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Tangerine dream best album
Tangerine dream best album






tangerine dream best album

I honestly think it is the best tangerine dream album and probably one of the best electronic albums of all time. For an album that it more than 80 minutes, there isn’t a moment where I get bored. I’m amazed that it is a live album, it sounds better than most live recordings I’ve ever heard. I agree, Poland deserves to be on the list. I would take off Optical Race (good album) or say top 11 🙂 You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.ġ3 Responses to “TEN TANGERINE DREAM ALBUMS TO BLOW YOUR MIND” You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. This entry was posted on Februat 6:40 pm and is filed under Reviews & Commentary. With just Froese and Paul Haslinger, they create dense, rhythmically charged excursions that stand up to some of their best works and hold up better than albums like Le Parc.įinally an album that should be on the list, Epsilon in Malaysian Pale, the third solo album from Edgar Froese and a Dream album by any other measure. I know that consensus opinion has it that the Private Music years sucked, and they did, except for Optical Race the first album they made for the label, owned by former Tangerine Dreamer, Peter Bauman. Something of an anomaly in that it features a drummer, Klaus Krieger, and gives the Dream a more fluid and aggressive sound, especially in the screaming side long title track.

TANGERINE DREAM BEST ALBUM FREE

There seems to be more exploratory fun and a more personal sound as they drop in surreal free falls in the midst of their dramatic compositions. But unlike so many of thier post-Virgin releases, this 1996 albums doesn’t bludgeon you with canned synthesizer bombast. Goblins’ Club recalls the 80’s sound of Tangerine Dream when they were just adding more aggressive rhythms and clearly defined melodies to their fanciful spacescapes. Another two-sided excursion that moves from the quietest solo piano spot to thundering sequencers from the heavens. Ricochet was their first live album, although it was all new materiel and sounds like a studio recording. Part of the classic quartet of albums, this was their most commercial release to date and the first album with real melodies. Originally a two sided work, Tangram is a multi-movement opus sometimes sabotaged by episodic writing, but still with some haunting themes amidst the pounding sequencers and more melodic invention than most prior Dream albums. This is one of the last long-form Dream recordings. This 1972 recording is a drone zone manifesto, and a beautifully enveloping work free of melody, rhythm and just about any other conventional music signpost. Ambient before ambient, but owing much to Gyorgy Ligeti pieces like “Atmospheres,” synths, gliss guitar, organ and “noise generators” unfold in undulating, slow motion patterns across what was a double LP. Playing with a cello quartet, it’s a journey of interwoven tones phasing through each other from acoustic to electric to something entirely new. It’s been called their most experimental CD, but I think it’s their most thoughtful, controlled and uncontrived album. Subsequent live albums would be more pre-programmed performances. This was really the truly last live recording from the group. Johannes Schmoelling had been in the group for a while at this point and his influence is felt in gorgeous melodies and rhythms that have you ricocheting off your seat and between your headphone cups. This was the Dream working with a precision and structure that earlier works didn’t have, but they were still creating in long-form with a fair amount of improvisation. Listening to Logos, from 1982, you can hear why. Tangerine Dream was an exciting live band in the 70s and half of the 80s. Phaedra is transitional, retaining some of the avant-garde Ligeti-esque texturalism from Zeit on the mellotron drenched “Mysterious Semblance at the Strands of Nightmare,” but the title track and Rubycon, an album length composition were definitive journeys into inner space. The Dream bound them in interlocking patterns, mellotron chords and synthesizer textures. The classic trio of Edgar Froese, Christoph Franke and Peter Baumann found the secret of rubber band sequencer patterns discovered by Tonto’s Expanding Headband 2 years earlier. These are the signature Dream albums, the blueprint for every retro-space artist out there, the sound that influenced ambient, techno, and more. Phaedra and Rubycon have always been a pair for me and that pair is half of a quartet with Ricochet and Stratosfear.

tangerine dream best album

On the air I said I’d pick five, but I decided to go with ten. 10 Best Tangerine Dream Albums From Number Six of 20 Icons of Echoes








Tangerine dream best album