White Eagle
 |
Artist:
Tangerine Dream
Label: Virgin Records Us
Category: Music
Average customer rating:
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1
UPC: 724383944422
EAN: 0724383944422
ASIN: B000000W52
Release Date: 1994-05-17 |
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Listmania:
-
My Top 25 Albums Of 2005
-
My Top Albums In June,2005
-
The Mojave Trilogy by Tangerine Dream
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The Massive discography of Tangerine Dream (Pt. 1) 1970-1987
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Tangerine Dream Greatest
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Tangerine-Flavored Dreams
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TD pt 1: Electronic/Techno/Ambient Favorites 3
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The best Tangerine Dream
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TANGERINE DREAM: all their best, old & new
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10 Arpeggios to die for...
Tracks:
- Mojave Plain
- Midnight In Tula
- Convention Of The 24
- White Eagle
Similar Items:
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Hyperborea
-
Tangram
-
Exit
-
Logos: Live at the Dominion
-
Ricochet
Customer Reviews:
Short, but Incredibly Sweet.......2007-02-13
First, I must confess a qualified Tangerine Dream bias. For years, I tried to gather every recording of the band's numerous incarnations, all the while avoiding other electronic music. In the 1990s, I lost interest in most of Tangerine Dream's continuing output, and despite a few pleasantly surprising releases, since then I've been a far less enthusiastic fan than I used to be. I have, however, branched out and begun to listen to lots of modern electronic music. So, in evaluating White Eagle, I try not to speak purely as another solicitous Tangerine Dream fan, but rather as a disillusioned fan of the band and a listener of electronic music in general.
With that said, White Eagle has become one of my favorite Tangerine Dream recordings, easily in the top five of a voluminous discography. If you are a fan of the Johannes Schmoelling era (roughly 1980 to 1985), then White Eagle is a CD you must own. In terms of style, equipment, and composition, it compares to Hyperborea and Exit. Logos sounds similar, though it is a longer and far more cohesive expression. As other reviewers have observed, White Eagle does not necessarily flow or fit together as does Logos, Tangram, or Rubycon for that matter. And, it is hardly a full length release at just over 38 minutes.
Yet, the opening track Mojave Plan continues to captivate me, even after countless spins. It starts slowly, building from seemingly random percussive notes and high pitched pads into a relentless sequence-driven melody--not too unlike the slow build in Poland, the opening track of the Warsaw Concert. Some of the drumming and high pitched synths sometimes seems gratuitous, but the melodies are irresistible. This continues into the 10 minute mark, when the listener is finally given a rest before another, briefer movement finishes the track. Again, a slow build to a dramatic and pleasing melody--perhaps at times too dramatic, but infectiously energetic.
If Mojave Plan is a comfortable double shot of espresso, then Midnight in Tula is a painful triple: the pep brings tremors. Just a twelve second build, reminiscent of the starting chime for Pole Position, prepares the listener for a nonstop sequence and fast-paced melody that exhausts itself within four minutes. As others have said, it would competently blanket a car chase scene. The next track, Convention of the 24, is much more mellow affair. It meanders around the same reverberating base sequence, with light pads, brighter sequences, and various sound effects coming and going. It reminds me most of Edgar Froese's contemporaneous solo efforts.
The last and title track, some have said, saves the album. While I disagree on the weakness of the opening song Mojave Plan, I concur that the song White Eagle is something special. A comparatively slow-paced sequence, the song served as a theme song to a German television program. It's the most contemplative song on the album, and perhaps the most thought provoking Tangerine Dream song of the early eighties. Few Tangerine Dream songs achieve for me at least, a balance between not being too intrusive and becoming irrelevant. Stated another way, almost all Tangerine Dream can fade into the background, but some tracks such as Mojave Plan demand all of my attention during critical listening. I am almost always analyzing what I hear on those songs, yet on the few tracks like White Eagle, I can listen critically and reflect beyond the music itself.
In conclusion, White Eagle is an overlooked studio recording from the peak of one of Tangerine Dream's arguably two greatest creative periods, the mid-1970s being the other. If you have heard Logos, Exit, Hyperborea, or even Tangram, and like the early -1980s Tangerine Dream sound, give White Eagle a chance; you won't be disappointed. Like me, you even may find it become one of your favorite Tangerine Dream recordings.
White Eagle.......2005-11-23
White Eagle was one of the first TD albums that I bought for myself when I first went to University in 1982 after listening to my older brother's recordings of Ricochet and Force Majeure. As such, it is probably the album I have most listened to over the years with the possible exceptions of Logos Live and Optical Race.
White Eagle beigns with superb Mojave Plan begining with a mysterious, dark introduction reminiscient of a sci-fi soundtrack before building up to the second movement. Here the pace picks up and the synth drum beat creates a real sense of motion, typical of many TD tracks. There's a constant ebb and flow of synth themes and melodies driven by an infectious pulse. The third movement of Mojave Plan is one of the best tracks produced during the Froese-Schmoelling-Franke era. Early examples of sampling are present showcasing the evolution of computer music at this time which has hardly be bettered. The final movement of Mojave Plan brings all of the elements of the previous 3 movements together, the drum rythyms, mysterious soundscapes, keyboard solos.
Midnight in Tula is a fast uptempo number with pre-hip hop style rythyms. It is reminiscient of a car chase. A very straightforward track.
Convention of the 24 is my least favourite track on the album. Anyone familiar with Edgar Froese's solo work will pick up his sequencer driven signature styles throughout.
The final Track, White Eagle, is light and spacious. It's the most laid back track here and is one to savour. The complex and ever changing sequences are a forerunner of the style exemplified in the album Optical Race. The track roars to a successful conclusion. Job well done.
Overall, a fine effort. Probably the most polished TD album up to that date. Not the most complex or the most emotional, but most certainly a technological triumph.
Second real 80s TD outing is brief, but good for the most part.......2005-07-07
White Eagle(1982). Tangerine Dream's 16th(?) album.
As a brief history, Germany-based-group Tangerine Dream started off in the late 60s as a sort of experimental rock 'n roll act. Very quickly they ditched the typical rock format in favor of a more instrumental, avant-garde, freeform approach to the music, using various instruments but gradually incorporating synthesizers into the mix. Aside from other early 70s electronic bands like Kraftwork, TD were among the first to heavily incorporate synthesizers and keyboards into the music as a main focus. As a result, they churned out many trippy, atmospheric albums throughout the decade and built up a solid fanbase. It's fun to listen to all the albums and hear how synthesizer technology has improved and changed over the years. Then once the 80s dawned upon the band, they began to (slightly) decrease the lengths of the songs and add rhythmic structures to them, thus helping to make their newer music more palatable to the public. They also started creating movie scores for famous films such as Risky Business, Thief, and Firestarter.
One interesting fact to note is that TD has more albums than probably ANYBODY in existence! They usually put out about 1-2 albums per year, so for as long as they've been around, that's like nearly 50 albums! Also of note is that their "live" albums all contain original material, and thus count as actual (out of the)studio albums in chronology.
Anyways, I first came across TD about a year ago when searching for soundtracks among famous musicians who create movie scores. One of these critically-hailed groups was none other than TD, so I figured that I should check them out in hopes of finding some great melodic instrumental work. So of all the albums, I randomly picked WE to be my starting point, in hopes that it would do TD's reputation as much justice as I have heard about.
In most ways, WE is a direct continuation of the 1981 release Exit's sound. A lot of the same keyboards and synthesizers were incorporated from that album and thus this album picks up right where Exit left off. It bears a strong keyboard reverb sound similar to the keyboards found in Rush's Signals album, which came out right around the same time. It's clearly different from their mid 70's era, so die-hard fans of those albums might not like this.
The first couple minutes of 'Mojave Plan' are just aimless noises that should be skipped and clearly don't start the album off well, but once the 2:40 mark hits, the actual music picks up and takes you through several melody driven-movements done in different tempos. By the end of its 19+ minutes, I was already a fan. Next up is the high-energy 'Midnight In Tula', one of my all-time favorite short-TD tracks. It reminds me of a high-speed chase scene you would see in any 80s action movie complete with a really cool "siren" synthesizer effect in a couple of spots. Then, 'Convention Of The 24' is sort of a subtley intricate, yet repeating 7-minute outing that brings earlier TD to mind, most notably Tangram(1980). The title track was the only one to gain any sort of attention from the album (why??), as it is the lightest theme giving a slight look at TD's future outings. It's a pretty noteworthy and mandatory TD listen.
Replayability: Medium to low. Not as much as other 80s TD albums, but it does get played from time to time.
As awesome of an introduction as WE was to me, I'll have to take off a star for the fact that its brevity (4 tracks, less than 40 minutes) leaves one to believe that more music could have been made. Of course, there is nothing wrong with quality over quantity, it's just that its lack of length is more noticeable on WE than on other releases. It has its moments of brilliance among other places, and should not be skipped by fans. It may not be the best place to start for 80s TD (in that case, I'll point you in the direction of Exit(1981) and Underwater Sunlight(1986)), but if you like keyboards and synthesizers played out into a well-constructed instrumental score, then WE will not disappoint. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.
80's TD fans should look into:
-Exit(1981), Thief(1981), Logos(1982), Hyperborea(1983), Holland(1984), Le Parc(1985), Underwater Sunlight(1986), Green Desert(1973), and Tyger(1987)
70's TD fans, if you don't like 80s TD's sound, then you should stay away and instead get:
-Phaedra(1974), Rubycon(1975), Stratosphere(1976), Encore(1977), Force Majure(1979), and Tangram(1980).
Good, but still, not perfect.......2005-01-06
I already have some kind of orientation in Tangerine Dream outings, having only 5 albums. Most often I hear that they were at their most creative in the seventies, creating creepy music with longich melancholic trakcs, which sounded like a soundtrack to some fantastic films. "White Eagle" from 1982 is still a good electronica album, yet this is not THE Tangerine Dream I loved on the albums "Phaedra" and "Rubycon" (1974 and 1975). It seems like Vangelis was making such music few years earlier, so TD's electronic-rock style is nothing new. With throbbing bass lines (not the ones you had on Rubycon though) and simpler synthesizer melody lines this album is likeable (I admit I listen to it quite often), but, well, it's not very... sophisticated. The music is much simpler and generally made to be enjoyed (is it bad?). The heavy and noisy "Midnight in Tula" would make an excellent single, while the best known track here is definitely the title 4-and-half-minute-long new age track.
The 20-minute-long "Mojave Plan" is great and the a bit shorter "Convention of the 24" is mesmerizing and it makes me think of the creepy suites from TD's glourious past. Altogether a nice album, but defnitely TD had better albums, which hang like a shadow over their newer outings...
The Good stuff.......2003-08-06
I just read that this album followed the disappointing "Exit". I was quite pleased with this album, it is almost worthy of the same praise as the earlier TD, though here they use better equipment and it's not so experimental (improvisational) though still inspired. This album does take you away, the soundscapes don't sound contrived or forced, the writing is good and the sounds and production excellent, and performances more inspired than the lifeless "Exit". I recommend this over Force Majeur or Hyperborea.
Music CD:
- Music For Synchronized Swimming In Space ~ Hi-Fi Sky
- One ~ The O'Neill Brothers
- History of My Heart ~ Suzanne Ciani
- Wrapped in Stillness ~ Various Artists
- Underworld ~ Dagda
- 1999 Soundscapes: Live in Argentina ~ Robert Fripp
- Signature Series: Romantic Strings
- Raising the Rhythms ~ James Asher
- All Is One ~ Yulara
- Meeting Rivers ~ M Path
Music CD
Music CD
Music CD
Congas Y Comparsas Del Carnaval ~ Various Artists
Charangueando: Latin Roots ~ Various Artists
White Eagle ~ Tangerine Dream
Sounds of Nature: Woodland Wonder ~ Various Artists
A Thing About You ~ Roxette
Gablz ~ Gablz
Album de Oro ~ Los Acosta
En la Intimidad ~ Domingo Qui%C3%B1ones
15 Nortenas de Corazon ~ Various Artists
Mis 30 Mejores ~ Jose Luis Rodr%C3%ADguez