Tangerine Dream’s Edgar Froese at The Royal Albert Hall, 2 April 1975. In front of him, a sequencer-equipped EMS synthesiser A little earlier, in 1971, the British company Electronic Music Studios ...
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“At one point it feels like they’re going to take off”: Tangerine Dream’s Rubycon box set
At 36 minutes, the first part of the Rainbow concert is longer than Rubycon in its entirety. Group improvisation inevitably gives rise to longueurs, but these musicians had a rare empathy and sense of ...
You can’t hold back the water, and there’s perhaps no greater testament to the unstoppable nature of time than to learn that Phaedra, the 1974 album by Tangerine Dream that broke the mould for music, ...
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