Jump to content
IGNORED

Jean Michel Jarre


soundwave

Recommended Posts

Ok we've had recent threads Vangelis and Tangerine Dream, Krautrock ect but what do watmm'ers think of the ole flamboyant french synth maestro?

 

For me it he was the first electronic music I got into (admittedly a fanboy in my yoof and more critic in my adulthood) and although he's certainly guilty of some horrendous cheesy pop he's also made some of the most pioneereing electronic music of the 80's. Everyone always rants on about Kraftwerks more direct influence on dance/techno music buit I often think JMJ's best work is often very overlooked and was way ahead of its time.

 

His concerts were pretty too.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Masonic Boom

I don't actually know much about him, except that he invented the Laser Harp or something.

 

So a "search and destroy" on his back catalogue would be quite helpful to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

if it weren't for my parents playing Jean Michel Jarre quite regularly as a kid, i probably would have very different music tastes right now.

 

there is a VHS home recorded tape of Paris La Défense gig in 1990 here, that has been watched. and watched. and watched. and watched.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I liked his stuff when I was a kid (I owned oxygene, equinoxe and zoolook, guess I was around 8-10), I haven't listened to him in years and years, but the little I've heard was way cheesy. I will probably revisit them sooner and later to have my childhood ruined while performing multiple :facepalm:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The "I" in my post being my dad.

edit: that doesn't make any sense lol. I try again - My dad owned those records, I just listened to them a lot.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Conor74

Me like. Heap years ago.

 

Think Oxygene was one of the first songs I can remember appreciating. I guess I was 4 or 5 at the time. But extraordinarily bright...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't actually know much about him, except that he invented the Laser Harp or something.

 

So a "search and destroy" on his back catalogue would be quite helpful to me.

 

my faves

 

Oxygene

Equinoxe

China Concerts '81

Cities in Concert Huston/Lyon

Waiting for Cousteau (mainly for the long ambient title track)

Oxygene 7-13

Printemps de Bourges

 

 

 

there are gems in other albums but these are the most consistant imho

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Masonic Boom

I don't actually know much about him, except that he invented the Laser Harp or something.

 

So a "search and destroy" on his back catalogue would be quite helpful to me.

 

my faves

 

Oxygene

Equinoxe

China Concerts '81

Cities in Concert Huston/Lyon

Waiting for Cousteau (mainly for the long ambient title track)

Oxygene 7-13

Printemps de Bourges

 

 

 

there are gems in other albums but these are the most consistant imho

 

Cheers! That's a great starting point, very useful.

 

(Wonder how much of this is on Spotify...?)

 

((Well, Oxygene is, so I'll start right there. Awesome.))

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was thinking of bringing this up myself but wondered if I would get laughed off the page!

 

Is it me or does nobody/media seem to mention him anymore? I cannot remember seeing anything at all about him for years and he never seems to get mentioned in great album lists. I was under the impression that everybody in the world nowadays thought he was a load of rubbish and it was just me who still liked him.

 

Anyway Exquinoxe 5 was the first electronic track I ever heard, a teacher at school bought it in and played it and I remember clearly sitting there and thinking it was brilliant. So JMJ got me into electronic music. I had almost all of his stuff on cassette up to Waiting for Cousteau. Though most of it I liked back then I would say nowadays only Oxygene and Exquinoxe would stand the test of time. Both are brilliant. Concerts for China was pretty good and a couple of tracks of Zoolook maybe worth a listen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Masonic Boom

I'm not really familiar enough with his music to understand why so many others (Vangelis, Tangerine Dream, etc.) got critical reevaluation in a way that JMJ didn't. But it is kind of code for a certain type of new age-naffness.

 

There was an interview with Mr Twin where they mentioned JMJ, wasn't there? Where Mr Twin was all "get out of town" at first then sheepishly had to confess "well, yeah" - it's gonna bug me now what exactly was said, but hey, I'm a big picture concepts kind of person not a detail remembering person. ha.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Equinoxe parts 4-7 are just awesome. Really really forward-thinking. I reckon it's always overlooked as Oxygene's sequel, but it's quite a different album. BTW Part 7 = VBS.Redlof.B - 30 years.

 

See:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HosP7iy0r5o

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcdQkM58Bw8

 

Magenetic Fiels is also pretty damn killer. Part 1 is an epic 17 minute masterpiece. Part 3 is really nice and so is the latter half of part 4 where the mood TOTALLY changes.

 

I personally think the China Concerts album is a good starting point.

 

Zoolook is just "wow". It sounds a bit dated now but for the time must have sounded out of this world.

 

Oh and Oxygene 7-13 is probably better than the original.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not really familiar enough with his music to understand why so many others (Vangelis, Tangerine Dream, etc.) got critical reevaluation in a way that JMJ didn't. But it is kind of code for a certain type of new age-naffness.

 

There was an interview with Mr Twin where they mentioned JMJ, wasn't there? Where Mr Twin was all "get out of town" at first then sheepishly had to confess "well, yeah" - it's gonna bug me now what exactly was said, but hey, I'm a big picture concepts kind of person not a detail remembering person. ha.

 

The interview was in Future Music and Mr James reply about JMJ's music was "It's cheesy but I like it."

JMJ has also credited RDJ's work saying something like "no one makes drums sound as loud"

Personally I think a lot of parallels can be drawn from both artist's - they make very melodic yet experimental electronic thats appealing to the masses, they both use thier own image to give instrumental electronic music a face, they both were on top of their game in thier time and both have big fuck off ego's as a result. :-P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

JMJ has also credited RDJ's work saying something like "no one makes drums sound as loud"

I remember that interview. He said something along the lines of "The Chemical Brothers program the best drums ever, apart from Aphex Twin of course!"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I was little... like probably 5-7 I saw the music video for Rendezvous 4 on TV a few times. Me and my brother loved it so much, I remember getting up and dancing around like crazy.

 

When I looked into his music more recently I didn't really get into it, most of it isn't that kinda stuff really... I guess I actually prefer his poppier, dancier stuff to his electronic orchestral weirdness.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.