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Prog-Electronic that is not Ambient? |
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moshkito ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 18066 |
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Hi, I disagree. There is some outstanding material by TD after that, and as expected, it was slightly different, and I wonder if it wasn't (at the time), Chris's ability to get past the behemoth synthesizers he was still in love with, and still played in his first solo albums, although it appeared they got simplified and he had a much better control of them, something that Edgar stated in the book, was always a problem and caused the other members to have to improvise while Chris found what was needed for the piece they were trying to do. It wasn't easy, but Edgar admits that most often Chris did get it right, though not always the same. It was, just another change in their history, but the amount of material that ended up coming out and its presentation on stage was fantastic and second to none. I don't think there EVER WAS another band that was so clean and so mature in concert, and then even be able to add moments of improvisation to the show ... it's all over their live concerts that were video'd, and it's just sad that it is not appreciated as much as it should have been. Even the time with Jerome was nice, not specifically outstanding, but it was a much needed ability to be added to the band, and right after the addition if Iris (along with Linda) made it a superb live show ... but folks still think that she should have stayed at home making babies, or the keyboards and not played the saxophone or the flute. Sadly and crazy that their 3rd (or 4th or 9th) life in music is not enjoyed. It should be!
Edited by moshkito - October 08 2021 at 09:36 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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siLLy puPPy ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic Joined: October 05 2013 Location: SFcaUsA Status: Offline Points: 15344 |
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Kraftwerk even though they are listed here as krautrock
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BaldFriede ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: June 02 2005 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 10266 |
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I totally agree; with "Optical Race" TD went totally downhill, even if they did an album inspired by one of my favourite books afterwards: "Der Engel vom westlichen Fenster" by Gustav Meyrink. (The title was badly translated as "The Angel from the West Window" by TD; correct would have been "The Angel of the West Window").
Edited by BaldFriede - October 06 2021 at 16:20 |
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ProfPanglos ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: July 25 2017 Location: Austin, Texas Status: Offline Points: 624 |
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I think TD lost their fire to a great degree when Christopher Franke left. For me, there was a noticeable change, a lack of edge & complexity, when Franke departed. As much as I love the band, Optical Race was the beginning of the end of the TD I knew and loved. Not to say there are some really good tracks here and there after Franke left, but there was also a tremendous amount of... what I would call 'canned,' somewhat 'cheesy' music that they churned out.
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moshkito ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 18066 |
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Hi, It is possible and likely, but in the end Friedkin would have to deliver a film that involved too much music that could not (at the time) be shown as much as Edgar felt, at least. Friedkin, while a nice director, was not really one for using music well in most of his films, unlike some other directors who were not afraid to display the music to its better effect, right down to creating magic moments in film, like the ending of BLADE RUNNER or the use of music in CHARIOTS OF FIRE, and some other things done by Ryuichi Sakamoto that the director allowed to let the music live. Or even how Werner Herzog lined up his work along the Popol Vuh music in the earlier days! Some of those "hours" of tapes, were likely used in the live concert series, possibly updated and improved, but you and I do not know exactly which material it was, except that what was used in the film was not even close to what TD did in their final shows with Edgar in Australia. I imagine that when Bianca passes, Jerome will be in charge of everything, and we might find some new things in there that are not being seen, or shown at this time, possibly because Bianca might have been privy to some comments by Edgar while he was alive. That's another story, I imagine. Rather than have the "new" version of TD do something too electronic to be classically inspired, I would love to see them bring out some of the stuff that is buried, although I think that Bianca might be too attached to it to allow it to be seen, or perhaps it is thought to not be as complete and clear as a lot of TD's music seems to be, but (again) I'm not sure what is and isn't at this point. All I can say is, that I miss TD a lot, and that the version without Edgar is lacking a lot of feeling, and I find it too electronic, rather than musical but that might be considered an opinion of mine, rather than the reality. I miss the "trips" and the newer version of TD did not have a tripping feel as before, which to me breaks the "prog-electronic" thing as much as the "ambient" thing. Both of those types of pieces were about extending your feelings, not just extending solos on top of solos!
Edited by moshkito - October 06 2021 at 10:22 |
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verslibre ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: July 01 2004 Location: CA Status: Offline Points: 18576 |
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I do think Friedkin would have an idea. Apparently he's in possession of many hours of tapes of music Edgar sent him. In an interview, he said he was returning them to Bianca. I was under the impression we'd get to hear some of what's on them, but so far, no developments.
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moshkito ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 18066 |
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Hi, I'm on the bubble about this, since for me TD is not about "prog electronic" or "ambient" at all, but in the early days a lot of excursions about the behemoth synthesizers and later, what I would call "pastoral classical music done electronically", that we could close our eyes to and fly away with. Sometimes the title of the pieces in a subtle sort of way mentioned a book or a piece of art, and while this might have been Edgar's way of identifying how he saw a lot of his music, in the end, I have never felt it was "wrong" or out of place. Listening to his Kafka album, is almost better than reading the book (The Castle), and the same goes for a lot of his music, going back to STRATOSFEAR, though I think that the earlier material might be considered "ambient", 20 years before the term even came around!!!!!!!!! But they were a very fine "interpretation" of many things, and ideas, even if the titles were a bit strange and out there! Another example ... I would rather listen to the live concert of "SORCERER", than I would to sit and watch the movie, since what he did with the music is something that even the director could never have understood or thought about! ... and it was finally done in its entirety in the last concert series that Edgar Froese did in this life before he departed. I don't know that we are capable, anymore, of just listening to music and enjoy it, WITHOUT having to put some sort of label in it ... it's just scary to me, that we must label something in order to even consider putting a little ear to it! At that point, it is not about the MUSIC and its ART ... it's about glorifying the fan, and ignoring the artist! |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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ProfPanglos ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: July 25 2017 Location: Austin, Texas Status: Offline Points: 624 |
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Try the band Younger Brother. "Last Days of Gravity" is a great album. So is Benji Vaughan's solo album "Even Tundra."
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Nogbad_The_Bad ![]() Forum & Site Admin Group ![]() ![]() RIO/Avant/Zeuhl & Eclectic Team Joined: March 16 2007 Location: Boston Status: Offline Points: 21320 |
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Ah, but should they be? Surely they're prog?
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Ian
Host of the Post-Avant Jazzcore Happy Hour on Progrock.com https://podcasts.progrock.com/post-avant-jazzcore-happy-hour/ |
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A Crimson Mellotron ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: September 10 2020 Location: Sofia, Bulgaria Status: Offline Points: 5690 |
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It's an interesting topic... I think I have not thought of most prog electronic albums as ambient. Yes, there are a few Tangerine Dream records that are 'proto-ambient' or something like this, but overall I think prog electronic albums are just... prog electronic albums. Ambient is another genre, and believe me, there are no ambient artists on PA. (For example, check Atrium Carceri... I can't imagine seeing them here
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chopper ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20032 |
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I'm not an expert in this genre by any means but I like The Utopia Strong album (featuring snooker maestro Steve Davis).
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suitkees ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: July 19 2020 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 9050 |
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^^ Thanks, verslibre! I don't know Quantum Fantay, so I will try to get a listen to their work. I remember having listened to a Synergy album a long time ago and it didn't really stick to me. I don't remember which album it was, I guess it was either Sequencer, or Games, or Audion..., but I don't think it was the later Metropolitan Suite... Will give it a listen too...
Edited by suitkees - August 02 2021 at 12:33 |
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Saperlipopette! ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Offline Points: 12422 |
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verslibre ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: July 01 2004 Location: CA Status: Offline Points: 18576 |
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If you're looking for more bands like the Ozrics (since that's not prog EM), they're out there. One is Belgium's Quantum Fantay.
I love that album, too, so that gives me a better idea of what you may like. Another album came out the same year — Synergy's The Metropolitan Suite — and it has a similarly symphonic feel. It doesn't sound like Jarre, TD, Vangelis or anyone else (but Larry Fast has never sounded like them). If you've never heard it, try Vangelis' 1988 album, Direct. It's wonderful.
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suitkees ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: July 19 2020 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 9050 |
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^ Definitely! I mean, Riley, Beaver, Krause, TD, Jarre, Kraftwerk, and others still... they were all pioneers in some more or less defined way. I actually like the first two TD albums, but after those they mostly just bore me, however "pioneering" their subsequent efforts maybe were. It is also about "it touches me or it doesn't touch me." I listen with my "guts", in that sense... That said, regarding the electronic music of the late 40s, 50s, 60s (and I'm thinking of the likes of Pierre Schaeffer, Pierre Henry, Dick Raaijmakers, Tom Dissevelt, Delia Derbyshire, to name just a few), they were mostly working in laboratories (of universities or private companies like Philips). So yes, that wasn't suited for touring. But these electronic pioneers were a major influence on those electronic pioneers of the 70s and beyond that adapted these experiments into more "popular" (or "rock" if you wish) music. That's the intriguing part of musical influences and prog, in general, is full of those influences coming from completely different domains (classic, electronic, folk, etc...). (BTW, the concept of "song" wasn't used by the OP, and I don't think it has much value in this present discussion... but that just as a side note...) (edit: on another side note, it is true also that cinema very early on has introduced electronic instruments into their sound tracks. I think it was Edgar Varèse who incorporated as first composer an electronic instrument in a composition, but composers and sound engineers for cinema were on it very quickly. I have no literature on that at hand, I think, but it is an interesting subject on itself...)
Edited by suitkees - August 02 2021 at 09:39 |
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moshkito ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 18066 |
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Hi Terry Riley Beaver and Krause for sure. Probably the two best known of them. Most of these, though, are very experimental and a serious attempt at getting some sort of control over the electronic new instrument, and most of them failed, in the sense that things could not be replicated easily enough. Thus, their ability to go on tour and take the instruments was prohibitive, and this was a very serious issue with Tangerine Dream on their first several years in concert. They could not redo things, and that was the main reason why their bootlegs were so HOT ... it was all different, not to mention that according to Edgar's book there were massive issues with the equipment not warming up enough, and the weather and the room temperatures, one of which was freezing (not enough electricity to handle it all) and guess what ... a live album came out of it ... POLAND! In freezing temperatures! None of these and TD's early material comes close to "prog" or "song" ... it is all pretty much a free flow or a stream of consciousness based on the sounds they were able to create. The book that will really help us learn more about this would be CHRISTOPHER FRANKE's if he ever got around to do it, but his break with TD was not good, and to this day he has remained quiet about it, and decidedly ... it looks like musically retired now! There would be more, for example, there were electronics that were not specifically credited in the film FORBIDDEN PLANET and some other really far out sci-fi early films that really pushed the genre until the time that Ray Harryhausen brought it all to a stop with Bernard Herrmann music. However, Bernard's music was not really electronic, but the use of different instruments differently that allowed for moods and touches that were way out of town and far out. It is epic in many ways, but not something that the "rock" oriented folks in PA (for example) might enjoy left and right, but they are (by far!) some of the nicest and most exciting film soundtracks ever made. There is an article, and I can not find it, that even describes the experimental stuff in electronica in the 60's and went so far as to say that in the West it was more free form and tripped out, and in the East it was more thought out and less trippy, and it seemed to take a different angle. In many ways, Beaver and Krause would fit as "west" while Terry Riley would fit as "east". I'm not specifically well learned on how electronica came to Europe, specially Germany, but in the late 60's it was the Berlin group and school that helped bring it all to the foreground to what it has become today. Those early folks at that school, were very keen on "non-Western music concepts" which no doubt helped their work come alive within improvisation, which was a big thing at the time, in theater and film and some of the arts in Germany. Edgar Froese said that it was a new time, no past references (all destroyed) and many folks only had themselves and the instrument to look at and they came up with something that was different. This last detail is a very important detail in the growth of electronic music. That a lot of it ended up mixed with rock, is way later and in many cases not even as interesting as the originals and the great ones.
Edited by moshkito - August 02 2021 at 08:46 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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suitkees ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: July 19 2020 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 9050 |
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Interesting question indeed. I'm not a fan of the ambient kind of electronic music and most albums of TD, Schulze, Jarre a.o. I find them quite boring. And although most of them have been very progressive regarding electronic music, I cannot really classify them as - dominantly - rock and thus neither as prog rock. But well, that's another debate and not that interesting. What I personnaly would consider electronic prog is e.g. Ozric Tentacles (but here on PA they are in another sub-genre). Since we talk about him lately, I quite like Geoff Downes' The Light Program album. I wouldn't have been surprised to see the two Chris Evans & David Hanselmann collaborations (Stonehenge and Symbols) here on PA, although they might be considered more as synth dominated pop-rock than as prog... I'm also very intrigued by the electronic pioneers of the 50s and 60s, but we're not at all in the "rock" realm here (although some of Pierre Henry's album's might qualify...).
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Progishness ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: December 10 2020 Location: Planet Rhubarb Status: Offline Points: 2565 |
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Pretty much the same here, as I'd also like to get more into electronic prog, but stuff which is more akin to the likes of Kraftwerk than Tangerine Dream.
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I prophesy disaster ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: December 31 2017 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 4918 |
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I had been thinking about asking a similar question, although I was considering phrasing the question as asking for electronic music that doesn't sound like Tangerine Dream. However, I do think we're asking for something similar. I was thinking that the creators of electronic music typically do so with a particular mindset about what electronic music is, whereas in truth, electronic music is simply music created using electronic sounds, and shouldn't really dictate a style of music. On the other hand, such music might be placed in different subgenre, even though it is electronic music. |
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richardh ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 29452 |
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most of the highly rated ones are ambient based. Too me far too many are overrated although I do enjoy Edgar Froese - Epsilon In Malaysian Pale which (excuse the sport analogy) knocks it out the ball park in terms of ambient electronic for me. However I enjoy the following which don't really draw from ambient ideas as much Jean Michel Jarre - Magnetic Fields/ Rendez-vous Tangerine Dream - Cyclone/Underwater Sunlight Neuronium - Heritage
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