Uwe Schmidt

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Uwe Schmidt
Birth name Uwe Schmidt
Born August 27, 1968
Origin Frankfurt, Germany
Genre(s) Electronic music
Glitch
IDM
Latin Dance
Techno
Experimental
Occupation(s) DJ, producer
Years active 1992-present
Label(s) various
Website www.atom-heart.com/
www.senor-coconut.com/

Uwe Schmidt (aka Atom Heart, Atom™, Señor Coconut; born August 27, 1968 in Frankfurt, West Germany), is a German DJ and producer of electronic music. He is often regarded as the father of electrolatino, electrogospel, and aciton (acid-reggaeton) music.

Contents

[edit] Career

During the early 1990s, Schmidt produced dance music under a number of monikers including Atom Heart. In 1994, Schmidt started his own label, Rather Interesting, with the aim of developing music that doesn't follow the "traditional paths of electronic music".

In 1996 he decided to move to Santiago, Chile, to explore Latin music. He quickly adopted the intentionally ridiculous Señor Coconut moniker, and soon released El Gran Baile, finding time afterwards to do a little remix work for Towa Tei, formerly of the multi-national Deee-Lite.

His next release, in 2000, was the Latin-Kraftwerk fusion of El Baile Alemán. The album featured several Kraftwerk classics reworked with Latin instrumentation and rhythm. El Baile Alemán was intended as a salute to and a parody of Kraftwerk, as evidenced by the intro to "Autobahn" which featured the sound of a car that wouldn't start.

The album was credited to Señor Coconut y Su Conjunto, but the album was entirely the work of Schmidt on synthesizers and samplers, with the aid of three vocalists. It received just enough critical acclaim in the U.S. for Schmidt to put together a short headlining tour. In March 2001, Señor Coconut, complete with a seven-piece backing band, set off for North America, but visa problems with some of the Chilean musicians forced Schmidt to cancel the tour.

[edit] Aliases

  • Almost Digital
  • Atom™
  • Atom Heart
  • Atomu' Shinzo
  • Bass
  • Bi-Face
  • The Bitniks
  • Brown
  • Bund Deutscher Programmierer
  • CMYK
  • Coeur Atomique
  • Datacide (a collaboration with Tetsu Inoue)
  • The Disk Orchestra
  • Don Atom
  • DOS Tracks
  • Dots
  • Dr Mueller
  • Dropshadow Disease
  • Erik Satin
  • Flanger (a collaboration with Burnt Friedman)
  • Flextone
  • Fonosandwich
  • Geeez 'N' Gosh
  • Gon
  • HAT (a collaboration with Haruomi Hosono and Tetsu Inoue)
  • H. Roth
  • i
  • Interactive Music
  • Jet Chamber (a collaboration with Pete Namlook)
  • Lassigue Bendthaus
  • LB
  • Le Diapason
  • Lisa Carbon
  • Lisa Carbon & Friends
  • The Lisa Carbon Trio
  • Los Negritos
  • Los Samplers
  • Machine Paisley
  • Masters Of Psychedelic Ambiance
  • Midisport
  • Mike Mc Coy
  • Millennium
  • Mono™
  • M/S/O
  • +N (a collaboration with Victor Sol)
  • Naturalist
  • Ongaku
  • Pentatonic Surprise
  • Pornotanz
  • Real Intelligence
  • The Roger Tubesound Ensemble
  • Schnittstelle
  • Second Nature
  • Semiacoustic Nature
  • Señor Coconut
  • Silver Sound
  • Slot
  • Softcore
  • Soundfields
  • Subsequence
  • Superficial Depth
  • Surtek Collective (a collaboration with Original Hamster)
  • Synthadelic
  • Urban Primitivism
  • VSVN
  • Weird Shit

[edit] Partial discography

[edit] As Lassigue Bendthaus

  • The Engineers Love (1988)
  • Matter (1991)
  • Binary (1992)
  • Cloned (1992)
  • Render (1994)

[edit] As Atom Heart, Tetsu Inoue and Bill Laswell

  • Second Nature (19??)

[edit] As Atomu Shinzo

  • Act (1993)

[edit] As Atom Heart

  • Datacide II (1993)
  • Coeur Atomique (1993)
  • Orange (1994)
  • Live at Sel I/S/C (1994)
  • +N - ex.s (1994) (with Victor Sol & Alain "Stocha" Baumann; guest appearance by Chris & Cosey)
  • +N - plane (1994) (with Victor Sol)
  • Dots (1994)
  • Softcore (1994)
  • Aerial Service Area (1994) (with Victor Sol and Niko Heyduck)
  • VSVN (1995)
  • Mu (1995)
  • Semiacoustic Nature (1995)
  • Silver Sound 60 (1995)
  • Bass (1995)
  • Real Intelligence (1995)
  • Machine Paisley (1996)
  • Hat (1996)
  • Brown (1996)
  • Apart (1996)
  • +N - built. (1996) (with Victor Sol)
  • Gran Baile Con...Señor Coconut (1997)
  • Digital Superimposing (1997)
  • Schnittstelle (1998)

[edit] As Lisa Carbon

  • Experimental Post Techno Swing (1993)
  • Polyester (1995)
  • Trio de Janeiro (1997)
  • "Standards" (2003)

[edit] As Flanger

  • Templates (1999, Ntone, Cat. no: NTONECD33, CD)
  • Midnight Sound (2000, Ntone, Cat. no: NTONECD40, CD)
  • Inner Spacesuit (2001, Ninja Tune, Cat. no: ZEN12105, 12")
  • Outer Space / Inner Space (2001, Ninja Tune, Cat. no: ZEN61/ZENCD61, 2xLP/CD)
  • Spirituals (2005, Nonplace, Cat. no: NON18, CD)
  • Nuclear Jazz (Templates/Midnight Sound) (2007, Nonplace, Cat. no: NON21, CD)

[edit] As Geeez 'N' Gosh

  • My Life With Jesus (2000)
  • Nobody Knows (2002)

[edit] As lb

[edit] As Bund Deutscher Programmierer

  • Stoffwechsel (2000)

[edit] As Señor Coconut y Su Conjunto

[edit] As The Disk Orchestra

  • [k] (2001)

Style: experimental/indus/noise

[edit] As Midisport

  • 14 Footballers In Milkchocolate (2001)

[edit] As Dos Tracks

  • :) (2002)
  • Dos Tracks (2002)

[edit] As Atom™

  • CMYK (2005)
  • iMix (2005)
  • Son Of A Glitch (2007) (with Mikrosopht, Audiocrip, Original Hamster, The Machinist, and Yoshi)
  • Liedgut (2009)

[edit] As Los Negritos

  • Speed-Merengue Mega-Mix 2005 (2005)

[edit] As Surtek Collective (with Original Hamster)

  • "The Birth Of Aciton" (2007)

[edit] External links

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