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Topic: Tangerine Dream, ACMI Theatre Melbourne 20-11-2014Posted By: Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Subject: Tangerine Dream, ACMI Theatre Melbourne 20-11-2014
Date Posted: November 20 2014 at 08:48
TANGERINE DREAM - `SORCERER' LIVE at the ACMI THEATRE, MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, 20TH NOVEMBER 2014:
Line-Up: Edgar Froese Thorsten Quaeschning Ulrich Schnauss Hoshiko Yamane
Tangerine Dream performed a continuous two hour set tonight again in Melbourne, Australia, playing directly under a large cinema screen showing the `Sorcerer' film above them. With the dialogue in the movie completely muted, this new Tangerine Dream line-up that debuted a few days ago presented all of the themes from the original 1977 soundtrack, some reworked completely by way of band member Hoshiko Yamane's violin and cello replacing electric guitar. In addition, there was essentially an extra 75 minutes of music added for the occasion, and the band performed uninterrupted for two straight hours.
The band presented the most hypnotic, brooding and dramatic soundtrack possible, with plenty of thick and loud (perfectly emulated!) Mellotron and a variety of beats that gave the music more of a futuristic quality than ever before. A real highlight was watching both Thorsten Quaeschning and Ulrich Schnauss' mastery of improvised keyboard build in several slowly unfolding soundscapes that reached an unbearable level of tension! Founder Edgar Froese offered delicate and perfectly restrained contributions throughout, and all four musicians complimented each-other beautifully.
As good as the Melbourne Town Hall performance was from a few days before, this was far superior and even more immersive. More along the lines of the much-loved Tangerine Dream music of old, it actually succeeded in making the band sound more thrilling, vital and relevant than ever.
If you have the opportunity to see the band perform this soundtrack in your own country, make sure you see it!!
******
My partners in crime for this event were my best buddy Harry (Prog Archives member Stratcat), music blogger Bruce J and his lovely wife, and I also got to meet two passionate fans Geoff K and Colin A from a T'Dream fangroup, and they couldn't have been more genuine.
Thanks to all of the above for a wonderful evening, and for Tangerine Dream delivering the PERFECT night of progressive-electronic music!
Some of my own personal photos from the night follow:
Replies: Posted By: Meltdowner
Date Posted: November 20 2014 at 13:14
A more intimate concert, then. Nice Did anyone paid attention to the movie?
Posted By: Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Date Posted: November 20 2014 at 18:11
Yes, Sam, and I TOTALLY forgot to mention that it was more intimate, thanks!
It was difficult to pay attention to the movie because:
a) It was totally muted, so no film-based audio was present. b) The music the band was playing was two straight hours of music, and although it had all the material from the original soundtrack worked in, the music never tried to actually match up specifically with the visuals.
There was a guy sitting directly in front of me that was reading the film subtitles on his phone the entire time though!
Just come across this clip, a short one posted by Geoff, one of the T'Dream fans I mentioned above, give you a bit of an idea what the show looked like:
Posted By: Meltdowner
Date Posted: November 20 2014 at 18:39
If they matched everything with the movie, it would mean so much more work from them and it would be like The Dark Side of the Rainbow
The guy was probably waiting for the oportunity to see the movie in the theatre
Really good recording, they sound just like then, and the audience was strangely quiet.
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: November 20 2014 at 18:46
Great review, A-B-B! Sorcerer is one of TD's darkest works. Looks like it was a good show.
Meltdowner: TD audiences listen to the music, they don't scream "Free Bird"!
Posted By: Meltdowner
Date Posted: November 20 2014 at 19:03
^ Althought I would like to listen to a TD cover of Free Bird
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: November 21 2014 at 00:36
Meltdowner wrote:
^ Althought I would like to listen to a TD cover of Free Bird
They did cover "Purple Haze"! The first time** was on the Rockoon tour, which made it onto album as 220 Volt Live. Overall, it was nowhere near as good as the Optical Race tour, but Edgar's guitar showcase piece "Hamlet" was better than his guitar spotlight in '88.*
* = California Theater, San Diego, CA (sadly, this venue was closed)
** = Wiltern Theater, Los Angeles, CA (same place where I saw ELP on the Black Moon tour)
In my own opinion, it's a step in the right direction, and definitely a world away from the percussion/lead saxophone-driven music their music was stuck in for many years. It's lovely and ambient, and I think this new line-up will really deliver the goods in short time. The newest member Ulrich was a bit of a revelation at the live shows, especially this `Sorcerer' one, and with bringing in modern influences, I think he'll provide a freshness to them. We'll see, I guess!
I did pick up several other CD's they had on sale from their more recent releases from the merchandise stand, but I did leave that tedious Brian May live one well behind!
*****
My friend Bruce, who again attended this show, has done another thorough write-up of it, as well as providing some comparisons between the original `Sorcerer' LP and the recently released double CD kind-of live recording `Sorcerer 2014', you can read it here if you're interested:
Posted By: Toaster Mantis
Date Posted: November 21 2014 at 04:01
Did they have any opening acts with them? When I saw them live in Copenhagen back in April this year, they had two of the Cluster guys with them and also Neu!.
------------- "The past is not some static being, it is not a previous present, nor a present that has passed away; the past has its own dynamic being which is constantly renewed and renewing." - Claire Colebrook
Posted By: Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Date Posted: November 21 2014 at 08:14
Toaster, no opening act for this cinema screening performance. The band went on stage just after 7:15pm, finished at 9:15pm, then came back at 10pm for a second two hour performance! I only stayed for the first one.
Lucky you to see those kind of guest acts though!
Posted By: HolyMoly
Date Posted: November 21 2014 at 08:17
Thanks for the review and pics. I'd really like to see them in concert some day. I'm mostly familiar only with their 70s and 80s material, so I'd like to experience their current material in the flesh, it would be a great introduction for me.
------------- My other avatar is a Porsche
It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle if it is lightly greased.
-Kehlog Albran
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: November 21 2014 at 14:05
Aussie-Byrd-Brother wrote:
Verslibre, in answer to your question about the new album `Mala Kunia', I reviewed it just the other day here:
In my own opinion, it's a step in the right direction, and definitely a world away from the percussion/lead saxophone-driven music their music was stuck in for many years. It's lovely and ambient, and I think this new line-up will really deliver the goods in short time. The newest member Ulrich was a bit of a revelation at the live shows, especially this `Sorcerer' one, and with bringing in modern influences, I think he'll provide a freshness to them. We'll see, I guess!
I did pick up several other CD's they had on sale from their more recent releases from the merchandise stand, but I did leave that tedious Brian May live one well behind!
*****
My friend Bruce, who again attended this show, has done another thorough write-up of it, as well as providing some comparisons between the original `Sorcerer' LP and the recently released double CD kind-of live recording `Sorcerer 2014', you can read it here if you're interested:
Thanks, I'll read that. I just checked your review...the "Quantum Years," eh? Nice that Ed wants to head into adventurous territ'ry again, but this again reminds me of what he said circa the late 1980s. Actually, I heard of TWO strange things back then, neither of which came to be:
1) A fan asked Edgar point-blank after a concert on the 1988 tour if Tangerine Dream was going to "end" soon, i.e. was Edgar going to disband TD? His answer was yes. (Based purely on hearsay, but as we know, exactly the opposite happened as TD churned out albums like a conveyor beginning not long after.)
2) Edgar said in a print interview that TD was heading into sonic territory (via advanced synthesizer/sampling technology that only they would have hands on, or whatever) of which other bands and musicians of their ilk would have extreme difficulty tailing them...
...okay, that was a load, because Optical Race turned out to be the last album in a great run in which every album sounded almost completely different thematically, compositionally and electronically from the last. Without Chris Franke's stunning sound library, TD sounded like they chose to work with presets caked with delays and reverbs. The collective sound of Lily on the Beach, Melrose, Rockoon, and Turn of the Tides was homogenized and extraordinarily underwhelming. Tyranny of Beauty was a step back in the right direction, but Goblins' Club effectively took them off "autobuy" status for me.
Posted By: Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Date Posted: November 22 2014 at 18:37
Verslibre, thanks for those tid-bits of information, very interesting!
Urgh, `Rockoon'....isn't that one a shocker! So faceless and charmless!
I don't think this new disc `Mula Kunia' is a radical reworking of their sound, but it's a little more subtle and ambient, so hopefully even better results will emerge from this line-up soon.
Over the course of the two concerts I attended, I picked up several discs - the three CD `Phaedra Farwell Concerts 2014', `One Night in Africa', `Sorcerer 2014', `Franz Kafka: The Castle', `Chandra: The Phantom Ferryman part 2', and a double compilation `Booster VI'. Listening over them all over the last few days, they're all perfectly nice, each with standout tracks, plenty of nice ones, and some throwaways too - so pretty much par of the course with their track record for some time now!
Posted By: Meltdowner
Date Posted: November 22 2014 at 18:47
Nice souvenirs! I only know Booster from those and it's very nice music. I never listened to the Sorcerer album but after reading that last review I really want to.
Posted By: Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Date Posted: November 22 2014 at 18:52
Thanks, Sam, I haven't listened to that `Booster VI' yet, but I'm back at work starting tomorrow, so that's when I'll be spinning much more music again.
Both the 1977 and the recent 2014 versions of `Sorcerer' are superb, but it's best to treat them as two different things as opposed to comparing them! Both stand up well on their own merits
I just found out that all of these Australian shows were professionally recorded, so there's a good chance they'll receive some sort of official release in the near future. That would be a nice way to remember the shows. Take that, my dodgy Goblin live in Melbourne bootlegs!
Posted By: Meltdowner
Date Posted: November 22 2014 at 19:20
It's 80's TD with updated beats, don't expected much from it but it's enjoyable.
I'll have to listen to both then
Nice! Nothing's better than bootlegs of concerts you went to By the way, I noticed their last DVD was recorded here, but it has a terrible rating: they probably played for half a dozen people because it was not even mediatized They also played here in 1980 that must have been something, playing the newly released Tangram
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: November 25 2014 at 01:29
Aussie-Byrd-Brother wrote:
Verslibre, thanks for those tid-bits of information, very interesting!
Urgh, `Rockoon'....isn't that one a shocker! So faceless and charmless!
I don't think this new disc `Mula Kunia' is a radical reworking of their sound, but it's a little more subtle and ambient, so hopefully even better results will emerge from this line-up soon.
Over the course of the two concerts I attended, I picked up several discs - the three CD `Phaedra Farwell Concerts 2014', `One Night in Africa', `Sorcerer 2014', `Franz Kafka: The Castle', `Chandra: The Phantom Ferryman part 2', and a double compilation `Booster VI'. Listening over them all over the last few days, they're all perfectly nice, each with standout tracks, plenty of nice ones, and some throwaways too - so pretty much par of the course with their track record for some time now!
How much in the way of "new sounds" are present on Sorcerer 2014? The original album has such a distinct quality that I'm not exactly anticipating a new version of it.
The Booster series is pretty good. There's a good deal of filler, but I'd also check out Booster II and III. The link below might also lead to a selection of Tangerine Dream compilations and soundtracks.
Posted By: Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Date Posted: November 26 2014 at 07:36
Verslibre, the new version is well worth getting! The first disc, the live performance of the new `Sorcerer' album sees the original music expanded and reinvented. Many of the tracks are much longer now, but all sound perfectly suitable to the mood of the original.
The second disc, meant to be `unused' and unreleased related recordings is probably a bit of a con, but it actually contains simply some of the best modern music they've ever released. It's a lot more ambient, less obvious and has quite a cool dance element throughout it, lots of subtlety and restraint, and is a world away from the sax and extravagant percussion era from a few years back. Please, give this set a try, and I think you'll discovered two completely different albums but both very high quality.
*****
My friend Colin, who I met at the above show, has uploaded almost 40 minutes of footage from the performances (I should have added in my review that the band performed a first two hour show, had an hour break in between, then came back and did it all again for a second screening/live performance!), and with his kind permission, I can post the link below:
Posted By: Guldbamsen
Date Posted: November 26 2014 at 10:04
So this was the show I missed in Copenhagen
Have to admit, that looks absolutely brilliant. I would've loved to see that. Thanks for making me feel so jealous (yet again).
Anyways, very nice pics and stories here Michael. Kangaroo the PA correspondant
Btw I haven't been too impressed with the latest couple of TD albums - make that most of what Froese has been dishing out the past 20 years (A good long vacation and some weed might do him some good methinks), but I'm seriously thinking about buying that Sorcerer 2014 release.
------------- “The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams
Posted By: Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Date Posted: November 26 2014 at 17:50
I know what you mean, Dave. As much as I like some of them, there's a sameness to a great quantity of the modern albums, and I know how you feel about ultra-clean production.
But I really think the second disc is pretty special, and a world away from the borderline AOR instrumentals they were stuck doing for some time. There's none of those cheesy schmaltzy tracks either. Check these tracks from the second disc out when you have the time and see if they are more to your taste.
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: November 27 2014 at 14:53
These are surprisingly good! Thanks for posting them. Btw, is that Edgar playing guitar on "Crash" or is it Zlatko/Gerald/Thorsten?
Posted By: Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Date Posted: November 27 2014 at 16:34
Your guess is as good as mine, Verlibre! So many of their modern albums list the music as `perfomed by Tangerine Dream', even though the actual songs get more specific writing credits. Very vague on specific details, and quite frustrating!
To add to the confusion here, the `Sorcerer 2014' CD set does those things as well, but doesn't list the violin/cello player Hoshiko (who appears on at least two or three of the pieces), and despite there being none of the sax/percussion elements from the previous few years, there's a picture of the back cover of the previous line-up with the two other women!
Glad you liked those tracks!
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: November 30 2014 at 17:47
Hi,
I hope this makes it to DVD ... I miss it all already and I saw TD 4 times!
------------- 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: Guldbamsen
Date Posted: December 04 2014 at 06:26
While it's undeniably TD and about 10 times better than what most modern Berlin School ripoff acts are dishing out, I still think it sounds like something I've heard before over the last 20 years. Nothing new under the sun.
Yes I know, I'm a hard man to please It would be a fair bit easier for Froese and co if they hadn't already released soooo many albums, but they have -and when the sound and feel of the music 99% of the time is knitted in with the classic 80s 90s TD melodic synth work, it gets harder and harder to distinguish between eras, albums and tracks....at least it is for this puppy.
Sorry Kangaroo, I know you dig this and why shouldn't you? I guess I'm too picky...
------------- “The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: December 04 2014 at 13:15
Guldbamsen wrote:
While it's undeniably TD and about 10 times better than what most modern Berlin School ripoff acts are dishing out, I still think it sounds like something I've heard before over the last 20 years. Nothing new under the sun.
Yes I know, I'm a hard man to please It would be a fair bit easier for Froese and co if they hadn't already released soooo many albums, but they have -and when the sound and feel of the music 99% of the time is knitted in with the classic 80s 90s TD melodic synth work, it gets harder and harder to distinguish between eras, albums and tracks....at least it is for this puppy.
Most TD after Chris Franke's departure in '87 seems to suffer for lack of compositional diversity. More chances were taken in '70-'87 but particularly on albums like Force Majeure, Tangram, Exit, White Eagle (etcetera) where individual sections within longer pieces/suites were so varied yet seamless. Merge the edge they had back then to the sounds of the day, which IMO were the best they ever employed (especially when Johannes was in there), and TD essentially becomes their own hardest act to follow.
And yes, none of the rip-off acts have ever been able to approximate the goodness found on any of the albums above, nor the concurrent live albums, though Arc's Fracture is one superb elaboration on the Rubycon sound.
Posted By: Guldbamsen
Date Posted: December 04 2014 at 13:56
I know a few other people who prefer that period of TD, and while Force Majeure is one of my absolute faves of theirs, it's still the early years that I prefer. Stuff like Alpha Centauri, Rubycon, Atem and Ricochet is where it's at for me. I do like Exit and Tangram, but the darkness and intangible nature of their earlier music seem to have vanished in favour of the more melodic and does indeed also come across a lot easier on the ears.
Haven't heard that Arc album, but a few Berlin School resurrection releases that really connects with me. Steve Moore's Light Echoes from 2012 is certainly one of them. Another would be Free System Project's Pointless Reminder. Again, nothing new under the sun, but the music is just so damn effective!
With modern TD I feel they can do anything. Heck Froese practically influenced most of the styles he's been incorporating into the mix since the start of the 80s, so his palette should be big enough to branch out beyond the norm.....I just feel that he doesn't. Maybe he's too caught up in it to see or hear or feel it. I'm not sure, but as I've said oh so many times before, the man needs a break or something new to inspire him. I know he gets all these ideas from ancient civilisations and old myths, but if those ideas don't receive an equally fresh and perhaps most importantly DISTINCT sound of their own, it then very quickly turns into this perpetual synth soup with little if anything remotely unique about it.....and that is a shame I feel, especially when talking about one of the greatest wizards behind the keys.
------------- “The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams
Posted By: Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Date Posted: December 04 2014 at 18:35
Sorry they didn't do much for you, David! I know you have a liking for a particular sort of era/sound/production!
Although I totally agree about a...sameyness (if that's even a real word?! ) to much of the modern Tangerine Dream albums, and yes, there are a TON of them, I do find that repeated listens reveals plenty of imaginative themes and ideas. It's very easy with so many albums to play one once, not hear much on it to instantly impress, then discard it right away. But I take the time to listen to one particular album of theirs over and over to really learn the compositions, and in some ways, I find it baffling that Edgar and Co are full of so many different ideas. I guess not all those ideas are to everyone's tastes, but I suppose I still find him a little more inspired than other older progressive related artists?
Hmmm, I'm sure I had a point in there somewhere!
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: December 05 2014 at 11:57
After the Schmoelling era, I love the Baumann era. Both trios created irrefutably sublime works.
The funny thing is that one of my all-time favorite TD albums (was my #1 for many years), Force Majeure, is the duo of Froese and Franke with Klaus Krieger on drums, held over from the unique quartet formation of F/F/K with flute/voice man Steve Jolliffe (he himself being a former TD member). Or you can call them a trio, since there are three.
Force Majeure is an incredibly diverse album in TD's discography. It's the third and final album in what I call their "progressive rock" phase that started with Stratosfear. These albums have so much guitar (and some bass) and keyboard sounds that are not synthesizers — plus real drums — that they're keyboard-based prog, they're not "electronic" albums per se. (That phase was re-ignited with the assimilation of wunderkind Johannes Schmoelling on Quichotte aka Pergamon.) Heck, there's even a section of "Force Majeure" that reminds me of Neu! With Stuntman released the same year in 1979, Edgar was in top form as composer/melodist/instrumentalist. And we even got another sequenzer tour-de-force in "Thru Metamorphic Rock" (following the first few minutes with Ed's crafty guitar solo that Michael Mann used for Thief).
I do love Alpha Centauri, Green Desert, Phaedra and Rubycon. The spectral sound of those albums was something TD did best. As we know, many emulators, but too few who could really match it.
With the Schmoelling era, their synthesizer sound technology peaked and so did the quality of their sounds. The only time the compositions and sounds seems to lack a little something was on Hyperborea. "Sphinx Lightning" sounds unfinished. "Cinnamon Road" is a nice ditty but nothing spectacular. The standout is the beautiful title piece, which is probably one of the best things TD ever recorded.
Posted By: Guldbamsen
Date Posted: December 05 2014 at 12:18
Force Majeure is the only real space rock album they did imo....maybe that's why I love it so dearly. Through Metamorphic Rocks is still one of my alltime faves. Love the sound of that broken cabinet and the fact that they decided to run with it and keep it on the album. That's balls!
I do like Hyperborea and that title track indeed is mesmerising. S'got a "shimmery" quality to it that I really dig.
I don't remember which famous musician once uttered this, but I am also very partial to the 'silences' in music. The room you leave open to breathe. I think that is another way of relegating the kind of "feel" that I think went missing up through the 80s and 90s with TD. I guess it got swapped for the exploration of the new synths and as you rightly point out: the compositions. Again, it's down to taste
------------- “The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: December 05 2014 at 12:49
Guldbamsen wrote:
Force Majeure is the only real space rock album they did imo....maybe that's why I love it so dearly. Through Metamorphic Rocks is still one of my alltime faves. Love the sound of that broken cabinet and the fact that they decided to run with it and keep it on the album. That's balls!
I do like Hyperborea and that title track indeed is mesmerising. S'got a "shimmery" quality to it that I really dig.
I don't remember which famous musician once uttered this, but I am also very partial to the 'silences' in music. The room you leave open to breathe. I think that is another way of relegating the kind of "feel" that I think went missing up through the 80s and 90s with TD. I guess it got swapped for the exploration of the new synths and as you rightly point out: the compositions. Again, it's down to taste
Once Schmoelling left is when the idea of "overpopulating" compositions with all sorts of sounds/FX started simmering, IMO. There were sonics to spare with Johannes, but they knew when to build up and break down. The last sections of "Tangram Set 2" and the cerebral space of "Remote Viewing," for example. The second-to-last part of "Tangram Set 2" isn't unlike something Vangelis would have done on Blade Runner. Schmoelling was the right man to complete the band.
Underwater Sunlight is the last album that sports the qualities I loved their music for: the wistful if not somber melodies juxtaposed with jubilance, the sense of mystery, etc. Even if that album ushered in a penchant for All Things Digital (and sampled guitar, not real), the compositions were superb.
Two albums later, Optical Race got some of it right but in hindsight comes off half-assed. Good tracks: "Marakesh," "Mothers of Rain," "Cat Scan," "Sungate," (most of) "The Midnight Trail." The rest was disposable.
Then came Lily on the Beach with a few flashes of the TD I knew, but with Melrose, I knew something was...wrong.
Posted By: Guldbamsen
Date Posted: December 05 2014 at 13:07
verslibre wrote:
Guldbamsen wrote:
Force Majeure is the only real space rock album they did imo....maybe that's why I love it so dearly. Through Metamorphic Rocks is still one of my alltime faves. Love the sound of that broken cabinet and the fact that they decided to run with it and keep it on the album. That's balls!
I do like Hyperborea and that title track indeed is mesmerising. S'got a "shimmery" quality to it that I really dig.
I don't remember which famous musician once uttered this, but I am also very partial to the 'silences' in music. The room you leave open to breathe. I think that is another way of relegating the kind of "feel" that I think went missing up through the 80s and 90s with TD. I guess it got swapped for the exploration of the new synths and as you rightly point out: the compositions. Again, it's down to taste
Once Schmoelling left is when the idea of "overpopulating" compositions with all sorts of sounds/FX started simmering, IMO. There were sonics to spare with Johannes, but they knew when to build up and break down. The last sections of "Tangram Set 2" and the cerebral space of "Remote Viewing," for example. The second-to-last part of "Tangram Set 2" isn't unlike something Vangelis would have done on Blade Runner. Schmoelling was the right man to complete the band.
Underwater Sunlight is the last album that sports the qualities I loved their music for: the wistful if not somber melodies juxtaposed with jubilance, the sense of mystery, etc. Even if that album ushered in a penchant for All Things Digital (and sampled guitar, not real), the compositions were superb.
Two albums later, Optical Race got some of it right but in hindsight comes off half-assed. Good tracks: "Marakesh," "Mothers of Rain," "Cat Scan," "Sungate," (most of) "The Midnight Trail." The rest was disposable.
Then came Lily on the Beach with a few flashes of the TD I knew, but with Melrose, I knew something was...wrong.
Funny how we hear music differently. I mean that in a good way. The manner in which you talk about Tangram makes me think of Atem ...but I know where you're coming from and I can detect what you're hinting at in the music. The few albums I really dig with the new sound that came with Tangram and Exit are actually two live releases. Quichotte and Logos. That may have something to do with both of them having one foot planted in the TD of old with loooong brooding pieces where those 'silences' are allowed to breathe if you will. Together with the highly melodic discourse of the surrounding piano, keys and synthesisers it just kinda works for me.
Then again, all this talk of TD in the early 80s makes me want to revisit the hell out of Exit, Tangram, Hyperborea, White Eagle and Underwater Sunlight. Gotta say, Underwater Sunlight is an album I haven't heard in years. I remember it having some of the most horrendous sounding synths I'd ever heard in my life I might feel differently today though(I actually might - some of the stuff I'm digging at the moment is so incredibly far removed from my younger self's musical inclinations that it simply defies belief. I certainly wouldn't have believed you if you told me at 25 that I'd been majorly into space disco at 32).
------------- “The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: December 05 2014 at 14:25
Guldbamsen wrote:
Funny how we hear music differently. I mean that in a good way. The manner in which you talk about Tangram makes me think of Atem ...but I know where you're coming from and I can detect what you're hinting at in the music. The few albums I really dig with the new sound that came with Tangram and Exit are actually two live releases. Quichotte and Logos. That may have something to do with both of them having one foot planted in the TD of old with loooong brooding pieces where those 'silences' are allowed to breathe if you will. Together with the highly melodic discourse of the surrounding piano, keys and synthesisers it just kinda works for me.
Quichotte aka Pergamon is stellar. JS' first 'official' appearance, with that beautiful piano arrangement. Parts of the album were remixed for Wavelength, while some of Logos reappears on The Keep. Just about anything done while Johannes was in the band is golden, IMO. I just have an issue with certain elements of Hyperborea which I think could have been better.
Firestarter is essentially an original TD album. It's loaded with music found nowhere else.
Guldbamsen wrote:
Then again, all this talk of TD in the early 80s makes me want to revisit the hell out of Exit, Tangram, Hyperborea, White Eagle and Underwater Sunlight.
Exit is sublime from beginning to end, IMO. In fact, something I don't usually do is listen to all these albums we're talking about in sequence, which I was doing yesterday, save for White Eagle. I hadn't done that in a LONG time. I think I'm going to put on Stratosfear pretty soon.
Guldbamsen wrote:
Gotta say, Underwater Sunlight is an album I haven't heard in years. I remember it having some of the most horrendous sounding synths I'd ever heard in my life
The sounds are starkly digital. Compared to the analog gear they wielded up through '83, it's night and day. The integrity of the compositions overcome this, though.
Guldbamsen wrote:
I might feel differently today though (I actually might - some of the stuff I'm digging at the moment is so incredibly far removed from my younger self's musical inclinations that it simply defies belief. I certainly wouldn't have believed you if you told me at 25 that I'd been majorly into space disco at 32).
Would you believe me if I told you I knew a guy 20+ years ago who listened to TD and nothing else? I tried to throw some Mark Shreeve at him, but if it wasn't TD or a TD alumnus, he wasn't interested.
One thing we can all agree on: Tangerine Dream will certainly never produce anything of this sort again.
Posted By: Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Date Posted: December 07 2014 at 07:32
Any Aussie prog fans (Are they many who visit the Archives?! ) who attended the Melbourne shows, you now have a nice way to remember the shows (so throw away those bootlegs! ).
Coming January 15th, an official 3 CD set will be released with both the entire Melbourne Town Hall show, with an additional CD comprised of material from the two `Sorcerer' live shows!