the village of Dörentrup in central Germany is thrown into total darkness
the village’s cash-strapped local council has been switching off all the streetlights in the village each evening until 6 a.m
a nightly blackout would provoke outrage as residents find themselves fumbling and stumbling their way home through the dark
with a new scheme that allows residents to turn on streetlights on demand — anytime
anywhere — using just their cell phones
When Dörentrup’s council started switching off the streetlights
Dieter Grote’s wife would worry about their children coming home late at night in the pitch black
“My wife has all the good ideas,” Grote
“I discussed the problem with her and we thought it must be possible to have the lights available on demand.” Dieter got in touch with the local utility company Lemgo and together they came up with a solution: How about turning on the village lights with a simple telephone call
Lemgo developed a special modem and software to make it possible
(See pictures of the odyssey of the cell phone.)
In the first project of its kind in Europe
the residents of Dörentrup can now switch on the lights on a specific street whenever they like
All they have to do is register for the scheme online and provide a phone number
Then each time anyone needs to see in the dark
enter the six-digit code that corresponds to the stretch of road they want lit
They’ll stay on for around 15 minutes
enough time for someone to walk from one end of the average Dörentrup road to the other
“The scheme is easy for everyone to use,” says Grote
“Elderly people can use a cash machine
so they can make a call to switch on the streetlights.”
After a pilot project last year proved to be a big hit with the public
Dörentrup’s council has decided to roll out the scheme for the whole village
Utility company Lemgo says the scheme will cut down Dörentrup’s carbon-dioxide emissions by around 12 tons each year compared with leaving the streetlights on all night
“We found out that on each stretch of road
people only switch on the lights up to three times each night,” explains Frank Bräuer
“That’s why this system works in villages or the outskirts of a town where residents don’t need the lights burning all night.” But Dial4Light won’t work for everyone
he admits: “It wouldn’t be suitable for a big city like New York or London
where there’s a lot going on at night.”
(See 10 things to do in London.)
After he was forced to turn off the village lights to help save money
he faced complaints from angry residents worried about their safety when making their way home in the dark in the dead of night
He still defends his decision to flip the switch — “If I watch TV at home
I switch the lights off in the lounge; people shouldn’t expect the streetlights to be on when they’re not outside” — but says that any money saved will go toward building schools or sports facilities for the village
And although the council picks up the electricity bill every time anyone uses Dial4Light (locals only pay for the call)
the scheme is still cheaper than running the streetlights through the night
“We’re cutting electricity bills and we’re doing something to help the environment,” says Ehlert
(See TIME’s Heroes of the Environment 2008.)
Lemgo says there are plans to launch the scheme in five other countries and it has received requests for its new technology from all over the world
With the recession biting into town-council coffers everywhere and growing pressure to reduce carbon emissions
letting residents light up the night only when they need to seems like a bright idea
Read “Solar Power Hits Home.”
See pictures of Germany.
Contact us at letters@time.com
Schneider TM is the electronic solo music project of Bielefeld-born Dirk Dresselhaus
Since 1997 Dresselhaus has released music as Schneider TM through a vast variety of imprints
with his most known track is being “The Light 3000” from his Binokular EP
released back in 2000 – a track voted by the Wire as one of the best cover versions of all time
Today his latest album Construction Sounds will see the light of the day
Released through the notable german Bureau B label
We shared some thoughts with Dirk about it
along with Berlin’s never ending under-construction status and his new role curating the Wednesday nights at Berhain’s Kantine alongside Jochen Arbeit from Einstürzende Neubauten
but you’re considered part of the Berlin scene
You haven’t been here for that long have you
In the 90s I spent a lot of time in Berlin because the booking agent for my old band Locust Fudge was here
Did your moving here have something to do with City Slang
I suppose that in a way it’s an “essential” record in my total back catalogue
My life at that time was characterized by construction sites
Before I moved to Berlin I lived with a couple of friends in an old house in the countryside that a friend of ours had bought
The plan was to renovate it and build a studio there
We were really living in a construction site
The whole project unfortunately imploded due to financial and interpersonal issues then
because I had been working for City Slang and the concert agency Power Line anyway
it made sense to just get out of the village and go to Berlin
Dörentrup wasn’t exactly the funkiest place to live
would you also use that metaphor to describe your understanding of yourself
The things that a person experiences are always connected to the inner self
since I moved out of my parents house at 18
I’ve been trying to find some place where I felt at home and at peace but that still hasn’t really happened yet
I suppose that construction sites have always somehow gotten in the way
I lived in several apartments that were renovated
then in the country where we ourselves were the renovators
Then I lived in Leipzigerstrasse and that house turned into a construction site soon after
with plastic sheets and drill machines everywhere
Did you deliberately move into these kinds of environments so that you could use the noises and manipulate them to develop your own sound
I lived in an area where all the houses were being renovated and for the last five years I was living there they renovated the house I was living in
They had to get the people who were living there out
Then the idea came for me to turn things around and use this experience for me – because it has been such a psychological form of terror that I had gone through
For a variety of reasons I then had to live there for a few years because I was busy trying to set up a studio and didn’t have time to run away
Then I got the idea to record some of the sounds because some were extremely interesting and I really experienced them as music
Your musical style as Schneider TM has developed a lot over the years
How would you explain this development into the “noise” genre
On the one hand I had been making a lot of sound music before with Ilpo Väisänen from Pan Sonic
We were using instruments and field recordings so I had been intensively involved with this type of music for quite a while
The idea for the record came from being constantly around these construction sites
At first you think “oh it will just be over soon”
but then the sounds really penetrate you and you realise that you have to come to terms with it
I started to hear the sounds as music and recognized patterns that were very interesting
After a while I guess these sounds just entered into my subconscious and I started copying them in my electronic improvisations
When I listened back over the things I had made I realized that I had essentially been imitating a construction site
or at least that it was heavily influenced by those sounds in terms of structure and sound
Then it just occurred to me to put these together with all the field recordings I had made “on the fly” from my window at my home
It wasn’t as though I made a conscious decision or that this direction was a “career move”
rather it all came through my subconscious
A friend of mine pointed out that there are similarities between that record and the very first Schneider TM recording which begins with recorded noises
I can certainly see the structural and harmonic parallels
Would you describe this move as a step towards authenticity
An attempt to absorb what’s around you into your work
I don’t know whether construction sites are “authentic”
What I found fascinating was that the creation of the construction noises were not motivated by the acoustic concerns of the workers
but rather by the requirements of the technical building process
I thought that the workers must nevertheless somehow unconsciously be aware of how the different sounds relate to each other
but at a deeper level than one can have with words
Does getting attention for your music and selling records still play a role when it comes to your releases these days
It doesn’t really interest me to think about whether something will have success before I make it
In my experience it’s better to focus on things where I am most motivated and where I get the most energy back in return
This translates over to the music and gives it power
I think you can hear it when musicians have thought too much about what they can do to have success; it’s usually less interesting music
I suppose I’m interested in whether you think about how an album fits in with your last
Do you try and create something that “completes the circle” of your music and flows together with previous recordings
I guess that the circle automatically closes
or rather that the circle continues to expand
I don’t think I’ve come “full circle” yet with my music
For example there’s a hidden track at the end of the last record on City Slang
but it’s a two or three minute field recording of street noises from that phase
I think that when you think about flow there are elements that run like a thread through my work
but I didn’t make the record knowing that it would be released
I wasn’t sure if it would interest anybody and no one was waiting for it
so it was a purely musical decision to do it
It was also a kind of cathartic moment because now hopefully the construction site curse is over
How do you conceive of performing this live
I use parts of the field recordings and the arrangements that are on the record
then I re-sample and perform the electronic parts live
I would say that I play “versions” of the songs that are on the record
I can’t use every element that is on the record
I can remodel the songs and make something new
who makes live videos to go with the music
occasionally also out of construction sites and house structures
In the last two years I’ve also performed occasionally with Tomoko Nakasato
In October I’m playing a release concert that will be the beginning of a monthly concert series that I’m curating together with Jochen Arbeit in the Berghain Kantine
It’s called Aufladetechnische Konferenz (ATK) and will take place every third Wednesday of the month
On 17 October I’m playing with Tomoko Nakasato and the Polish video artist Pani K
who will use light and an infrared camera to perform interactively with the dancer
It will be a special concert for me with these three elements
I’m interested in collaboration and I could imagine improvising with other musicians and using those elements live too
So would you describe the ATK concert series as your playground
with Tomoko and Pani K and Jochen is playing solo but also with a video artist
then we’ll be playing a short set together later on
[Jochen rings] We’ve performed together quite a lot recently
mostly in smaller venues that don’t have great sound
then we got the offer from Andre from Ostgut to put on shows at Berghain Kantine
We’re inviting people to perform as part of the series but we’re always involved in some way together with other people
The idea is to create things that spontaneously exist for one evening through improvisation
but it should also be a party and not too academic
The concept of “recycling” seems to be important in your work
though samples and using recordings that you’ve made
It makes me think of this scene in the Sun Ra documentary A Joyful Noise where you can see how he composes
He keeps a field recorder on top of his organ or piano and then “jams” with himself and when he finds himself playing something interesting he records it
At the end he has a long sequence of recordings
just of moments that he found trippy himself
which he can then try out with a massive orchestra
To me that’s genius because that way you can learn from yourself and discover new things
if I’d continued repeating the same things with Schneider TM that I was doing a few years ago
things which helped me reach a wider audience
I suppose for established musicians and bands there is pressure to keep doing what your fans like
Is it necessary to keep doing new things as the world changes in order to stay honest in your music
Everyone is free to decide why they listen to music
Some people always listen to the same music because
it offers them a feeling of home in this evil world
I mean I still listen to Neil Young and I don’t find it boring
I also like to listen to new music that can surprise me
I don’t think constantly struggling to find something new is necessarily good
Did you ever have a moment where you decided that you were going to try and make a living from music rather than get a job on the side so that you could maintain your freedom as a musician
I’ve been living off my music for a while now
I never went to uni and I needed to earn my own money because I didn’t get anything from my family
I’m very thankful that I can live from my music but I don’t just live from Schneider TM
I also write music for films and for me those are also “jobs”
It’s good to be able to let off steam with other projects
I don’t know how it all turned out this way but I guess at some stage I decided to live off music
and for some illogical reason it somehow worked
I think that making that decision can liberate you to invest more energy in the music and it gives you greater endurance
but spending too much time thinking about how to make money from music and how to get well known can lead to you wasting so much energy because you’re under pressure
When I started with Schneider TM it was a time when people who were making techno but also had previously been in guitar bands were kind of looked down on
people asking how could I make electronic music when I’m actually a singer and guitarist which I found so absurd that I then did that cover of that Smiths song to provoke them
people play guitar and make techno or electronic music or whatever
there are enough borders in the world so why should there be borders in music
there is a bridge that separates indie rock from electronic music
Was the transition a simple process for you
I’m not really interested in trying to connect two independent systems with each other like some bands do
What we found interesting about “indie rock” back then was doing things with guitars that people didn’t usually do
such as working with loops and impulse noises
That was really an “electronic” approach to music and actually not that far away from the first Schneider TM record
I actually came to doing Schneider TM because I was playing around with putting my drum machine through guitar effects like delays and filters
It was all relatively fluid and for me that was the “bridge”
I also had an interest in electronic music because rock music became kind of boring to me
It’s just like when you always eat the same food
eventually you just want to try something different
I enjoy manipulating sounds and using instruments for things that they weren’t really meant for
construction sites aren’t meant to be musical either
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