Alpha Centauri (album) explained

Alpha Centauri
Type:Studio album
Artist:Tangerine Dream
Cover:Alpha Centauri.png
Caption:1971 LP album cover
Released:March 1971
Recorded:January 1971
Studio:Dierks Studio
Length:39:48
Label:Ohr
Producer:Tangerine Dream
Prev Title:Electronic Meditation
Prev Year:1970
Next Title:Zeit
Next Year:1972

Alpha Centauri is the second studio album by German electronic music group Tangerine Dream. It was released in March 1971 by record label Ohr.

Content

The music on this album is quite different from Tangerine Dream's first album Electronic Meditation, partly because of a heavier reliance on keyboards and electronic technology, although they still mostly remain in the background: the dominant instruments on the album are organ and flute. The other difference is that this album focuses on dark, spacey soundscapes as opposed to jam sessions. The shift in instrumentation resulted in an atmosphere dubbed by Edgar Froese himself as "kosmische musik". Julian Cope's Head Heritage wrote that the album "used the space rock template from [Pink Floyd's] Saucerful of Secrets (and removed the rock)".[1]

A nowadays extremely rare single "Ultima Thule" was released in February of the same year. Side 1 employs the same guitar riff as "Fly and Collision of Comas Sola", but the single was at the time otherwise an unconnected release. Re-releases of Alpha Centauri in the 2000s have however included either or both parts of Ultima Thule as bonus tracks.

Release

Alpha Centauri was released in March 1971 by record label Ohr. It sold 20,000 copies in their native Germany, nearly four times as many as their later classic Phaedra.

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Julian Cope Presents Head Heritage | Unsung | Reviews | Tangerine Dream – Atem . 9 March 2012.