Description

Book Synopsis

Berlin in the early 1990s, right after the fall of the Berlin Wall: this is the place to be. Berlin-Mitte, the central district of the city, with its wastelands and decaying houses, has become the centre of a new movement. Artists, musicians, squatters, club owners, DJs and ravers are reclaiming the old city centre and bringing it back to life. This interregnum between two systems – the collapse of the old East Germany, the gentrification of the new Berlin – lasts only a few years. West Berliners, East Berliners and new residents from abroad join together to create music, art and fashion, to open bars and clubs and galleries, even if only for a few weeks. In the months following the fall of the Wall, there is a feeling of new beginnings and immense possibilities: life is now, and to be in the here and now feels endless. The phrase ‘temporary autonomous zone’ is circulating, it describes the idea – romantic and naive but, in the circumstances, not absurd – that, at a certain moment in history, you can actually do whatever you want.

Ulrich Gutmair moved to West Berlin as a student in autumn 1989: two weeks later the Wall came down. He spent the next few years studying during the day in the West and exploring the squats, bars and techno clubs in the East at night. He fell in love with House and Techno and raved at Tresor, Elektro, Bunker and many other places that in the meantime have almost disappeared from collective memory. Ten years later he decided to write a book about that period in between, when one regime was brought down and a new one wasn’t yet established. When utopia was actually a place to inhabit for a moment.



Trade Review

"Gutmair's chronicle is about another mise en scene ... namely that of the first electronic dance clubs. His descriptions of the sounds and smells, bass drums and breakbeats, the low-ceilinged and cinder-strewn dance floors transport one to those locations better than any film version of the day."
The National

"[A] fascinating work of cultural history."
Society



Table of Contents
List of Illustrations

Acknowledgements

Preface to the English edition

Map of Locations


I. How Long is Now?

II. The Year of Anarchy

III. Occupying the Government District

IV. At the Elektro, Mauerstrasse 15

V. The Nineteenth-Century ‘Founders’ of Berlin

VI. U. S. P.


Bibliography

The First Days of Berlin: The Sound of Change

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 16 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Ulrich Gutmair, Simon Pare

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      View other formats and editions of The First Days of Berlin: The Sound of Change by Ulrich Gutmair

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: Publication Date: 05/11/2021
      ISBN13: 9781509547302, 978-1509547302
      ISBN10: 1509547304

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Berlin in the early 1990s, right after the fall of the Berlin Wall: this is the place to be. Berlin-Mitte, the central district of the city, with its wastelands and decaying houses, has become the centre of a new movement. Artists, musicians, squatters, club owners, DJs and ravers are reclaiming the old city centre and bringing it back to life. This interregnum between two systems – the collapse of the old East Germany, the gentrification of the new Berlin – lasts only a few years. West Berliners, East Berliners and new residents from abroad join together to create music, art and fashion, to open bars and clubs and galleries, even if only for a few weeks. In the months following the fall of the Wall, there is a feeling of new beginnings and immense possibilities: life is now, and to be in the here and now feels endless. The phrase ‘temporary autonomous zone’ is circulating, it describes the idea – romantic and naive but, in the circumstances, not absurd – that, at a certain moment in history, you can actually do whatever you want.

      Ulrich Gutmair moved to West Berlin as a student in autumn 1989: two weeks later the Wall came down. He spent the next few years studying during the day in the West and exploring the squats, bars and techno clubs in the East at night. He fell in love with House and Techno and raved at Tresor, Elektro, Bunker and many other places that in the meantime have almost disappeared from collective memory. Ten years later he decided to write a book about that period in between, when one regime was brought down and a new one wasn’t yet established. When utopia was actually a place to inhabit for a moment.



      Trade Review

      "Gutmair's chronicle is about another mise en scene ... namely that of the first electronic dance clubs. His descriptions of the sounds and smells, bass drums and breakbeats, the low-ceilinged and cinder-strewn dance floors transport one to those locations better than any film version of the day."
      The National

      "[A] fascinating work of cultural history."
      Society



      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations

      Acknowledgements

      Preface to the English edition

      Map of Locations


      I. How Long is Now?

      II. The Year of Anarchy

      III. Occupying the Government District

      IV. At the Elektro, Mauerstrasse 15

      V. The Nineteenth-Century ‘Founders’ of Berlin

      VI. U. S. P.


      Bibliography

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