*** Welcome to piglix ***

Atem (album)

Atem
Atem.png
1973 LP album cover
Studio album by Tangerine Dream
Released March 1973
Recorded December 1972 – January 1973
Studio Dierks Studio
Genre
Length 41:28
Label Ohr
Producer Tangerine Dream
Tangerine Dream chronology
Zeit
(1972)
Atem
(1973)
Phaedra
(1974)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3/5 stars
Head Heritage positive

Atem (German: Breath) the fourth studio album by German electronic music group Tangerine Dream, released in March 1973 by record label Ohr.

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.Julian Cope's Head Heritage described it as Tangerine Dream's "transitional album".

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.

It was largely through DJ John Peel's enthusiastic championing of this album (it was his "Album of the Year" in 1973), that Tangerine Dream first came to the attention of British music listeners in a big way. 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.

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".

All tracks written by Edgar Froese, Christopher Franke and Peter Baumann.


...
Wikipedia

...