Printed From: Progarchives.com
Category: Progressive Music Lounges
Forum Name: Prog Bands, Artists and Genres Appreciation
Forum Description: Discuss specific prog bands and their members or a specific sub-genre
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=133537 Printed Date: November 26 2024 at 03:33 Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Topic: Vangelis AppreciationPosted By: Jared
Subject: Vangelis Appreciation
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 03:50
I was at risk of hi-jacking one of Greg's threads when asking Rich about his Vangelis highlights, for which I'd like to thank him:
richardh wrote:
Vangelis is a big one. I like most of his output the only ones I don't bother with are those very early avant albums (pre 'Earth') and the much later soundtracks for Alexander and El Greco. The other 32 albums I like to varying degrees but they get played at some point or other. Vangelis top five is nearly impossible but I'll have a stab:
Heaven and Hell
China
Direct
El Greco (the non film soundtrack)
Voices
subject to change at any given moment!
I'm finally getting round to giving his back catalogue some of the attention it deserves (I've not paid much attention to it for 30 years?). I can't remember a thread dedicated to an evaluation of his music, so thought I would use Rich's thoughts to commence a thread, which might help me and others navigate his works. I own and like:
L'Apocalypse Des Animaux, H&H, Albedo, Spiral, China, Opera Sauvage, Soil Festivities & Mask
I really struggled with Beaubourg (although may revisit for a 4th listen) and Invisible Connections, which will probably never be revisited.
Which of his disks do you enjoy?
------------- Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
Replies: Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 04:16
If I'm going to have a thread hijacked, it might as well be about Vangelis. :) I like so much Vangelis. I started off really liking his 80s soundtrack music, Blade Runner, The Bounty and Antarctica, and then his album China. And I had a best of that I used to listen to often. Later in the 2000s I got into his 70s albums, Spiral, The Dragon (which is not so official), L'apocalypse des animaux and Earth are some favourites. I like the avant-garde Hypothesis, which like The Dragon is not so official a release. I like Albedo 0.39, and I'm into Sex Power (and his debut album of the same name is pretty good too ;) ).
------------- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts
Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 06:04
^^ thank you Greg... I'm taking notes.
------------- Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 06:49
Hi,
Right from the start with his first album ... I am not sure I can even think/consider one album above any other ... along with Ryuichi Sakamoto, one of the great composers of the 20th century for my tastes.
I think they will be remembered for a long time.
Somewhere in the Space Pirate Radio lists is a promo LP for "Heaven & Hell" that can't be shared, where hs discusses his music, and what he says is far out ... and folks still don't believe me ... all his albums have "teaspoons" on it ... and he really puts down "commercial music" ... and he doesn't want to be a part of it.
I think it is very evident in his music all around. Lovely stuff, and it one person I shed a tear when he passed away ... I was glad to have been a part of his life and story from the days of Aphrodite's Child all the way to the end. And there still is some stuff not released that the folks in charge of his music are afraid to release, or say something about it. No artist of his ability lacks a lot of bits and pieces in their closets!
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 07:26
^^ which are your favourite albums, Pedro?
------------- Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 08:22
Jared wrote:
^^ which are your favourite albums, Pedro?
Hi,
I'm not sure I can think of a "favorite" at all ... I simply love the works the composer has created, and how it has always helped my imagination live.
I suppose of all the albums, the stuff in BLADE RUNNER is the one I love to listen to all the time, but I believe it is because the visuals from the film are so beautiful and well represented that it is hard to not enjoy them. Not quite the same, but "CHARIOTS OF FIRE has a similar touch.
Again, I like all of the albums ... not just one. The composer is by far, one of the top ones in my thoughts, along with Ryuichi Sakamoto ... their visual nature and how the music was used added so much to their work, and it helped in all of their albums. It makes me think what would happen if Beethoven or Stravinsky were around these days ... although some pieces have been illustrated by FANTASIA and ALLEGRO NON TROPPO, and in the end, I would love to see more of that!
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 11:25
I'd recommend almost any Vangelis album - especially the sensational soundtracks - but I'd give Beaubourg, Hypothesis & Invisible Connections a wide berth, although you already know those three experimental albums are best avoided anyway. Vangelis and Avant Garde are not a good combination for me.
1970: Vangelis - Sex Power (soundtrack) - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LsAfOXXOBIe43VM6wjJaUq9" rel="nofollow - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LsAfOXXOBIe43VM6wjJaUq9
1972: Vangelis - Fais Que Ton Reve Sot Plus Lang Que La Nuit - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LvM65riv3cSklLozwF98q9B" rel="nofollow - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LvM65riv3cSklLozwF98q9B
1980: Vangelis - See You Later - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LtRFqfIkSF_xiyjoC_3SkZw" rel="nofollow - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LtRFqfIkSF_xiyjoC_3SkZw
1981: Vangelis - Chariots of Fire (soundtrack) - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LsjS0L1K0ZG6sOkFp6PSGOh" rel="nofollow - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LsjS0L1K0ZG6sOkFp6PSGOh
1990: Vangelis - The City - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LvgvHlWMKVpnJQEFa3vqvoA" rel="nofollow - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LvgvHlWMKVpnJQEFa3vqvoA
2019: Vangelis - Nocturne: The Piano Album - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LsRw0Exq3REueHzZcFD5CJ9" rel="nofollow - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LsRw0Exq3REueHzZcFD5CJ9
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 12:16
Logan wrote:
If I'm going to have a thread hijacked, it might as well be about Vangelis. :) I like so much Vangelis. I started off really liking his 80s soundtrack music, Blade Runner, The Bounty and Antarctica, and then his album China. And I had a best of that I used to listen to often. Later in the 2000s I got into his 70s albums, Spiral, The Dragon (which is not so official), L'apocalypse des animaux and Earth are some favourites. I like the avant-garde Hypothesis, which like The Dragon is not so official a release. I like Albedo 0.39, and I'm into Sex Power (and his debut album of the same name is pretty good too ;) ).
Do you like The City? That's a really underrated one in Vangelis' discography, IMO. It plays like an unofficial sequel to Blade Runner. I think I'll listen to it today.
Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 13:23
verslibre wrote:
Top 3
Albedo 0.39 Soil Festivities Direct
Next 7
Heaven and Hell L'Apocalypse des Animaux Juno to Jupiter Spiral The City Blade Runner Opera Sauvage
Next 10
China Ignacio Antarctica Rosetta Mythodea Mask Beauborg See You Later Oceanic Chariots of Fire
Thank you, once more you've been very thorough and inciteful...
If I had to pick one, Albedo would be my favourite and I too think Soil Festivities is a remarkable piece of music. I think I like Mask a little more than you, but then I've always been a sucker for choral works...
------------- Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 14:20
verslibre wrote:
Logan wrote:
If I'm going to have a thread hijacked, it might as well be about Vangelis. :) I like so much Vangelis. I started off really liking his 80s soundtrack music, Blade Runner, The Bounty and Antarctica, and then his album China. And I had a best of that I used to listen to often. Later in the 2000s I got into his 70s albums, Spiral, The Dragon (which is not so official), L'apocalypse des animaux and Earth are some favourites. I like the avant-garde Hypothesis, which like The Dragon is not so official a release. I like Albedo 0.39, and I'm into Sex Power (and his debut album of the same name is pretty good too ;) ).
Do you like The City? That's a really underrated one in Vangelis' discography, IMO. It plays like an unofficial sequel to Blade Runner. I think I'll listen to it today.
I don't recall having heard The City. Will spin it when I have more free time. Thanks. From ratings I have seen, mostly at rateyourmusic before, I find that a lot of Vangelis seemed significantly underrated (or lesser rated than how I would see it rated). There often is a band-wagon effect to an extent when it comings to ratings I believe. And a lot gets largely overlooked that may have been appreciated if heard.
------------- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts
Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 14:26
Logan wrote:
There often is a band-wagon effect to an extent when it comings to ratings I believe. And a lot gets largely overlooked that may have been appreciated if heard.
I think there is... many will almost 'subliminally' rate slightly lower if an album has already been a low rating by others beforehand, while the opposite can also be true. I think someone like Vangelis can fall victim to this, as his music is incredibly subtle at times and requires more listens than many are prepared to give.
------------- Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 14:36
Top 10 Vangelis Albums
1981: Vangelis - Chariots of Fire (soundtrack) - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LsjS0L1K0ZG6sOkFp6PSGOh" rel="nofollow - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoIDt_C5y1LsjS0L1K0ZG6sOkFp6PSGOh
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 17:15
Jared wrote:
Thank you, once more you've been very thorough and inciteful...
If I had to pick one, Albedo would be my favourite and I too think Soil Festivities is a remarkable piece of music. I think I like Mask a little more than you, but then I've always been a sucker for choral works...
Thanks for launching the site's official Vangelis thread. Lord knows we must regularly discuss the man and his music.
Mask, Soil Festivities, The City and Ignacio (which would be higher on my list if he didn't have so many great albums) seem to fly under the radar thanks to his most popular and better-known works.
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 17:17
Logan wrote:
verslibre wrote:
Logan wrote:
If I'm going to have a thread hijacked, it might as well be about Vangelis. :) I like so much Vangelis. I started off really liking his 80s soundtrack music, Blade Runner, The Bounty and Antarctica, and then his album China. And I had a best of that I used to listen to often. Later in the 2000s I got into his 70s albums, Spiral, The Dragon (which is not so official), L'apocalypse des animaux and Earth are some favourites. I like the avant-garde Hypothesis, which like The Dragon is not so official a release. I like Albedo 0.39, and I'm into Sex Power (and his debut album of the same name is pretty good too ;) ).
Do you like The City? That's a really underrated one in Vangelis' discography, IMO. It plays like an unofficial sequel to Blade Runner. I think I'll listen to it today.
I don't recall having heard The City. Will spin it when I have more free time. Thanks. From ratings I have seen, mostly at rateyourmusic before, I find that a lot of Vangelis seemed significantly underrated (or lesser rated than how I would see it rated). There often is a band-wagon effect to an extent when it comings to ratings I believe. And a lot gets largely overlooked that may have been appreciated if heard.
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 20:28
Hi,
What a bunch of goons ... and no one is looking for the teaspoons in the albums, yet!
C'mon ... have some fun!
Yes, it is likely synthesized and touched up, but they are there in many places! Neat too!
The story starts with the teaspoons hitting the glasses at the dinner table, btw, in Vangelis' younger years ... he said the magical sound was one of his inspirations! I keep telling you that "magic" ... sometimes, is more than just notes and chords ...
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Jacob Schoolcraft
Date Posted: August 31 2024 at 21:17
I have 31 cd's to be exact. I am not a fan of opera singers and so none of his collaborations with opera singers are in my collection.. If it's El Greco I don't mind. Mask contains vocals throughout however it doesn't strike me as being a style in opera. Even Heaven & Hell contains a choir..but it doesn't remind me of Opera.
I'm also not a fan of Jon & Vangelis although that material is done well it is not my style. I have everything but the aforementioned.
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: September 01 2024 at 10:47
Jacob Schoolcraft wrote:
I'm also not a fan of Jon & Vangelis although that material is done well it is not my style. I have everything but the aforementioned.
The side-long epic "Horizon" from Private Collection is pretty great.
Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: September 01 2024 at 11:33
verslibre wrote:
Logan wrote:
verslibre wrote:
Logan wrote:
If I'm going to have a thread hijacked, it might as well be about Vangelis. :) I like so much Vangelis. I started off really liking his 80s soundtrack music, Blade Runner, The Bounty and Antarctica, and then his album China. And I had a best of that I used to listen to often. Later in the 2000s I got into his 70s albums, Spiral, The Dragon (which is not so official), L'apocalypse des animaux and Earth are some favourites. I like the avant-garde Hypothesis, which like The Dragon is not so official a release. I like Albedo 0.39, and I'm into Sex Power (and his debut album of the same name is pretty good too ;) ).
Do you like The City? That's a really underrated one in Vangelis' discography, IMO. It plays like an unofficial sequel to Blade Runner. I think I'll listen to it today.
I don't recall having heard The City. Will spin it when I have more free time. Thanks. From ratings I have seen, mostly at rateyourmusic before, I find that a lot of Vangelis seemed significantly underrated (or lesser rated than how I would see it rated). There often is a band-wagon effect to an extent when it comings to ratings I believe. And a lot gets largely overlooked that may have been appreciated if heard.
I like that. That sounds rather like more optimistic and beautiful Blade Runner. It does have a cinematic sound. I also liked music (not Vangelis) from Blade Runner 2049. Thanks.
------------- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: September 01 2024 at 14:40
Logan wrote:
I like that. That sounds rather like more optimistic and beautiful Blade Runner. It does have a cinematic sound. I also liked music (not Vangelis) from Blade Runner 2049. Thanks.
Totally. It's another successful concept album, and plays best in one go-through, like Soil Festivities.
Posted By: Saperlipopette!
Date Posted: September 01 2024 at 22:40
I'm not the kind of music listener to simply "love" all of this or
that artist body of work. If something fail to connect with me, it doesn't really matter if Vangelis, Morricone or whoever composed the music. I move on. Vangelis, like almost every
composer/instrumentalist of his generation, loses me underways at some
point. But he had 10-15 years of greatness. And that's more than enough
for me.
5 The Dragon (1971), Odes (with Irene Papas) (1979) 4.5 L'Apocalypse des Animaux (1973), Blade Runner (1981/1982) 4 Sex Power (1970), Hypothesis (1971), Earth (1973), Heaven and Hell (1975), Opera Sauvage (1980) 3.5 Albedo 0.39 (1976), Spiral (1976), See You Later (1980), Soil Festivities (1984) 3 Ignacio (1975), La Fete Sauvage (1976), Beaubourg (1978), China (1979), Antarctica (1983), Mask (1985), 1492: Conquest of Paradise (1992) 2.5 Ραψωδιέ (Rapsodies) (1986)
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: September 01 2024 at 23:58
He is the ultimate eclectic artist. Not always easy to categorise what he does. He perhaps got hijacked by Hollywood and once Chariots Of Fire and Blade Runner came out he was supposed to copy that. It's to his credit that he didn't. He recorded most of his well known albums in the period 1975-1985 at a studio in West London. I remember reading a piece on the internet from his sound engineer about how tricky it was to record anything without upsetting the local residents. Nowadays the studio no longer exists and a block of flats has been built in its place. After that he moved back to Greece and set up a studio in Athens , the first album he recorded there was Direct. Still an album I like a lot, this takes you on a journey through his various styles. In the 90's he recorded the albums Voices, El Greco and Oceanic , all 3 containing some of his most beautiful music. In later years he made the excellent Rosetta and Juno To Jupiter as well as the operatic and sweeping Mythodea. I enjoy all those. He was fascinated with the idea of space travel and reaching out to the cosmos and that dominated his music later on. Covid took him away from us sadly but what a legacy of work he has to his name. It's just extraordinary that only one man could do all this. Mike Oldfield gives him a run for his money but that's it imo.
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: September 02 2024 at 04:05
richardh wrote:
...
It's just extraordinary that only one man could do all this. Mike Oldfield gives him a run for his money but that's it imo.
Hi,
Mike, is not a composer in the sense that Ryuichi Sakamoto and Vangelis were ... and they did a lot of soundtracks which gives you an idea of how visual their work was for them, and how they illustrated it, not just how it was interpreted in film many times, for which Ryuichi Sakamoto deserves a lot of praise.
Mike, has redone too many TB's for my taste, and he has not exactly moved away from the mechanical style of composition that he is attached to, with the exception of AMAROK which was known to be a huge finger to the record company ... and yet it is appreciated much more than expected ... but he has not come back to that free form thing as far as I can tell.
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: September 02 2024 at 07:51
I'd just like to say 'thanks' to everyone for their initial thoughts... I've been reading everyone's preferences with interest and will expand my knowledge of his discography in due course while there were some I am familiar with, others relatively new to me, such as Soil Festivities and Mask have pleasantly surprised me..
------------- Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
Posted By: mellotronwave
Date Posted: September 02 2024 at 15:31
I like Vangelis'works with Aphrodite's child and I like his 1973 's Earth a lot .... A Must Have imo
Posted By: progaardvark
Date Posted: September 03 2024 at 10:50
My favorites from him are:
Albedo 0.39
Direct
Heaven and Hell
Opera Sauvage
I should explore more. It's quite a large discography.
------------- ---------- i'm shopping for a new oil-cured sinus bag that's a happy bag of lettuce this car smells like cartilage nothing beats a good video about fractions
Posted By: Meltdowner
Date Posted: September 03 2024 at 11:40
verslibre wrote:
Do you like The City? That's a really underrated one in Vangelis' discography, IMO. It plays like an unofficial sequel to Blade Runner. I think I'll listen to it today.
I took a chance on that album on vinyl some years ago and I enjoyed it more than I thought I would (more than Direct). It has a couple of weaker tracks but since it's a concept album I'm more forgiving.
Vangelis is an artist I adore I've been listening for more than ten years, and there's still a lot of music I never heard from him, mostly soundtracks. I've been listening to "L'Apocalypse des Animaux" often at night since I bought it last year, it's very relaxing but doesn't fall into background music.
My favourite album is still the first one I heard, Spiral. I find fascinating that all the percussion is acoustic, in electronic music it's normally the first thing that's replaced with synthesizers.
Than I'd complete my top 3 with Heaven and Hell and China. I also really like Soil Festivities and The Dragon.
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: September 03 2024 at 11:59
Meltdowner wrote:
verslibre wrote:
Do you like The City? That's a really underrated one in Vangelis' discography, IMO. It plays like an unofficial sequel to Blade Runner. I think I'll listen to it today.
I took a chance on that album on vinyl some years ago and I enjoyed it more than I thought I would (more than Direct). It has a couple of weaker tracks but since it's a concept album I'm more forgiving.
Vangelis is an artist I adore I've been listening for more than ten years, and there's still a lot of music I never heard from him, mostly soundtracks. I've been listening to "L'Apocalypse des Animaux" often at night since I bought it last year, it's very relaxing but doesn't fall into background music.
My favourite album is still the first one I heard, Spiral. I find fascinating that all the percussion is acoustic, in electronic music it's normally the first thing that's replaced with synthesizers.
Than I'd complete my top 3 with Heaven and Hell and China. I also really like Soil Festivities and The Dragon.
Glad you like The City. Do you have Juno to Jupiter? It's exceptional, was his best music in years.
Posted By: Steve Wyzard
Date Posted: September 03 2024 at 13:16
Glad to see The City, an oft-overlooked album, receive so many mentions. It's the one that changed me from a casual fan to a serious listener. I read somewhere he composed/recorded The City in a hotel room while on a movie set, endlessly waiting for "dailies" to make soundtrack music for. It's shorter than most of his albums and got a serious promotional push in the USA from the record company, and I've often wondered if many listeners have held that against this album.
Other favorites: China, Opera Sauvage, Chariots of Fire, Soil Festivities, Mask, Voices, Oceanic.
Posted By: octopus-4
Date Posted: September 03 2024 at 13:20
Am I the only one who likes Invisible Connections?
Vangelis is one of my favorite artists ever. I've managed to purchase the two vinyls with Irene Papas and a collection of Forminx during a trip to Crete (there was a nice shop in Agios Nikolaos).
I have all his official releases and I still listen to him. Aphrodite's Child always put me in a sort of melancholic state, as they were actually very famous and I've listened to them a lot when I was a child.
Apart of that, my favorite albums are Heaven And Hell, Albedo 0.39 and China.
The Blade Runner 25th anniversary boxset features also Demis Roussos and I've never regretted the expense.
The only album that I don't like is See You Later. I think (by memory) that it's one of my very few one-star reviews.
The City, mentioned above is another very good album. In particular Morning Papers gives me the sensation of going for a breakfast after a non-sleeping night.
------------- I stand with Roger Waters, I stand with Joan Baez, I stand with Victor Jara, I stand with Woody Guthrie. Music is revolution
Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: September 03 2024 at 13:54
octopus-4 wrote:
Am I the only one who likes Invisible Connections?
Luca, I simply can't get my head around how to listen to this one; it's so sparse and disjointed, almost devoid of any underlying melody with which to build on with repeated listens.. you merely seem to be hanging on for the next set of notes, then wondering how they connect to what you've just heard? I really struggle with Beaubourg, but that's a walk in the park compared to this!
I reluctantly came to the conclusion that it was just too intelligent for me?
------------- Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
Posted By: Cosmiclawnmower
Date Posted: September 03 2024 at 14:11
I feel like a bit of a Vangelis virgin really.. i first came across (and love) the lps Spiral and Albedo 0.39 in my teens (Pulstar was the theme to a UK childrens tv programme about horses in the mid-late 70's!) but never really explored his music. Until i came across Soil festivities and China which have a very personal connection to me and apart from odd bits and pieces ive just not really explored further, for which i feel slightly embarrassed. However, this is something i intend to rectify!
-------------
Posted By: Meltdowner
Date Posted: September 04 2024 at 04:58
verslibre wrote:
Glad you like The City. Do you have Juno to Jupiter? It's exceptional, was his best music in years.
Never heard it but I've been meaning to. I do have Rosetta and listen to it often as well. It has a great flow, I just find the title track distracting because the melody is similar to a Portuguese Pop song
octopus-4 wrote:
Am I the only one who likes Invisible Connections?
I never dared to approach it, the Deutsche Grammophon label and the comparisons with Beaubourg say it's not for me. I hope I'm wrong.
Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: September 04 2024 at 06:13
Meltdowner wrote:
octopus-4 wrote:
Am I the only one who likes Invisible Connections?
I never dared to approach it, the Deutsche Grammophon label and the comparisons with Beaubourg say it's not for me. I hope I'm wrong.
Oh, Beaubourg is very accessible by way of comparison....
------------- Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: September 05 2024 at 22:13
Invisible Connections is one of those albums where it's better to have the CD. Back in the day I purchased the cassette and couldn't understand what I was listening to. About 10 years I got the CD and had a listen and liked it. It is Berlin school (like Beauborg) where sonic landscape is the thing, no rhythm or melody apparent. It's hard to imagine anyone else doing this.
Heard some exciting news yesterday. Been waiting for years for this.
666 - The Apocalypse Of John (CD/Blu-Ray / Vinyl pre-order)
Aphrodite's Child’s astonishing concept album 666 - from 1972 - is a masterpiece of Progressive and textural experimentation helmed by band members Vangelis and Costas Ferris.
This limited box set edition contains remastered versions of the original album mix and the rare 1974 Greek LP version (which featured considerably different mixes to the original LP release), along with a Blu-Ray disc featuring 96 kHz / 24-bit Atmos, 5.1 up mixes, a stereo mix, and a 28-minute episode of the French television show Discorama from June 1972 featuring Vangelis talking about the album.
The boxed set includes a book featuring a new essay and original interviews with the band plus many previously unseen photographs that Vangelis sourced from his various archives around Europe.
Pre-order for November 11 release.
Posted By: Saperlipopette!
Date Posted: September 05 2024 at 22:56
^Nice. This reminded me of a 16 minute previously unreleased track (until 2002). I got it
of a collection titled Babylon the Great. I think it's basically
Vangelis improvising and it sounds a little like Sex Power and
Hypothesis combined (but easier on the ear than the latter album). Not
everyone's cup of tea, but I love it. It says that it's recorded in 1969
during the 666-sessions, so to me it's strange that it's never been
featured as bonus material for that album. Not this time either. Maybe
Vangelis himself hated it, like he seemingly did with the mentioned Hypothesis (and
the fantastic The Dragon):
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: September 06 2024 at 12:14
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: September 12 2024 at 06:20
progaardvark wrote:
...
I should explore more. It's quite a large discography.
HI,
It's quite large since he had been at it since the mid 60's ... which places things at the very least 50 years ... but his solo albums are the best thing, and it is clear how he "saw" a lot of music ... it was very "visual" and "film like" which really helped it get illustrated by several film directors, and eventually got him an OSCAR.
Listening to it all from the start is a treat ... from "Earth" to the last release, how he dealt with the new equipment, and then new music ... you have to say it was special, though there aren't enough specials on him that show/tell a whole lot about him, which would suggest not exactly a simple person at all, but one that lives according to his musical moods, which, of course, we know were far out and excellent.
I find that I can not select a single album as best or to make a suggestion at all ... in his later days, you could say he was more "classical" as a musician, but that was something that was in him, anyway, although I kinda thought that how "Heaven and Hell" came off was likely to be a sort of ... something ... about commercial music and the record companies. This is implied and suggested in the promo that was sent to many FM stations which Guy Guden played on his show in its entirety which explains a lot of his music and where it came from, up to and including such things as t-spoons that folks here don't believe in at all, but it shows a human side that we have a tendency to not believe at all ... he's "normal", just like we are, and sensitive to a lot of bits around us ... and he uses them ... we just ignore those things! And a rock musician, goodness me, he/she would never consider anything but a chord or note! Creativity at the DAW, as I call it ... not in the music living inside your head and heart!
I would think that not making a suggestion would be better ... so you can get surprised ... but I think that's more my own vision of "discovering" something new, instead of some more MOS stuff out there that is so commercial you want to go .....and formatted even worse ....
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Dellinger
Date Posted: October 09 2024 at 19:08
Besides Pulstar and the Blade Runner end titles, which other electronic songs would be up there?
Posted By: Saperlipopette!
Date Posted: October 10 2024 at 00:05
Dellinger wrote:
Besides Pulstar and the Blade Runner end titles, which other electronic songs would be up there?
L'apocalypse Des Animaux is an album I've listened to countless times. It's beautiful and gentle... Progressive Electronic/Ambient. Very unique for 1973. It resembles some of the music Brian Eno would start making a few years later.
Posted By: Jared
Date Posted: October 10 2024 at 00:33
Saperlipopette! wrote:
L'apocalypse Des Animaux is an album I've listened to countless times. It's beautiful and gentle... Progressive Electronic/Ambient. Very unique for 1973. It resembles some of the music Brian Eno would start making a few years later.
agreed... I feel very similar about Soil Festivities; very delicate, subtle and beautiful...
------------- Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
Posted By: Starshiper
Date Posted: October 10 2024 at 03:09
For me, Vangelis' Albedo 0.39 remains the benchmark of space-orientated yet organic electronic music from the 1970s because of its masterful blending of cosmic soundscapes, innovative synthesiser methods, and profound thematic study of space and humanity's role within it. All of these elements evoke a transcendent auditory experience that still sounds fresh to these ears.
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 10 2024 at 06:09
Starshiper wrote:
For me, Vangelis' Albedo 0.39 remains the benchmark of space-orientated yet organic electronic music from the 1970s because of its masterful blending of cosmic soundscapes, innovative synthesiser methods, and profound thematic study of space and humanity's role within it. All of these elements evoke a transcendent auditory experience that still sounds fresh to these ears.
Hi,
In one of the Vangelis Documentaries there is a scene that is the perfect explanation of a lot of his talent and ability ... and it is a shot of him playing/composing the music for Blade Runner, and it goes on for a good minute or two ... and all you can see is the film looking at the building and the camera moving upwards (think of whatshisname's mobile moving up to the sky) and the music follows ... and stays with it bit by bit ... and it fits beautifully ... and it shows/explains something about composing that is not everyone's thought or idea ... he's all visual, and he is literally following the visual in front of him ... and this is also very clear in Chariots of Fire ... when you can see his keys match the pace and the movement.
I suppose that you can suggest that the film director is the one that can see that and use it, but Maurice Jarre, also did that with his soundtracks and they fit beautifully in many places. Ryuichi Sakamoto might not have done the same but he had a magic touch for several moments and always came up with the far out bit, again, some of it might be the director of the film, but that is unlikely, since Ryuichi, like Vangelis and Maurice, had done this "touch" before and it was a matter of the director being smart enough not to waste some great music.
This is not "commercial" music, as Vangelis has suggested in many a special, and this is the hard part of explaining a lot of this ... we are way too attached to a lot of "commercial" works and materials, in order to be able to find/discern materials that are not onto the "commercial" sounding thing, and you can see this in a lot of Hollywood films with generic music at the start and at the end ... or worse ... during a romantic scene ... and sometimes some well known songs to make you think this is far out! The group Mogwai has also done a couple of things really well, also suggesting a touch of the appreciation of the visual side of things.
It's all about the touch ... and some have it and some don't ... the REAL composers always have it. The rest, for me, are merely doing notes and (sometimes) the worse ... the director is horrible at using the music ... Babylon 5 had this problem, and never used Christopher Frank's music to make the show better ... I don't think any of those directors ever knew what music was for other than sweeping the floors!
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Starshiper
Date Posted: October 10 2024 at 07:19
moshkito wrote:
Starshiper wrote:
For me, Vangelis' Albedo 0.39 remains
the benchmark of space-orientated yet organic electronic music from the
1970s because of its masterful blending of cosmic soundscapes,
innovative synthesiser methods, and profound thematic study of space and
humanity's role within it. All of these elements evoke a transcendent
auditory experience that still sounds fresh to these ears.
/..../
Blade Runner /..../
Even though I am aware why so many people
are enthused about the Blade Runner movie, I, for one, do not count
among its fervent fans. Not even the Blade Runner soundtrack works to me
as much as "See You Later" album featuring Jon Anderson from the same
period of the early 1980s; that's possibly Vangelis' most "prog-rock" record
he ever released as a solo album. The strange fact that "See You Later"
was never released in the United States before being added to the 2017
"Delectus" compilation box set may be the cause of the lack of attention
that Vangelis enthusiasts from the U.S. typically give to the "See You
Later" LP from 1980.
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: October 10 2024 at 22:36
^ Memories Of Green from See You Later was actually later used on then Blade Runner soundtrack. For a long time the Blade Runner soundtrack was unavailable and only an orchestral version was released which was distinctly odd. I would have liked the soundtrack of The Bounty to be released, I loved that for the music even more than Blade Runner which I loved mainly for the film itself. I like the See You Later album and the modern (for the time) electro beats of Multi Track Suggestion especially. Clever clever artist. He was able to be a lot more eclectic than most music composers but Hollywoood wanted that Chariots Of Fire thing after that movie became a massive hit and that somwhat bedeviled him for years and seemed to create a source of resentment from then great man which was a shame.
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: October 10 2024 at 22:43
Dellinger wrote:
Besides Pulstar and the Blade Runner end titles, which other electronic songs would be up there?
I would refer to his album Themes. Love that as a compilation album as it includes previously unreleased Vangelis music from the Bounty as well as a few other films.
There are other 'songs' such as Alpha, To The Unknown Man, Multi Track Suggestion plus everything off his lovely 90's album Voices which I personally adore.
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 11 2024 at 07:19
richardh wrote:
...
He was able to be a lot more eclectic than most music composers but Hollywoood wanted that Chariots Of Fire thing after that movie became a massive hit and that somwhat bedeviled him for years and seemed to create a source of resentment from then great man which was a shame.
Hi,
I think (do I think at all???) ... he had the best with a few directors and what Hollywood had to offer was not a director that knew music, and worse ... could use it.
Hollywood, is not exactly "known" for music ... more likely what radio calls "jingles" in their films to help decorate the bathroom ... so to speak. I get really tired of that piece of music during the kissing scene ... goodness, how that seems ugly these days ... and so not sexy! I keep thinking that Prince Charles, drunk and kissing a lamp post would be more fun and the music more interesting ... but Hollywood? I would almost state that Hollywood is better known for MUSICALS, than the music, and both you and I can hum a few tunes off those .... easily enough!
But in the specials about Vangelis, both on video and LP (promos from the record company in the old days of FM) what he is against is what he calls "commercial music" ... and he wants his freedom, and both directors for "Chariot of Fire" and "Blade Runner" allowed him the freedom to look at the dailies and such. And it makes a difference, although I am not sure that Hollywood will allow that with any composer, as that is one person that is not in the "top tier" for a movie ... the producers first, the stars second, the coke dealers third, the caterers fourth, the extra girls fifth, the script handlers and page turning duty girls sixth ... and somewhere AFTER the film is made, comes the composer of the music, hopefully create something memorable ... I doubt that any of these movies will allow a composer a name anywhere near the Cruise! Other than a girl, of course!
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: October 11 2024 at 10:17
richardh wrote:
^ Memories Of Green from See You Later was actually later used on then Blade Runner soundtrack. For a long time the Blade Runner soundtrack was unavailable and only an orchestral version was released which was distinctly odd. I would have liked the soundtrack of The Bounty to be released, I loved that for the music even more than Blade Runner which I loved mainly for the film itself. I like the See You Later album and the modern (for the time) electro beats of Multi Track Suggestion especially. Clever clever artist. He was able to be a lot more eclectic than most music composers but Hollywoood wanted that Chariots Of Fire thing after that movie became a massive hit and that somwhat bedeviled him for years and seemed to create a source of resentment from then great man which was a shame.
Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: October 11 2024 at 11:01
Vangelis - Theme from Cosmos - in memory of Carl Sagan, who's now up there somewhere amongst the billions and billions of heavenly bodies.
Posted By: Starshiper
Date Posted: October 12 2024 at 00:46
richardh wrote:
^ Memories Of Green from See You Later was actually
later used on then Blade Runner soundtrack.
And in my opinion,
the greatest track in the Blade Runner soundtrack is Memories of Green.
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 13 2024 at 06:48
Starshiper wrote:
richardh wrote:
^ Memories Of Green from See You Later was actually
later used on then Blade Runner soundtrack.
And in my opinion,
the greatest track in the Blade Runner soundtrack is Memories of Green.
Hi,
This is tough ... because SOUNDTRACKS are not exactly about "songs" and things for us to like or not like ... they are about pieces of music that decorate the picture even better, and I do not think this specific track used was meant to be a "song" for our enjoyment ... it is a part of the romantic notions and expressions that were used in this film, many of which are very different to our ears ... but to determine a soundtrack by its songs? I'm not sure it is the right thing at all ...
And, in the end, Vangelis' talent ended up with an OSCAR and he will be remembered for a long time for his incredible musical legacy, soundtracks or not.
This is specially important in regards to the very open and lively discussions that Vangelis offered many times in regards to "commercial music" ... and his work was very important in this area ... just hard to believe that all we can think of is a "song" ... and not even how it was used in the film, which was done beautifully and with a lot of care and appreciation for Vangelis' touch on the keys. Very few ... VERY FEW ... film directors have a love and respect for the music, to make sure it is VISIBLE in the whole thing and an important part of the film ... Maurice Jarre, Ryuichi Sakamoto and a couple of others, come to mind ... and all three have OSCARS in their closets! And they got those for a good reason.
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Starshiper
Date Posted: October 13 2024 at 08:24
moshkito wrote:
Starshiper wrote:
richardh wrote:
^ Memories Of Green from See You Later was actually
later used on then Blade Runner soundtrack.
And in my opinion,
the greatest track in the Blade Runner soundtrack is Memories of Green.
Hi,
This is tough ... because SOUNDTRACKS are not exactly about "songs"
I
agree, of course, that soundtracks are not exactly about the tracks,
but Memories of Green—which infuses the ambience and permeates with its
ethereal atonality and minimalistic sounds—features in the scene of
Blade Runner when Rachael first visits Deckard's flat, and in my view,
it is the central piece of the film's score. Only Vangelis' detuned
piano sound can evoke such a wide range of emotions.