Monumental Movement Podcast
This episode explores German techno during the pandemic era—an examination of how a deeply physical, club-centered culture adapted to global disruption and redefined its modes of existence. Centered around Berlin, the scene faced unprecedented closures, forcing artists, promoters, and institutions to rethink performance, community, and sustainability. We trace how iconic spaces such as Berghain temporarily fell silent, while digital platforms, livestreams, and alternative formats emerged as new channels for connection. Artists navigated the tension between techno’s embodied experience—sound system, crowd, space—and the disembodied nature of online transmission. Technologically, the shift accelerated hybrid practices: remote collaboration, modular live streams, and audiovisual experimentation expanded the definition of performance. At the same time, the pause allowed for introspection—renewed focus on minimalism, texture, and listening beyond peak-time functionality. This episode analyzes resilience as cultural process: how underground values—community, independence, and sonic exploration—persist under constraint. Through history, technology, and social context, we explore how German techno not only survived disruption, but evolved—reshaping its identity in a changing world. 【Related Column】German techno and the pandemic in the 2020s: Cultural transformation brought about by lockdown and revitalization https://monumental-movement.jp/en/column-2020s-german-techno-pandemic/
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