Towards the Within — There Must Be So Much More

When I first saw the the Berlin-based band on the upcoming playlist, “Pink Turns Blue”, I almost outright dismissed them. The name evoked for me a sound other than what I thought I was looking for because it reminded me of the song “Pink Turns to Blue” on Hüsker Dü’s 1984 seminal album, Zen Arcade. I figured that if a band had intentionally named themselves after a hardcore band from my youth, they would probably play hardcore punk as well, which is not the music I was looking to discover at this time. If the name shared an accidental (or esoteric) relationship, it still seemed like an odd name to choose for darkwave. But, following my commitment to discovery via music “radio” I gave them a whirl anyway, figuring that I could skip the song part way through if it turned out not to be the genre I was looking for.

I’m glad I didn’t instant-skip.

Pink Turns Blue photo
Pink Turns Blue; Photo: Daniela Vorndran, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

How I have never managed to hear of Pink Turns Blue is a bit surprising to me. I’ve found plenty of indie bands over the years that were not easy discoveries to be made back in the 80s and 90s. A German band playing a darkwave, guitar-based sound during my old-school goth days falling off my radar? That seems almost criminal.

The band was formed in 1985 and, yes folks, they named themselves after that aforementioned song (which I’ve included on my YouTube playlist for this series, if you are curious). The song that I heard first heard was “Your Master is Calling”, but it is one of those songs from the 80s that, while it caught my attention, also followed the habit common to the period of overstaying its welcome at over seven minutes, so I elected to share a different song that still captures the vibes of the band but is of a shorter duration.

This is not like the synth-oriented sounds of the genre, but has more of a 3-piece sound: guitar, bass and drums. Some people would likely class the band as more gothic or more straight indie rock, but I can heard some of the precursor sounds in the band’s songs that feel very borrowed from earlier acts like Joy Division while avoiding some of the more Velvet Underground sound of Sisters of Mercy.

If you listen, you’ll have to let me know what you think of this discovery in the comments below.


7 responses to “Towards the Within — There Must Be So Much More”

  1. missparker0106 Avatar
    missparker0106

    I agree with the Joy Division influence. I also hear Chameleons and the very first inkling of shoegaze…jangly guitar, earnest rhythm. I somehow missed this group and their music and I know they would have been a part of my playlist. Thank you for the intro!

    1. michael raven Avatar

      You’re very welcome.

      THAT’S who I was trying to think of. Chameleons… Thanks for that assist.

      What I like about these guys over some of the other bands I’ve heard that are similar in sound is that he enunciates much better than the other guys (who often speak English as a first language) and the mix is a lot clearer overall than what I’ve been hearing. It seems to be a “thing” to mix down the vocals in a lot of these bands.

      When I ran the sound board/mixer for a friends, I would always bump the level up on vocals just a little more than other folks might because I hate muddy vocals lost behind the other instruments.

  2. Bob Avatar

    Very cool song. Thanks for the share. Pink Turns to Blue is one of my favorite Hüsker Dü songs.

    1. michael raven Avatar

      Same. Basically anything off Zen Arcade or New Day Rising will make me smile (especially “Celebrated Summer”).

      Glad you liked the song.

  3. chrisnelson61 Avatar

    I have listened to them a few times in the past (although it was only this century that I discovered them).
    Not bad, but, the, they never really grabbed me.

    1. michael raven Avatar

      I can understand that. Seems like one of those bands that might be good for certain moods rather than general listening.