German electronic outfit Tangerine Dream have announced a North American tour in the fall.
The 18-date outing kicks off on September 8th in Miami. Shows are also scheduled in Asheville, Atlanta, Dallas, San Diego, Los Angeles, Vancouver, Philadelphia, Montreal, and more. See the full schedule below.
Tangerine Dream’s current lineup is led by Thorsten Quaeschning, the chosen successor of the group’s founder, Edgar Froese, who died in 2015. Quaeschning will be joined on the road by Japanese musician Hoshiko Yamane and Paul Frick (of Brandt Brauer Frick).
Tickets are available through Ticketmaster or Stubhub, where orders are 100% guaranteed through StubHub’s FanProtect program.
Tangerine Dream 2023 Tour Dates:
09/08 – Miami, Fl @ Miami Beach Bandshell
09/11 – Asheville, Nc @ Orange Peel
09/12 – Atlanta, Ga @ Centre Stage
09/13 – Dallas, TX @ Ferris Wheelers
09/14 – Austin, TX @ Empire Garage
09/16 – Albuquerque, Nm @ El Rey
09/17 – Tucson, Az @ Rialto Theatre
09/18 – San Diego, CA @ The Magnolia
09/19 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Vermont
09/20 – San Francisco, CA @ Regency Ballroom
09/22 – Portland,...
The 18-date outing kicks off on September 8th in Miami. Shows are also scheduled in Asheville, Atlanta, Dallas, San Diego, Los Angeles, Vancouver, Philadelphia, Montreal, and more. See the full schedule below.
Tangerine Dream’s current lineup is led by Thorsten Quaeschning, the chosen successor of the group’s founder, Edgar Froese, who died in 2015. Quaeschning will be joined on the road by Japanese musician Hoshiko Yamane and Paul Frick (of Brandt Brauer Frick).
Tickets are available through Ticketmaster or Stubhub, where orders are 100% guaranteed through StubHub’s FanProtect program.
Tangerine Dream 2023 Tour Dates:
09/08 – Miami, Fl @ Miami Beach Bandshell
09/11 – Asheville, Nc @ Orange Peel
09/12 – Atlanta, Ga @ Centre Stage
09/13 – Dallas, TX @ Ferris Wheelers
09/14 – Austin, TX @ Empire Garage
09/16 – Albuquerque, Nm @ El Rey
09/17 – Tucson, Az @ Rialto Theatre
09/18 – San Diego, CA @ The Magnolia
09/19 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Vermont
09/20 – San Francisco, CA @ Regency Ballroom
09/22 – Portland,...
- 7/17/2023
- by Scoop Harrison
- Consequence - Music
Revered progressive electronic act Tangerine Dream have collected previously unheard outtakes, live footage, 5.1 surround sound versions and newly remastered studio tracks for the upcoming box set In Search of Hades: The Virgin Recordings 1973 – 1979, out June 14th via Umc-Virgin. The 16-cd/2-Blu-Ray Ultra Deluxe version collects the band’s seven albums recorded for the Virgin label during their influential streak in the decade: Phaedra, Rubycon, Ricochet, Stratosfear, Encore, Cyclone and Force Majeure.
Also included are two discs of stereo outtakes from the Phaedra sessions at the Manor Studios in Oxfordshire, England,...
Also included are two discs of stereo outtakes from the Phaedra sessions at the Manor Studios in Oxfordshire, England,...
- 4/18/2019
- by Ryan Reed
- Rollingstone.com
One of the most effective — and simply best — scores of the year thus far is for the Safdies’ Good Time, from Oneohtrix Point Never (aka Daniel Lopatin). A frenzied, pulsating work that consumes much of the film, it’s perfectly attuned with the non-stop energy of the crime drama. With the film hitting theaters today (our rave review), the full score is now streaming, including the closing track featuring Iggy Pop.
“When we were working on the film, Josh and Ben would remind me to go harder and more out, because it’s very easy to mimetically revert back to [Tangerine Dream founder] Edgar Froese—it’s just in my DNA,” Lopatin tells Pitchfork. “Then Josh is in the room being like, “No, make it more fucked up.” His expression was, “Get micro,’ because he’s the exact same way.”
Check out the score below, along with a Vikram Gandhi-directed short starring and written by Robert Pattinson,...
“When we were working on the film, Josh and Ben would remind me to go harder and more out, because it’s very easy to mimetically revert back to [Tangerine Dream founder] Edgar Froese—it’s just in my DNA,” Lopatin tells Pitchfork. “Then Josh is in the room being like, “No, make it more fucked up.” His expression was, “Get micro,’ because he’s the exact same way.”
Check out the score below, along with a Vikram Gandhi-directed short starring and written by Robert Pattinson,...
- 8/11/2017
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
Tangerine Dream should be no stranger to any fans of 80’s cinema. I learned about the group via Firestarter, a score that I still love to this day. Lately, there has been a lot of new synth groups and solo acts popping up and its popularity is evident by the craze and appreciation of the music behind Netflix’s sleeper hit, Stranger Things.
As you may know, the show used three of Td’s songs/compositions in its first season. Well, it looks like Tangerine Dream either dug the show or really dug the music by Kyle Dixon & Michael Stein (one-half of S U R V I V E) because Tangerine Dream just covered/paid tribute to the main theme of Stranger Things. Take a listen below.
It’s important to note that Tangerine Dream’s lineup has consistently changed. The founding member, Edgar Froese, passed on in January of last year.
As you may know, the show used three of Td’s songs/compositions in its first season. Well, it looks like Tangerine Dream either dug the show or really dug the music by Kyle Dixon & Michael Stein (one-half of S U R V I V E) because Tangerine Dream just covered/paid tribute to the main theme of Stranger Things. Take a listen below.
It’s important to note that Tangerine Dream’s lineup has consistently changed. The founding member, Edgar Froese, passed on in January of last year.
- 9/13/2016
- by Andy Triefenbach
- Destroy the Brain
Kyle Dixon and Michael Stein's Stranger Things score became one of the most acclaimed elements of the hit Netflix series this summer, with many noting the debt owed to electronic pioneers Tangerine Dream, who famously crafted synth-driven soundtracks for such classic/cult '80s films as Risky Business, Legend, Near Dark and Three O'Clock High in addition to releasing over 100 albums over the course of their nearly five-decade career. "We listen to a lot of Tangerine Dream and they did a ton of soundtracks," said Dixon in a recent interview with Salon. "There’s a few key soundtracks by them that definitely influenced us in a lot of ways, like Thief and Sorcerer." Well, the group clearly caught wind of the reference, as over the last several days the trio -- currently consisting of Thorsten Quaeschning, Hoshiko Yamane and Ulrich Schnauss -- have released three tracks on Soundcloud that pay tribute to the series,...
- 9/12/2016
- by Chris Eggertsen
- Hitfix
Over the weekend, we found out a truckload more information about GTA V, specifically as it pertains to the sound of the game. Rockstar announced that GTA V will have a whopping 15 radio stations along with 2 talk radio stations, totaling over 240 licensed songs, and also an original, context-sensitive score provided by Tangerine Dream’s Edgar Froese, Woody Jackson (who previously worked on Red Dead Redemption and L.A. Noire), and The Alchemist & Oh No.
In addition to the five tracks that Rockstar released samples of, we’ve also learned that the likes of Pam Grier and Kenny Loggins will be hosting other radio stations (soul and rock respectively). While some stations are starting to leak out given the Psn screw-up last week, Rockstar have posted some official sample clips to whet our appetites ahead of the September 17th release date…
5. Vinewood Boulevard Radio
Ensuring that GTA V is going to...
In addition to the five tracks that Rockstar released samples of, we’ve also learned that the likes of Pam Grier and Kenny Loggins will be hosting other radio stations (soul and rock respectively). While some stations are starting to leak out given the Psn screw-up last week, Rockstar have posted some official sample clips to whet our appetites ahead of the September 17th release date…
5. Vinewood Boulevard Radio
Ensuring that GTA V is going to...
- 9/2/2013
- by Shaun Munro
- Obsessed with Film
Dubstep, drumstep, glitchstep, chillstep, fill-in-the-blank-step... the electronic dance music field is growing at an exponential rate, leaving its underground roots far behind as some of my favorite established electro-rockers like Celldweller and Front Line Assembly incorporate modern Edm elements into their sound, metal bands mash up their riffs with dubstep elements (like Korn's collaboration with electro-house superstar Skrillex), and more genre crossovers are being born than I can possibly keep up with. The landscape is so overrun now that it takes an artist with unique skills to stand above the herd... and a dark and spooky image doesn't hurt either; it's certainly one way to get my attention. That finally happened this year, when I was introduced to the ominous team Blackburner, whose stage identities are concealed behind bizarre robotic killer rabbit suits with glowing Cylon eyes. If you're having trouble picturing that, I've included images and clips showing these bass-dropping bunny-borgs in action.
- 12/27/2012
- by Gregory Burkart
- FEARnet
In addition to his more dance-floor-ready work as half of Ford & Lopatin, Daniel Lopatin also makes ambient music that could score a thousand gonzo Ambien-dreams as Oneohtrix Point Never. It’s difficult music to describe, but it’s decidedly easy to digest—especially when compared to Opn’s earlier experiments in arpeggiated drone, which recall Tangerine Dream and label-mate Emeralds. Where 2010’s Returnal opened with a scene of bedlam worthy of Kevin Drumm’s Sheer Hellish Miasma, Replica begins gingerly, setting the mood with some alien-yet-inviting, Boards Of Canada-sounding tones. Unlike the similarly iterative The Field, Opn builds its ...
- 12/6/2011
- avclub.com
Above: Composer Cliff Martinez. Photograph by Robert Charles Mann.
Bernard Herrmann, John Barry, Georges Delerue, Toru Takemitsu...sometimes it seems like cinema's greatest composers are all behind us. But just as films were not "better back then," soundtracks weren't either. Looking for great soundtrack artists nowadays is akin to looking for great movies: there seems a lot more of everything, and it takes a roving gaze (and ear) to find that excellence and expression splintered across film festivals, creaking home video releases, YouTube videos (see, recently, a gathering of music by Jorge Arriagada for Raúl Ruiz's films) and other disseminations of the ever-widening world of cinema.
While I may look forward to a film by a director I like, or one shot by a cinematographer I'm interested in, it's not every day I'm excited to hear a movie. One major exception to this aural ignorance is a name that...
Bernard Herrmann, John Barry, Georges Delerue, Toru Takemitsu...sometimes it seems like cinema's greatest composers are all behind us. But just as films were not "better back then," soundtracks weren't either. Looking for great soundtrack artists nowadays is akin to looking for great movies: there seems a lot more of everything, and it takes a roving gaze (and ear) to find that excellence and expression splintered across film festivals, creaking home video releases, YouTube videos (see, recently, a gathering of music by Jorge Arriagada for Raúl Ruiz's films) and other disseminations of the ever-widening world of cinema.
While I may look forward to a film by a director I like, or one shot by a cinematographer I'm interested in, it's not every day I'm excited to hear a movie. One major exception to this aural ignorance is a name that...
- 9/27/2011
- MUBI
Bowie, Christiane F and Taxi zum Klo: these are the things that made Berlin so alluring to the British pop culture of the late 70s and early 80s. Jon Savage remembers a bewitching era
Frank Ripploh is fed up. Stuck in hospital for six weeks with some unnamed contagious sexual disease – most probably hepatitis – he receives a visit from his live-in lover. Instead of listening sympathetically to Frank's moans about the other patients, Bernd gives him a right telling-off about his promiscuity: "I hope lying here teaches you something." After Bernd leaves, a furious Frank pulls his clothes on and hails a taxi. There then follows a mad dash around various public toilets. With the meter running, he desperately searches for a quick pick-up and eventually ends up in Berlin's Tiergarten – a large public park near the centre of the city that was a notorious cruising ground at that time.
Frank Ripploh is fed up. Stuck in hospital for six weeks with some unnamed contagious sexual disease – most probably hepatitis – he receives a visit from his live-in lover. Instead of listening sympathetically to Frank's moans about the other patients, Bernd gives him a right telling-off about his promiscuity: "I hope lying here teaches you something." After Bernd leaves, a furious Frank pulls his clothes on and hails a taxi. There then follows a mad dash around various public toilets. With the meter running, he desperately searches for a quick pick-up and eventually ends up in Berlin's Tiergarten – a large public park near the centre of the city that was a notorious cruising ground at that time.
- 4/21/2011
- by Jon Savage
- The Guardian - Film News
Captain Kirk is headed back to space.
William Shatner, the Emmy winning TV icon, announced the track listing and details for his new space-inspired cover album, Searching For Major Tom. The album will feature a large number of heavy metal covers, as well as songs by U2, Frank Sinatra, Queen and Pink Floyd.
Shatner has had a storied music career, producing confusing, parodied yet somehow enlightening song covers and original bits over the past 40+ years. His first album, The Transformed Man, raised eyebrows with its bizarre covers, which, in what would become his trademark style, boasted dramatic readings of lyrics over music. HIs best known track was a recording of Sonny & Cher's "Mr. Tambourine Man." Check out Urlesque's ranking of his ten best cover songs here.
Shatner announced the album via Twitter back in February.
Here's the track list:
Space Trucking Originally By Deep Purple - Deep Purple Drummer...
William Shatner, the Emmy winning TV icon, announced the track listing and details for his new space-inspired cover album, Searching For Major Tom. The album will feature a large number of heavy metal covers, as well as songs by U2, Frank Sinatra, Queen and Pink Floyd.
Shatner has had a storied music career, producing confusing, parodied yet somehow enlightening song covers and original bits over the past 40+ years. His first album, The Transformed Man, raised eyebrows with its bizarre covers, which, in what would become his trademark style, boasted dramatic readings of lyrics over music. HIs best known track was a recording of Sonny & Cher's "Mr. Tambourine Man." Check out Urlesque's ranking of his ten best cover songs here.
Shatner announced the album via Twitter back in February.
Here's the track list:
Space Trucking Originally By Deep Purple - Deep Purple Drummer...
- 4/13/2011
- by Jordan Zakarin
- Huffington Post
Here at HeyUGuys, we aim to provide you with an all-encompassing look into the world of film. Whether you’re a fully-fledged cineaste, or just possess a casual interest, there’s something for anyone with our alternative A-z of cinema, which starts today and runs through the week.
If you’ve ever wondered just what it is an Executive Producer does, or maybe if you’ve heard the ambient sounds of Tangerine Dream in an 80’s film favourite without knowing who you were listening to, this is the list for you!
Here are the letters P-t…
Pauline Kael (1919 – 2001) was an American film critic who wrote for The New Yorker magazine from 1968 to 1991. She is often regarded as the most influential American film critic of her day.
Although a big advocate of the New Hollywood of the 70’s, some of her reviews carried a somewhat contrarian viewpoint of what many considered classics in modern era.
If you’ve ever wondered just what it is an Executive Producer does, or maybe if you’ve heard the ambient sounds of Tangerine Dream in an 80’s film favourite without knowing who you were listening to, this is the list for you!
Here are the letters P-t…
Pauline Kael (1919 – 2001) was an American film critic who wrote for The New Yorker magazine from 1968 to 1991. She is often regarded as the most influential American film critic of her day.
Although a big advocate of the New Hollywood of the 70’s, some of her reviews carried a somewhat contrarian viewpoint of what many considered classics in modern era.
- 2/24/2011
- by Adam Lowes
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
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