Showing posts with label tangerine dream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tangerine dream. Show all posts

Sunday 14 October 2018

Log #107 - The Beauty Of Simplicity

Eddy Bamyasi

Miles Davis - Bitches Brew CD2
Air - Moon Safari
Tangerine Dream - Zeit CD2
Boards of Canada - Geogaddi
Granados - Goyescas
William Ackerman - Past Light

Here we have another lovely piano CD in the shape of Granados courtesy of the excellent Naxos label. Naxos do a very comprehensive series of budget classical CDs which are a great way to get into the world of classical music.

Enrique Granados's music, like his Spanish compatriot Isaac Albeniz, is more well known in its classical guitar form than the original piano versions. Indeed the Spanish flavour of many of these pieces works brilliantly for Spanish guitar and pieces by both composers have formed the set lists of the best classical guitar players throughout the 20th century, initially through Segovia who initiated many of the guitar transcriptions from such heavyweight composers, through Williams and Bream and others in his footsteps. Hence you are generally much more likely to have heard Asturias or Sevilla or Oriental on guitar than piano.

I'm not sure Segovia's approach was right. In an almost single handed effort to get the classical elite to take his instrument seriously he personally transcribed many pieces originally written for piano, or other classical instruments like the violin, for guitar. He also commissioned established composers from the classical world to write for the guitar. The results of both approaches are mixed. For one thing the versions for guitar are fiendishly difficult which stands to reason when you consider the differences between the instruments. Some things possible on a piano are physically not possible on a guitar. Similarly the sustain possible on a violin is likewise not possible on a guitar. Segovia was also too hasty in dismissing wonderful music written by composers who wrote exclusively for guitar - composers who understood the unique characteristics of the instrument most notably a lot of the South American composers such as Barrios and Lauro who did not come up to Segovia's snobbish standards. So generally I steer clear of guitar transcriptions of classical pieces. Despite some exceptions like a lot of these Spanish pieces (and Bach interestingly) they are usually better in their original forms.

While on the subject of guitarists we have our first sighting of Will Ackerman. Continuing the snobby theme there are many classical guitarists (Segovia would definitely be one) who wouldn't give someone like Will Ackerman the time of day. They would consider his playing and his music beneath them as it is relatively simple and played on a steel string acoustic guitar rather than a "proper" classical.

The Beatles are very nice young men, no doubt, but their music is horrible.
Segovia on hearing George Harrison describe him as the "Father of us all".


I'm pleased I've grown out of that attitude both as a listener and a player. We should all appreciate that the simplicity/complexity scale is no yardstick by which to measure the greatness of music. Furthermore as a player it is much better to master a simpler piece well with musicality and feeling, than to struggle through a car crash of a complicated piece. The great King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp was classically trained but said hearing one Jimi Hendrix chord meant more to him than the whole classical repertoire. For me seeing Tommy Emmanuel (an acoustic guitarist who doesn't even read music) live for the first time about ten years ago absolutely blew my mind (he was so good it made me want to throw my guitar away forever). Will Ackerman is not in the same league as Tommy Emmanuel but I have very much enjoyed both playing and listening to his beautiful music. In fact I play his albums much more than Tommy Emmanuel's who is more of a live showman than a recording artist and his compositions don't quite come across the same way on record. That's interesting isn't it? You need the spectacle as the music itself is not enough. It's a case of seeing someone do something in the flesh and thinking "wow, how did he do that?". This becomes meaningless on a recording. I've been playing a lot of ambient and DJ/electronic music recently. It is lovely to listen to, but as a live spectacle does it have the same effect? No, it's completely different. [Btw, don't you get tired seeing those best guitarist of all time posts on facebook groups? It's so boring and predictable. The answer btw is Tommy Emmanuel (not Jimmy Page, or David Gilmour].

Guitarists mentioned here:from top to bottom, left to right, Lauro, Hendrix, Emmanuel, Barrios, Williams, Bream, Segovia, Fripp, Ackerman (and no Page or Gilmour)

So back on message - Will Ackerman has recorded many a solo guitar album for the Windham Hill new age label which he co-founded. This album Past Light is a collaboration with other musicians including labelmates Mark Isham and Michael Hedges, who flesh the sound out with guitar, synthesizer, piano, cello and fretless bass. The Kronos Quartet also guest on one track. It's gorgeous relaxing music. Not particularly earth shattering or memorable, but lovely to listen to when in the mood.

A very small point for Will Ackerman obsessives (if indeed there are any out there). On my album cover the word Visiting is very faintly visible after Past Light. With a keen eye you can just about make it out on the picture above. Visiting is the opening track on the album but the album itself is definitely called Past Light and not Past Light Visiting.






Sunday 7 October 2018

Log #106 - So Much Good Music Under The Sun

Eddy Bamyasi

I'm excited about this week's listening. Sometimes it's hard to think of 6 albums to listen to, but this week the CDs were positively jumping off the shelf like those springy sticky toys we used to have.


This was because my interest in ambient minimalist electronica was re-ignited and this opened up a wealth of potential listening from the likes of Tangerine Dream, Squarepusher, Aphex Twin, Four Tet, and Brian Eno.

Debussy - Preludes Books I and II
Penguin Cafe Orchestra - Union Cafe
Tangerine Dream - Zeit
Boards of Canada - Geogaddi
Fripp and Eno - No Pussyfooting
Blue States - Nothing Changes Under The Sun

Take Tangerine Dream for example. Last year, or maybe the year before, through this blog I became reacquainted with the band mainly via their classic mid 70s albums like Phaedra and Force Majeure.  Checkout a track like Cloudburst Flight if you aren't convinced. But I hadn't ventured deeper into history to hear much of their early 70s work which was much more ambient before they started introducing pulsed rhythms.

Zeit seemed to be the go-to album for most fans of early period Tan Dream. I bought the new remastered double album version containing the original double album plus a live disc. I haven't even got on to the live disc yet. The original album is gorgeous. It's just what I want from an ambient piece of music. Consisting of just 4 "side-long" tracks of chilling dark drone music - you can safely stick it on repeat all day, and go about your business. It's great to listen to passively, as background music.

It's very unobtrusive and as such creeps up on you very subtly. You pick up different things each time you walk past your speaker, things you haven't noticed before.

Contrary to what you may expect I actually find incredible depth and interest in this sort of music. Because it is so subtle there is a lot to discover that isn't immediately obvious. New sounds and textures reveal themselves gradually over repeated plays. It really challenges conventional understandings of what music is.

In comparison The Penguin Cafe Orchestra are relatively mainstream. This album is also a "double" in old money. I think it suffers slightly from covering too many different styles across it's 16 tracks. There are straight forward classical like pieces (these are the most successful), ambient sound effects, and whimsical throwaways. As such, as a whole it does not convey the mood or continuous aesthetic of a piece like Zeit. My favourite PCO album is their debut, Music From...

Fans of instrumental electronic music are in safe hands with the assured Boards of Canada. With only 4 full length albums over a 20 year career (Geogaddi from 2002 is officially their second not counting the excellent extended EP Twoism with which they announced themselves in 1995) they practise quality over quantity.

Spoken word samples are backed by ghostly synth melodies over down tempo hip hop beats. I always think their particular type of analogue synth music sounds vaguely out of tune with it's variations, clicks, flutters, crackles and bends; this makes it all the more organic and earthy.

When I first bought Fripp and Eno's No Pussyfooting (1973) I remember whizzing through the two side long tracks in double quick time trying to find where they changed (I had it on cassette tape). Of course they didn't change and I was left confused for a long time before realising the point of this classic ambient collaboration. Ironically later releases of the album included a half speed/double length version of one side of the album - The Heavenly Music Corporation (as well as a recording of the entire album in reverse!). I'm not sure how I feel about this. To me it devalues the original, making it seem even more random and thrown together than it did already.

Urban myth says that on release the album was accidentally played on BBC radio backwards (I have no idea how this happened, it sounds very unlikely, but I'm not surprised that the only one who noticed was apparently Brian Eno himself who phoned in to complain). 

Nevertheless with it's epic distorted Frippertronic guitar improvisations over Eno's loops and phased drones it remains an early classic of the ambient genre and entirely unexpected coming from two artists respectively members of the bands King Crimson and Roxy Music at the time. Great cover too.


Fripp and Eno recorded a second album Evening Star (1975). When later asked about a promised third album that had never materialised Fripp sarcastically replied it had already been done in the form of Eno's celebrated collaboration with David Byrne - My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts which appeared in 1981 (Fripp did receive a writing credit).

Cover album this week is Nothing Changes Under The Sun by Blue States which is the stage name (or more fittingly the studio name) for producer Andy Dragazis. The music is less ambient and more chilled down tempo electronica along the lines of Zero 7, Kruder and Dorfmeister, and most of all Air. If you like Air's Moon Safari you'll love this too.

As I've said before this sort of music can run the risk of becoming wallpaper or elevator fodder. It's a fine line but the right side of the line is maintained when the melodies are as consistently good as they are here on beautiful tracks like Diamente or Trainer Shuffle or Heroes' Elegy

Hear Diamente below (with apologies to email readers for whom I don't think videos render - please click into the source blog or try this link >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eC6fD_j0Cqw ):


Finally, just occasionally you just need some classical music on a dull Sunday morning, and when you need some classical, you can't get better than Debussy. I'm no expert on classical music but for me he seems to bridge the gap between traditional melodic classical music and more modern discordant 20th Century "classical" music. So you get beautiful melodies, but with originality and a modern edge. It's a win win.

Also there's not much of him as I understand (willing to be contradicted by any Debussy experts out there?). This is a big advantage in any music, but particularly classical where you have not only 400 years worth of history but also multiple copies of the same pieces. Debussy didn't write any symphonies and all his orchestral works can be entirely found on one classic double album, the famous Phillips edition:



This is so worth getting. Even if you don't think you've heard any Debussy before you will recognise some of the tracks on here. It's a beautiful record that will reward repeated listens. It's your duty to try it even if you are an outright punk rocker! It might just change your life.

[..actually classical is a definition oft misused in classical music. It refers to a particular era in music, rather than a style. So classical is a term equivalent to baroque, or romantic, or renaissance for example. But for the purposes of this blog, and most people's understanding, classical stands for all music that people generally understand and accept as "classical", ie. stuff that uses traditional acoustic wooden and brass instruments like violins and oboes and stuff and is often performed in chambers, quartets and orchestras and... you know what I mean] ... I'm glad you've cleared that up. Ed.

The album in the slot this week isn't actually this one. We have here Debussy's books of solo piano preludes. These are mostly short tracks - mostly very pleasing, although as I mention above, with an edge. It's not pure easy listening that's for sure. Some of these tracks have been made famous in ads and films like The Usual Suspects.



Sunday 3 June 2018

Log #88 - Tonight's The Zeit

Eddy Bamyasi

A really strong series this week bolstered by new investments. I've been planning to get Tangerine Dream's classic Zeit album for ages and finally cashed in an amazon voucher for this and Midlake's Trials of Van Occupanther album. Charity pick ups this week come from US rockers Eels and UK festival favourite Scott Matthews. If that wasn't enough bringing up the rear is many people's favourite Neil Young album. I'm not sure Tonight's the Night is his very best but in a strong field I'd have it in my top 5.


~

1. Tangerine Dream - Zeit
2. Tangerine Dream - Zeit cd 2 / The Klangwald Performance
3. Midlake - The Trials of Van Occupanther
4. Eels - Shootenanny!
5. Scott Matthews - Passing Stranger
6. Neil Young -  Tonight's The Night

~

Zeit

Although this album is famously one (and probably the best) of Tangerine Dream's early ambient releases (before they introduced the pulses and rhythms) there is a lot of listening here. You need to play such static music a bit more before you can really appreciate it's subtle intricacies.  And then there is the bonus "live" album on top too.  It's gonna be great. Tangerine Dream are definitely one of the groups who have enjoyed a new lease of life in my listening since starting this blog. Tbc.

Shootenanny!

I've never heard any Eels before. I am only aware of the cover of their early album with the strange looking girl with the big eyes. This is pretty good in a rock guitar sort of way although many would accuse them of "rock by numbers". The laid back singing reminds me of that bunch of bands around Whiskeytown, Wilko, Golden Smog, Ryan Adams - not a bad bunch at all but this isn't particularly remarkable on early listens (it is so hard to be different in this crowded field). This is one of the more exciting tracks:



Passing Stranger

This, his 2006 debut album, is excellent stuff from Scott Matthews who obviously has a talent for acoustic, electric and slide guitar, soulful singing, and an ear for a great hook and a liking for some world music flavours. It even sounds a bit like Led Zeppelin (and Jeff Buckley and James Morrison) in places - not what I was expecting. Again a crowded market, being that solo soulful singer songwriter guitar player area, but different enough to warrant further listens.



Midlake

As I've said before this is an even more crowded market but this band is class. This was their "breakthrough" album released in 2006. First track "Roscoe" is a good place to start:



Tonight's The Night

Neil Young's Tonight's The Night is almost certainly his bleakest album (and there have been a few). Officially the final part of his "ditch" trilogy it was actually recorded in 1973 shortly after Time Fades Away and before 1974's On The Beach, but the release was delayed until 1975.

Most of the tracks were recorded over one night with the band in an apparent drug and drink induced state of relaxation. The songs are extremely raw and live. Whereas the roughest edges have been honed off of the similar On The Beach recording the production here, where it exists at all, is rough and ready, warts and all. Some of the songs sound out of tune and the volume and stereo separation is variable.

I used to play this depressing album to cheer me up. Things could never be as bad as this.

However it works! The band literally sound like they are in your front room. The underlying quality of the songwriting, the melodies, the bar room authenticity of the live band, and the heart rendering beauty of Young's solo tracks on piano or acoustic guitar, all shine through to make this one of his best loved collections.

Kids, this is what real music sounds like.

The album explores the depth of Neil's pain over the heroin overdose deaths of Crazy Horse's Danny Whitten and roadie Bruce Berry. The bookends of Tonight's The Night are the title track which opens and concludes the album - the two versions are pretty indistinguishable, and apparently (in response to heckles to "play something we know") Young would repeat the song more than once in the same set when touring the album in late 1973:

Bruce Berry was a working man
He used to load that Econoline van
A sparkle was in his eye
But his life was in his hands
Well, late at night when the people were gone
He used to pick up my guitar
And sing a song in a shaky voice
That was real as the day was long

Early in the morning at the break of day
He used to sleep until the afternoon
If you never heard him sing
I guess you won't too soon
Because people let me tell you
It sent a chill up and down my spine
When I picked up the telephone
And heard that he'd died out on the mainline

Just wow, this is crushing stuff and it is relentless throughout this amazing record I will never tire of.

The personnel (courtesy Wiki) dubbed The Santa Monica Flyers included Young collaborators from the Stray Gators (Harvest)After The Goldrush, and Crazy Horse:

Neil Young – vocals; guitar on "World on a String," "Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown," "Mellow My Mind," "Roll Another Number," "Albuquerque," "New Mama," "Lookout Joe," and "Tired Eyes"; piano on "Tonight's the Night," "Speakin' Out," and "Borrowed Tune"; harmonica on "World on a String," "Borrowed Tune," and "Mellow My Mind"; vibes on "New Mama"

Ben Keith – pedal steel guitar, vocal on "Tonight's the Night," "Speakin' Out," "Roll Another Number," "Albuquerque," and "Tired Eyes"; pedal steel guitar on "World on a String" and "Mellow My Mind"; vocal on "New Mama"; slide guitar, vocal on "Lookout Joe"

Nils Lofgren – piano on "World on a String," "Mellow My Mind," "Roll Another Number," "Albuquerque," "New Mama," and "Tired Eyes"; vocal on "Roll Another Number," "Albuquerque," and "Tired Eyes"; guitar on "Tonight's the Night," "Speakin' Out"

Danny Whitten – vocal, electric guitar on "Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown"

Jack Nitzsche – electric piano on "Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown"; piano on "Lookout Joe"

Billy Talbot – bass all tracks except "Borrowed Tune," "New Mama," and "Lookout Joe"

Tim Drummond – bass on "Lookout Joe"

Ralph Molina – drums, vocal all tracks except "Borrowed Tune," "New Mama," and "Lookout Joe"; vocal on "New Mama"

Kenny Buttrey – drums on "Lookout Joe"

George Whitsell – vocal on "New Mama"



Sunday 22 October 2017

Log #56 - 3 Miles Out - a Classic, a Not Sure, and a Duffer

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Miles Davis - Kind of Blue
2. Miles Davis - Bitches Brew CD1
3. Miles Davis - Bitches Brew CD2
4. Miles Davis - Sketches of Spain
5. Tangerine Dream - The Essential
6. Tangerine Dream - Phaedra

Miles Davis was a notable absentee from last year's logs. In fact he won top prize for most notable absentee in last year's awards. But he makes an overdue comeback in this log with 3 classic albums.

Actually what alerted me this weekend was watching the brilliant (albeit shocking) Ken Burns Vietnam War documentary currently airing on BBC. Aside from the amazing photographs and footage there is also a superb soundtrack - Miles Davis's Kind of Blue beginning episode 2.

I would say (on current listening, and of course tastes can change especially with familiarity) Kind of Blue is the best of this selection, and for many not only his best ever album, but one of the best ever jazz albums from anyone.

It's difficult to compare of course. Davis's career spanned multiple decades and styles. Kind of Blue (1959) is melodic old style easy listening jazz, languid trumpet and lounge piano, immediately accessible.  It is very interesting how the first two tracks start out with the same refrain, and when I play this album I often wonder why they were separated.

I suspect jazz traditionalists were probably pretty miffed with this new direction rather as Dylan's fans were when he went electric a few year's earlier.

Bitches Brew (1970) on the other hand is not easy listening. It is jazz/rock/fusion consisting of extended jams featuring jazz rock guitarist John McLauglin - in fact it does sound a lot like McLauglin's Mahavishnu Orchestra. It's pretty random. There are grooves but Davis honks a lot of avant garde noises over the top. But it is a classic and was revolutionary in its time so I'm sure I need to play it a lot more to fully appreciate, and I will. The most demanding music is often the most satisfying in the long run. I suspect jazz traditionalists were probably pretty miffed with this new direction rather as Dylan's fans were when he went electric a few years earlier. Keeping up with the times or shaping the times?

Miles Davis's Sketches of Spain just doesn't work.

As for Sketches of Spain (1960) I must say I'm not a fan. The centre piece is an interpretation of the orchestral piece Concierto de Aranjuez - an established classic in the guitar repertoire. I just don't think it works. The original (which I'm very familiar with) is much better. If this wasn't Miles Davis it would probably be dismissed as commercial pap.

Miles Davis fronting his fusion band in the early 70s

My excellent affair with Tangerine Dream continues this week. If you want a good compilation to cover many of the best bases go for The Essential collection. If you want to dive straight into getting one or two original albums there is no better place to start than Phaedra.

Sunday 15 October 2017

Log #55 - A Whitest Boy Alive Retrospective and More Love For (Very) Early Tangerine Dream

Eddy Bamyasi

1. Tangerine Dream - The Essential
2. Tangerine Dream - Force Majeure
3. Tangerine Dream - Cyclone
4. Tangerine Dream - Phaedra
5. The Whitest Boy Alive - Rules
6. The Whitest Boy Alive - Dreams

Following my year end review a couple of posts ago I was drawn like a magnet to my Whitest Boy Alive albums. A retrospective is perhaps an overstatement considering their back catalogue consists of only two albums. It takes a few plays of each to distinguish between the two. They both follow the same format - concise catchy pop songs with whispered vocals, simple guitar riffs, electric piano, infectious bass lines and sharp snare drum beats. Surprisingly for someone who has explored and enjoyed the complexities of prog rock and classical I love both these albums despite their apparent simplicity and lack of "weight". But maybe that is why?

Actually it's simpler than that. You can have rubbish prog rock and brilliant pop. It just depends how it is done. With these albums you have a collection of beautifully crafted pop songs - practically any one of them could have been a single hit - there isn't really an "album track" or "filler" throughout both CDs.
You can have rubbish prog rock and brilliant pop. It just depends how it is done.
Dreams just pipped Rules as my album of the year for 2016/17. Not much in it apart from I heard Rules much earlier and was over familiar with some of the key tracks on there - Intentions and 1517. As for Dreams I have particularly homed in on Golden Cage and Done With You. Such brilliant bass that makes it practically impossible not to dance to or at least tap your foot.

Finally a word for the brilliant line drawings that grace their album covers, merch, and videos.

Still enjoying a late blossoming love affair with Tangerine Dream. In particular I've been playing the really early stuff (not listed here apart from Phaedra as I don't actually have them yet - so it's been a case of youtube at the office - annoyingly for the sake of a few quid I just missed out on a box set of the first 3, or even 4, albums on ebay - very silly as would cost three or four times as much new - the one I really want to get is Zeit - great cover too - another brilliant painting by Edgar Froese).
This is freak-out spacehead rock lifted to a new level...‘Zeit’ is a must listen, and unlike anything else ever made...You will not believe the places you will be taken. 
"Rockmoose" writing at Julian Cope's website http://www.headheritage.co.uk/unsung/review/690/



Sunday 8 October 2017

Log #54 - A Tangerine Dream 70s Retrospective

Eddy Bamyasi

Following the new Tan Dream Essential entry last week I've gone for a near clean sweep this week. Odd one out is one of Klaus Schulze's early solo albums Picture Music (he went on to record over 50 and this was just his 4th). Schulze was originally part of Tangerine Dream but was actually only present for their first album Electronic Meditation.

1. Tangerine Dream - The Essential
2. Tangerine Dream - Force Majeure
3. Tangerine Dream - Cyclone
4. Tangerine Dream - Phaedra
5. Tangerine Dream - Encore
6. Klaus Schulze - Picture Music

The Tan Dream debut album is a curious affair. Basically it sounds nothing like Tangerine Dream and nothing like Klaus Schulze either. Despite the album title the electronics are relatively minimal with the musicians using traditional instruments - Schulze on drums - but there is nothing traditional about their use. The music is avant garde and experimental more akin to the experimental pieces of early Pink Floyd and Can and heavily influenced by Stockhausen. It may have been an important recording in the gestation of "Krautrock" and "The Berlin School" but deserves only passing attention these days as an actual listening experience.

Ignoring a recently released "lost" tape Green Desert allegedly from their early period (although  sounding suspiciously much more modern) Tangerine Dream followed up with three ambient albums championed by John Peel amongst others: Alpha Centauri, Zeit and Atem, the latter being one of Peel's albums of the year in 1973. Although still using some traditional instruments such as flute, organ and percussion, they were now very much an electronic band.
It's electronic for sure, but these early analogue recordings with their flutters and imperfections, their swirls and waves, sound organic and very real.

Trivia Fact no. 1: Edgar Froese's baby son Jerome featured on many of the early album covers. 

In 1974 they moved to the Virgin label and released Phaedra which many regard as their best. Here they began to develop more hypnotic pulsed music particularly on the powerful title track and Movements of a Visionary. These two tracks are separated by the gorgeous lush mellotron "strings" of Mysterious Semblance At The Strand Of Nightmares. 


I remember falling asleep listening to Phaedra, a little stoned and being completely blown away by the adventure of it. It was taking me to places I had never been before. This album is the reason I’m obsessed with synthesisers. 
 Anthony Gonzalez

Rubycon followed - just two tracks - a side one and a side two. Ricochet was their first live recording - again just two tracks (there would be many more live recordings that would be released as albums - most live performances consisted of new material interspersed with improvisations based on existing tracks). Stratosfear indicated a move towards more accessible melodic compositions that would be developed through the 80s. Parts of the title track from Stratosfear would surface again in the double live album Encore (four 20 minute tracks).


Not surprisingly Tangerine Dream's music made excellent movie soundtrack material and in 1977 they scored William Friedkin's Sorcerer film. Although a departure from their epic side long compositions the album is actually a very coherent work.

Trivia Fact no.2: Sorcerer is Stephen King's favourite film.

By the end of the 70s Tangerine Dream were venturing towards a more expansive progressive rock direction. The drums and guitars returned for two of my favourite albums - Cyclone and Force Majeure - but in a much more conventional rock style. The former even featuring lyrics and vocals to mixed reviews. Each album consisted of just three tracks of epic proportions with titles like Thru' Metamophic Rocks and Rising Runner Missed by Endless Sender.


Tangerine Dream 1978, Steve Jolliffe far right

Trivia Fact no.3: Much maligned singer Steve Jolliffe from the 1978 Cyclone album was actually briefly in Tangerine Dream with Klaus Schulze in 1969 on saxophone, flute and keyboards.

And there my Tangerine Dream exploration pretty much ends as they entered a more melodic commercial synthesizer era through the 80s and who knows what since. 50 years since their formation and literally 100s of albums later, they are still going in some form despite the death of Edgar Froese in 2015 - a new album Quantum Gate was released last month with writing credits to Froese and good reviews. Maybe time to give their post 1980 output a listen starting with this one!

Trivia Fact no.4: Baby Jerome Froese actually joined Tangerine Dream in 1989 and stayed with the band until 2006.


3 of the best from the 70s:


Sunday 1 October 2017

Log #53 - Tangerine Dream were no Satsuma Nightmare

Eddy Bamyasi

Firstly I offer a thank you to all my readers as my blog enters it's second year. I hope some of you have stumbled across something of interest and discovered some new music. In listening to my music and writing these pieces I have both discovered new things and rediscovered old too! The list below is an example of that - I had never heard any Kanye West before last week (apart from a car crash live appearance on some awards show a couple of years ago) and I only recently bought Bob Marley's classic Catch a Fire album although I was very familiar with the famous joint touting cover (the music was not what I had assumed it would be). Yet at the opposite end of the scale I've been a fan of Neil Young and Tangerine Dream for over 30 years.

1. Tangerine Dream - The Essential
2. Kanye West - Late Registration
3. James Morrison - Songs for You, Truths for Me
4. Eilen Jewell - Sea of Tears
5. Bob Marley - Catch a Fire
6. Neil Young - On the Beach

I've just got to admit it. I do really like Tangerine Dream. It's probably not that cool nowadays but they are really good at what they do. And they are original. Their music is instantly recognisable even amongst the plethora (that's a Tan Dream song title if I've ever heard one) of electronic experimental instrumental music out there. They don't sound like Kraftwerk, nor Brian Eno, nor Boards of Canada. Possibly their closest contemporary may have been Jean-Michel Jarre or possibly Philip Glass in places or Aphex Twin, but their mostly drumless yet pulsed and rhythmic sequencer music is ultimately unique.
Don't think of it as music, just put this album on, turn it up loud, and let the experience wash over you and take your brain to far off places!
Actually I feel a gnod music map coming on - let's see if my hunches are right?


Other maps are available from the brilliant gnod.com

This album is yet another collection. There are loads out there and I generally avoid non original albums. But I knew enough from the regular albums to spot that this was a particularly good selection from their peak Virgin label days of the mid to late 70s and contains at least 60% of music I have not got on CD elsewhere. Crucially the tracks are full length - to maintain that hypnotic atmosphere so characteristic of Tan Dream's music this is essential.

The original knob twiddlers, Froese, Franke, Baumann

Quoting from the sleeve notes - "With a mere six tracks from six different albums, but more than seventy minutes long, this compilation serves as a perfect portrait of the sheer vastness of Tangerine Dream's music. Enormously epic and otherworldly tracks were the artistic trademark of the most important and internationally most successful German instrumental band ever. If Kraftwerk were the pioneers of electronic beats, Tangerine Dream were most definitely the pioneers of electronic atmosphere, the forerunners of Ambient."



For the aficionados the track listing is -

1. Movements Of A Visionary 7:55 taken from the album Phaedra 1974
2. Rubycon (Part One) 17.18 taken from the album Rubycon 1975
3. Stratosfear 10:35 taken from the album Stratosfear 1976
4. Cloudburst Flight 7:26 taken from the album Force Majeure 1979
5. Tangram (Part One) 19:47 taken from the album Tangram 1980
6. Hyperborea 8:38 taken from the album Hyperborea 1983

This collection is an excellent Tan Dream sampler for the beginner. For those who want to delve deeper into this weird and wonderful world I would recommend the original albums Force Majeure and Phaedra. The former is more conventional prog rock fayre with real guitars and drums as on the brilliant Cloudburst Flight (also present in the above collection). The latter is an ambient classic which forms a bridge between their early ambient soundscape drones like Zeit and their more commercial rhythmic albums. I'm also very fond of Cyclone which splits the fans being the only album with vocals. [Personally recorded cassettes of mine with old school friend and Tangerine Dream authority Electric Ape under the name Satsuma Nightmare are of old curiosity interest only!]

Three great Tangerine Dream albums from the 70s, always great covers too, many painted by Edgar Froese

So once again thank you for listening and reading, and I look forward to another 52 weeks and another 312 albums in 2017/18!
A new day, a new dawn, and new beginnings - where will we go, what will we discover?






Monday 23 January 2017

Log #17 - Jaki Liebezeit (1938 - 2017) and the Motorik Beat

Eddy Bamyasi


1. The Cinematic Orchestra - Ma Fleur
2. Holger Czukay - Movies
3. Klaus Schulze - Picture Music
4. Tangerine Dream - Encore
5. Can - Ege Bamyasi
6. Can - Sacrilege

Well with a pseudonym like Eddy Bamyasi it was inevitable there would be a "Krautrock" entry sooner or later in the blog. The term "Krautrock" in music seems to have been generally accepted without too many negative connotations. Perhaps that is because the purveyors are almost exclusively held in high esteem and are frequently name-checked as hugely influential by more modern artists. Krautrock doesn't literally mean all German rock - it refers to a particular genre arising in the early 70s through bands such as Can, Neu!, Faust, Kraftwerk, Amon Duul, and Tangerine Dream, characterised (very generally speaking) by experimental electronics, and repetitive heavy beats termed motorik.

Here we have three albums shared between Can and Tangerine Dream plus solo efforts from Holger Czukay (of Can) and Klaus Schulze (of Tangerine Dream).

Breaking News! Sadly I have just heard, literally mid post, that Can's drummer Jaki Liebezeit died this week (the music selection being entirely coincidental but subsequently appropriate and poignant). I was surprised to learn he was 78, and was due to play a concert at the Barbican, London, this spring with fellow Can member keyboardist Irmin Schmidt.

Can was one of those bands that blew my mind when I first heard them. I had not heard anything like them before and a huge characteristic of their sound was Jaki's drumming. From that moment on he became, and remained, my favourite drummer.

Jaki Liebezeit behind his minimal kit and singer Damo Suzuki

Ege Bamyasi is probably the best starting point for any new Can fans. Released in 1972 with its Andy Warhol inspired soup can cover it is the middle one of the celebrated "Damo" trilogy, offering more focused grooves than both the preceding avant garde epic Tago Mago, and the following more space-prog-rocky Future Days. Can covered a wide range of genres in their music over their core career (essentially 1969 - 1979) including heavy rock, funk, jazz, and electronic, and even classical avant garde and minimalism (founding members Czukay and Schmidt studied under Stockhausen). Well known for their extended jams and improvisations Ege Bamyasi efficiently covers most components of the Can sound across seven tracks of power and beauty, all underpinned by Jaki's metronomic drumming high in the mix as beautifully demonstrated here in Vitamin C.

As well as Jaki's drumming the bone crushing rhythms were augmented by the thump of Holger Czukay's deep bass. Czukay liked to experiment in the studio with other instruments and unusual sampling, and his full ambitions were realised on a number of experimental solo albums - some with collaborators including David Sylvian and Jah Wobble. Movies must be one of the earliest pop/rock albums (1980) to draw extensively upon samples. In particular Czukay would record voices he picked up on short wave radio. The album has two short poppy tunes and two extended experimental compositions. All four tracks have enough ideas for a whole musical career! There certainly wasn't anything else that sounded like this album when I first heard it, and I don't think there is even today. If you would like to delve into the bizarre mind of Holger Czukay start with the Persian Love tidbit and then progress to the soundbite rich Hollywood Symphony.

The Can Sacrilege album was aptly named as it is a double CD of remixes (by Brian Eno, System 7, Sonic Youth, and The Orb amongst others) of revered Can classics. But I don't think purists should be too precious. It's actually very good and the tracks are different enough to be interesting but at the same time retain a lot of what Can was all about. Befitting of the release date of 1997 (and the Can blueprint itself) most tracks are of the drum and bass persuasion giving off a massive sound!

Tangerine Dream, and former member Klaus Schulze, specialise in what I call pulse music. The tracks are all instrumental (I believe Tan Dream only released one album Cyclone with vocals which was panned by the fans, but I actually think is one of their best) and usually lengthy (these two albums for instance each have single LP side length tracks of around 20 minutes each). Unlike electronic contemporaries Kraftwerk the beat is usually provided by pulsing gated synths rather than drum machines.

There is no death, there is just a change of our cosmic address.
 Edgar Froese

I guess with the emergence of popular music in the 1960s there will now continuously be artists reaching their 60s and 70s and becoming nearer to a change of cosmic address. While researching this piece I learnt that TD's founder Edgar Froese had passed away in 2015. With each passing a chance to see an iconic artist or band live for the first time passes too - a realisation that has resolved me to buy a ticket to see Damo Suzuki coming to Brighton this Spring. Damo is usually backed by a band of local (relatively unrehearsed I assume) musicians at each gig - an intriguing concept not entirely alien to the former Can front man. One can hope his random sonic journeys will lead to the resurrection of some familiar riffs in his sets.

German "Krautrock" pioneers Edgar Froese 1944-2015 and Jaki Liebezeit 1938-2017





To learn more about some key Krautrock artists have a look at this article http://observer.com/2015/07/8-krautrock-artists-you-need-to-hear-right-now/



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