Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Atem (album)
View on Wikipedia
| Atem | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
1973 LP album cover | ||||
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | March 1973 | |||
| Recorded | December 1972 – January 1973 | |||
| Studio | Dierks Studio | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 41:28 | |||
| Label | Ohr | |||
| Producer | Tangerine Dream | |||
| Tangerine Dream chronology | ||||
| ||||
Atem ([ˈaːtəm], "breath") is the fourth studio album by German electronic music group Tangerine Dream.[2] It was released in March 1973 by record label Ohr.
Content
[edit]The music on Atem ranges from slow atmospheric pieces to more aggressive percussion and vocal experiments with dynamic Mellotron orchestrations. Describing its style, AllMusic wrote "Atem is more melodic and less dissonant than Tangerine Dream's other early works. The lineup [...] puts a nice topspin on the old prog rock sound. [...] While it is still very common to see TD listed as progressive rock and art rock, this album is pure space music."
The album marked the end of the band's seminal "Pink Years" period, with future albums adopting a more structured (and commercially viable) sound.[citation needed] Julian Cope's Head Heritage described it as Tangerine Dream's "transitional album".[3]
The baby pictured on the cover is Jerome Froese, the son of Edgar Froese, who would eventually become a member of Tangerine Dream. He was two years and four months old at the time this album was released.
Release and reception
[edit]| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Head Heritage | positive[3] |
It was largely through DJ John Peel's enthusiastic championing of this album (it was one of his "Albums of the Year" in 1973), that Tangerine Dream first came to the attention of British music listeners in a big way.[citation needed] The public began ordering copies of the group's albums through mail order companies (although Atem, along with Alpha Centauri, did get an official UK release on Polydor around this time). According to legend, it was this mail order activity that caused Richard Branson to take notice.[citation needed]
In its retrospective review, Head Heritage described it as "TD's most adventurous and exhilarating listening experience", and the title track as "TD’s most powerful moment".[3]
Track listing
[edit]All tracks are written by Edgar Froese, Christopher Franke and Peter Baumann.
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Atem" | 20:27 |
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Fauni-Gena" | 10:47 |
| 2. | "Circulation of Events" | 5:52 |
| 3. | "Wahn" | 4:29 |
Personnel
[edit]- Edgar Froese – Mellotron, organ, guitar, voice
- Christopher Franke – VCS3, drums, percussion, organ, voice
- Peter Baumann – organ, piano, VCS3
References
[edit]- ^ a b Brenholts, Jim. Atem - Tangerine Dream at AllMusic
- ^ Berling, Michael (29 September 2016). "Atem". Voices in the Net.
- ^ a b c "Julian Cope Presents Head Heritage | Unsung | Reviews | Tangerine Dream – Atem". 9 March 2012.
External links
[edit]Atem (album)
View on GrokipediaBackground
Band context
Tangerine Dream was founded in 1967 by guitarist Edgar Froese in West Berlin, initially drawing from psychedelic rock influences with an evolving lineup that included various musicians on saxophone, drums, and bass.[5] By 1970, after the departure of key early members Klaus Schulze and Conrad Schnitzler, drummer Christopher Franke joined from the band Agitation Free, marking a pivot toward electronic experimentation.[5] In 1971, following the brief tenure of organist Steve Schroyder—who contributed to their second album—keyboardist Peter Baumann replaced him, solidifying the classic trio of Froese, Franke, and Baumann that would define the band's most influential period.[5] This lineup emerged amid the vibrant West Berlin scene, where the band rehearsed at studios like Beat Studio alongside acts such as Ash Ra Tempel, contributing to the foundational development of the Berlin School of electronic music—a genre characterized by hypnotic, sequencer-driven soundscapes.[5] The band's early discography under Ohr Records, often referred to as the "Pink Years" due to the label's distinctive pink ear logo, showcased a rapid evolution from improvisational roots to refined electronic compositions.[6] Their debut album, Electronic Meditation (1970), featured free-form improvisation blending rock elements with experimental sounds created from household objects and basic effects, reflecting influences from Jimi Hendrix and Pink Floyd.[7] Alpha Centauri (1971) marked a transitional phase, introducing synthesizers like the VCS3 and shifting toward quieter, meditative space-rock structures with avant-garde touches inspired by composers such as Karlheinz Stockhausen.[7] By Zeit (1972), a double album of ambient, beatless soundscapes recorded in just ten days, Tangerine Dream had fully embraced non-rhythmic electronic exploration using Moog synthesizers and noise generators, prioritizing cosmic immersion over conventional melodies.[7] This progression encapsulated the Berlin School's emphasis on atmospheric, technology-driven music, with Ohr Records providing a platform for the band's innovative output from 1970 to 1973.[6] Atem (1973) served as the culmination of the Pink Years and the final release under their Ohr contract, amid growing tensions with the label that led to legal disputes.[3] The album represented a transitional bridge, blending the experimental depth of prior works with more accessible dynamics that foreshadowed the international success of the band's subsequent Virgin Records era, beginning with Phaedra in 1974.[3]Album development
The development of Atem began in late 1972, as Tangerine Dream sought to explore themes of breath and circulation, drawing inspiration from cosmic expanses and organic processes to create a more structured sonic landscape. This period marked a deliberate pivot from the band's earlier ambient experiments, with Edgar Froese, Chris Franke, and Peter Baumann conceptualizing the album as a meditation on life's vital flows, evident in planned elements like pulsating rhythms and airy textures that evoked natural and interstellar motifs.[8][9] Building on the meditative drone of their prior album Zeit (1972), the trio decided to incorporate greater melodic accessibility and reduced dissonance, aiming for dynamics that included rhythmic percussion and layered synthesizers to broaden the music's emotional range without abandoning electronic abstraction. This shift was intended to make the work more engaging, featuring experimental vocalizations and atmospheric passages that would simulate inhalation and exhalation, reflecting a conscious evolution toward a "cosmic" yet grounded aesthetic.[3][7][9] The album's title, Atem—German for "breath"—directly encapsulated these pre-production ideas, symbolizing the band's ambition to infuse their kosmische musik with vital, breath-like experimental vocals and enveloping atmospheres. The album's post-release acclaim, including BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel's selection of Atem as his album of 1973, validated the group's push for wider appeal and facilitated their transition to Virgin Records later that year.[3][7][4]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording sessions for Atem took place from December 1972 to January 1973 at Dierks Studios in Stommeln, near Cologne, Germany.[3] This approximately one-month period marked a focused and intensive effort by Tangerine Dream to capture their evolving sound in a professional 8-track facility.[7] The lineup consisted of Edgar Froese, Christopher Franke, and Peter Baumann, representing the band's first complete studio collaboration as a trio without guest contributors. The group was produced by Rolf-Ulrich Kaiser and Tangerine Dream, maintaining artistic control throughout, while Dieter Dierks handled engineering duties. According to Froese, the actual tracking and mixing spanned about 15 days, underscoring the efficiency and immersion of the process.[7] These sessions yielded extended improvisational pieces central to the album, born from the trio's spontaneous interplay and experimentation with emerging electronic textures.[7]Equipment and techniques
The production of Atem marked Tangerine Dream's first extensive use of the Mellotron, employed by Edgar Froese to create orchestral swells and ethereal textures through its signature tape-loop mechanism, which replayed prerecorded sounds in short, 7-second bursts.[7] This instrument's low-fidelity playback, limited to around 9 kHz, contributed to the album's hazy, dreamlike quality, influencing the band's shift toward more structured compositions to accommodate the loops' constraints.[10] Complementing the Mellotron were Farfisa organs used by all three members—Froese, Franke, and Peter Baumann—for sustained drones and harmonic foundations.[11] Custom-built electronics, including Franke's bespoke rhythm units, added percussive elements and experimental timbres, expanding the group's palette beyond standard commercial gear.[11] Two EMS VCS3 synthesizers were central, delivering pulsing sequences and whooshing effects via their integrated sequencers, representing an early adoption of voltage-controlled sequencing for repetitive, motorik-inspired patterns.[1] Recording techniques emphasized layered tape loops for atmospheric depth, with VCS3 loops generating eerie, evolving backgrounds and Mellotron segments building immersive soundscapes.[1] Experimental vocal processing was explored sparingly through manipulated recordings, introducing breath-like sounds—echoing the album's titular theme of respiration—via slowed and filtered tape manipulations that evoked organic inhalation amid electronic abstraction.[7] The sessions at Dierks Studios in Stommeln utilized an 8-track multitrack setup over 15 days in late 1972 and early 1973, enabling denser layering and complex overdubs compared to the group's prior monophonic efforts on albums like Zeit, thus facilitating innovative sound design that blended improvisation with rhythmic reintroduction.[10] These methods shaped Atem's kosmische style, prioritizing vast sonic environments over traditional melody.[7]Musical style and composition
Overall style
Atem blends elements of ambient, space rock, and krautrock, and is considered a key work in electronic music.[12] The album's sound is more melodic and less dissonant than Tangerine Dream's other early works.[13] Its extended track durations contribute to a total runtime of approximately 41 minutes. In comparison to Tangerine Dream's prior album Zeit (1972), which emphasized stark minimalism, Atem (1973) offers greater accessibility through its melodic leanings and structured progressions, marking a shift toward more listener-friendly electronic compositions.[3] This evolution positions Atem as a transitional work, serving as a precursor to the sequencer-driven rhythms and hypnotic sequences that would define the band's breakthrough album Phaedra (1974).[14] Rooted in the kosmische musik tradition of krautrock, the album's style reflects Tangerine Dream's maturation in crafting expansive, otherworldly soundscapes during their formative Ohr Records era.[9]Thematic elements
The album Atem centers on the theme of breath as a metaphor for life's cyclical nature, with the title track exemplifying this through its ritualistic progression from expansive drones to moments of simulated respiration, evoking inhalation and exhalation as symbols of renewal and transience.[8] This motif aligns with broader explorations of vitality and impermanence, where sonic pauses amid electronic swells represent the ebb and flow of existence.[14] Symbolic contrasts between organic and mechanical elements recur throughout, as in the interplay of synthesized bird calls and insect-like noises against rigid sequencer patterns, symbolizing the circulation of natural and artificial forces in perpetual motion.[8] The track "Wahn," translating to "delusion" or "illusion" in German, further embodies this through disjointed, manic structures that blur reality and fabrication, suggesting a philosophical inquiry into perception and falsehood.[14] These motifs underscore a tension between the vital and the constructed, mirroring the album's depiction of event cycles as both inevitable and illusory.[3] Influenced by philosophical ideas of existence and science fiction narratives of vast unknowns, Atem embodies the Berlin School's cosmic aesthetic, where electronic abstraction conjures interstellar journeys and existential wonder.[15] Vocal experiments, such as the treated chants in "Wahn," introduce rare human elements into the predominantly synthetic soundscape, marking this album's transitional role from ambient experimentation to more structured compositions.[3] This human touch amid cosmic detachment highlights a unique phase in the band's evolution, bridging raw electronic frontiers with emergent melodic accessibility.[8]Release
Initial release
Atem was released in March 1973 by the German record label Ohr Records, with the catalog number OMM 556.031.[1] The album was issued as a stereo vinyl LP in a gatefold sleeve, with initial distribution limited to Germany.[2] The cover art features a painting by Edgar Froese, incorporating photographs by Monique Froese, including an image of her son Jerome Froese at the age of two years and four months.[16][17] In the United Kingdom, the album gained significant attention when BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel selected Atem as his Album of the Year for 1973, which sparked a surge in interest and led to substantial mail-order sales through Virgin Records.[18][3] This promotion marked an early step in Tangerine Dream's growing international profile, preceding their later releases on Virgin.[4]Reissues and remasters
The album Atem saw its first compact disc reissues in the mid-1980s, beginning with a 1985 edition on Jive Electro in the UK (catalog C TANG 2), distributed through RCA and Virgin labels, marking the transition of Tangerine Dream's early Ohr catalog to digital formats.[19] Subsequent 1980s pressings followed on similar labels, providing early accessibility to collectors before widespread CD adoption. A notable remaster arrived in 1996 via Essential Records in the UK (ESM CD 348) and Sequel Records in the US (SEQUEL 1035-2), both enhancing audio clarity from the original analog tapes without adding bonus material.[1] The 2004 Japanese edition on Arcàngelo (ARC-7050), a remastered paper-sleeve release, further improved dynamic range, though it remained faithful to the original tracklist.[20] In 2011, Esoteric Recordings issued a deluxe two-CD remastered edition (EREACD 21019) in the UK, featuring the core album alongside a bonus disc of a previously unreleased 40-minute live performance from the Deutschlandhalle in Berlin on November 29, 1973, offering expanded context while preserving the album's integrity.[21] No major alternate mixes or studio outtakes have been officially released across editions. The 2012 Japanese SHM-CD by Belle Antique (BELLE 121945) gained acclaim for its high-fidelity replication using Super High Material discs, minimizing digital artifacts. Modern availability expanded with the 2018 "Pink Years Albums 1970-1973" four-CD clamshell box set from Esoteric, which included a newly remastered version of Atem alongside the band's first three Ohr albums, packaged in replica sleeves for archival appeal.[22] Since the early 2010s, Atem has been accessible via streaming platforms such as Spotify, facilitating broader digital consumption without physical media.[23]Reception and legacy
Contemporary reception
Upon its release in March 1973, Atem garnered enthusiastic support from key figures in the British music scene, particularly BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel, who named it his Album of the Year and praised its adventurous electronic compositions as exemplary of the kosmische music genre.[24][25] Peel began featuring Tangerine Dream tracks on his show as early as autumn 1972, and by April 1973, he described the band as "the best of the Kosmische Music bands," noting the polarized yet passionate listener responses—many letters lauded the music's immersive qualities, while others expressed strong opposition.[24] This endorsement significantly boosted the album's visibility in the UK, attracting progressive and experimental music fans despite the band's prior obscurity outside Germany.[4] Peel's heavy rotation of tracks from Atem marked the beginning of Tangerine Dream's international breakthrough, leading Virgin founder Richard Branson to sign the group in 1973 and contributing to modest initial sales that established a cult following.[25] In Germany, its commercial performance remained limited on the independent Ohr label.[18]Critical legacy and influence
In the decades following its release, Atem has been reevaluated by critics as a pivotal transitional work in Tangerine Dream's discography, bridging the experimental density of their earlier albums like Zeit (1972) and the more melodic sequencer-driven sound that defined their mid-1970s era. A 2016 retrospective in uDiscover Music described it as an intense, experimental bridge that showcased the band's shift toward reflective, trancelike ethereality, with tracks blending tribal percussion, Mellotron layers, and electronic improvisation to create a raw, otherworldly atmosphere.[4] Similarly, a review on the Head Heritage website praised Atem as the band's most adventurous and exhilarating album, highlighting its weird and wild qualities—often overlooked in favor of later classics—and its focus on earthly, ritualistic themes through innovative sound design.[9] The album solidified Tangerine Dream's role as pioneers of the Berlin School genre, a style of electronic music characterized by atmospheric synthesizers, repetitive sequences, and immersive textures that emerged from the West Berlin scene in the early 1970s. While later albums like Phaedra (1974) are often credited with fully defining the genre, Atem contributed foundational elements through its blend of avant-garde experimentation and proto-ambient structures, influencing the development of sequencer-based electronic music.[26] Its impact extended to ambient music.[27] Culturally, Atem achieved enduring status despite lacking major awards, gaining a devoted following through its inclusion in influential broadcasts and modern adaptations. In the 2020s, the album has seen renewed accessibility via streaming platforms like Spotify and Apple Music, contributing to a revival of interest in early electronic music among younger listeners exploring krautrock and ambient genres.[23]Credits
Track listing
All compositions on Atem are credited to the band's core trio of Edgar Froese, Christopher Franke, and Peter Baumann, with no guest contributors.[1][28]| No. | Title | Duration | Writer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Side one | |||
| 1 | "Atem" | 20:25 | Froese/Franke/Baumann |
| 2 | "Fauni-Gena" | 10:43 | Froese/Franke/Baumann |
| Side two | |||
| 3 | "Circulation of Events" | 5:49 | Froese/Franke/Baumann |
| 4 | "Wahn" | 4:31 | Froese/Franke/Baumann |
| Total length: 41:28 |
Personnel
Atem marks the first Tangerine Dream album fully credited to the core trio of Edgar Froese, Christopher Franke, and Peter Baumann, without contributions from guest musicians.[3][4] The band's lineup on the album consisted of:- Edgar Froese – Mellotron, guitar, organ, VCS3 synthesizer, voice, composer, producer[1][29]
- Christopher Franke – Organ, synthesizer (VCS3), percussion, drums, voice, composer[1][29]
- Peter Baumann – Organ, synthesizer (VCS3), piano, composer[1][29]
