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The video game music genre of the 1980s is often divided into two separate and distinct movements: krautrock and the chiptunes movement. Krautrocksounded heavily influenced by heavy psychedelic rock and foreign experimental rock, psychedelic prog-rock, avant-garde music in the 1970s, as well as in the early 1980s, particularly by bands such as Radiohead, Pop Will Eat Itself, Current 93, Joy Division, Killing Joke, Bauhaus, Echo and the Bunnymen, Sonic Youth and Sonic Flowers. Ethereal music or dark rock were other influences, with artists such as Coil, Saint Vitus, Sonic Youth, Deafheaven and Isis becoming known as critically and commercially influential pioneers of the genre. Others, such as John Loder and Mathew Ash Williams of the UK's first sound-art movement Dark Space, took influences from dark electronic music such as the dark ambient genre. In particular, the likes of Mike Patton of Faith No More and Entombed were influenced by the style. Others have been at the forefront of these sounds. Since the late 1970s, German band Kraftwerk (from Düsseldorf, Germany) were pioneers in the field, releasing the singles "Computer World" (1978) and "Trans-Europe Express" (1979), and the album "Connaisseur" (1979). These were followed by several more albums, "Autobahn" (1982) and "The Man-Machine" (1986). Other, similar bands such as Tangerine Dream, The Orb, Soft Machine, Throbbing Gristle, Concrete Blonde, Tuxedomoon and also were influential. The krautrock artists also were the first to use computers in their music. Steve Roach of the British band Coil, who founded the influential Factory Records in 1982, claims that "[when] our music develops any influences, they all come from the same place because we only listen to one record at a time. The whole scene is to do with a barrier of some sort, and krautrock without a barrier is very, very difficult - we can't hear anything else at all".[53]] Kraftwerk's 1983 mini-album The Man-Machine and U2's 1987 mini-album Zooropa were the first works that blended those electronic bleeps with high-end melodies, d2c66b5586