Chris Franke, Edgar Froese and Peter Baumann. I’ll never forget them, got all their early albums. Slow, subtle rythm and paradigm shifts. Many people freaked out and hated them, called them boring and tedious. These people never cared to listen and let emotions flow. Ricochet always had a calming effect on me.❤
@@sinusiridum551 I just don't like their music, I think it's vastly overrated and it didn't withstand the passage of time (contrarily to a lot of Philip Glass' works since @andrewsharpe2587 mentionned him).
@alanhindmarch4483 never got to see Tangerine Dream, but was at live bands Gong, Faust, Can and Yamasta East Wind and others at UEA in Norwich. Great times.
My first TD concert was in Sheffield City Hall, an perfect venue for acoustics, when they played Tangram. Froese, Franke and Johannes Schmoelling. I think I was 16. Wonderful experience. Not Coventry territory though. I've been lucky enough to have been at other seminal concerts though, so I can't complain....
When I think of Germany and what it represents to me, it’s this era. This was a great gift to the world. Tangerine Dream, Klaus Shulze, Kraftwerk, and Popol Vuh. Coney Plank. Certain albums in the seventies. It was an incredible thing. People think the seventies were all about disco. For me it was this era. Incredible time.
@@pctrobottitley8334 I haven’t listened to that one in a long time. I’ll give it a spin. I do recall really loving the beginning of that record. There are some interesting things post mid seventies for them. Some of the work they did on the Sorcerer soundtrack was amazing, especially the main theme.
That was my first ever concert at the age of 14 ! It should have been Cockney Rebel a few months earlier, but unfortunately that was cancelled. Sad news recently of Steve Harley's death. C.R. were the first band I got into, however T.D. made an epic 1st live concert. All best.
Bought the Ricochet album in 76/77. Listening now in 2024, i can still remember the sequence and sounds as it progresses. Some things just imprint......class.
One of the greatest albums in this genre. Even after nearly fifty years.The first seconds are already awesome.This is a kind of music from the cosmos itself.
Stary dobry kawałek. Tangerine Dream I Camel, oraz Krawtwerk to prekursorzy muzyki elektronicznej. Dziękuję. Pozdrawiam Wszystkich Miłośnikow takiej muzyki❤❤❤😊
Oj, oj, oj... Chyba nie tylko oni i nie tacy znowu wielcy prekursorzy. Powiedzmy, że prekursorzy niemieckiej* muzyki elektronicznej, a ściślej zaledwie jednego z jej rodzajów. * oczywiście wyłączając wielbłąda.
@@PiotrBednarczyk-j1i No i tu dochodzimy do meritum sprawy. Niemcy, jak tylko coś u nich choćby o piczy kłak wystaje ponad przeciętność natychmiast pompują kasę, promują, pomagają na wszelkie sposoby. Robią tak, bo unich nadal króluje stylistyka piwno-biesiadna z akcentami tyrolskimi. Jak to w Polsce wyglądało (i nadal wygląda!) wszyscy wiemy, najlepszy przykład nasz Czesław Niemen. W pozostałych krajach nikt przynajmniej NIE PRZESZKADZA!
OMG, I'd forgotten that this band existed 😮I grew up listening to TD, was my Dad's favourite band. I'm now 57 and my Dad is 78 and the coolest Dad in the world. I grew up listening to the music no one had heard of at the time and I will always be grateful for that. Listening Xmas Eve 2024 . Merry Christmas ❤
@@marcelokonrad6055 Die Sendung habe ich auch regelmaessig gehoert und habe es auch zu einem Live Event von Schwingungen bei den Externsteinen geschafft. Interessanterweise die einzige Musiksendung, die ich als Metalhead gerne und immer im Radio gehoert habe.
I loved Ricochet, my first of many TD albums, bought this when I was just 16 and an apprentice earning a few bob. Great to hear it again. I still so love the seventies, I listened and loved everything - Bowie, Punk, Dylan - Desire, Jethro Tull, King Crimson, Floyd, ELP, Sabbath, Fleetwood Mac, Joni, BJH. What a decade of the greatest music.
This was the album my brother used for his 35mm slide shows. This music works beautifully in that purpose as it does for just about any type of listening pleasure.
I'm sorry to say that after nearly fifty years, I never heard of this band before. I felt like my life was meaningless until now. Thank you for this video.
Next listen to Phaedra, Rubycon, Green Desert, Stratosfear, Exit, Force Majeure, Poland, Logos, Underwater Sunlight. Those are in my collection and I can tell you that you will love them. Then start filling in the gaps, because they put out three hundred albums, CD's, singles, and compilations since 1967.
I remember I was about 11 in the back of my parents car listening to Alan Freeman on a cheep one earphone radio and he played the whole of side 2 of this album . Blew my mind
I come from East Germany and TD was one of my first impressions of electronic music. Since then I loved TD and now I wish Edgar Froese would be alive! RIP!
1975 I was a student at Kansas City Art Institute. 3 AM a maverick station somewhere played this tune, & I was spellbound. No local stations ever played it. One thing I've learned about art is, It doesn't matter how good it is, in most cases it's who you know or do you have the $$$ to push it in the market. T.D. has been severely underrated.
I mean they do extended meditations, not pop singles right? They make the short lst of 70s tron pioneers w/ Kraftwerk Gary Numan as household names .synth geeks still trying to figure out their hacks
I saw them on that tour too. The BBC took video footage of the band at Coventry, but this isn't the audio from that concert. It's the album compiled from several performances on that tour, and it has acoustic drums (and maybe other elements) that were added in the studio later. You'll notice that their hand movements are usually out of sync with the music.
As a young 17 year old in a sleepy little village in England I bought my first tangerine dream LP after hearing them played by John peel in 1975. Absolutely loved them
A truly magical piece of music that has not aged a jot. I bought this album back in the day & it still is to me one of the great compostions of the 20th C. This is the LP studio version with added visuals of the cathedral where they played a live version. How I wish I had seen the classical TD line-up perform !
The intro sends shivers down my spine - remembering the days when we were young, high, drifting away to this set during a live performance of Tangerine Dream
Holy crap, I came across this by accident: the images at the start are of the old and new Coventry Cathedral where this concert took place. I was born and raised in Coventry but I was just a toddler back then. I heard about this concert years later but never saw footage of it 😂
Il passato è favoloso quando rispolveri emozioni e ricordi, oltre alla nostalgia si respira spesso anche un filo di mistero... questo ne e' un esempio poi un concerto nella cattedrale ne aumenta il fascino. Ascoltavo i Tangerine da boy anni fa' e credo che riprenderò ad ascoltarli 😊😊.
Nie mogłem pojechać na pierwszy koncert TD w Poznaniu (Kilka lat później). Nie puścili mnie ze szkoły - to był wiek maturalny, ciężkie czasy w Polsce. Musiałem odpuścić, bilet kupił ode mnie kolega z innej szkoły. Mam do dziś pierwszy album koncertowy z Polski w wersji winylowej. Kupiłem go w Poznaniu. Umberto - Respect :-)
An impressive statement, knowing that you lived through the band's golden period, while still a teenager. Greetings from João Pessoa, northeast of Brazil
I have played this album close to two thousand times, all the way from the original release to the bits & bobs steve wilson had for the ISOH box. never gets old.
Ho parecchi vinili dei Tangerine Dream ,musica eterna che riesce ancora a distanza di tanti anni, ad aprirti la mente e a farti sognare .....Grazie di essere esistiti
1 April 1975. Chicago. Aragon Brawlroom. 3 dollars. Windowpane. Because Chi town had a reputation for being a guitar fanatics stronghold Edgar gave us all a long jam on his guitar and it was absolutely incredible. The light show was spectacular. One of the best trips ever.
A wonder of aesthetics, dynamics, simplicity, complexity. When it was new, I heard it on the turntable every day for about one year. And further on. Much more than every other piece.
Ricochet resonate in my heart like the drums of youth, never will I got to be in tune with my own soul but to listen to this masterpiece of remembrance when the world was still vibrating in the sounds of the future.
Back in the early 80's when I was still in school I was in a rental apartment that had an old HiFi console that could somehow play 33 1/2 albums at half speed. Dont ask me how. But when I threw on a TG album not only did it last twice as long, the sound was amazing. I would play that as background while trying to study or get creative [I was a Photography student] . My roomates thought I was nuts.
My brother had this album so I knew its music growing up in the seventies. Round about 1984 I got stoned for the first time on this so I’m forever thankful 🙏🏼
I remember seeing this on t.v. back in the mid 70's at the age of about 15, then saw them a short while later at the Hammersmith Odeon (first time I saw a laser show) and have been a fan ever since!
An ad cut into this at 12:00 and it just seemed a sin, as if someone had desecrated a holy place with their very presence. Watching these artists create these sounds is like watching the gods create the winds, and the thunder, the bird songs, the hissing of the waves as they recede from the shore. Genius musicians, wizards, shamans.
That arpeggio upbeat part starting around the 8 minute mark is for starters very fast for the time and even has 90s-if not even more recent- psytrance vibes
From one of the most famous german pioneers of Synthie Music, called then Krautrock. Tangerine Dream was the 1st west-german band playing in the east-german communistic GDR (DDR in german). Depeche Mode said in an interview, that the germans inspired them for their Synthie Pop.
Je les ai vus au Théâtre Antique d'Orange (France) le 16 août 1975. J'avais 18 ans. En plus d'écouter la musique, on comptait le nombre de claviers qu'il y avait sur scène...
Germany was ahead in the development of electronic music....way ahead. I remember seeing many alternative electronic bands in Hamburg and in München were I was an army sergeant. The music had a soothing effect on me.......while smoking some marihuana. German and US soldiers becoming friends through music. Great memories.
The switch, the real "Ricochet", happens after 8 minutes. But you need to listen the first 8 minutes completely, to feel the real impact of that passage.
I bought Phaedra when it first came out not really knowing anything about them other than it was a TRIP. It was always a go-to album when I needed grounding.
The visuals are a bit messy, but the music is inspirational - was lucky enough to be at the Liverpool Cathedral concert around this time, which was unforgettable.
These guys opened the door to later digital pioneers like Peter Kruder and Richard Dorfmeister who have made a huge impact on my listening habits, and have opened a few doors themselves.
Chris Franke, Edgar Froese and Peter Baumann. I’ll never forget them, got all their early albums. Slow, subtle rythm and paradigm shifts. Many people freaked out and hated them, called them boring and tedious. These people never cared to listen and let emotions flow. Ricochet always had a calming effect on me.❤
There is no emotion in this, it's just plain sequencing with bland and boring melodies on top 🙄
The same people who wouldn't appreciate Philip Glass.
@@reboursquali sono gli album dei Tangerine Dream che preferisci ?
@@sinusiridum551 I just don't like their music, I think it's vastly overrated and it didn't withstand the passage of time (contrarily to a lot of Philip Glass' works since @andrewsharpe2587 mentionned him).
@@reboursse non ti piace, va bene ! Ma Zeit Atem e Phaedra sono eterni !
I was at Coventry Cathedral 1975 aged 21 and got to see Tangerine Dream, brilliant atmosphere.
I am rarely jealous of a concert experience, but...yeah. Seriously jealous. Well done.
@alanhindmarch4483 never got to see Tangerine Dream, but was at live bands Gong, Faust, Can and Yamasta East Wind and others at UEA in Norwich. Great times.
A landmark concert . How lucky are you to have been present 😂❤
My first TD concert was in Sheffield City Hall, an perfect venue for acoustics, when they played Tangram. Froese, Franke and Johannes Schmoelling. I think I was 16. Wonderful experience. Not Coventry territory though. I've been lucky enough to have been at other seminal concerts though, so I can't complain....
I was there too! Awesome gig.🎉
Nearly 50 years old. And somehow this music fits better to our current digital age than what you can hear today.
But I love the analogue years and their analogue gear.
Totally agreed sir! ideenwerk ! They are REAL artists NOT computer geeks or AI feeding nonsense into your brain
Fit digital age by analogue synth.
Boomhakala Boom 👍🔥🔥🔥🔥
It is simple, it is real music real art, hence it's timeless
When I think of Germany and what it represents to me, it’s this era. This was a great gift to the world. Tangerine Dream, Klaus Shulze, Kraftwerk, and Popol Vuh. Coney Plank. Certain albums in the seventies. It was an incredible thing. People think the seventies were all about disco. For me it was this era. Incredible time.
Absolutely agree,however my favourite album since the mid 70’s remains Force Majeure
@@pctrobottitley8334 I haven’t listened to that one in a long time. I’ll give it a spin. I do recall really loving the beginning of that record. There are some interesting things post mid seventies for them. Some of the work they did on the Sorcerer soundtrack was amazing, especially the main theme.
@@pctrobottitley8334 Also really love Edgar Froese’s “Epsilon In Maylaysian Pale.” I’m amazed that it’s out of print in its original state.
Can, Neu, Faust etc.
Dont forget "Software",whith Peter Mergener and Michael Weiser.
Me and my wife saw TD perform Ricochet live at Birmingham Town Hall in 1975, the power of those synths was tremendous, never forget it to this day
So you will remember when a bass tone hit the resonance of the building and it felt like it shook and was about to fall down around you.
@@stevesmyth4982Absolutely, I truly believe that was my first experience of what a deep DEEP bass sounded like, or should the be “felt like”
analog
That was my first ever concert at the age of 14 ! It should have been Cockney Rebel a few months earlier, but unfortunately that was cancelled. Sad news recently of Steve Harley's death. C.R. were the first band I got into, however T.D. made an epic 1st live concert. All best.
Still got my Ticket !
Bought the Ricochet album in 76/77. Listening now in 2024, i can still remember the sequence and sounds as it progresses. Some things just imprint......class.
One of the greatest albums in this genre. Even after nearly fifty years.The first seconds are already awesome.This is a kind of music from the cosmos itself.
Yup grammar school days, and discovering another tangerine dream too.
Brilliant Electronic Band ! Poland Loves Tangerine Dream ;-)
Their best performance was the Warsaw Concert 1983 Live in Poland. One of my favorite albums.
@@MrTHounsell
And in Wrocław, in the same tour. Hala Ludowa. Unforgetable performance.
Pzdrka:)
@@mariuszkr9566 Ja w tym samym roku w Łodzi !!!!
Stary dobry kawałek. Tangerine Dream I Camel, oraz Krawtwerk to prekursorzy muzyki elektronicznej. Dziękuję. Pozdrawiam Wszystkich Miłośnikow takiej muzyki❤❤❤😊
Oj, oj, oj... Chyba nie tylko oni i nie tacy znowu wielcy prekursorzy.
Powiedzmy, że prekursorzy niemieckiej* muzyki elektronicznej, a ściślej zaledwie jednego z jej rodzajów.
* oczywiście wyłączając wielbłąda.
@@andrzej3511 Tak Masz rację. Ale ile jest zespołów których nie słyszeliśmy z tych lat. Pozdrawiam
@@PiotrBednarczyk-j1i No i tu dochodzimy do meritum sprawy. Niemcy, jak tylko coś u nich choćby o piczy kłak wystaje ponad przeciętność natychmiast pompują kasę, promują, pomagają na wszelkie sposoby. Robią tak, bo unich nadal króluje stylistyka piwno-biesiadna z akcentami tyrolskimi.
Jak to w Polsce wyglądało (i nadal wygląda!) wszyscy wiemy, najlepszy przykład nasz Czesław Niemen. W pozostałych krajach nikt przynajmniej NIE PRZESZKADZA!
Pink Floyd.
Do not forget" Ash Ra Temple"
Bought Phaedra when it came out..used to catch my dad listening to it drifting off when he thought no one was about 😅😂..RIP Bill, 🇬🇧 England '24
Phaedra was the business! Loved it. A girlfriend I had thought I was doing drugs when I played the LP at her flat?/ Amazing!
Here i am at 70 and have listened to Phaedra since my old Army Days.
OMG, I'd forgotten that this band existed 😮I grew up listening to TD, was my Dad's favourite band. I'm now 57 and my Dad is 78 and the coolest Dad in the world. I grew up listening to the music no one had heard of at the time and I will always be grateful for that. Listening Xmas Eve 2024 . Merry Christmas ❤
My first concert was Klaus Schulze and the second one was Tangerine Dream… Still love this music!
Have been listening to these guys for decades. Still fresh…
Found this in 1976 after spending most of a year in Guatemala, Mexico, and El Salvador. This and Kraftwerk. Historic!
Wir haben uns immer Donnerstags Abend getroffen mit guten Freunden um die Elektronische Musik zu hören und dabei ein Paar joints geraucht
„Ah, tach Kollege.”
SCHWINGUNGEN...im WDR
@@marcelokonrad6055 Die Sendung habe ich auch regelmaessig gehoert und habe es auch zu einem Live Event von Schwingungen bei den Externsteinen geschafft. Interessanterweise die einzige Musiksendung, die ich als Metalhead gerne und immer im Radio gehoert habe.
@@marcelokonrad6055 exakt,mit Winfred Trenkler,beste Sendung,bester Mann🥰
I loved Ricochet, my first of many TD albums, bought this when I was just 16 and an apprentice earning a few bob. Great to hear it again. I still so love the seventies, I listened and loved everything - Bowie, Punk, Dylan - Desire, Jethro Tull, King Crimson, Floyd, ELP, Sabbath, Fleetwood Mac, Joni, BJH. What a decade of the greatest music.
was für eine Komposition! Diese Steigerung vom Beginn zum Ende gleicht einer grossartigen Symphonie. Es ist ein Meisterwerk!
I did like this melody in 1976 and i like it now in 2024 he is on of the first person to make electronic music on this way.
For sure. They were the creators and precursors of this style.
Klaus Schultz was before them I think
@@garethde-witt6433
Klaus Schultz was in TD for their first album but played only drums no keyboards.
This was the album my brother used for his 35mm slide shows. This music works beautifully in that purpose as it does for just about any type of listening pleasure.
Almost 50 yrs ago these guys were already lightyears ahead with their music ❤
Masterpiece ❤
I'm sorry to say that after nearly fifty years, I never heard of this band before.
I felt like my life was meaningless until now.
Thank you for this video.
Next listen to Phaedra, Rubycon, Green Desert, Stratosfear, Exit, Force Majeure, Poland, Logos, Underwater Sunlight. Those are in my collection and I can tell you that you will love them. Then start filling in the gaps, because they put out three hundred albums, CD's, singles, and compilations since 1967.
@@beekay5914 - Thank you for that. I'll check into them. :)
(Don't forget White Eagle!)
I remember I was about 11 in the back of my parents car listening to Alan Freeman on a cheep one earphone radio and he played the whole of side 2 of this album . Blew my mind
I might have listened to this for the first time as you. Incredible.
Take care
Electronic music was once very difficult to do well, especially live. TD were masters.
I come from East Germany and TD was one of my first impressions of electronic music. Since then I loved TD and now I wish Edgar Froese would be alive! RIP!
Sad, they weren't playing this music on popular radio in my neighbor back then.😢
They played once on Erich’s lampen laden I think 🤔
you are right, it was in 1980 at the palace of the republic and was named Quichote@@ChromosomeSyndicate
Genial nach 45. Jahre wieder auf kreative, musikalische Reise zu gehen! Ihr habt die Musik innovativ mit geprägt, Merci dafür! Alain🌈😘
1975 I was a student at Kansas City Art Institute. 3 AM a maverick station somewhere played this tune, & I was spellbound. No local stations ever played it. One thing I've learned about art is, It doesn't matter how good it is, in most cases it's who you know or do you have the $$$ to push it in the market. T.D. has been severely underrated.
I mean they do extended meditations, not pop singles right? They make the short lst of 70s tron pioneers w/ Kraftwerk Gary Numan as household names .synth geeks still trying to figure out their hacks
Timeless classic, still gets me after all that time.
❤❤❤Love TD. RIP Edgar. Old school. Greetings Dirk Belgium.
Hello Dirk, greetings from João Pessoa, Brazil
I was at this concert. It was televised and shown on britsh TV BBC2 almost 1 year after the concert😁
I saw them on that tour too. The BBC took video footage of the band at Coventry, but this isn't the audio from that concert. It's the album compiled from several performances on that tour, and it has acoustic drums (and maybe other elements) that were added in the studio later. You'll notice that their hand movements are usually out of sync with the music.
I knew Ricochet and Rubycon when I was a student, high school. They became the soundtrack of my life.
Ricochet is one of my all-time favourite albums! I love TD and especially this era.
My dad supported TD in 1975 in Brisbane, Australia.
As a young 17 year old in a sleepy little village in England I bought my first tangerine dream LP after hearing them played by John peel in 1975. Absolutely loved them
A truly magical piece of music that has not aged a jot. I bought this album back in the day & it still is to me one of the great compostions of the 20th C. This is the LP studio version with added visuals of the cathedral where they played a live version.
How I wish I had seen the classical TD line-up perform !
When I was young. The light was brighter, the grass was greener with friends surrounded and nights of wonder
Cette musique m'a ouvert à une autre dimension lorsque j'étais adolescent 💫
The first time I heard it I also had the same experience.
Aussi moi
The intro sends shivers down my spine - remembering the days when we were young, high, drifting away to this set during a live performance of Tangerine Dream
Holy crap, I came across this by accident: the images at the start are of the old and new Coventry Cathedral where this concert took place. I was born and raised in Coventry but I was just a toddler back then. I heard about this concert years later but never saw footage of it 😂
Il passato è favoloso quando rispolveri emozioni e ricordi, oltre alla nostalgia si respira spesso anche un filo di mistero... questo ne e' un esempio poi un concerto nella cattedrale ne aumenta il fascino. Ascoltavo i Tangerine da boy anni fa' e credo che riprenderò ad ascoltarli 😊😊.
Nie mogłem pojechać na pierwszy koncert TD w Poznaniu (Kilka lat później). Nie puścili mnie ze szkoły - to był wiek maturalny, ciężkie czasy w Polsce. Musiałem odpuścić, bilet kupił ode mnie kolega z innej szkoły. Mam do dziś pierwszy album koncertowy z Polski w wersji winylowej. Kupiłem go w Poznaniu. Umberto - Respect :-)
An impressive statement, knowing that you lived through the band's golden period, while still a teenager.
Greetings from João Pessoa, northeast of Brazil
I have played this album close to two thousand times, all the way from the original release to the bits & bobs steve wilson had for the ISOH box.
never gets old.
Epic band with an enormous catalogue of music. I am partial to the 70'ies and 80'ies stuff though.
Ho parecchi vinili dei Tangerine Dream ,musica eterna che riesce ancora a distanza di tanti anni, ad aprirti la mente e a farti sognare .....Grazie di essere esistiti
Je suis de votre avis ❤
Anch'io come te ho bei tempi😢
The music on Ricochet is reminiscent of the Sorcerer soundtrack. Love this period.
..great LP... powerful and imaginative...
Fascinante Jim!!!
I discovered TD in the early 80s. And Ricochet was one of the first of their albums I bought. It's still a favourite. ❤
Love Tangerine!
1 April 1975. Chicago. Aragon Brawlroom. 3 dollars. Windowpane. Because Chi town had a reputation for being a guitar fanatics stronghold Edgar gave us all a long jam on his guitar and it was absolutely incredible. The light show was spectacular. One of the best trips ever.
Windowpane had that effect on me too.
Amen, brothers. A place in time/ space that will never be repeated
タンジェリンドリームの中で1番好き❤️
A wonder of aesthetics, dynamics, simplicity, complexity. When it was new, I heard it on the turntable every day for about one year. And further on. Much more than every other piece.
This is MUSIC To FORGET about EVERYONE................,
And EVERYTHING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Ricochet resonate in my heart like the drums of youth, never will I got to be in tune with my own soul but to listen to this masterpiece of remembrance when the world was still vibrating in the sounds of the future.
Back in the early 80's when I was still in school I was in a rental apartment that had an old HiFi console that could somehow play 33 1/2 albums at half speed. Dont ask me how. But when I threw on a TG album not only did it last twice as long, the sound was amazing. I would play that as background while trying to study or get creative [I was a Photography student] . My roomates thought I was nuts.
Yeah a lot of em had 78, 45, 33 1/3 and 16 2/3 rpm which was half speed built in to make it easier to learn riffs etc.
My favorite band of all time!
My brother had this album so I knew its music growing up in the seventies. Round about 1984 I got stoned for the first time on this so I’m forever thankful 🙏🏼
My favourite TD album and most definitely in my top 10 favourite albums of all time. Superb😁
I saw them in 1981 it was my first,ever concert i was mesmerised and just 19!❤
Es que poder disfrutar de phaedra, rubicon, blakdance, timewind, autobahn, radioactivity, aguirre etc, que época irrepetible, fantastica 😊
Many years later it is still great music.
Wow, this takes me back!
I have only just come across this band and I want more! So good!👍
Very inventive and excellent far before lot of others bands.
That was AWESOME!!!!
Only got into TD around 2015 on a friend's suggestion. Loved them ever since.
Setting the controls for the heart of the Sun
One inch of love is one inch of shadow cherokee lane
Yeah, definitely some resemblance.
Pink Floyd
I remember seeing this on t.v. back in the mid 70's at the age of about 15, then saw them a short while later at the Hammersmith Odeon (first time I saw a laser show) and have been a fan ever since!
An ad cut into this at 12:00 and it just seemed a sin, as if someone had desecrated a holy place with their very presence. Watching these artists create these sounds is like watching the gods create the winds, and the thunder, the bird songs, the hissing of the waves as they recede from the shore. Genius musicians, wizards, shamans.
I would have been pleased to be there...
still love it!!
One of the best in the world!, I'm 57, I was,16 when I heard,force majeure, I don't think I need to say anymore!
Remember first hearing this on the day it came out ,magical was the word ,what great music
This is a masterpiece and will remain so for centuries to come.
En ce temps-là on était dans l'insouciance et on prenait le temps d'apprécier la belle musique❤👍🙏
Gran bel pezzo ❤❤❤❤❤
Gorgeous editing work!
Thank you very much ! Greetings from João Pessoa, Brazil
Wow, I was at the Fairfield Hall concert in Croydon. Nothing recorded there seems to have made it to the Ricochet album.
Best TD set up ever!!
Saw them at the Kursaal,Southend on sea Essex,England,sometime in the 70 s,woke up on Alpha Centauri,nice.🖖🛸
That arpeggio upbeat part starting around the 8 minute mark is for starters very fast for the time and even has 90s-if not even more recent- psytrance vibes
From one of the most famous german pioneers of Synthie Music, called then Krautrock. Tangerine Dream was the 1st west-german band playing in the east-german communistic GDR (DDR in german).
Depeche Mode said in an interview, that the germans inspired them for their Synthie Pop.
Krautrock is in no way "Synthie music".
@@Trymsi yes fella
@@TrymsiI just came across another krautrock band from Germany called Eloy. Yes, they use a ton of synth
These guys produced some of the most three dimensional/ 'cinematic' recordings & shows I ever experienced.
Ein Jahrhundertalbum ✨!
If you listen to this critically, and realize it’s all Analog. It’s still shakes the fright bone.
Je les ai vus au Théâtre Antique d'Orange (France) le 16 août 1975. J'avais 18 ans. En plus d'écouter la musique, on comptait le nombre de claviers qu'il y avait sur scène...
Germany was ahead in the development of electronic music....way ahead. I remember seeing many alternative electronic bands in Hamburg and in München were I was an army sergeant. The music had a soothing effect on me.......while smoking some marihuana. German and US soldiers becoming friends through music. Great memories.
The switch, the real "Ricochet", happens after 8 minutes. But you need to listen the first 8 minutes completely, to feel the real impact of that passage.
I bought this on vinyl long ago ... still have it ❤
Same. I loved the cover back then and I still do. Both sides.
@KiltedGreen Well it's time to put it on - right now! Off I go...
I bought Phaedra when it first came out not really knowing anything about them other than it was a TRIP. It was always a go-to album when I needed grounding.
Einfach nur genial und mega geil ❤😊
Maravillosos recuerdos de juventud.😊
Great Elektronik 🎹🎹🎹Musik..🎸Made in Germany..
RIP Edgar!
Fantastic!
The visuals are a bit messy, but the music is inspirational - was lucky enough to be at the Liverpool Cathedral concert around this time, which was unforgettable.
Was it the Anglican or the Catholic?
@@dodibenabba525 Anglican - I was there too.
@@DaveBessell wow must have been awesome, sadly too young.
Ich hörte es im Radio bei Winfried ... seitdem hat es sich in meinem Hirn eingebrannt ;) ... Gänsehaut wenn ich es höre ... unfassbar
Ja,ja. bei Winfried Trenkler, das waren noch Zeiten.
Is it me or is it really all about that cool watch that dude is wearing? I am sold!
It's the watch ...
I caught this tour at York minster, aged 16.
These guys opened the door to later digital pioneers like Peter Kruder and Richard Dorfmeister who have made a huge impact on my listening habits, and have opened a few doors themselves.
Amazing T.D. masterpiece!