Encore (Tangerine Dream album)
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Allmusic | [1] |
Encore: Tangerine Dream Live is the second live album by the German group Tangerine Dream.[2] It is mostly assembled from various recordings from the band's very successful 1977 U.S. tour.
Track listing
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Cherokee Lane" | 16:19 |
2. | "Monolight" | 19:54 |
3. | "Coldwater Canyon" | 18:06 |
4. | "Desert Dream" | 17:30 |
TD performed "Cherokee Lane" and "Monolight", or some variants thereof, at every concert in 1977. The released version of "Monolight" has been identified as being recorded in Washington, D.C. on 4 April. The spoken introduction of the album also comes from here. A fantape of this complete concert was officially released as a part of the Bootleg Box Set vol. 2 in 2004. (Two other tracks, named "Monolith" and "Drywater Rush" on Tangerine Tree volume 4 and subsequently also on the Bootleg Box, were also played in some form from concert to concert, but were not included on Encore.) With regards to "Coldwater Canyon", Edgar Froese has stated that the track was played only once, during the tour's leg in southwestern United States.
After a slightly experimental wind effect and organ intro,"Cherokee Lane" settles into a hypnotic sequencer/mellotron improvisation. "Monolight" starts with a piano improvisation, followed by a short melodic piece called just "Encore" on the single release set to a march-like rhythm. After this, a more typical sequence is brought in and TD return to improvisation, tangenting the main themes to the title track from their previous studio album Stratosfear, and "Betrayal" from their soundtrack album Sorcerer. This section was on the 1994 compilation Tangents subtitled "Yellow Part". The track ends with another piano section, this time a version of the ending from Stratosfear's final track "Invisible Limits" which, in turn, is based on Beethoven's "Moonlight Sonata". "Coldwater Canyon" plunges headfirst into another sequence-based improvisation with a very choppy rhythm, laced with extensive guitar work from Froese.
In contrast to the other three tracks, "Desert Dream" is a collage of older, more atmospheric material, including leftover material from previous studio albums as well as parts of the group's soundtrack to the play Oedipus Tyrannus, recorded live in Chichester in August 1974.
Singles
- "Encore" – "Hobo March"
Personnel
- Edgar Froese – guitar, Moog modular synthesizer, Mellotron Mark V, Steinway Grand Piano, Oberheim Four Voice, ARP Omni, Palm Products GmbH 1020, Projeckt Elektronik sequencer, producer, engineer, mellotron, mastering
- Peter Baumann – Projekt Elektronik Modular Synthesizer, Projeckt Elektronik sequencer, Fender Rhodes, EMS Vocoder, Mellotron M400, ELKA Rhapsody 610, ARP Pro Soloist, producer, engineer, mastering, mixing
- Christopher Franke – Projeckt Elektronik sequencer, Computerstudio digital sequencer, Oberheim ob-1, ELKA Rhapsody 610, electronic percussion, ARP Pro Soloist, Oberheim sequencer, Moog modular synthesizer, Mellotron M400, producer, engineer, mellotron, sequencing, mastering
Additional personnel
- Monique Froese – photography
- Hartmut Heinze – engineer
- Simon Heyworth – digital remastering
- Mark Prendergast – liner notes
Chart performance
Year | Chart | Position |
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1977 | UK Album Chart | 55 |
References
- ^ Brenholts, Jim. "Encore - Tangerine Dream". AllMusic.
- ^ Berling, Michael (29 September 2016). "Encore". Voices in the Net.