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Tracklist

Shadow Flyer5:53
Canyon Carver4:17
Water's Gift5:24
Canyon Voices4:26
Sudden Revelation4:46
A Matter Of Time8:53
Purple Nightfall2:04
Colorado Dawn4:26

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    • Robot_0110's avatar
      Robot_0110
      Edited 12 months ago

      A press release for the video/laserdisc of the Canyon Dreams project stated that the music for Canyon Dreams would only ever be heard on the filmed release and never in another format. Eventually of course it was released on CD in the 90s, but vinyl apparently missed its chance. That's why this bootleg is nice to own. Such as it is, it sits nicely alongside other albums of this period like Hyperborea, Green Desert and Underwater Sunlight - though arguably this is my favourite of those!
      • bartoszkruczynski's avatar
        I have a copy for sale, DM me if interested.
        • pauwgerlings's avatar
          pauwgerlings
          Edited 2 years ago
          This gorgeous album (recorded in 1986! wíth Chris Franke) was not like a set of proposals for, nor a collection of excerpts from, a Hollywood movie, but a normal album that was accompanied by a video (almost) as long as the album itself, which was first only released on VHS video tape for home enjoyment.
          Luckily it also appeared on cd and vinyl (albeit much later: in 1991), because this is simply a beautiful album, with or without those accompanying images. I dare say even better without
          • bullfinchart's avatar
            bullfinchart
            For Tangerine Dream, 1987 is largely remembered for Chris Franke's final full-length release with the band, Tyger (the only pre-2000s TD studio album I refuse to have in my collection). However, although Canyon Dreams wasn't released on CD until 1991, it originally dates to 1987 as the band's first video-album. The band's first work for new-age label Miramar, the original release seemed to cement their reputation as a new-age group, yet the music itself is some of the most interesting to come from the group's post-Virgin era.

            The combination of soundtrack-like purpose and Haslinger's studious musical focus lends the album as strong sense of unity from start to finish. Elements of the band's then-synthpop leanings are in evidence, particularly on the energetic Canyon Carver, but much of the album is stripped back to a more ambient sound. Opener Shadow Flyer uses a staggered sequencer line to move the track forward, whilst Purple Nightfall and the beautiful epic Sudden Revelation are devoid of rhythm all together, and are wonderful additions the band's small but impressive collections of pure ambient pieces. A Matter of Time, at nearly ten minutes, runs through several different moods, and is reminiscent of the band's earlier epics. The mysterious Water's Gift is replete with eerie synths and light ethnic percussion, the most atmospheric track on the album. Even the bonus track Colorado Dawn, written especially for the CD release in 1991, fits quite well, despite being an example of Jerome Froese's energetic '90s TD sound.

            Canyon Dreams is one of the most unfairly overlooked albums in the band's catalogue, which sometimes gets classed as simply one of the band's multitude of soundtracks. Instead, it is a singularly consistent work which shows a subtlety and maturity to the group during a period when their music could be bold and brash. Highly recommended for those who are interested in Tangerine Dream's '80s sound.

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