Born in 1957, Günter started his musical life playing drums and electric guitar in rock and jazz bands before moving to Paris in 1980 and studying at IRCAM, the sound institute and research center founded by Pierre Boulez. He returned to Germany in 1986 and started work on computer compositions. After his first two albums, originally released on the German label Selektion and now reissued on the domestic Table of the Elements, he entered a period of collaboration and remixes with several leading sound artists, including John Duncan, Ralf Wehowsky, Asmus Tietchens, Alan Lamb, and Merzbow. In 1995, he created his own label, Trente Oiseaux, to release quality electro-acoustic works that share his interest in new approaches to sound art.
In the late '90s, he developed a new concept of time for his compositions, which he calls DIM (an acronym for the French phrase Duree, Ici, Maintenant -- Duration, Here, Now) and which is based on our subjective perceptions of the present moment and how different they appear based on the activity in which we are engaged. According to neurological research, our perception of the present lasts only about three seconds; everything else is memory or anticipation. Since 1998, he has measured the duration of all of his work in these three-second units. The decade's closing years saw a resurgence in solo compositions, with three new works released on CD in 1999/2000, all of which reflect his growing interest in harmony and the influence of Feldman and Luigi Nono. ~ Caleb Deupree, Rovi