Oxygene 3
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- KVRAF
- 7540 posts since 7 Aug, 2003 from San Francisco Bay Area
Thanks!Vortifex wrote:Opinions are subjective and all that, but for me his best work is still the original Oxygene. If I were to rank his best albums it'd probably be something like this:deastman wrote:I never got into JMJ. The only album I bought was Rendezvous back in the 80s, probably on the basis of some review in Keyboard magazine. I was not impressed. Of course I've heard the track Oxygene(some number) in isolation and it seemed not bad. So if I were to go back and listen to his best work, what would that be?
1) Oxygene
2) Equinoxe
3) Magnetic Fields
4) Zoolook
5) Concerts in China
Everything after that is meh IMO.
Incomplete list of my gear: 1/8" audio input jack.
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
My top 6:
Equinoxe
Oxygene
Oxygene II
Les chants magnétiques
Chronologie
Rendez-vouz
Equinoxe
Oxygene
Oxygene II
Les chants magnétiques
Chronologie
Rendez-vouz
- KVRAF
- 5564 posts since 13 Jan, 2005 from the bottom of my heart
Just set this troll on mute like 99% of the members here Opax. At least he was the only reason that i don't spend to much time here anymore.Opax wrote:I'll tell you what is pathetic... People who troll threads just to try and stir the pot and try to get a reaction. Are you posting for posting sake? I mean, over 21,000 posts - why don't you actually spend some time making music instead of trolling the forums here at KVR with your irrelevant, pedantic agenda?
Yes, there is only one copy of Music for Supermarkets in existence, as the master was destroyed. No, I do not own that album. I think the majority of people aware of this album will know that. But thank you for pointing out the obvious.
Anyone else care to talk about Oxygene 3?
PS. About Oxygène 3: Let me listen to it over the next week and i will report my impressions here in a few days.
Whoever wants music instead of noise, joy instead of pleasure, soul instead of gold, creative work instead of business, passion instead of foolery, finds no home in this trivial world of ours.
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
Diva and Ethnicolor are really great tracks, but the short tracks don't do it for me, so that is why I don't rate it that high as an album.Vortifex wrote:I remember when I played Zoolook for the first time. It was a real "what the f**k?" moment. Unlike anything I'd heard before from Jarre, or anyone else for that matter. After a few listens it grew on me, and I still love it to this day. Easily his most innovative album. Some of the sounds used place it firmly in the 1980s when it was made, but it still holds up as an interesting work.
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- KVRAF
- 16802 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
It reminds me of Robert Miles' Children, I find it tiresome, I can't really listen to more than a minute or so of it. I think that the original melody was catchy, so there's that.Vortifex wrote:... well, I mean, it's passable I suppose, but if you or I submitted that to a label, they wouldn't be hailing us as the next big thing in electronic music.
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- KVRian
- 589 posts since 16 Jun, 2003
I've listened to Oxygene 3 several times now, and it has definitely grown on me. I think the three albums work pretty well played in sequence. I'd find it hard to rate JMJ's albums, although I think that Equinoxe will probably always be my favourite. From his more recent albums, I love Oxygene 7-13 and Geometry of Love. Tastes can change over time. I remember when I first bought Waiting for Cousteau on CD, I was bitterly disappointed with the 40-odd minute title track which was little more than a soundscape and not especially musical to my ears, and yet now I can happily sit and listen to it from start to finish, just relaxing.
I met Jean Michel Jarre at HMV in Oxford Street on Friday, when he was signing copies of the new album. It was far too brief though and I went straight into fanboy mode...
I met Jean Michel Jarre at HMV in Oxford Street on Friday, when he was signing copies of the new album. It was far too brief though and I went straight into fanboy mode...
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- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
I would have done the sameandrew71 wrote:I went straight into fanboy mode...
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- KVRAF
- 16802 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
I like soundscapes and I prefer Waiting for Cousteau to his latest effort, but, I think that other people do soundscapes better. As soundscapes go it it's pretty predictable. Low rumbling bass, twinkles, piano drenched in reverb, choir voices. Not that any of those things are bad, but I didn't find the combination interesting or compelling. The only thing that was a bit surprising were the strange spoken voices, some were interesting, some were just funny. IMHO, as soundscapes go, it's not good enough to be 46 minutes long.andrew71 wrote:I've listened to Oxygene 3 several times now, and it has definitely grown on me. I think the three albums work pretty well played in sequence. I'd find it hard to rate JMJ's albums, although I think that Equinoxe will probably always be my favourite. From his more recent albums, I love Oxygene 7-13 and Geometry of Love. Tastes can change over time. I remember when I first bought Waiting for Cousteau on CD, I was bitterly disappointed with the 40-odd minute title track which was little more than a soundscape and not especially musical to my ears, and yet now I can happily sit and listen to it from start to finish, just relaxing.
I met Jean Michel Jarre at HMV in Oxford Street on Friday, when he was signing copies of the new album. It was far too brief though and I went straight into fanboy mode...
From my point of view, this isn't about evolving tastes, I think that JMJ is overrated. Reading his bio it seems to me that he is largely the product of privilege and luck. He was in the right place at the right time and was interested in the right things in the right ways to be labeled a pioneer. I give him some credit for not being taken completely by mainstream tastes, but again, I think that's in some part a consequence of his privilege and influence. He happened to be taken by synthesizers in a time where that wasn't all that common. I think, for example, that had he been interested in classical piano that nobody would have ever heard anything about him.
I'm sure glad that I can preview pretty much anything before buying it these days.
- KVRAF
- 8130 posts since 13 Jan, 2003 from Darkest Kent, UK
I'd go along with that (though have a soft spot for Rendouzvous, guilty pleasure etc etcVortifex wrote:Opinions are subjective and all that, but for me his best work is still the original Oxygene. If I were to rank his best albums it'd probably be something like this:
1) Oxygene
2) Equinoxe
3) Magnetic Fields
4) Zoolook
5) Concerts in China
Everything after that is meh IMO.
- KVRAF
- 8079 posts since 9 Jan, 2003 from Saint Louis MO
To be fair, many of the sounds in the original Oxygene, Equinoxe, Rendezvous etc. and Zoolook are quite dated.Vortifex wrote:They're already dated.Numanoid wrote:I am a bit worried how dated those sharp EDM like plucks he uses often will sound a couple of years down the road.
So far Oxygene 3 is just not grabbing me though.
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
No, the tweaking of sounds on those albums are timeless, will never datefoosnark wrote:To be fair, many of the sounds in the original Oxygene, Equinoxe ... are quite dated.
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
Well, you can say that about Kraftwerk as well.ghettosynth wrote:He happened to be taken by synthesizers in a time where that wasn't all that common. I think, for example, that had he been interested in classical piano that nobody would have ever heard anything about him.
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- KVRAF
- 16802 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
Not really. Kraftwerk released several improvisational albums with traditional instruments prior to their more successful synth work. I don't think that their paths are similar at all really. In any case, I'm not of the mind that Kraftwerk is overrated. YMMV.Numanoid wrote:Well, you can say that about Kraftwerk as well.ghettosynth wrote:He happened to be taken by synthesizers in a time where that wasn't all that common. I think, for example, that had he been interested in classical piano that nobody would have ever heard anything about him.