Jean Michel Jarre Discography Download Tpb

Discography
  1. Jean Michel Jarre Influences

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What can i say about Jean-Michel Jarre? Well he's a great artist that surpas many styles. But his early works are still the best don't know what happen with his music today i don't feel the same enjoyment anymore like Zoolook, Oxygene, Rendez-Vous, Chronologie, etc. Today he seem to have changed his genre to be in the paths of the so called evolution but to me he lost it at some way don't get me wrong i respect Jean-Michel Jarre as his father that has also made great music. But i don't know how i can say it only that JMJ today isn't the same anymore of what JMJ was in the past. Alot of his newer work has a feel that he's bored or became too mature 'old' in making such music.

Jean Michel Jarre Influences

Anyway he's a 'pioneer' of the electronic genre yes but surely not the grand father, he's the father thats more accurate. ( Todays electronic music has lost alot potential of what it was guess the downfall of that genre was felt in the years 2000's since every subgenre suffers alot Techno, Trance, Hardcore, Speedcore, Drum&Bass, Goa, etc.). When I think of Jarre, I notice that he made his first 10 albums using analog synthesizers with the traditional mixing desk, tape recorder, effect box approach.

These albums were done in the 70's, 80's and 90's, see below.Deserted palaceOxygeneEquinoxeMagnetic fieldsZoolookRendez-vousRevolutionsWaiting for cousteauChronologieOxygene 2After three decades in the analog world he had to reinvent himself and the logical way was to go digital and use the DAW with digital effects and digital synthesizers occasionally complementing that with his signature analog sounds. First he made a shocking record Metamorphoses that was wholly different from the traditional Jarre sound. He perfectly captured the digital world and out-did everyone else in a single stroke - atleast in my opinion.

After that he released a couple of experimental digital albums, Sessions 2000 jazz album and Geometry of Love chill-out album. Then he went electronica and wanted to prove himself there and succeeded in my opinion with Teo & Tea, Electronica 1 & 2 and finally Oxygene 3 where he mixed both the electronica and the analog. These albums were done in the 00's and 10's.MetamorphosesSessions 2000Geometry of loveTeo & teaElectronicaElectronica 2Oxygene 3As I see the albums laid out this way - and having listened through all of them now - it all seems very logical for Jarre. He started analog and then went digital and tried to capture both sides of the synthesizer and the accompanying technology that is needed to produce the music. You can also see how the albums are related to the technology that came to be during each decade and how later he tried to follow the times stylistically and not get stuck to his past. I think Jarre has succeeded outstandingly and I hope he will yet release a couple more albums - perhaps during the 20's - and that would be his sixth decade as a recording artist.

Mindless debates about the 'pioneers'. Please guys, stop it!

Electronic music had an evolution and every person had his contribution to it MORE or LESS. Timewise and meaningwise Jarre had one of the greatest contribution to it all even if there were electronic music before unlike the Stockhausens who never made anything 'musical' but ad-hoc, random-like chaotic effects what I wouldn't call music.1976 Was a milestone: Oxygene was an incredibly important, deep, thoughtful blast and I consider it to be one of the biggest impact to the history of the music. I do remember those times very well.Kraftwerk, T. Dream, Vangelis is a different question. They were also the few ones who paved the road. I'd vote Oxygene as one of the biggest creature of the mankind.

Jean

I know what it takes to ignore it, I know the nowadays don't really accept the 'truth' what is mirrored by the philosophy, the art, the music. Even if you can't accept it, even if you think other way, Oxygene comprises this 'truth' about the being!!!! Renault diagnostic software elm327. OK, if you deny it, say it's OK if you don't like it but please think about it: you are a great lier (for yourself on the first place). JMJ the PIONEER of electronic music??

Come on, you guys.Why would you lie about something as beautiful as music?? There were lots of people, like Karlheinz Stockhausen and others who were creating electronic music LONG BEFORE JMJ did (at least one decade before), so PIONEER, my a.s.

And please, don't you mess with Kraftwerk, because they paved the way for ALL of the dance music genres and styles we know nowadays, like hip-hop, electro, house, techno, synth-pop, trance, you name it. Can JMJ make such a claim?? Not in a million years. Besides, JMJ's music is a LOT different from Kraftwerk's, so let me ask you this: why would you even compare them?? It makes no sense at all. Jarre is undoubtedly the pioneer, because he understands and demonstrates the power of electronics on every level. However, does that make him an 'electronic' pioneer?

Exploring, playing and obsessively demonstrating what electronics can do - whether by themselves or in combination with real instruments - and despite the unquestionable creative (and of course, anthology) value of albums like 'Oxygene' or 'Equinoxe', his music is mostly and sadly secondary.Because, Jarre is more interested in populism - and that is why his music suffers a great deal, due to plain and simple ambition, or even more so - ego. Of course, when saying 'ego', it is not necessarily a bad thing, but the kitsch aspect definitely (and sadly) does compromise most of his catalogue.