2024-02-20

TANGERINE DREAM - PHAEDRA @ 50

 

On this day, half a century ago on February 20th, 1974, the future of electronic music would receive one of its most important foundation stones, as Tangerine Dream released their fifth studio album, Phaedra. It was an album that would introduce one of the most crucial components to the production of synthesizer based music, with the step sequencer taking centre stage on this most influential album.

As well as introducing music fans to the mechanical, hypnotic bass pulse of the step sequenced modular synthesizer, this was the first album by the group to be released on Richard Branson's burgeoning Virgin Records. Branson had heard a set of recordings Edgar Froese and Christopher Franke had made earlier in 1973 at Skyline Studios in Berlin, and was impressed enough to sign the group to his label and invite them to come to the UK to record. They set up camp at The Manor in Shipton-on-Cherwell during November of 1973 and spent just under six weeks to complete the album.

Initial production did not go smoothly, however, as the group and studio engineers wrestled with a seemingly endless string of technical issues. Things began to change with a breakthrough recording by Edgar Froese, assisted by his wife, Monique. Froese recalled the session.

"Phaedra was the first album in which many things had to be structured. The reason was that we were using the Moog sequencer (all driving bass notes) for the first time. Just tuning the instrument took several hours each day, because at the time there were no presets or memory banks. We worked each day from 11 o'clock in the morning to 2 o'clock at night. By the 11th day we barely had 6 minutes of music on tape. Technically everything that could go wrong did go wrong. The tape machine broke down, there were repeated mixing console failures and the speakers were damaged because of the unusually low frequencies of the bass notes. After 12 days of this we were completely knackered. Fortunately, after a two-day break in the countryside a new start brought a breakthrough. 'Mysterious Semblance' was recorded on Dec 4th. Pete (Baumann) and Chris (Franke) were asleep after a long day's recording session so I invited my wife, Monique, into the studio. I called in the studio engineer and recorded it in one take on a double-keyboarded Mellotron while Monique turned the knobs on a phasing device. This piece is on the record exactly as it was recorded that day. And this practice was to continue for the rest of the session."

The title track was originally based on an improvisation recorded in the studio, and unintentionally exhibits one of the limitations of the analog equipment used at the time. As the equipment warmed up, some of the oscillators began to detune (they were highly temperature-sensitive), which was responsible for some of the changes in the music towards the end of the piece. Both the title track and "Movements of a Visionary" rely on Franke's use of the Moog analog sequencer as a substitute for bass guitar.

With the release of the album, Tangerine Dream were suddenly thrust onto the world stage as the premier ambassadors of the new German "Krautrock" scene, even though, ironically, Phaedra did rather poorly in Germany, selling a mere 6,000 units. But the story was very different on the international markets, as it reached gold record status in no less than seven countries. This was all with virtually no airplay and sales only being pushed by word of mouth by fans. In the UK, the album peaked at #15 on the LP charts!

Its effect on the trajectory of electronic music was incalculable. The sound of precision, pulsing step-sequencer synth-bass became ubiquitous within techno pop music as the decade progressed, becoming foundational to iconic, groundbreaking works by the likes of Kraftwerk and Giorgio Moroder. Phaedra has since gone on to be acknowledged as one of Tangerine Dream's most essential and respected albums, defining the group's career from that point forward.

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