Tangerine Dream

by John Bush music biography
Without doubt, the recordings of Tangerine Dream have made the greatest impact on the widest variety of instrumental music during the 1980s and '90s, ranging from the most atmospheric new age and space music to the harshest abrasions of electronic dance. Founded in 1967 by Edgar Froese in Berlin, the group has progressed through a full three dozen lineups (Froese being the only continuous member with staying power) and four distinct stages of development: the experimentalist minimalism of the late '60s and early '70s; stark sequencer trance during the mid- to late '70s, the group's most influential period; an organic form of instrumental music on their frequent film and studio work during the 1980s; and, finally, a more propulsive dance style, which showed Tangerine Dream with a sound quite similar to their electronic inheritors in the field of dance music.
Froese, born in Tilsit, East Prussia, in 1944, was little influenced by music while growing up. Instead, he looked to the Dadaist and Surrealist art movements for inspiration, as well as literary figures such as Gertrude Stein, Henry Miller, and Walt Whitman. He organized multimedia events at the residence of Salvador Dali in Spain during the mid-'60s and began to entertain the notion of combining his artistic and literary influences with music; Froese played in a musical combo called the Ones, which recorded just one single before dissolving in 1967. The first lineup of Tangerine Dream formed later that year, with Froese on guitar, bassist Kurt Herkenberg, drummer Lanse Hapshash, flutist Volker Hombach and vocalist Charlie Prince. The quintet aligned itself with contemporary American acid rock (the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane), and played around Berlin at various student events. The lineup lasted only two years, and by 1969 Froese had recruited wind player Conrad Schnitzler and drummer Klaus Schulze. One of the trio's early rehearsals, not originally intended for release, became the first Tangerine Dream LP when Germany's Ohr Records issued Electronic Meditation in June 1970. The LP was a playground for obtuse music-making -- keyboards, several standard instruments, and a variety of household objects were recorded and filtered through several effects processors, creating a sparse, experimentalist atmosphere.
Both Schulze and Schnitzler left for solo careers later in 1970, and Froese replaced them the following year with drummer Christopher Franke and organist Steve Schroeder. When Schroeder left a year later, Tangerine Dream gained its most stable lineup core when organist Peter Baumann joined the fold. The trio of Froese, Franke, and Baumann would continue until Baumann's departure in 1977, and even then, Froese and Franke would compose the spine of the group for an additional decade.
On 1971's Alpha Centauri and the following year's Zeit, the trio's increased use of synthesizers and a growing affinity for space music resulted in albums that pushed the margin for the style. Atem, released in 1973, finally gained Tangerine Dream widespread attention outside Europe; influential British DJ John Peel named it his LP of the year, and the group signed a five-year contract with Richard Branson's Virgin Records. Though less than a year old, Virgin had already become a major player in the recording industry, thanks to the massive success of Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells (widely known for its use in the film The Exorcist).
Tangerine Dream's first album for Virgin, Phaedra, was an milestone not only for the group, but for instrumental music. Branson had allowed the group free rein at Virgin's Manor Studios, where they used Moog synthesizers and sequencers for the first time; the result was a relentless, trance-inducing barrage of rhythm and sound, an electronic update of the late-'60s and early-'70s classical minimalism embodied by Terry Riley. Though mainstream critics were unsurprisingly hostile toward the album (it obviously made no pretense to rock & roll in any form), Phaedra broke into the British Top 20 and earned Tangerine Dream a large global audience.
The follow-ups Rubycon and the live Ricochet were also based on the blueprint with which Phaedra had been built, but the release of Stratosfear in 1976 saw the use of more organic instruments such as untreated piano and guitar; also, the group added vocals for 1978's Cyclone, a move that provoked much criticism from their fans. Both of these innovations didn't change the sound in a marked degree, however; their incorporation into rigid sequencer patterns continued to distance Tangerine Dream from the mainstream of contemporary instrumental music.
Baumann left for a solo career in 1978 (later founding the Private Music label), and was replaced briefly by keyboard player Steve Jolliffe and then Johannes Schmoelling, another important member of Tangerine Dream who would stay until the mid-'80s. In 1980, the Froese/Franke/Schmoelling lineup was unveiled at the Palast der Republik in East Berlin, the first live performance by a Western group behind the Iron Curtain. Tangerine Dream also performed live on TV with the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra one year later, and premiered their studio work on 1980's Tangram.
Mike Oldfield had shown the effectiveness of using new instrumental music forms as a bed for film on Tubular Bells, and in 1977 The Exorcist's director, William Friedkin, had tapped Tangerine Dream for soundtrack work on his film Sorcerer. By the time the new lineup stabilized in 1981, Hollywood was knocking on the band's door; Tangerine Dream worked on more than 30 film soundtracks during the 1980s, among them Risky Business, The Keep, Flashpoint, Firestarter, Vision Quest, and Legend. If the idea of stand-alone electronic music hadn't entered the minds of mainstream America before this time, the large success of these soundtracks (especially Risky Business) entrenched the idea and proved enormously influential to soundtrack composers from all fields.
Despite all the jetting between Hollywood and Berlin, the group continued to record proper LPs and tour the world as well. Hyperborea, released in 1983, was their last album for Virgin, and a move to Zomba/Jive Records signaled several serious changes for the band during the late '80s. After the first Zomba release (a live concert recorded in Warsaw), 1985's Le Parc, marked the first time Tangerine Dream had flirted with sampling technology. The use of sampled material was an important decision to make for a group that had always investigated the philosophy of sound and music with much care, though Le Parc was a considerable success -- both fans and critics calling it their best LP in a decade. Tyger, released in 1987, featured more vocals than any previous Tangerine Dream LP, and many of the group's fans were quite dispirited in their disfavor.
Schmoelling left in 1988, to be replaced by the classically trained Paul Haslinger and (for a brief time) Ralf Wadephul. Optical Race, released in 1988, was the first Tangerine Dream album to appear on old bandmate Peter Baumann's Private Music label. Several more albums followed for the label, after which Haslinger left to work on composing film scores in Los Angeles. His replacement, and the only other permanent member of Tangerine Dream since, was Edgar's son Jerome Froese (whose photo had graced the cover of several TD albums in the past). Another record label change, to Miramar, preceded the release of 1992's Rockoon, which earned Tangerine Dream one of their seven total Grammy nominations. The duo continued to record and release live albums, remix albums, studio albums, and soundtracks at the rate of about two releases per year into the late '90s. Meanwhile, the influence of Tangerine Dream's '70s releases upon a generation of electronica and dance artists became increasingly evident, from the Orb's indebted ambient techno to DJ Shadow's sampling of Stratosfear's "Invisible Limits," heard on "Changeling," from 1996's Endtroducing....
During the early 2000s, new material surfaced at a slightly slower rate. In addition to a handful of studio albums -- including 2005's Jeanne d'Arc, for which Froese was first joined by Thorsten Quaeschning, a musician who would figure into several subsequent TD releases -- and a couple soundtracks (Great Wall of China, Mota Atma), there was "the Dante trilogy" (Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso, released from 2002 through 2006) and the five-part "atomic seasons" (with titles like Springtime in Nagasaki and Winter in Hiroshima, created for a Japanese man who survived the bombings of both cities). During these years, keeping tabs on archival releases, both live and studio, was more challenging than ever; most prominently, there was The Bootmoon Series, entailing audience and soundboard recordings of performances dating back to 1977, as well as reissues of the first four albums and several anthologies. Despite so much focus on the past, epitomized by 40th anniversary concerts that took place 2007, Tangerine Dream remained equally connected to the present.

discography snapshot

1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
Year Title Rovi Rating    
1970 Electronic Meditation
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1971 Alpha Centauri
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1972 Zeit
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1973 Atem
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1974 Phaedra
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1975 Rubycon
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1975 Ricochet
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1976 Stratosfear
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1977 Encore
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1977 Sorcerer
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1978 Cyclone
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1979 Force Majeure
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1980 Tangram
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1981 Exit
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1981 Thief
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1982 Die Melodie aus Dem Gleichnamigen TATORT
1982 Logos: Live at the Dominion
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1982 White Eagle
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1983 Hyperborea
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1984 Firestarter
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1984 Flashpoint
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1984 Poland: The Warsaw Concert
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1984 Warsaw in the Sun
1985 Le Parc
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1985 Legend [Silva Screen]
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1986 Desert Dream
1986 Green Desert
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1986 Heartbreakers
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1986 Pergamon
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1986 Pergamon Live
1986 Underwater Sunlight
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1987 Canyon Dreams
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1987 Deadly Care
1987 Tyger
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1988 Livemiles
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1988 Marakesh
1988 Optical Race
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1989 Dead Solid Perfect
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1989 Destination Berlin
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1989 Lily on the Beach
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1989 Miracle Mile
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1990 Melrose
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1990 Wavelength
1990 Three O'Clock High
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1990 Near Dark
1991 From Dawn Til Dusk
1991 L' Affaire Wallraff (The Man Inside)
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1992 Rockoon
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1992 The Park Is Mine
1993 220 Volt Live
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1993 Dreaming on Danforth Avenue
1994 Catch Me If You Can
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1994 Turn of the Tides
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1995 Tyranny of Beauty
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1996 Zoning
1997 The Grammy Nominated Albums
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1997 Tournado
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1997 Oasis
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1998 Ambient Monkeys
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1999 Sohoman
1999 Transsiberia: The Russian Express Railway Experience
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1999 Dream Encores
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1999 Quinoa
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1999 Mars Polaris
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1999 Architecture in Motion
1999 What a Blast: Architecture in Motion
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2000 Soundmill Navigator: Live at the Philharmonic, 1976
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2000 The Seven Letters from Tibet
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2000 The Great Wall of China
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2002 Inferno
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2003 Mota Atma
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2004 The Bootmoon Series: Aachen 1981
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2004 The Bootmoon Series: Montreal, April 9th, 1977
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2004 The Bootmoon Series: Paris 1981
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2004 The Bootmoon Series: Sydney 1982
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2004 The Bootmoon Series: Ottawa 1986
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2004 Purgatorio
2005 The Bootmoon Series: Brighton 1986
2005 The Bootmoon Series: Cleveland 1986 image description
2006 Jeanne d'Arc
2006 High Voltage
2006 Nebulous Dawn: The Early Years
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2006 Paradiso image description
2006 The Bootmoon Series: Detroit 1977 image description
2006 The Bootmoon Series: Preston 1980 image description
2007 Madcap's Flaming Duty image description
2007 TD Om 2.1
2008 Booster
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2008 Hyperborea 2008
2008 Views from a Red Train
2009 Autumn In Hiroshima: Part Three From The Five Atomic Seasons
2009 Springtime in Nagasaki
2009 Summer in Nagasaki
2009 Winter in Hiroshima: Part Four from the Five Atomic Seasons
2010 Booster II
2010 The Epsilon Journey
2010 Chandra: The Phantom Ferry, Pt. 1
2010 London Eye Concert 2008
2010 Phaedra Revisited
An Electronic Journey
B.C. Soundtracks
Booster III
Cloudburst
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Dream Mixes
Dream Mixes, Vol. 5
Mojave
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Mysterious Semblance at the Strand of Nightmares
Phaedra 2005
Run to Vegas
The Endless Season
Vulcano
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