Force Majeure - A Review of the Book

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Hipgnosis
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Force Majeure - A Review of the Book

Post by Hipgnosis »

Hi,

The majority of books dealing with biographies, are something that leaves a lot to be desired. It's always about the fans and their look at some kind of hero, that we're supposed to appreciate and appease in every way possible to maintain their fame. One rarely finds out a whole lot about the person themselves, and, in the end, some of these books are not always satisfactory.

It's not always that we find something that, in many ways, is quite different, and this time it is told from Edgar Froese's point of view, and how he saw things, rather than some idealistic thoughts and views about life that gave them the stardom they gained.

Edgar's view is highly different from many folks, as it is not necessarily about the music, but about the art itself that helps create the music. This is very difficult for most fans, that often simply like the tunes and otherwise could be said to not have any other appreciation for the work itself. By the end of the book, you understand the process which this band used for a long time to create a lot of special albums of music that is still being released a few years after he left us for his new cosmic address.

Discussing, what many would consider an imaginary process to create some art, is difficult, as a lot of times, there are no words for those inner feelings, and one has to find a way to that "secret", and perhaps the first of these is cleared up right away in the book, by the time that Edgar spends in Spain with Salvador Dali.

One can not learn by simply copying and thinking that the idea was clever. In the world of Salvador Dali, like a lot of the surrealists at the time, it is not about just "seeing" these things, but also "living" them. And that was the main difference, it seems, for the work he did as opposed to others. So, Edgar finds a way to get into Salvador's studio and in there ... we think that he really got to understand his first intuitive abilities and how to make them come alive. The question, I think, would be, how to get this across to others and create something that made sense and was interesting at the same time, and I think that Salvador specified that it did not matter if it made sense or not ... you either live it, or you don't.

From this point on, you wonder what the book is about. The creativity? The band? The ... everything else?

The book turns into an encyclopedic study of the elements that made Tangerine Dream live, if not in their minds, at least in ours, and we go through an exhausting history of various moments, that kinda explode on the frozen tundras of Poland, in a manner that you wonder ... you got to be kidding me? Nope ... it was all there, the worst dream that we could possibly expect, and something that we would imagine would make the members stronger, and instead made things much more difficult to work with and eventually create yet another change in the group.

Many things are interesting in this very good and difficult book to read sometimes, since it is detailed so much ... and then, the one chapter that might throw many folks off, is the one about David Bowie, at a time, when he appears to have decided to go to Berlin, for the purpose of cleaning up from all the drugs and leeches around him. One wonders, why a "pop star" is of such an important part of the book and Edgar's career, and in the end, what is hard to see is that he learns even more ... what it takes and ticks for someone to "create" something totally different, and in one astounding moment/example, it is the producer Tony Visconti that makes it clear ... it is about David's voice and he is going to play it until he finds the moment he needs to develop it. PERIOD. And everyone had to shut and leave until that time made its entrance! Edgar, and the members of TD had been doing that for some time, even if they did not have any words to describe it. Their ways were mostly about the sound itself,and its quality and eventual development.

I'm not sure that TD ever really had the luxury that David Bowie enjoyed, but they did have a very strong intuitive edge, even if it was according to the book, rather different than most people's. Start that sequence and they take over from there in due course. Not all pieces that ended up in albums were exactly like that, and many of them had very different starts and moments, and you will find out that for a long while, it was a new "sound" that helped them developw, and later, not just a sound, but a way to interweave everyone's piece of work together into some of the most beautiful music anyone has ever done.

The book, is actually very good, although I am inclined to believe that the "humor" in it, sometimes gets in the way, since we are not in Germany, and it could be even more difficult if you were not in Berlin at the time, to know how the cynical, weird, off kilter exchanges to our ears, can seem so normal, and something "not to take personally". One has to have very thick skin, it seems, to get past all that, and more than likely even thicker skin to be able to get everyone in the room, and the band to stay together to create even more music for what 46/47 years or so?

The book comes to an end, and it appears that there simply was not any more time before Edgar left our plane of existence, to add some more and describe for us what it took in the next 10/15 plus years to create what they did, that in concert, if one is to take the moments from a lot of the videos out there, were excellent to the audience. And to me! How can you not enjoy "Rocking Out the Bats", for example?

In the end, if there is a sadness for me, it is that Christoph Franke did not send a note or two, and one can sometimes think that Edgar's eyes looking at Christoph is sort of a cartoon, complete with the typical WB barbs, German style, of course. Makes me think that Mr. Franke thinks that he had more involved and invested in the whole thing than Edgar shows, and comments on. Edgar makes a point of just about appreciating all the folks that participated in the large amount of work, but it seems that not as much, is seen from Mr. Franke.

All in all, this is a very special book, and given the hardships involved and the incredible stage adventures and failures that took place in many of their early days' concerts, it was inevitable that putting it all down on paper would make sense, if anything to show folks how a vision of a visionary in music, MUST be brought to life.

I am not sure that many of us will look at this book, that way ... I first saw them in the first American tour at the Santa Monica Civic and for the 4th and last time in Portland in 1986 at the Arlene Schnitzler Hall, when my girlfriend at the time even said in the end ... is all that supposed to be music?

Kinda says it all about the music that TD creates. But it has the force of an artist, that only a real artistic mind can live through and innitiate. This group and their work, has been for many years very important to my own internal development, since I was an inner "tripper" (if you will), and music like this had all the movie parts that one needed to live in it, and no lyrics to throw you off the cliff!

Only one odd thing for me ... the title and the album. I think that Edgar, secretly, loved that album, and I, personally, love to put that on and blast it. And to me, this was really enjoyable. And an album that still stands out in my mind as well as any of the others I love to listen to.

It is, by all accounts a very strong and wonderful book. Not your run of the mill discussion about this or that, but in the end, a really fine instrument into the creative mind day in and day out ... which made Tangerine Dream, one of the finest artists of this century for me.

I kinda would have liked to see/hear more about the later lineups and folks, but apparently by that time it never arrived for the book, or is not in a form that can be published or shared. However, if these later concerts are an indication, as the shows on the Internet and DVD's seem to suggest, the ability of the newer folks to stick to the work, seems to have been much more centered and focused than before, even if many people do not think the music was as powerful and beautiful as before, which in my mind is not the case ... it was just as good.

Well done ... very well done ... just like a new Tangerine Dream album always was ... and I do not think that any of us could have asked for a whole lot more! It is a long story, that is told via the tours and works that were created for the moment, and everything in between, and one should really consider this a massive catalogue of what it was like, specially in the earlier days of electronic works, when so many halls did not even have the capacity to handle so many instruments and whole layouts were very difficult ... to even consider playing.

Highly recommended and I would have loved to read more of it and into 2010 and the later years, specially things that helped create the SORCERER shows and the massive effort that something like that would have required, but it shows how well this group could function and develop work that most can not do at all.

A book that stands out for it quality and really, feels like ... just another TD album that you gladly play many times, and enjoy ... I'm not sure that the past music will sound the same having read all of this, but I doubt that the visual nature of my feelings has changed because of this reading. It is fabulous and a large thank you to the TD folks in their effort to put this out correctly, even if the last 10 to 15 years are missing, which may not exist, but with the encyclopedic mind that put together the book. I had already thought, via my literary house, figured that this was a show by someone that knew what the "artistic mind and soul", was more about, than just a song or a piece of music.

A great thank you to Bianca for her input and assist, and all the fans that made this book possible. A prized effort in my humble collection of books.

(c) 2018 by Pedro Sena. Printed by author.
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Insvims
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Re: Force Majeure - A Review of the Book

Post by Insvims »

Thanks for this wonderful review! I don't have the words to write about it in such an elegant way, but I get all you are saying here. It resonates within me.
I have 80 pages left to read (including all the comments from fans etc.), but I can agree on what you describe here.

My fear that the last 15 years are not covered was confirmed, and I am sad about it, because those years are so important to me. Hopefully some more texts will be released, or maybe Thorsten or someone will continue to write about all that has happened since.

I can admit that I am a bit annoyed about the fact that EF seems to focus on all that went wrong. I have longed to read about his further adventures, about his life and his victories, about his travels and his daily life. The book is MAYBE (at least in my opinion) focusing too much on everyone that has made his life difficult. But there must have been a lot of good times as well (I hope). Like coming off stage and being ecstatic about how good things went, or how nice it must have been to see the exotic places over the years, on how it was along the Trans Siberian Railway (a special interest for me), etc.
I have some pages still to read, and I enjoy it all the time.

I wish you could have seen the band after 1986 also, although I am of course a bit envious that you saw them that early. My live experience with TD started in 2008 at Loreley. After that I have seen them seven times in total. The last one being Elbphilharmonie now in Febryary 2018.

Thanks again for the wonderful review. I hope many will read (and comment) on it!



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Re: Force Majeure - A Review of the Book

Post by ant »

:) I still have a lot of the book to read - it is just finding the time to do so. What I have read so far, I have thoroughly enjoyed and I look forward to the rest. Yes, EF does go through a lot of the 'difficult' times but I think that is what makes it interesting. If it was all about how good everything was, I think it might become a bit dull. I had a feeling it would finish around the early 90's as the same happened with the documentary film. I presume Edgar just hadn't got round to the years following the early nineties before he sadly passed. Yes, perhaps Thorsten at some point will put pen to paper about his time with the band and get some input from Linda, who, of course, joined Edgar in the late 80's. Still, what we have from Edgar is wonderful and I will treasure it until I meet up with him in the new cosmic address!! :D
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Re: Force Majeure - A Review of the Book

Post by projekt-elektronik »

Insvims wrote: [...] I can admit that I am a bit annoyed about the fact that EF seems to focus on all that went wrong. [...]
I really enjoyed reading about recording Stratosfear, for example -- after all, it's a true miracle that this music materialised at all.

You might indeed get the impression EF was a bit of a grumpy old man who grew even grumpier with age -- being at the forefront of his own musical style must have been fairly frustrating an experience more often than once, and dealing with people in the industry even more so. Combine this with a bold ego and a strong vision...
"Den Brüdern trau ich nicht. Den Brüdern trau ich nicht! Kommt alles vom Tonband." (Edgar Froese -- Signale aus der Schwäbischen Straße)
Hipgnosis
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Re: Force Majeure - A Review of the Book

Post by Hipgnosis »

projekt-elektronik wrote: ...
You might indeed get the impression EF was a bit of a grumpy old man who grew even grumpier with age -- being at the forefront of his own musical style must have been fairly frustrating an experience more often than once, and dealing with people in the industry even more so. Combine this with a bold ego and a strong vision...
I'm not sure that many of the "famous" artists going back many years, are not similar, or the same ... it's how they protect their own inner person from influences and (sometimes) situations and people that want to take up their time, which often they do not have.

In many biographies, over and over, there are many of these.

The hard part, is that in this day and age, "fans" think they have a right to a piece of an artist, and this is the part that is a problem, and often seen in many bulletin boards with many fans telling an artist what he/she should do, and even going as far as reading the stuff hurts many times, a lot more than we probably notice.

In our own house, with so many literatii coming and going, don't think that many of them were not even worse, than what some folks think is EF's grumpy personna. One of them just about spit on us children to give you an idea ... and I can not tell you if it was for fun or not, but I do not remember hearing laughter ... just that I was wisked away quickly!

I'm sure that many will find a lot of this and that and this and that ... not nice, but sometimes the social environment dictates a lot ... and I think that the time in Berlin, was probably a lot of it, that tended to isolate people even more and more from each other, and it might, eventually, be something that helped create "krautrock" in various German locations ... by keeping people "separated", you (supposedly) prevent more issues for the leadership? ... something like that.

I'm not sure I can explain it and it might not be quite right. BTW, it did not bother me, a whole lot, but having seen some of this in Portugal in my days ... I don't think I was surprised.
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