Thank You for showing these! We Appreciate the varieties that you present & show & play! We are hardcore T.D. fans & collected Tangerine Dream & related solo albums when we were growing up, and caught T.D. on Tour every time they toured The U.S., We collected what Krautrock that we could find in the record shops, in the Imports sections, but we were only subjected to what was sent to the States in the late 70's & early 80's, so Thanks Again for sharing your wide Variety & Knowledge!! 😎
Tangerine Dream were probably the very first krautrock band I ever heard / bought with Phaedra (also my first and still favourite electronic music album). Only got to see them live the once unfortunately - in 1981 in London. Original krautrock albums are difficult and expensive to find, so very glad when it found some popularity again and re-issues began to be released. Thanks for watching and for the kind comment.
Wonderful selection. Great and wonderful records. Tangerine Dream is a treasure trove dating back to the mid-80s. Afterwards they unfortunately left their path. It was only from 2017, after the death of Edgar Froese, that they continued the old legacy. Warm greetings from Germany. Andreas.
@@crossingrubycon I absolutely agree about Tangerine Dream Andreas, I loved their music up to the mid 80s, but after that I didn't enjoy the music I heard. The post Froese material is however a return to form. Thanks for watching, very glad you enjoyed it. All the best... Pete
Another fantastic collection part Pete. I checked out Adelbert Von Deyen's "Eclipse". Boy you were right. It does sound like Dark Side of the Moon or Floydish. Tortilla Flat is next to be checked out. Wonderful and informative. Top notch Krautrock selections Pete~ Rob/Boston
Hi Rob, Eclipse if you're being generous can be described as a homage to DSotM, but as a total rip-off if you were not being so generously inclined 🤣. I like it though I do much prefer the first 3 albums by him. Good luck with Tortilla Flat - hopefully you'll enjoy them. All the very best... Pete
Hi Pete, I liked a lot sample of Tomorrws Gift, have never heard of them. That Tibet record I have seen one time at a fair, great cover art. That Twenty sixty six is pretty great album at its subgenre, i have never bought it though. That Tarot package would be great to have. Some intriguing stuff I have never heard or yet havent given a proper listen. Glad that you made this episode eventually. Greetings, Petri.
Hi Petri, glad you found some stuff in there that you liked. While the 2nd Tomorrow's Gift album is deemed to be their best, I'd love to find the first Tomorrow's Gift album (a double) sometime. The Tarot album is superb and a must have IMO. Cheers... Pete
Hi Pete - well worth the wait and some real favourites in there . Tetragon great band and also love the precursor Trikolon Cluster album . all a delight for Organ fans . Twenty Sixty Six also a huge favourite . Spartacus just shades it for me with Triumvirat and am also huge fan of the debut Mediterranean Tales album. Great video . Be well Graham
Thank you Graham. I've not heard the Trilikon Cluster album - that one is on my wish list. I've only got / heard the two Triumvirat albums so far - Illusions is my favourite of the two, but Spartacus is pretty new to the collection so it's one that I need to live with a bit longer. Cheers... Pete
Excellent! I was just telling my guitar instructor when he asked about what Krautrock is that he should check out your videos if he wants to dive in. I only have a touch of Tangerine Dream and the Wegmuller album out of this lot, and that obviously needs to change. Complex jazzy Canterbury Krautrock is a lovely combination of words. A bit of Karn Evil inspiration in the first Triumvirat album. My one dealer has a reissue of the Twenty Six still I believe, so might start with a pickup there. I had never heard that edition of Deutsch Nepal. I have heard a different one on an extended version of Wolf City. This is what you need on a windy -12 Fahrenheit evening. Take care, Richard
Hi Richard, thanks for the recommendation to your guitar instructor! TD's Phaedra was my very first Krautrock album and is still my favourite electronic music album of all time. You can't go wrong with 70s TD, and in fact up to the mid 80s they were still putting out very good albums. Recent TD has seen a return to form. I love Kraut Jazz, to my mind some of the finest Jazz rock / fusion out there. If you like Wolf City then you'll like the Utopia album as it's jazzier. Take care... Pete
I’m fascinated by the artwork on that Asmus Tietchens album. (Great music, too, of course.) It appears to be credited to someone else, but it looks exactly like the work of Jean de Bosschère, whose art from the book The City Curious is used for releases on the obscure Beak Doctor label out of Berkeley.
@@michaelpdawson Translating the info on the back cover it states that it's from a woodcut by an artist called Richard von Hoerschelmann. I can't find out anything about him. There is an illustrator by the name of Rolf von Hoerschelmann but his style looks different. I got the album for free from a guy who turned out to be the person who released it - he had a copy that had been in his garage for decades. According to Discogs it goes for around £100 - so a true bargain!
Thank You for showing these! We Appreciate the varieties that you present & show & play! We are hardcore T.D. fans & collected Tangerine Dream & related solo albums when we were growing up, and caught T.D. on Tour every time they toured The U.S., We collected what Krautrock that we could find in the record shops, in the Imports sections, but we were only subjected to what was sent to the States in the late 70's & early 80's, so Thanks Again for sharing your wide Variety & Knowledge!! 😎
Tangerine Dream were probably the very first krautrock band I ever heard / bought with Phaedra (also my first and still favourite electronic music album). Only got to see them live the once unfortunately - in 1981 in London. Original krautrock albums are difficult and expensive to find, so very glad when it found some popularity again and re-issues began to be released. Thanks for watching and for the kind comment.
Wonderful selection. Great and wonderful records. Tangerine Dream is a treasure trove dating back to the mid-80s. Afterwards they unfortunately left their path. It was only from 2017, after the death of Edgar Froese, that they continued the old legacy. Warm greetings from Germany. Andreas.
@@crossingrubycon I absolutely agree about Tangerine Dream Andreas, I loved their music up to the mid 80s, but after that I didn't enjoy the music I heard. The post Froese material is however a return to form. Thanks for watching, very glad you enjoyed it. All the best... Pete
Been waiting for this one Pete! Lol…..as always, thanks for sharing, you have such an amazing collection…..peace!
Thank you Joseph for watching and the kind comment.
Great presentation!
❤️ from 🇸🇪
Thank you very much - glad you enjoyed it.
Another fantastic collection part Pete. I checked out Adelbert Von Deyen's "Eclipse". Boy you were right. It does sound like Dark Side of the Moon or Floydish. Tortilla Flat is next to be checked out. Wonderful and informative. Top notch Krautrock selections Pete~
Rob/Boston
Hi Rob, Eclipse if you're being generous can be described as a homage to DSotM, but as a total rip-off if you were not being so generously inclined 🤣. I like it though I do much prefer the first 3 albums by him. Good luck with Tortilla Flat - hopefully you'll enjoy them. All the very best... Pete
Hi Pete, I liked a lot sample of Tomorrws Gift, have never heard of them. That Tibet record I have seen one time at a fair, great cover art. That Twenty sixty six is pretty great album at its subgenre, i have never bought it though. That Tarot package would be great to have. Some intriguing stuff I have never heard or yet havent given a proper listen. Glad that you made this episode eventually. Greetings, Petri.
Hi Petri, glad you found some stuff in there that you liked. While the 2nd Tomorrow's Gift album is deemed to be their best, I'd love to find the first Tomorrow's Gift album (a double) sometime. The Tarot album is superb and a must have IMO. Cheers... Pete
Hi Pete - well worth the wait and some real favourites in there . Tetragon great band and also love the precursor Trikolon Cluster album . all a delight for Organ fans . Twenty Sixty Six also a huge favourite . Spartacus just shades it for me with Triumvirat and am also huge fan of the debut Mediterranean Tales album. Great video . Be well Graham
Thank you Graham. I've not heard the Trilikon Cluster album - that one is on my wish list. I've only got / heard the two Triumvirat albums so far - Illusions is my favourite of the two, but Spartacus is pretty new to the collection so it's one that I need to live with a bit longer. Cheers... Pete
Excellent! I was just telling my guitar instructor when he asked about what Krautrock is that he should check out your videos if he wants to dive in. I only have a touch of Tangerine Dream and the Wegmuller album out of this lot, and that obviously needs to change. Complex jazzy Canterbury Krautrock is a lovely combination of words. A bit of Karn Evil inspiration in the first Triumvirat album. My one dealer has a reissue of the Twenty Six still I believe, so might start with a pickup there. I had never heard that edition of Deutsch Nepal. I have heard a different one on an extended version of Wolf City. This is what you need on a windy -12 Fahrenheit evening. Take care, Richard
Hi Richard, thanks for the recommendation to your guitar instructor! TD's Phaedra was my very first Krautrock album and is still my favourite electronic music album of all time. You can't go wrong with 70s TD, and in fact up to the mid 80s they were still putting out very good albums. Recent TD has seen a return to form. I love Kraut Jazz, to my mind some of the finest Jazz rock / fusion out there. If you like Wolf City then you'll like the Utopia album as it's jazzier. Take care... Pete
I’m fascinated by the artwork on that Asmus Tietchens album. (Great music, too, of course.) It appears to be credited to someone else, but it looks exactly like the work of Jean de Bosschère, whose art from the book The City Curious is used for releases on the obscure Beak Doctor label out of Berkeley.
@@michaelpdawson Translating the info on the back cover it states that it's from a woodcut by an artist called Richard von Hoerschelmann. I can't find out anything about him. There is an illustrator by the name of Rolf von Hoerschelmann but his style looks different.
I got the album for free from a guy who turned out to be the person who released it - he had a copy that had been in his garage for decades. According to Discogs it goes for around £100 - so a true bargain!