In 1969–1970, journalist and producer
Uwe Nettelbeck brought Campylognatus Citelli together with the Hamburg group
Nukleus—featuring
Jean-Hervé Péron,
Rudolf Sosna, and
Gunther Wüsthoff—to form a new experimental ensemble for
Polydor Records. The musicians were relocated by Nettelbeck to an old schoolhouse in
Wümme, near
Bremen, which was converted into a private recording studio. There, Faust developed their collective working method, combining Diermaier's improvisational drumming with tape manipulation, electronic processing, and collage techniques. The sessions produced the debut album
Faust (1971), engineered by
Kurt Graupner and released by Polydor in a transparent vinyl sleeve—a radical statement of German experimentalism in rock music. == Career ==