
Horst Weidenmueller, who based the influential indie/digital label !K7 and launched the distinguished DJ-Kicks compilation collection, has died, the label introduced yesterday (February 11). No reason for demise was given, however the assertion referred to a critical sickness. Weidenmueller was 60 years outdated.
Weidenmueller was born within the Black Forest area of Germany however moved to Berlin in his early 20s, the place he based !K7 in 1985 to provide music movies. It advanced right into a file label a decade later, releasing techno and home alongside DJ-Kicks compilations—a collection whereby producers and DJs compiled units that bridged dancefloor and homebound listening, giving DJs an outlet to discover past the standard combine format and discover new audiences within the course of.
After the inaugural C.J. Bolland combine, DJ-Kicks rapidly turned a staple of digital music, with dozens of legends making landmark mixes that turned consecrated classics, increasing dance music’s scope as an album format. Austrian duo Kurder & Dorfmeister made the second DJ-Kicks LP, and subsequent greats akin to 4 Tet, DJ Koze, Kemistry & Storm, James Holden, and an unparalleled Moodymann have contributed.
Alongside the collection, Weidenmueller continued to signal previous and future greats to !K7—together with A Man Known as Gerald, Matthew Herbert, and Erol Alkan—in addition to music from additional afield, like Tough and, extra not too long ago, Hundred Waters and Bloc Social gathering’s Kele Okereke.
In its assertion, !K7 wrote that Weidenmueller’s “imaginative and prescient, ardour, and dedication formed !K7 since 1985 into what it’s right now, and his legacy will proceed to encourage us. Past his function at !K7, Horst was a passionate advocate for the unbiased music group, a dedicated environmentalist, and true pal. His contributions have left a long-lasting affect on the business and won’t be forgotten.” The label, the assertion added, “stays dedicated to persevering with his imaginative and prescient with the identical ardour and integrity that he embodied.”