Underwater Sunlight

Last updated
Underwater Sunlight
Underwater Sunlight.png
1986 LP album cover
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust, 1986
RecordedApril, 1986, Berlin
Genre Electronic music
Length40:13
Label Jive Electro / Relativity
Producer Chris Franke, Edgar Froese, Paul Haslinger
Tangerine Dream chronology
Legend
(1986)
Underwater Sunlight
(1986)
Tyger
(1987)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svg [1]

Underwater Sunlight is the twenty-ninth major release and sixteenth studio album by electronic artists Tangerine Dream.

Contents

This album marked the first appearance of Paul Haslinger. [2]

"Underwater Sunlight" spent one week on the UK Albums Chart at No.97.

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."Song of the Whale, Part One: From Dawn..."8:25
2."Song of the Whale, Part Two: ...To Dusk"10:53
3."Dolphin Dance"5:05
4."Ride on the Ray"5:30
5."Scuba Scuba"4:30
6."Underwater Twilight"5:50

Singles

Dolphin Dance

No.TitleLength
1."Ride On The Ray" (Excerpt, wrongly titled Dolphin Dance)3:55
2."Dolphin Smile" (Released on Underwater Sunlight (2011))4:55
3."Song of the Whale"8:12

Personnel

Related Research Articles

Tangerine Dream German electronic music group

Tangerine Dream is a German electronic music band founded in 1967 by Edgar Froese. The group has seen many personnel changes over the years, with Froese having been the only continuous member until his death in January 2015. The best-known lineup of the group was its mid-'70s trio of Froese, Christopher Franke, and Peter Baumann. In 1979, Johannes Schmoelling replaced Baumann. Since Froese's death in 2015, the group has been under the leadership of Thorsten Quaeschning. He is joined by violinist Hoshiko Yamane who joined in 2011, Ulrich Schnauss who joined in 2014 and Paul Frick who joined 9 June 2020.

<i>Alpha Centauri</i> (album) 1971 studio album by Tangerine Dream

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

<i>Zeit</i> 1972 studio album by Tangerine Dream

Zeit is the third major release and third studio album by German electronic music group Tangerine Dream. A double LP, it was released in August 1972, being the first release featuring Peter Baumann, who joined then-current members Christopher Franke and Edgar Froese. Zeit is subtitled Largo in Four Movements.

<i>Phaedra</i> (album) 1974 studio album by Tangerine Dream

Phaedra is the fifth major release and fifth studio album by German electronic music group Tangerine Dream. It was recorded during November 1973 at The Manor in Shipton-on-Cherwell, England and released on 20 February 1974 through Virgin Records. This is the first Tangerine Dream album to feature their now classic sequencer-driven sound, which is considered to have greatly influenced the Berlin School genre.

<i>Ricochet</i> (Tangerine Dream album) 1975 live album by Tangerine Dream

Ricochet is the seventh major release and first live album by German electronic music group Tangerine Dream. It was released, on the Virgin label, in 1975. It consists of two side-long compositions mixed from studio recordings and the UK portion of their August–October 1975 European Tour. The sound of the album is similar to that of the group's other "Virgin Years" releases, relying heavily on synthesizers and sequencers to produce a dense, ambient soundscape, but is much more energetic than their previous works. Ricochet uses more percussion and electric guitar than its predecessors Phaedra and Rubycon, and borders on electronic rock. The main innovation on the album is the use of complex, multi-layered rhythms, foreshadowing the band's own direction in the 1980s and trance music and similar genres of electronic dance music.

<i>Rubycon</i> (album) 1975 studio album by Tangerine Dream

Rubycon is the sixth major release and sixth studio album by German electronic music group Tangerine Dream. It was released in 1975. It is widely regarded as one of their best albums. Rubycon further develops the Berlin School sequencer-based sound they ushered in with the title track from Phaedra.

<i>Cyclone</i> (Tangerine Dream album) 1978 studio album by Tangerine Dream

Cyclone is the eleventh major release and eighth studio album by Tangerine Dream and the first in their canon to feature proper vocals and lyrics. The cover is a painting by band leader Edgar Froese.

Jerome Froese is a German musician who, in 1990, officially joined his father Edgar Froese in the band Tangerine Dream. He remained a member until 2006. Prior to his direct involvement in Tangerine Dream, Froese often appeared on the covers of the band's albums as a child, beginning with the 1973 release of Atem, when he was two years four months old at the time the album was released.

<i>Encore</i> (Tangerine Dream album) 1977 live album by Tangerine Dream

Encore: Tangerine Dream Live is the tenth major release and second live album by the German group Tangerine Dream. It is mostly assembled from various recordings from the band's very successful 1977 U.S. tour.

Tangerine Dream discography

The electronic music group Tangerine Dream has released more than one hundred albums, singles, EPs and compilations since the group was formed in 1967.

<i>Pergamon</i> (album)

Pergamon (1986), originally simply released as Tangerine Dream (1980) with two parts, is the fourteenth major release and third live album by Tangerine Dream. It is a selection from the two live concerts held on 31 January 1980 at the Palast der Republik in East Berlin. The second of the two original concerts is available as Tangerine Tree Volume 17: East Berlin 1980. The original title Quichotte is a reference to Don Quixote, a film version of which was being screened in a nearby cinema as one of the concerts was performed, while the retitle is a reference to the Pergamon Museum located in East Berlin near the Palast der Republik.

<i>Sorcerer</i> (soundtrack) 1977 soundtrack album by Tangerine Dream

Sorcerer (1977) is the ninth major release and first soundtrack album by the German band Tangerine Dream. It is the soundtrack for the film Sorcerer. It reached No.25 on the UK Albums Chart in a 7-week run, to become Tangerine Dream's third highest-charting album in the UK.

Ralf Wadephul, born 1958 in Berlin, is a German keyboardist/composer who collaborated with Tangerine Dream in the late 1980s on their first "Melrose Years" album Optical Race (1988). While all the material on this album was composed by Froese and Haslinger prior to him joining the band, Wadephul did contribute the track "Sun Gate", a romantic ballad type number that features an Edgar Froese guitar solo. He also performed with the band on their North American tour later that year. Ralf left the band shortly afterwards following the birth of his son Julian Wadephul. The 2006 Tangerine Dream release Blue Dawn onsists of material composed by Froese and Wadephul during that same tour in 1988, albeit of a studio nature. Ralf continues to keep busy as a musician and sound engineer to this day.

Paul Haslinger

Paul Haslinger is an Austrian musician and composer. He lives and works in Los Angeles, California.

<i>Green Desert</i> 1986 studio album by Tangerine Dream

Green Desert is the twenty-seventh major release and the fifteenth studio album by electronic artists Tangerine Dream. The music was recorded in Berlin in 1973, during a period when Peter Baumann had temporarily left Germany to tour Nepal and India. Though unreleased at the time, it landed Tangerine Dream a record deal when Virgin heard the tapes. A remixed version of the music was released in 1986.

<i>Lily on the Beach</i> 1989 studio album by Tangerine Dream

Lily on the Beach is the thirty-seventh major release and nineteenth studio album by Tangerine Dream. The track "Radio City" was the first appearance of future TD member Jerome Froese, son of founding member Edgar Froese, while the track "Long Island Sunset" was the first time the saxophone was used in a TD track.

<i>Melrose</i> (album) 1990 studio album by Tangerine Dream

Melrose is the thirty-ninth major release and twentieth studio album by Tangerine Dream. This album was released in 1990 on the Private Music label founded by former Tangerine Dream member, Peter Baumann. The album further developed the instrumental pop style known from the previous two Private Music albums, Optical Race and Lily on the Beach. Edgar Froese's son, Jerome, for the first time appears on a Tangerine Dream album as a full-time member. This was Paul Haslinger's last album with Tangerine Dream.

A Time for Heroes

A Time For Heroes was the theme of the 1987 International Summer Special Olympics World Games. The theme was composed by Jon Lyons; the instrumental versions were performed by Tangerine Dream and the vocal version was performed by Meat Loaf and Brian May.

<i>Plays Tangerine Dream</i> 2006 compilation album by Tangerine Dream

Plays Tangerine Dream is the ninety-sixth release and second compilation by the German electronic music group Tangerine Dream. It features re-recordings and remixes by several present and past members of the band.

<i>Canyon Dreams</i> 1991 soundtrack album by Tangerine Dream

Canyon Dreams is the fortieth major release and it was released as the fourteenth soundtrack album by German band Tangerine Dream. It was recorded in 1986 and released in 1991 on compact disc and compact cassette formats. The music was written as a sound accompaniment for an eponymous scenic video film about the Grand Canyon by Jan Nickman, released by the record label Miramar in 1987 on VHS, Betamax and LaserDisc. The album's tracks are divided into various episodes and related to the titles of the cuts.

References

  1. Batdorf, Rodney. Underwater Sunlight - Tangerine Dream at AllMusic
  2. Berling, Michael (29 September 2016). "Underwater Sunlight". Voices in the Net.