Since their inception in
1970, Tangerine Dream have been a vanguard force in the field of synthesizer
music, producing numerous movie soundtracks and other sonic gems.
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Spanning three decades and
remaining a driving influence in electronic music are not easy achievements,
but this band has delivered time and again, expanding the boundaries of
instrumental ambience.
Their sound has evolved over
time, from drifting ethereal qualities, to cyclic sequencers, to newage
sedateness, to the driving intensity the band now displays.
TANGERINE DREAM: Mars
Polaris (CD on Tangerine Dream
International)
Recorded as a tribute to
the ill-fated Mars
Polaris Lander, this 71-minute CD features a highly rhythmic and often
energetic sonic portrait of this ambitious exploration mission and outer
space in general.
Although the band is known
primarily for its synthesizers, Tangerine Dream's instrumentation has always
included powerful guitar and sinuous percussive tempos.
And although percussion remains
a strong framework for their music, the band (now comprised of veteran
Edgar Froese and his son Jerome) mark their real power with the electronics.
A splendid mixture of keyboard
riffs and unworldly sounds, coalescing into sharp songs that invigorate
the spirit and entrance the mind ... sometimes even stirring the feet with
their rich rhythmic sense.
The melodies are vibrant
with energy, driven by a vital sense of composition intended to awaken,
not lull. A grandeur echoes within Tangerine Dream's music, melodies swell
the soul until it explodes from the limits of one's fleshly vessel.
This album is an excellent
example that invalidates most people's misconceptions regarding so-called
"newage" music.
Although Tangerine Dream
often work in pieces of epic length, the songs on this CD are restricted
to shorter form, averaging six to ten minutes.
This results in a compression
of the above-mentioned power, giving the tuneage a tighter flow that does
not lose one's attention with any slow-build of cycles.
Instead, the pieces hit hard,
grabbing listeners and catapulting them instantly into the adventure of
outer space, drenching the void with a drama and tension that is as exhausting
as it is inspiring.
RealAudio samples:
Pilots
of the Ether Belt
Astrophobia
TANGERINE DREAM: Valentine
Wheels (CD on Tangerine
Dream International)
After hopping from label
to label for nearly three decades, Tangerine Dream have finally established
their own record label, a vehicle not only for their current endeavors,
but one that affords listeners a glimpse into projects previously only
experienced by ardent fans.
"Valentine Wheels" is a sonic
document of the band's Shepherds Bush Empire concert of November 6, 1997.
For their 1997 world tour,
Tangerine Dream expanded their line-up from Froese father and son, adding
Emil Hachfeld and calling back ex-member Zlatko Perica.
At this London concert, the
band bridged classic pieces ("Poland", "Warsaw in the Sun", "Dolphin Dance",
"Stratosfear" [sample],
"Le Parc" -- best known to American audiences as the theme from the Streethawk
TV series -- and the always impressive "Betrayal" from their Sorcerer
movie soundtrack) and more recent compositions ("Waterborne" [sample],
"Sundance Kid" [sample],
"Silver Scale", and "Beach Theme").
This 59-minute CD blends
these musical eras together, often seamlessly, into an emotional flow that
spans three decades of source material.
The music is dynamic, but
rarely intrusive -- although it is difficult to ignore, especially when
the guitar commences its eerie wail.
"Valentine Wheels" is full
of incidents that steal the breath and thrill the audiophile.
RealAudio samples -
Stratosfear
Waterborne
Sundance
Kid
TANGERINE DREAM: Tournado
(CD on Tangerine Dream International)
Another document from the
band's 1997 world tour, this album features the same live line-up as "Valentine
Wheels" and a wholly different set of songs.
Here, the pieces are culled
from more recent releases, featuring such songs as "220", "Firetongues"
[sample],
"Girls on Broadway", and "Lamb with Radar Eyes" [sample].
Those familiar with these
songs might recall that the LP versions often lacked a sense of power or
majesty, coming from a period in which the band lapsed into more sedate
tuneage.
Here, though, we find these
sedate pieces infused with incredible vigor and almost deafening sparkle.
This live set breathes strength and brilliance into these songs, producing
a 70-minute CD that demands attention and respect.
RealAudio samples -
Firetongues
Little
Blond in the Park of Attractions
Lamb
with Radar Eyes
TANGERINE DREAM: Ambient
Monkeys (CD on Tangerine Dream
International)
This release is another document
from the band's 1997 world tour, but features yet another totally different
example of music.
Here, you get a taste of
the pre-concert taped ambient music played while the audiences prepared
themselves to experience Tangerine Dream live. Do not be deceived by that
description, for these pieces are far from minimal.
The music features many of
the musical frequencies common to Tangerine Dream's signature sound, blending
these keyboard tonalities with samples of environmental sounds such as
waves, trains and animal screeches.
The result is often abstract,
but rarely boring.
Although the melodic factor
is sparse throughout this 45-minute release, rhythms emerge, but fleetingly
-- a pity too, for several of the brief melodies are quite interesting
and deserve further expansion.
RealAudio sample -
The
Seventh Propeller of Silence
TANGERINE DREAM: Dream
Encores (CD on Tangerine
Dream International)
Here we have another example
of live Tangerine Dream, but not a specific performance.
The contents of this 72-minute
CD feature a collection of encore pieces spanning the band's live sets
from 1986 to 1997, culled from concerts played all over the world.
Although a clever gimmick
guaranteed to appeal to fans of Tangerine Dream, the real power of this
release is found in the music itself.
Thrilling, energetic and
emotional, these pieces are prime examples of the qualities that established
the band's international fame as electronic musicians of considerable importance.
You will thrill to the heavenly
melodies delivered via majestic synthesizers. You will be energized by
lively E-perc that captures an inner rhythm and starts the head swaying
and the foot tapping.
Your heart will soar with
the emotional grandeur of the music -- for what is more grand or emotional
than an epic encore at the end of a concert almost as physically draining
for the audience as it was for the performers?
Included are two non-Tangerine
Dream compositions: Lennon & McCartney's "Eleanor Rigby" and Hendrix's
"Purple Haze".
The band's treatment of the
Beatles' classic is gentle and sentimental -- up to the point where it
explodes with an unexpected fury that is both reverent and sensational.
Their version of the Hendrix
song borders on raucous, dominated by searing guitars and traditional drums.
RealAudio samples -
Thief
Yang And The Tangram Seal
Rolling
Down Cahuenga
TANGERINE DREAM: Quinoa
(CD on Tangerine Dream International)
This 50-minute CD compiles
tracks from previous rare releases available only to fan club members,
adding ten minutes of new material.
You get a strong dose of
domineering ambience here. Ambient with a beat, often quite a driving beat.
Swimming electronics and blood-quickening melodics.
The title piece, a 28-minute
opus [sample]
originally released in 1992 as a limited 1,000-disc fan club pressing,
is filled with breathtaking peaks and churning rhythm. Dueling sequences
of epic quality vie for the listener's attention.
"Voxel Ux" [sample]
was originally the prize for an online competition on Tangerine Dream's
Internet page in 1996. Until now, only one copy of this song existed, so
you can all rejoice that this melodic composition is finally commercially
available. Revel to its lush piano and calming temperament...just in time
for it to switch gears and roll into an ascendant heavenly grandeur, punctuated
by imperious percussion.
"Lhasa" is the new piece,
being the first movement from the band's proposed "Tibetan cycle" project.
Here, the sonics are predominantly softer, more contemplative, with sweeping
electronics and snowflake accents. Expect no ethnomusical strains, for
the "Tibetan" flair here is clearly inspired by lofty heights of chilly
portend.
RealAudio samples -
Voxel
Ux
Quinoa
TANGERINE DREAM: Sohoman
(CD on Tangerine Dream International)
This time, let's dip way
back to Tangerine Dream's concert at the Regent Theatre in Sydney, Australia,
on February 22, 1982. The band line-up was Edgar Froese, Chris Franke and
Johannes Schmoelling.
During this period, the band's
music was less percussive, comprising overlapping layers of keyboard-triggered
sequenced electronics. Despite the absence of snappy percussives, the melodies
were still fluid and dynamic, with surging tones conspiring to achieve
a dreamy urgency.
Fast-paced movements wash
over the audience, immersing the listeners in a thick pulse of inescapable
sonic drama. That was what the Aussies got to experience -- and now so
can you.
For 43 minutes, this CD takes
you on an excursion of playful wave forms, cycles that revolve and build
with sneaky evolutions. As the CD is labeled "Part One", we can only hope
to be given the opportunity to enjoy more of this past performance in the
future.
RealAudio samples -
Convention
of the 24th
White
Eagle
Logos
Part One (Excerpt)
TANGERINE DREAM: Timesquare
(Dream Mixes Volume 2) (CD on Tangerine
Dream International)
Back in 1995, Tangerine Dream
released a CD entitled "The Dream Mixes", wherein the band revisited tracks
from albums of then-recent vintage.
"Timesquare" is labeled as
"Dream Mixes Volume 2", but these remixes are so extreme as to elude
recognition. Delivering high on the satisfaction chart, the music on this
58-minute CD is extremely uptempo and exciting.
RealAudio samples -
Jungle
Jacula
Towards
the Evening Star (blue gravity mix)
TANGERINE DREAM: Transsiberia
(CD on Tangerine Dream International)
Here we have a soundtrack
composed to accompany a film about the Russian express railway experience.
(Okay, so this one has little to do with outer space, but it is a thrilling
listen and thoroughly enjoyable -- a nice capper for this overview of recent
Tangerine Dream releases.)
From its initial sonic outburst,
the rhythms of railway travel are mimicked by the band, now back to just
Edgar and Jerome Froese.
There are no train samples
here, the duplication is achieved with melodic construction. Percussives
softly create the hushed clank of metal wheels on tracks, while chattering
keyboards mimic the vehicular sway. Add to these tasty subtleties the presence
of intriguing melodics and driving riffs.
For 53 minutes, the music
will transport you from your domicile, conjuring the illusion of foreign
transportation through desolate panoramas. Guaranteed to immortalize railway
travel as Kraftwerk memorialized the long-distance car trip with "Autobahn".
RealAudio samples -
Yaroslaw
Station
Baikal
Sunrise
Chingan
Night
What do you think? Send your
comments to the editor.