Tag: Franz Scala

2025 END OF YEAR REVIEW

50 years from KRAFTWERK appearing on the BBC’s ‘Tomorrow’s World’ to perform ‘Autobahn’ and demonstrate the future of music, as Ralf Hütter remarked at the start of the 21st Century, “electro is everywhere” and can now be made on your mobile phone!

And while the KRAFTWERK brand continues to be fronted by the 79 year old Hütter with an extensive UK tour pencilled in next year, 2025 saw the sad passing of Synth Britannia heroes Dave Ball and Stephen Luscombe, while there was also the loss of COVENANT associate Andreas Catjar-Danielsson, NITZER EBB frontman Douglas J McCarthy and Gary Numan’s brother / former live band member John Webb. Outside of the genre, cult film director David Lynch, BLONDIE drummer Clem Burke, veteran diva Marianne Faithfull, The Prince Of Darkness Ozzy Osbourne and Head Beach Boy Brian Wilson were among those who left this mortal coil.

Musically in 2025, Mari Kattman became the alluring gothic club queen she always had the potential to be on her best album yet ‘Year Of The Katt’. She headed a strong feast of feisty releases from Ela Minus, Marie Davidson, Zanias, Jennifer Touch, Charly Haze, Ani Glass, Emmon, Minuit Machine and Compute alongside those by the female fronted DLINA VOLNY, CAUSEWAY, DINA SUMMER, AUSTRA, NNHMN and PARADOX OBSCUR.

Among the new talent making a good impression were Spike, Shears and Hannah Hu who is currently working on her first album with Dean Honer of I MONSTER. Having already released a couple of albums, on the ascendancy was self-styled Californian “retro electro artist” Sophie Grey who was joined by Trevor Horn during her live cover of ‘Video Killed The Radio Star’ while supporting Sting at the London Forum.

On the gentler side of electronics, Patricia Wolf and Loula Yorke came up with their fabulous respective instrumental offerings ‘Hrafnamynd’ and ‘Time Is A Succession Of Such Shapes’. There was also the return of LADYTRON as well as Alison Goldfrapp, Claudia Brücken and Kim Wilde. Going back to glitzy electropop on her new record ‘Mayhem’, Lady Gaga did an impression of Taylor Swift doing YAZOO on one of its highlights ‘How Bad Do U Want Me?’; meanwhile Taylor herself appeared to have turned into Los Angeles trio CANNONS on ‘The Fate Of Ophelia’, the synthy opening song of her 12th album ‘The Life Of A Showgirl’.

Photo by Oliver Blair

Swedish producer Johan Agebjörn proved to have one of the most prolific years in his music career with not only collaborations with R.MISSING on ‘Fakesnow’ and NINA on ‘Hush Hush Baby’ but also a new SALLY SHAPIRO album ‘Ready To Live A Lie’ and a solo long player ‘Southern Forest’; all this while holding down his day job as a psychotherapist! Another releasing two albums in 2025 was Paul Statham although one was a collection of archive recordings for what could have been the intended 1982 debut album by B-MOVIE entitled ‘Lost Treasures’; the other was a second record from his dark country project THE DARK FLOWERS featuring Jim Kerr of SIMPLE MINDS whose most recent single ‘Your Name In Lights’ had been co-written by Statham.

Impressively, SPARKS got ‘MAD!’ and then ‘MADDER!’ while undertaking a huge world tour with Ron Mael still tap dancing at 80 years of age during the drum solo of ‘No1 Song In Heaven’ and Russell Mael able to hit many of those high notes at 77. As ERASURE made a tentative return with a series of special UK fan club shows to celebrate their 40th anniversary, Andy Bell toured his solo album ‘Ten Crowns’ with KNIGHT$ not doing himself any harm being the opening act on the German leg ahead of a new album ‘Supernatural Lover’ out in early 2026.

After a few years of recorded absence, former TANGERINE DREAM members released long awaited albums with Peter Baumann from the classic line-up issuing the esoteric ‘Nightfall’ while Jerome Froese, son of co-founder Edgar, came up with the guitartronica of ‘Sunsets In Stereo’. Playing with the atonal atmospheres of early TANGERINE DREAM in places, the dark cerebral concept of ‘The Ray Bradbury Chronicles’ by Levente was worthy of investigation.

With their keyboard player Christian Berg now something of a modern day Rick Wakeman, KITE established themselves as a major world force with a spectacular show on ice at Stockholm’s Avicii Arena which saw special guest Nina Persson of THE CARDIGANS skating with the Helsinki Rockettes while singing their mighty collaboration ‘Heartless Places’.

Tom Shear released one of his most impressive and on-point albums as ASSEMBLAGE 23 in ‘Null’ while UNIFY SEPARATE didn’t mince their words on their ‘Heavy Meta’ EP. While Tobias Bernstrup kept the dark Italo flame alive with ‘Shadow Dancer’, Berlin continued to remain a force in underground club culture with two of its leading exponents Franz Scala and Kalipo presenting well-received long players that worked on the home hi-fi as well as on dancefloors. On the more poptronica front, Eddie Bengtsson finally stopped trying to “Numanise” his sound and came up with ‘Inget Motstånd’, a record in the more classic PAGE vein.

While synthwave appeared to be dead (as the controversial blog Iron Skullet declared in 2019), the influx of generic darkwave was a major blight on electronic music in 2025. The major label supported Mareux and his second album ‘Nonstop Romance’ had any potential painfully ruined by overused deliberate distortion to make it sound like it was recorded down a drainpipe.

Meanwhile PORCELAIN DANCER seemed to be the Rob Newman parody of Robert Smith as seen on ‘The Mary Whitehouse Experience’ resurrected only several octaves lower; his live performance provoked unintentional laughter from those who arrived early to see KORINE in London!

DEPECHE MODE released 4 songs that were originally deemed not good enough to put on their 2023 album ‘Memento Bori’ to append the live album accompanying their Mexico City concert film ‘M’. But 2025 was notable for a number of figures in the British DM fan community who were coming out with particularly repugnant far right views, seemingly oblivious to the decades of lyrical messages from the two remaining mixed race band members!

But there was hope in the darker side of synth with A THOUSAND MAD THINGS; with his haunted demeanour while navigating young manhood as a tortured outsider, William Barradale’s doomed romantic delivery reminiscent of Billy MacKenzie and Trevor Herion made him undoubtedly the most promising UK act since MIRRORS; his debut 5 song EP ‘Cry & Dance’ was one of 2025’s best bodies of work. This more than made up for ‘Dance Called Memory’, the extremely dull fourth album from NATION OF LANGUAGE which was anything but memorable…

After looking back at 1981, ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK were pleased to be return to the variously compiled podcast ‘Back To NOW’ to discuss the ‘NOW 1982 Yearbook’ with genial host Iain McDermott and Ian Wade, author of ‘1984: The Year Pop Went Queer’. While general music and culture podcasts such as ‘Back To NOW’, ‘Word In Your Ear’, ‘The Rest Is Entertainment’, ‘The Rockonteurs’, ‘SoundPower’ and Miranda Sawyer’s new offering ‘Talk 90s To Me’ were highly engaging listens, specific broadcasts focussed on synth and electronic music were usually weak, suffering from poor hosting and ham-fisted background research. But when a professional presenter was involved, synth-oriented chats could be enlightening as the appearance of John Foxx on ‘The Adam Buxton Podcast’ proved, despite the annoying jingles that accompanied it.

Featuring commentary from PET SHOP BOYS’ Neil Tennant, the BBC’s retrospective look at the collapse of EMI called ‘Music Money & Mayhem’ showed once again that when those who know nothing about music get involved in the music business, it will end in tears. Looking at the story of the history of Beggars Banquet label in its first series and featuring Gary Numan in its opening episode, ‘States Of Independence’ documented how creative enthusiasm from the heart can actually thrive.

So where are the audiences for live electronic music these days? Certainly, if the full houses for Marie Davidson, Geneva Jacuzzi, Loscil and KITE in London’s club-sized venues were anything to go by, the crowds are out there. This was not the case for some other acts on the circuit at new, cult and one-hit wonder level who were struggling to get above half capacity or had downsized considerably since their perceived highest profile. However, new music night Release Me managed to get very good attendances for their evenings in 2025 with the premise that all acts must perform previously unreleased material; this focus on their events being about the music with announced requests to not talk during sets was a fresh and very welcome approach.

Photo by Tom Casey

Elsewhere, the retro business did prosper with reunions, exhibitions, summer hits shows, classic album tours, deluxe reissues of albums that were never that good in the first place and notable records re-released in yet another expanded set for the 5th or 6th time! There were those trying to exploit the fading nostalgia of those heady romantic times, writing memoirs that left out so many important facts omitted that there were grounds for inclusion in the “fiction” section.

Then there were others releasing overlong collections with an average track length of between 6-8 minutes that no-one asked for nor desired… filtering and editing is such an important aspect to producing music so there was no excuse for these veterans! Some even sent out unmastered music files to review outlets, blissfully unaware that the sound quality might actually be mentioned, only to get stupidly angry about it when highlighted due to their own numbskull promotional abilities; it’s a funny old entitled world…

The positive and negative of modern day music consumption is growth CAN happen organically in its own internet powered niche. But with the fragmentation of promotion with social media actually being a choice despite wider protestations, even the AXS newsletter listing the acts soon to be playing the 20,000 capacity O2 arena in London provoked cries of “WHO?”; but that is how it is now and it needs to be accepted. Why should a Boomer or Gen X-er know about the bright young thing headlining Glastonbury?

However, you CAN create your own musical universe today, not listen to radio, create your own playlists and exclude as appropriate. After all, as Nick Rhodes from DURAN DURAN once remarked: “Good taste is exclusive” –  nobody should have to like what you like and neither should what somebody else likes appeal to you… niche interests are fine.

There is no doubt fandom has become more tribal and is now akin to away game support for football teams. But as a result, it has therefore got more toxic, with some fans getting ridiculously angry on socials about old less-than-positive reviews that David Hepworth, Mark Ellen, Ian Cranna, Dave Rimmer, Tom Hibbert or Neil Tennant might have written for Smash Hits 43 YEARS AGO!! “Bet he regrets that…” someone will quip smugly but the reality is, if there is a review that a writer will regret, from the experience of ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK, it will usually be the one that is too gushing with praise!

The gist of Smash Hits during its imperial phase that coincided with Neil Tennant’s tenure as Assistant Editor was it was a magazine which treated “pop” as the most “important” thing in the world while simultaneously highlighting how “ridiculous” it was too, with references to “the dumper”, “summer colds” and the “tongue sarnie”… often dismissed as a “teen mag”, a good number of teenagers could see through the up-itself pretentions of the NME so relished the more amusing and knowing “scribblings” of the Smash Hits team!

The wider public forgets that it might likely have the benefit of 4 decades of hindsight as well as weekly if not daily plays of a record in the first few years of its possession. While it has always been associated with “free speech”, “opinion” or “freedom of expression”, one of the problems with social media is the narcissistic self-seeking of validation as part of the main character syndrome that afflicts many in this modern world…

With tours in 2026 for KRAFTWERK, OMD, PET SHOP BOYS, CHINA CRISIS, HEAVEN 17, THOMPSON TWINS’ Tom Bailey, BLANCMANGE and Midge Ure among many, there is certainly plenty to keep people busy. Just don’t think everyone else will necessarily share in your passion; as time goes on, there will be a lot more of those who won’t have a clue what you are going on about…

U2 once asked “how long must we sing this song?”; so to end a divisive year where evil men with racist views have been casually normalised, the message outlined in 1981 by a trio of philosophers from South Yorkshire must continue to be repeated loud and clear: WE DON’T NEED THIS FASCIST GROOVE THANG! #FuckFarage #FuckReformUK #FuckTommyRobinson #FuckFlagshaggers #FuckTrump


A Time Called Then: ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK’s Oh 2025 Playlist is at https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1xXptdmcHAvXnXni6hjVnA


Text by Chi Ming Lai
14th December 2025

FRANZ SCALA Interview

Photo by Zeyd Ayoob

The Berlin-based Italian DJ and producer Franz Scala has just released his second album ‘Café Futuro’.

Issued on his own label Slow Motion, Franz Scala is a global champion of the Italian Dance Wave sound. A man who has been behind events like Italorama and Self Control, ‘Café Futuro’ is named after the bar he once ran in Neukölln which acted as a gathering point for the Italo and Cosmic Disco community.

Triggering feelings of nostalgia while presenting a modern dance-friendly underground sound, ‘Café Futuro’ differs from its 2021 predecessor ‘Mondo Della Notte’ by diving deeper to feature vocal contributions from international artists resident in Berlin such as FUROTICA, DINA SUMMER and Charlie, as well as Los Angeles-based duo ACID GYMNASTICS.

Featuring tantalising vocals from Argentine duo FUROTICA, ‘New Look’ makes a thumping statement of intent as the album opener while Franz Scala is joined by Dina of LOCAL SUICIDE and DINA SUMMER on equally thumping but more squiggly ‘Saxon Rebel’. Poland’s Charlie provides her enigmatic charm on the jagged throb of ‘Crush Test’ but alongside these vocal statements are his instrumental excursions like the retro-futuristic ‘Bit99’, the emulated nocturnal drive of ‘Echoes Of Love’ and the vibrant Euro-house of ‘Fantasy Bazar’. In addition, ‘Light Year Run’ will please anyone who has ever enjoyed a NEW ORDER Italo disco-inspired instrumental.

Franz Scala chatted to ELECTICITYCLUB.CO.UK about the making of ‘Café Futuro’ and discussed several of the album’s highlights…

What brought an Italian DJ to Berlin?

I first came to Berlin because I had the need to experience living in a big city. Back in Italy, I was already collecting records and DJing, but discovering Berlin was unique and open-minded. It gave me the space to explore different sounds and build something slowly, surrounded by people who were in my same music scenario.

How do you become entranced by what is now referred to worldwide as “Italo”? Were there key moments or tracks for you that started your interest?

My connection with Italo started naturally through record digging. At first, I was more into wave and early electronic records, but at some point, I found myself drawn to the cinematic side of Italian dance music from the 80s. There wasn’t one track that changed everything, but discovering artists like Alexander Robotnick or Klein & MBO definitely opened that world for me. It was music that felt familiar.

Photo by Julius Dettmer

How do you yourself define Italo, does it have to be a native species as some fans dictate or is it more like an attitude, an approach that can be universal?

For me, Italo is not just about geography. It’s a more playful way of production that can go in a different way and at the same time keep the attitude. Of course, the roots are Italian, but the spirit can be anywhere. It’s about how you approach melody, rhythm, and emotion with a certain “easy going” and fantasy. That can exist in Mexico, Japan, or Germany as much as in Italy.

While you have been making music since 2011 first as Franz Underwear, your first full-length album ‘Mondo Della Notte’ didn’t come out until the end of 2021, how do you now look back on that record?

‘Mondo Della Notte’ was a long process. It was a collection of ideas that had been evolving for years. Looking back, it captured a specific time in Berlin nightlife and my own journey through it. I see it as a bridge between my early “Underwear” productions and what I’m doing now. It had a cinematic feel and still dancefloor oriented, while the new album is made more in a storytelling way.

Although ‘Mondo Della Notte’ featured vocal samples, the new album ‘Cafe Futuro’ has guest vocals on several tracks… what influenced this more word-led approach?

During the years after ‘Mondo Della Notte’, I played countless DJ gigs and I slowly got into how voices create an instant connection. I wanted ‘Café Futuro’ to feel more direct, while still keeping my sound textures. Collaborating with vocalists also brings unpredictability, they interpret the tracks differently and add something I wouldn’t have created alone.

The opening track ‘New Look’ features FUROTICA from Argentina, how did you come to be working with them?

I got to know their music first and then we met in person when they moved to Berlin. I really liked their blend of vocal performance, sound, and attitude, very disco and elegant. When I had the idea for ‘New Look’, I thought their presence would set the tone for the whole record. It was one of the first collaborations that shaped the album’s direction.

Photo by Julius Dettmer

How do decide which tracks remain instrumental and which get developed with vocals, are the latter presented to potential vocalists with a much barer structure?

For the ‘Café Futuro’ vocals, I had all instrumental tracks ready to go. Then I sent the instrumental to the collaboration artists. They place their vocal layer on top very naturally. Then I listen back and if needed, I edited a bit the vocal structure or the arrangement so that all the elements blend together. It’s more like a dialogue rather than a feature.

There is a fine underground club scene in Berlin and the new album has vocals by locally resident artists such as Charlie on ‘Crush Test’ and Dina from LOCAL SUICIDE / DINA SUMMER on ‘Saxon Rebel’; so what did you from a production and arrangement point of view to suit their different delivery styles?

Every vocalist has a different energy. With Charlie, it was about creating space and a hypnotic flow where her voice could float in and out, minimal but intense, it feels like a ballad vibe to me. With Dina, the focus was on rhythm and energy, something that carries her natural way of singing. In term of arrangement was more like natural layering vocals on top of my instrumental track than building the track together.

Do you have any favourite production tools? Are you a hardware or software-based man? The press release mentions EMU keys, are there any other vintage instruments in your armoury?

I use both hardware and software, depending on the mood. I like the hands-on approach of hardware because it’s less predictable. The EMU keys, Matrix 1000, Bit 99 or OO6 are central to my setup. I still use software for arrangement and effects – the mix between the two worlds feels most natural to me.

So is the dark thumping instrumental ‘Bit99’ named so because it mostly features that Italian synth? You must like its sounds but what do you think of its functionality?

Yes, the title comes from that synth. The Bit99 has a particular character a bit rough but warm, analogue and FM not perfect in terms of precision, but that’s what makes it interesting. It’s not the most versatile instrument, but when it fits, it gives a strong identity to the sound.

‘Café Futuro’ is released as a double album, is vinyl still the best format for your music? What are your thoughts on the spectre of streaming?

Vinyl still feels right for me because it represents a full work beginning, middle and end. The physical process of releasing and playing it connects people in a different way. That said, I understand streaming is how most people discover music now. It’s useful for reach, but it also fragments the listening experience. It’s good to balance both worlds.

The album has a very international supporting cast and vocals by ACID GYMNASTICS from Los Angeles appear on the bouncy album closer ‘Fase Lunare’, how did you decide on that coming last and compiling the overall running order? Is it like putting together a DJ set?

Exactly, sequencing an album feels similar to building a DJ set. You guide the listener through moods and energy changes. ‘Fase Lunare’ felt like the right way to close the record because it feels a bit more ethereal and more introspective. It’s like the sun rising at the end of the night.

Do you have a favourite track on ‘Café Futuro’ which we haven’t discussed yet? Why is this one a favourite?

Maybe ‘Telephone Boy’. It’s one of those tracks that came together very naturally and sounds very fresh and crossover to me. It captures the cinematic and emotional side of that record with a strong dancefloor oriented attitude. I think it will be one of the tracks from the album other DJs will play the most.

Photo by Zeyd Ayoob

What are your hopes for this album? Any fears?

I hope the album reaches people beyond the club environment, that it can be listened to at home, in a car, or anywhere, and still create a mood. My only fear is that in the fast pace of music consumption, albums don’t always get the time they deserve. But I believe those who connect with it will take the time.

What is next for you?

I’m already working on new material, a couple of new releases already l planned for 2026. There will also be a remix release from ‘Café Futuro’ tracks. Apart from that, I’ll keep playing around and supporting projects that explore that intersection between 80s and modern dance music, the balance I’m always chasing.


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its grateful thanks to Franz Scala

Additional thanks to Dina Paschalidou Brudi at Eclectica

‘Café Futuro’ is released as a double vinyl LP and download by Slow Motion Records, go to https://slowmotionrecords.lnk.to/CafeFuturo

https://www.slowmotionmusic.it/project/franz-scala/

https://soundcloud.com/franz-scala

https://www.instagram.com/franzscala/

https://www.facebook.com/italiandancewave

https://soundcloud.com/slow-motion-records

https://www.instagram.com/slowmotion_records/

https://www.facebook.com/slowmotionrecords/


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
10th November 2025