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**Konstrukt 5**
On March 14, 2025, "Konstrukt 5" will be released. The new album by the Viennese indie chamber pop collective Buntspecht is imbued with radically wild beauty and hallucinatory-psychedelic intensity. In this way, Buntspecht offers confidence and warmth in dark times.
The confusion begins with the title: "Konstrukt 5" is the name of the new album by the Viennese group Buntspecht, and one naturally associates it directly with the number of their previous albums, until one realizes: "Konstrukt 5" is actually the sixth Buntspecht album, not the fifth. This makes it clear that you cannot approach Buntspecht with a pedantic sense of order or any classical category.
Much more important for understanding the group Buntspecht is the word before the number: A construct, according to the Duden dictionary - and now it gets a bit complicated! - is a "working hypothesis or conceptual aid for the description of explored phenomena," which means that everything Buntspecht does is always and forever a construct, because this music inherently possesses something temporary, unstable, and fragile, which is where its allure lies. It’s about the power and magic of the moment, about what is happening right now and what can be made of it. Spoiler: A lot!
The already quite high voice of Lukas Klein, which at times pleasantly reminds one of Hamilton Leithauser, nearly tips into hysteria at the beginning of the first single "Im Fluss" when he sings: "No matter what the morning brings, no matter." No wonder: You really have to be completely crazy, hysterical, or mad to seriously claim in these times: "Today is beautiful, yes everything is flowing, today is a good day," which is why Lukas hastens to sing afterward: "Everything goes down the river." This is the tension within which Konstrukt 5 operates.
In the waning winter of 2024, singer and guitarist Lukas Klein first met with Florentin Scheicher (piano, vocals, trumpet) for a first session in an old house belonging to Klein's family at the foot of the Rax Mountains, which was to lay the foundation for "Konstrukt 5." Snow still lay on the peaks, the first green was sprouting in the valleys, the air was clear, and their minds were free.
The vibe for this session was: At the slightest feeling of resistance or unwillingness, the idea would be abandoned and another pursued. The two musicians were after radical lightness. "We locked ourselves in there for a week and had a lot of fun," Lukas Klein recounts. "We worked on song ideas every day from nine in the morning until three at night." Layers and samples from these sessions made their way unchanged onto the final album, so small constructs, if you will. These miniature artifacts formed the basis of an album that was ultimately - as always with Buntspecht - developed together in the established lineup of Antonia Luksch (cello, vocals), Roman Geßler (saxophone), Florian Röthel (drums), and Jakob Lang (bass), supplemented with additional songs, and recorded in the studio.
Mood and composition were almost more important than the lyrics; melodies took center stage: "The lyrics often emerged from the composition this time," says Lukas, "whereas it was usually the other way around: The music had to follow the lyrics." This working method was felt by the entire band to be extremely liberating, as they could completely immerse themselves in the music.
The work on songs for this band still happens predominantly intuitively, almost unconsciously. And perhaps the album owes its bittersweetness to this approach. The fundamental attitude on Konstrukt 5: Optimism born from fatalism. "Everything goes down the stream" was, for example, one of the first lines that Florentin freestyled onto the unfinished song, but it then became "Everything remains in flow." One must not let all the madness out there completely get to them, even if that is not always easy.
"It’s not easy right now," Lukas confirms. "Wars, crises, Trump, Gaza - it’s nearly impossible to write light pieces in these highly politicized times. You don’t want to have these themes one-to-one in your art, but they are, of course, automatically a part of it. I want to internalize that and not deny it, while at the same time maintaining a certain lightness."
"Konstrukt 5" is thus the outstanding artistic document of a constructive approach to darkness.
The work on "Konstrukt 5" was always a rebellion against the circumstances, a struggle for beauty and an attempt to preserve a piece of it. "Way Down Alley" embodies this approach musically like hardly any other piece, a psychedelic flow that leads into infinity.
"Way Down Alley" owes its existence to a small accident: Florentin accidentally shifted a track incorrectly while editing the song. "That was actually a mistake from which something extremely interesting emerged rather accidentally," says Lukas. "From there, we built the piece together in the studio, but quite deliberately. What’s funny is that hardly any other piece sounds as spontaneous and jam-based as 'Way Down Alley.'"
Such spontaneous inspirations are essential for this band. The ballad "Vom Kopf der Hut," the elegiac "Die Stadt in dir," the spoken-word meditation "Was hält dich hier?" - these songs gently provide confidence, are enveloped in a captivating melancholy, and are imbued with superb musicality. They encourage one to keep going in the knowledge of the darkness.
"How fast the wind blows, I never really understood," sings Lukas Klein in the brilliantly sparkling "Wenn du jetzt gehst," whose chorus one never forgets once heard. But who really understands that?
The indie chamber pop of Buntspecht is characterized by a dystopian romance, a radically wild beauty, a mad intensity, as well as a sincerity and artistic freedom that is unparalleled in these days. Because it knows of our powerlessness. Thus, Buntspecht offers warmth and hope in dark times.