Thursday, October 25, 2007

Schwingungen Polls 1987: Top 3 songs

#01 (a) Robert Schroeder: The Message (Part 1)
#01 (b) Robert Schroeder: The Message (Part 2)
#02 Tangerine Dream: Tyger
#03 Bernd Kistenmacher: Cassandra's Dance [excerpt]

Friday, October 19, 2007

Official launch of Radio Schwingungen

After having fixed some technical problems this blog is now officially online. Every Thursday we're going to update it with a new selection from the annual Schwingungen polls. For the time being we have to stick to the top 3, but we're working hard to make the full top 20 selection available sometime in the future.

Further, on our sidebars, please find some technical gadgets & service information:

(a) Our new "RockIt" Audioblog Search Engine: On the basis of our 160 favourite sharity blogs we've created a Google Custom Search Engine exclusively searching downloadable audio blogs (range: krautrock, electronic, jazz, weird, avantgarde, contemporary classical etc.)

(b) Schwingungen title melodies: Using our embedded audio player (requires Flash) you will be able to listen to Schwingungen's two signature tunes: (i) Harald Grosskopf's So weit so gut (used from 1984 to 1993 or so) and (ii) Michael Garrison's Departure.

(c) There's a massive directory of links to other sharity blogs, mail-orders, record labels and electronic artists from that era.

Enjoy!

And don't forget to leave a comment if you like this blog. Passive freeriders are killing web 2.0.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Schwingungen Polls 1986: Top 3 songs


#01 (a) Tangerine Dream: Song of the Whale (Part 1)

#01 (b) Tangerine Dream: Song of the Whale (Part 2)

#02 Peter Seiler: Grönland

#03 You: Passing Landscapes


Sunday, October 14, 2007

Schwingungen Polls 1985: Top 3 songs


#01 Yello: Ciel Ouvert
#02 Tangerine Dream: Yellowstone Park
#03 Serge Blenner: Esthematique

Monday, October 8, 2007

Introduction to Radio Schwingungen

Hello. This is Adam Eleven from Orpheus Music: The Electronic Music Time Machine where I present vintage, commercially neglected electronic music from Pierre Henry to Roland Kayn.
In this side project, I will revive the nostalgic days when "Schwingungen" was still on the air, and when your Thursday evenings/nights were dedicated to electronic musings.

"Schwingungen" was quite a popular radio show on the West German Radio (WDR=Westdeutscher Rundfunk), moderated by Winfrid Trenkler. It ran between 1984 and 1995 and focussed on "popular/mainstream" electronic music - something in between new age & melodic stuff (J.M. Jarre, Tangerine Dream, Vangelis), but with occassional outings to more abstract and "experimental" stuff like Conrad Schnitzler and the early Ralph Lundsten. At this time, Schwingungen was more or less the only source of this type of electronic music (or even any electronics) on the Radio (outside the U.S.). But it wasn't just an conventional outlet of electronic music; Winfrid left no stone unturned to produce exclusive background content on the "scene": for instance, he visited Vangelis for an extended interview in his Hotel studio in Paris & Ralph Lundsten on his penninsula just outside Stockholm; Klaus Schulze & Tangerine Dream were regular visitors in Winfrid's Cologne studio; and there were even exclusive radio concerts with Ashra, Klaus Schulze and a bunch of others.

To make a long story short, this whole thing got me into electronic music. Although I'm not into the rather cheesy & plain Schwingungen stuff any longer (I nowadays prefer Xenakis' UPIC noise, Kayn's cybernetic madness, Pousseur's idosyncratic oscillations & Henry's sonic savageness) - I still enjoy a nostalgic dose of melody from time to time, and thought it would be high time to pay tribute to the once leading electronic show in Europe.

We'll I stop waffling in a minute. The purpose of this blog is to bring you some music from this era, plus some background info (interviews with Winfrid Trenkler and so on). The plan is like this: In the course of the next few months or so I'm going to post most of the top-twenty entries of the ten annual plus one "all-time" polls.

I don't have a definite release schedule so far, but this is likely to get rolling in November - so subscribe to my RSS and stay tuned to Radio Schwingungen.

Adam Eleven