Rock Bands & Pop Stars
Tangerine Dream Pictures
Band:
Tangerine Dream
Origin:
Germany, BerlinGermany
Band Members:
Edgar Froese, Jerome Froese, and Thorsten Quaeschning
Tangerine Dream Album: «Tangram»
Tangerine Dream Album: «Tangram» (Front side)
    Album information
  • Customers rating: (4.4 of 5)
  • Title:Tangram
  • Release date:
  • Type:Audio CD
  • Label:
  • UPC:
Customers rating
Track listing
  • 1Tangram Set 1 - Tangerine Dream
  • 2Tangram Set 2 - Tangerine Dream
Review - Product Description
Japanese only HQCD paper sleeve pressing. Marquee. 2009.
Customer review
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
- Dreamland

This album may have been the first thing by TD I ever bought. I can't remember for sure but I really didn't discover TD until the late 80's. I got this album in '88 when I saw it in a used record store. I would listen to it in the mornings while getting ready for work. Some of the music from this album (mainly at the beginning) is used in the movie "Risky Business". Although I have always liked side one more than side two, side two is also good. The best thing I can think to say to keep this review short is that this is some of the best synthesizer work you're going to hear on any album, not just TD albums. I would rate Tangram close to Stratosfear although they are different they both have a distinctive sound that I haven't heard on their other albums.

Customer review
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
- The heavenly music corporation

"Tangram" is something of a link between TD's late-'70s prog-rock days ("Cyclone", "Force majeure") and the streamlined approach of "Exit" and "White eagle". Unlike some of the other reviewers, I don't think that this album is overrated. In fact, "Tangram" is far more listenable and melodic than the droning, relatively one-dimensional soundscapes of early TD efforts like "Zeit" and "Rubycon". Musically, the two pieces are similar to one another, alternating between calm, minimalistic passages and very complex sonic landscapes made of sequencers, drum machines, guitars, and layers of convoluted synth sounds. Quite a step from many of TD's other albums, "Tangram" is not sheer beauty. There are some dissonant spots and distorted guitar solos, though the sound always stays very enganging and manages to hold the listener's interest during the whole CD. That's not a common thing for a disc containing two 20-minute megaworks, and it separates "Tangram" from many other new age records. Particularly impressive: The passage of "Tangram set 2" when TD consequently strip away one instrument after the other, leaving behind an over-the-top melody and finally spreading it between the stereo channels. My rating: "Tangram" is the embodiment of excellent trance music, just as Klaus Schulze's "Timewind" and Steve Hillage's "Rainbow dome musick".

Customer review
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
- CONTEMPORARY CLASSICAL MUSIC?

This is one of the landmark TD albums. It was done shortly after Johanes Schmoelling joined TD, and it is the first of a series of exceptional albums that define the 'Schmoelling period' in TD's long and astonishing career (see also my review of Stratosfear). Tangram is a transitional album that contains the 'best of both worlds', with TD still making concept music and with Schmoelling contributing his own creative ideas. True, this album is too polished, too precise, compared to Cyclone and Force Majeure, but it marks, after all, the beginning of the 80's. I guess the beauty of Tangram lies in its consistency and continuity; and, yes, in its perfection! It is a beautiful work without weak points, meant to be listened to and enjoyed from beginning to end. I like both parts the same, although I give a slight preference to the introduction of part II, and to the 'creation' sequences halfway through part I. Not really much else to say about this CD, comparable to White Eagle, Exit, Pergamon and Logos Live, except that, I would love to see TD, currently in decline, make this kind of electronic symphony music again. But, all the same, I am glad that Tangram is there and I can enjoy it any time I want to! It is, indeed, today's classical music

Customer review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
- Nice change

1980 sees a definite change in musical style mainly due to the enrolement of Schmoelling. Strong melodic syntheziser leads prevail through quite a bit of side 1 giving the album a very prog rock feel. It is quite easy listening compared to earlier works but still contains plenty of atmosphere. Side 2 weakens towards the end. As with a lot of TD albums, only certain passages really stand out and impress and it is for these little gems that we buy the CD's. Overall Tangram is very enjoyable and dynamic. It does contain some cliched synth pad arrangements especially on side 1 but the album as whole makes up for this.(I nearly forgot, there's no drum machine on this album it's all synth arrpegios and some samples to create rythm. This may sound weak for some listeners but bare with it).

Customer review
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
- mix-up

I think Amazon mixed things up here. Everything mentioned here refers to the original 1980 Tangram (which deserves 5 stars), the tracklisting as well as all the reviews (mainly from years ago....). But this is the 2008 "re-mix" (or rather "techno-overdub") of Tangram from 2008, which will hardly delight fans of the original album. So be warned if you follow these reviews, you WON'T get the original Tangram album (unless they show the wrong cover-art and album title...)