WE DO THE MASHED POTATO AND THE FUNKY CHICKEN

Baba O'Riley and Peter Baumann

Posted over 3 years ago
  • Artist:
  • Album:
    Trans Harmonic Nights
  • Track:
    This Day
I'm listening to Trans Harmonic Nights by Peter Baumann (1979) and it's hard to miss why Tangerine Dream sounded so much better before he left that seminal electronic-space jam band in 1977. The artist knew how to sequence baroque melodies and sing lullabies into vocoders. Baumann must have been an incredible catalyst for Tangerine Dream because even veteran TDreamer Edgar Froese's solo albums from this period sound lovely. (They do not after Baumann's exit). Anyways, I'm posting about Baumann because the first track "This day" has a sequence that reminds me of the very influential (and embarrasingly [for me] sentimental teenage anthem) "Baba O'Riley" by the Who, Pete Townsend's homage to Terry Riley, on the album Who's Next (1969). If you love the organ sequence in "Baba O'Riley" but can't handle the memories that "Teenage Wastleand" exhumes from the long (or recently) buried grave of your adolescence, then you can listen instead to a 9:49 only instrumental version of the song on Pete Townshend's Lifehouse Chronicles: Disc 1 -- Lifehouse Demos (1999). Unfortunately, this instrumental version excludes the riveting klezmer fiddle accompanyment (update: by Dave Arbus) at the end of the song. It also includes all the rock drumming from the original, I think, sounds very out of place on an all instrumental "Baba O'Riley." (I dream of Stereolab covering this with fiddle played by Jean-Luc Ponty).The Who toured Germany in 1972 and performed Baba in Hamburg -- a bootleg exists. Perhaps Baumann heard the song live then and it sparked his imagination for what it might be like to play Riley-esque instrumentals with a live band. Because that's what he was doing 2 years later with Tangerine Dream. (Baumann joined Tangerine Dream in 1972).For those new to Tangerine Dream, permit me to recommend their live album from 1975, Ricochet. (Listen carefully for the industrial-psych breakdown with homage to Brian Eno). Below is a photo of Baumann inspiring a generation of blissed-out spacelings to grow their hair long and assume the waifish intensity that only those who channel long dead baroque composers endure.

Comments (3)

  1. princesszyrtec says I have Tangerine Dream and Jean Luc Ponty on tape - for me, I "discovered" them in the mid-eighties, when I was just entering college and a whole new world of music exposure. I never did much research into who these people were that made such music - I only bought what I loved to hear day in and day out. I need to get them, and many, many others, on CD so I can then put it in iTunes and then MOG can probe my, erm, musical soul and put it on display for the world. I always love to hear the backstory of music that I have owned and listened to for years. It really does enhance the experience. Thanks!
    Permalink posted 07/12/2006
  2. spaceling says More backstory on Baumann is available here as well as google and other sources. This music was so obscure for me before the Internet made research so much easier. Can you imagine a 12 year old boy holding his father's dictaphone microphone up to his mono FM radio to dub songs off a public radio new age show? That's how I first grabbed Ponty onto cassette. Since I didn't have the DJ naming the tracks I had recorded, I searched for years before I discovered that it was a Ponty track. (All I remembered was that it sounded French!) Also, looking into the musical history of a band and following up on the stream of their influences and peers is an excellent way of finding more music to love -- some of which can be totally obscure. (It's probably an even better way of finding music than mog ;)
    Permalink posted 07/12/2006
  3. theseindifferentclocks says cool. thanks!
    Permalink posted 12/18/2006

Comment on this Post

Login using email and password below.

Forgot Password?

Don't have an account?
Join MOG. It's Free!

© 2006-2009 Mog Inc. All Rights Reserved