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DESTINATION BERLIN (OST)

Tangerine Dream

Progressive Electronic


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Tangerine Dream Destination Berlin (OST) album cover
2.80 | 47 ratings | 2 reviews | 4% 5 stars

Good, but non-essential

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Studio Album, released in 1989

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Alexander Square (LP Version) (4:50)
2. Emperors Castle (2:10)
3. Hitchhikers Point (5:00)
4. Brandenburg Gate (3:25)
5. Wall-Street (3:16)
6. Peacock Island (3:25)
7. Down The Avus (4:40)
8. Midnight In Bear City (4:25)
9. Berlin Summer Nights (4:17)
10. Alexander Square (Reprise) (2:00)

Total Time: 37:28

Line-up / Musicians

- Edgar Froese / synthesizer, keyboards, guitar, bass, producer
- Paul Haslinger / synthesizers, keyboards, producer

Note: The actual instrumentation could not be confirmed at this moment

Releases information

Soundtrack to the film directed by Ernst A. Heiniger (1989)

LP Hansa- 210 440 (1989, Europe)

CD Hansa- 260 440 (1989, Europe)

Thanks to Ricochet for the addition
and to Quinino for the last updates
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TANGERINE DREAM Destination Berlin (OST) ratings distribution


2.80
(47 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(4%)
4%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(17%)
17%
Good, but non-essential (36%)
36%
Collectors/fans only (28%)
28%
Poor. Only for completionists (15%)
15%

TANGERINE DREAM Destination Berlin (OST) reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by octopus-4
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR RIO/Avant/Zeuhl,Neo & Post/Math Teams
3 stars Not bad for a soundtrack. As almost all the TD works in the 80s, in particular the soundtracks, this album sounds very 80s for the sounds used and the rhythms. Again I'm keen to compare the actual TD music to what Pete Bardens was doing in the same period. Also the second part of "Alexander Square" sounds very similar to the early 80s CAMEL. Try to believe.

"Emperor's Castle" is more in line with the standard TD (of the 80s, of course). Melodic and a little repetitive. Let me say that for me "repetitive" is a good word when related to Tangerine Dream. This is a track on which the band is more recognisable by its fans, even if now it's just a duo.

"Hitchhikers Point" is just a good electro-pop track which could remind to Jean Michel Jarre if it wasn't for the square waves typical of Froese's sound. Just a bit too pop for my tastes, but in 1989 that was the standard.

"Brandeburg Gate" seems taken from Bardens' "Speed Of Light". Same sounds and the melancholic theme borderline with newage which may be appropriate if we think that 1989 is when the Brandeburg Gate has been made visible again to both the sides of the Berlin's wall.

The electronic rock and roll of "Wall Street" is I think the weakest track of the album. Between "The Friend of Mr Cairo" and "Flashdance" it's something that I may compare with the worst moments of CAMEL's "The Single Factor". Not VERY bad, but it really leaves me cold as most of the pop played by the radios in the 80s.

With "Peacock Island" we go back to what we can expect from a TD album of that period. The percussion are quite tribal, like on Camel's "Nude" whose concept was effectively about an island. In any case I think that this is where the hand of Edgar Froese is more in evidence. It's like a pop variation on Epsilon in Malaysian Pale. Probably it's the percussion that make ,me think so.

"Down The Avus" is another good instrumental which to me again sounds similar to CAMEL of the Breathless to Single Factor period.

"Midnight In Bear City" is still on the same line but on this the sounds are more typical of Tangerine Dream's music if we don't consider the guitar which reminds to the Genesis of the late 80s or even to Phil Collins' solo works.

"Berlin Summer Nights" is slow and very melodic. Being in Berlin I can't not think to "Stationary Traveller", even if this track is much more mellow than anything on that Camel's album.

The final two minutes with the reprise of Alexander Square were probably the end titles of the movie which by the way I haven't ever seen and of which I know nothing.

Good for easy listening and very far from being essential.

Latest members reviews

3 stars "Destination Berlin" is by TD standards a piece of fluff,but very nice fluff. It's the soundtrack to a German movie I haven't seen and I am not likely to ever do so,but the music functions very well on it's own. This is not one of those soundtracks that desperately needs the accompanying movie ... (read more)

Report this review (#69420) | Posted by Pixel Pirate | Wednesday, February 15, 2006 | Review Permanlink

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