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THE FIRST EVER FULL COMMERCIAL RELEASE OF THE 2004 ALBUM BY TANGERINE DREAM FOUNDER EDGAR FROESETANGERINE DREAM EXHBITION AT THE BARBICAN, LONDON BEGINS IN JANUARY 2020COVERAGE ON ALL SPECIALIST RADIOREVIEWS IN “PROG”, “CLASSIC ROCK”, “UNCUT”, “MOJO”, “RECORD COLLECTORCOVERAGE ON RELEVANT WEBSITES & FANZINESEsoteric Reactive is delighted to announce the first ever full commercial release of the 2004 recording by Tangerine Dream founder Edgar Froese, “Dalinetopia”.In 1967, the young Edgar Froese met the unique and eccentric artist Salvador Dali. Visiting the painter twice and performing together with Tangerine Dream a few times in his villa in Port Lligat, Spain, Edgar was one of the few musicians who knew the man face to face.Nearly four decades after these meetings, Froese decided to transform his experiences with Salvador Dali into sound, forming his own tribute to Dali.The album was originally made available as a mail order only item, but now finally makes its appearance as a wider release on Esoteric Reactive for the first time.“Dalinetopia” is a profound listening experience and a fine tribute from one much missed artist to another.
D**L
Excellent
Excellent. Will be missed.
O**S
Superb...
As someone relatively new to electronica and Tangerine Dream I am not sure that I review this disc as it is placed in the context of Froese’s cannon. However, I can say that it is has the merits of being highly atmospheric, convincingly performed and consisting of a wide variety of moods and pace. So if you can imagine and like the sound of music that involves,layered synth backdrops , emotive electric guitar themes backed by insistent drum patterns to add interest,this is for you. A very enjoyable disc, one that will repay as I have found, frequent repeated listening.
M**N
Goes on a bit
I am a big fan of the late Edgar Froese but this not his best work. Some of the tracks start well but do go on a bit.
S**R
Dali never had it so good
"Dalinetopia", if you hadn't already guessed, is Edgar Froese's tribute album to his one-time guide and mentor, Salvador Dalí, although not so much to the man himself, or even his art, but to the philosophy behind his art. The only remotely Dalí-like aspect to the production to my mind are the meaningless but highly evocative titles (and I am sure that 'Dalysisiphus' is actually meant to be 'Dalisisyphus') that are each suggestive of the prevalent mood of their respective track. The sleeve-notes for this 2004 solo release include a rather pretentious summary of just what that philosophy means for Edgar W. Froese, as artist and composer. Most Froese fans are well used to that sort of thing from their hero and won't need (or want) to understand it and know better than to let it detract from the music itself -- they'll merely judge this album on what they hear. Which is as it should be.So, what does it sound like? To my ear, the most noticeable thing is just how much Edgar seems to have learnt from his son Jerome, for this is the first Froese solo album to feature any decent drum machine programming. It is also one of the most consistent in quality (and character) of all of his solo albums, suggesting that this time he actually sat down to compose a full album, rather than putting together for public consumption a varied collection of experimental doodlings. To my ears, this is about the most satisfying Froese solo album since "Epsilon in Malaysian Pale" (and I'm talking about the original 1975 release, not the dreadful rehashed version released a few years ago) with no track feeling as though it is out of place or going on so long as to out-stay its welcome. The album doesn't feel to be 70 minutes in length.That said, there is nothing terribly exciting or stunningly brilliant about it, but it does have a pleasing array of guitar tunes (including some soaring riffs on 'Dalamuerte' and 'Dalagalor', for example, that are easily amongst Edgar's finest), a good mix of rhythms (from the gentle ballad of 'Dalozapata' to the pulsing drive of 'Daliesquador' and the almost techno-beat of 'Daluna') and some finely balanced but wide-ranging synthesised textures, which at times are almost orchestral in their grandeur. It also exhibits a degree of polish that is often lacking from this artist's solo releases, with tracks here exhibiting a degree of progression and development that Froese can usually never seem to manage when working on his own ('Daluminacion', for instance, progressing from a simple piano opening into a rich and complex-rhythmed little masterpiece, while the title track grows similarly into a synthesised vocal aria over a complex drum pattern that Edgar could never have managed in earlier times)."Aqua" and "Epsilon..." this is most decidedly not but 30 years on, what would one expect? I for one am pleased that Edgar seems finally to have come of age as a solo artist, no longer having any need to inflict the detritus of his sonic experimentation/doodling (see "Ages") upon the Tangerine Dream fan-base. Instead he simply does here what he (and TD) have always done best, producing an album of good solid electro-sonic tone-paintings (try "Le Parc" for an equivalent TD album) that are both engaging and invigorating, and which really stands up to repeated listening. Perhaps it is no accident that it has taken Froese almost 40 years to feel he is only now able to produce this tribute to the man who set him up his own particular artistic path?
M**S
Dalinetopia
I've loved Tangerine Dream and Edgar for years. I've loved the paintings of Dali as well. So it was with some expectation that I bought this album. When it dropped through my letterbox, I sat down to give it a listen with CD cover in hand. And it made no sense at all.The second time I listened to it, I put the cover away before I started. As a piece of music, it is really good in its own right, and reminded me of albums like Hyperborea and Underwater Sunlight. Nice guitar work too, a lot of it perhaps in the footsteps of Dave Gilmour I feel (and nothing wrong with that!).All in all this album is a really good listen, and it is certainly in my CD player more than anything else right now. It's well worthy as an addition to all their others that I have and cherish. But don't ask me what on Earth it has to do with Salvador Dali. No doubt though Edgar has a different view of things.
K**F
Very good
Very good. Sounds like a Tangerine Dream CD. I like it best compared to his other solo albums that I have. Some great songs on it.
E**.
Enjoying this one quite a bit
Though this release is not completly free of over used chord progressions, and the typical melodic phrasings that made for a tiresome journey to the land of Ninties Tangerine Dream-- been there done that-- I'm ejoying this one quite a bit. It's the clean shimmering mix firstly. The drum tracks are nice, and coupled with nice electronic pulses. The melodies after a second listen begin to really become clear for the patient listener. There is quite a a gorgeouse soundscape created in Dalozapata, and the lush Dalamuerte. The intricate rythmic complexity of Daleroshima, and better Dalasquadore, make one want to buy a five hundred dollar pair of headphones. Dalaglore is chill, and Daluna is fierce!Also, Edgar Froese is playing guitar on this album!! No stand ins, Finally. To my disappointment though he has lost his love for great lead runs like those we heard in "Three Bikes in The Sky," or the ending passages of "London."Oh well. Instead he meanders a bit with a reliance on harmonics and tones, but it's ok because this cd is so effective and damned pretty! It really is. To me it is like Mars Polaris, with a little more focus, and consistency.
B**B
Five Stars
Great music.
G**N
Three Stars
Ok at best...was a little disappointed, but none the less, it's Mr. Froese...still a nice listen.
P**N
great Edgar Froese of Tangerine Dream
I believe this to be the last solo release by the late, great Edgar Froese of Tangerine Dream. A decent effort but to my mind, not up to the quality of his solo releases of the 70s and 80s. As a huge fan of Tangerine Dream, I am gathering all the albums I wanted and hadn't yet gotten as there will not be any more since Edgar's death in January. It is growing on me with repeated plays.
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