[HN Gopher] Vangelis has died
___________________________________________________________________
Vangelis has died
Author : Saint_Genet
Score : 466 points
Date : 2022-05-19 17:04 UTC (5 hours ago)
(HTM) web link (pitchfork.com)
(TXT) w3m dump (pitchfork.com)
| bmitc wrote:
| He was a very unique, visionary talent. To back that up, beyond
| his scores, take a look at the following video to get a glimpse
| of how he worked.
|
| https://youtu.be/GWggDMDhwIA
|
| There used to be some forum posts detailing the custom MIDI
| controllers and setup more, but it looks like a lot of it has
| been deleted or removed. I found this though:
|
| https://www.synthevolution.net/blog/2017/5/22/the-devils-wor...
| lycopodiopsida wrote:
| A very sad day. He was still productive despite his age, his
| Nocturnes from 2019 are incredible. RIP and thanks for all the
| beautiful moments.
| climb_stealth wrote:
| The boxer Henry Maske had Conquest of Paradise playing as the
| entry music [0]. I don't quite remember the context but it may
| have been the last fight in his career. Pure athmosphere and
| goose bumps back in the day. I didn't actually know what song it
| was back then as I was just a child but the melody always stuck
| with me. It was years and years later when I actually learned
| about Vangelis and came across the song again.
|
| [0] https://youtu.be/J4HvovGe5TY
| msie wrote:
| Loved the guy's work for many years. Inspired so many other
| artists. I listen to his work and variations inspired by him, on
| YouTube while working. Rest in Peace.
| johnsanders wrote:
| Chariots of Fire is iconic of course.
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8a-HfNE3EIo
|
| I think my first encounter with his music was the Ernest & Julio
| Gallo wine commercials.
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mES7lzR9uFE
|
| Seems he should have been considerably older than 79.
| johnsanders wrote:
| And you can't mention the Ernest & Julio Gallo ads without a
| link to the voiceover guy / head of the ad agency Hal Riney.
| Another legend.
|
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_lnwNIlJUo
| julienchastang wrote:
| Thanks for the link to the commercial. Classic Vangelis.
| [deleted]
| motohagiography wrote:
| Imo, Vangelis brought the synthesizer from an experimental
| novelty to an instrument for composition. The two sounds I
| associate with him are the long brassy triangle with a steep
| envelope that we know from both Blade Runner and the
| accompaniment to the piano in the Chariots of Fire theme, and his
| effective use of chimes.
|
| I have tickets for Olafur Arnalds next week, and there is a
| younger generation of composers like Arnalds, Frahm, Richter,
| Tiersen, Aphex/James, and even Reznor/Ross, who could not have
| avoided Vangelis' influence marrying the synth with classical
| techniques. He was a big part of what inspired me to start making
| synth music and more than a few of my tracks have homages to his
| work, and this note triggered a memory of playing the Chariots
| theme on piano as a really young child and it seemed to be
| everywhere at the time. A loss, but hard to mourn such an
| exceptional contribution as well.
| pmoriarty wrote:
| Just for reference, here's Nils Frahm performing _More_ :
|
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRj6G6RB7jc
| johnohara wrote:
| When I listen to Chronotope Project I hear the Vangelis
| influences. Along with Vangelis' inspiration to pursue such
| solitary and personal musical expressions.
|
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARkcu3J8OvI https://chronotope-
| project.com/bio
| [deleted]
| fetus8 wrote:
| Based on my listening and no other knowledge, he probably had
| quite the influence on Oneohtrix Point Never aka OPN aka Daniel
| Lopatin. He's always been a big synth head and his OST scores
| really showcase his talents.
| caution wrote:
| So the piano was a beautiful instrument for you...
| ... But just one instrument, not enough. So I put nails in the
| piano, played on the strings, banged on the keys, making
| incredible sounds come out.
|
| [1]
| https://www.nemostudios.co.uk/vangelis/interviews/keyboard/k...
| PrimeDirective wrote:
| I have listened to Chariots of Fire and Blade Runner soundtracks
| countless times while developing or just spending time behind the
| computer. Thanks for making the time go by better Vangelis!
| mishkovski wrote:
| His music is strong nostalgia inducer for me. His melodies,
| hooks, and effects work perfectly bringing simple ideas into
| amazing atmosphere and experience.
| WalterBright wrote:
| Vangelis is one of those artists I just click "buy" on everything
| he does. I've never been disappointed. So sad to see no more
| albums. Thank you, Vangelis, for all the listening pleasure you
| created.
| aurora72 wrote:
| Vangelis' 1977 composition "To The Unknown Man" was interpreted
| by the Italian singer Milva as "Moi je n'ai pas peur" in 1981.
| eimrine wrote:
| RIP Maestro, your works are timeless! I firstly heared Vangelis
| from Ariston commercial w/ Ask The Mountains track _promice to
| add a link to YT when I can_
| Laremere wrote:
| My absolute favorite song of all time is Dial Out by Vangelis:
| https://youtu.be/Jnn9_NCLazM
|
| Rest in piece to a master of his art, and creator of the unique
| soundscapes made the world of blade runner something truly
| unique.
| mntne wrote:
| From his first band, Aphrodite's Child:
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-WTNFuF6qiA
|
| Bye my friend, goodbye
| LargoLasskhyfv wrote:
| /me salutes by playing Alpha
|
| [[?]] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gG1VBryzKM
| endorphine wrote:
| This is my favorite (and perhaps the least popular) from
| Vangelis. Listen to this gem...just listen to it:
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uta02hfUF4o
| Pr0ject217 wrote:
| Thank you.
| ohiovr wrote:
| I really love his work especially the album Voices.
| parenthesis wrote:
| "State of Independence" by Jon [Anderson of Yes] and Vangelis.
| Also features the wonderful Dick Morrissey (who, amongst other
| things with Vangelis, plays saxophone on the Blade Runner
| soundtrack).
| aemadrid wrote:
| You will be sorely missed. Fond memories of listening to Chariots
| of Fire, both sides of the tape, lying in my bed as a teenager.
| Always in my heart.
| stefanos82 wrote:
| This gave me goosebumps because I could not stop thinking about
| him the past week or so and I could not understand why...
|
| Anapausou en eirene thrule, Rest in peace legend.
|
| Kalo taxidi giganta mou https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nd-
| DlMOLCY4
| smrtinsert wrote:
| Here's a great tidbit - Vangelis and Ridley Scott prior to Blade
| Runner:
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DjvN8I0c7I&ab_channel=Mrden...
|
| RIP Vangelis
| julienchastang wrote:
| RIP. He had some memorable soundtracks during the 80s: Blade
| Runner, Chariots of Fire. Also scores for the TV series Cosmos w/
| Carl Sagan. I used to own the cassette tape for "China" which I
| remember enjoying many years ago.
| dver wrote:
| His work, especially the colab with Jon Anderson, has been an
| important sound track to my life.
|
| And dammit COVID 19
| nonrandomstring wrote:
| RIP a true master of synthesis, up there as an equal to Isao
| Tomita and Ralf Hutter.
|
| So many memorable and now foundational techniques:
|
| The gated saw string "chug" (Chariots of Tire)
|
| Glissando space echo dives (Blade Runner)
|
| Incredible synthetic guitar solos that inspired Jan Hammer
|
| Analogue strings from the CS80 that melt like Mantovani.
|
| Will be so sorely missed. I'm gonna play out all my collection in
| a huge Vangelisathon.
| racl101 wrote:
| R.I.P. Vangelis.
|
| That Blade Runner soundtrack was something really special.
| skywal_l wrote:
| - Blade Runner
|
| - Chariots of Fire
|
| - Cosmos
|
| - 1492
|
| and the list goes on. Pretty impressive.
| mhh__ wrote:
| That's a shame.
|
| His work on blade runner just has this timeless magic to it. The
| sequel ends on his motif (tears in rain) for a reason too.
|
| I also forgot to mention that chariots of fire is truly great
| too.
|
| Some parts of his music haven't aged too well, but the stuff that
| hasn't is sorely missed in today's film scores. Even if Zimmer is
| brilliant he's not a poet.
| zeruch wrote:
| He did some of his best (and worst) work while collaborating
| with Jon Anderson in my opinion. "Short Stories" was a great,
| quirky album in the late 70s. "Friends of Mr. Cairo" was dreck
| in the 80s.
| moron4hire wrote:
| Seriously, I can always tell a Hans Zimmer score without even
| having preknowledge that a film had hired him. Big, orchestral,
| boring score that repeats the same motifs he's been using for
| the last 50 years? Dude has one act.
| mkr-hn wrote:
| I think you overestimate how much say a film composer gets in
| the sound. They're there to put music to image and make the
| director happy, not impress you with their knowledge of
| composition. Being famous doesn't change that. Directors want
| their movies to sound like other successful movies, so you
| end up with trends. It's the same reason trailers all sound
| alike.
| paulsmith wrote:
| I'm basically with you but Interstellar stood out for me, I
| think he matched well with that film's themes.
| nsonha wrote:
| Same to Chris Nolan actually, he should for once make a film
| that does not mess with the concept of time. At this point it
| has become a gimmick
| vanderZwan wrote:
| That's more due to how movie scores are produced these days.
| Every Frame A Painting explains it really well in this video
| on why you can't remember any music from Marvel movies:
|
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7vfqkvwW2fs
|
| (well, up until they made that video, at least)
| pmoriarty wrote:
| What other Zimmer track sounds like _Time_ [1] (from his work
| on _Inception_ )?
|
| [1] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxabLA7UQ9k
| pmoriarty wrote:
| Vangelis is best known for the themes of _Blade Runner_ and
| _Chariots of Fire_ , but _Light and Shadow_ [1] also deserves to
| be remembered as one of his greats.
|
| And here is a fantastic video of him performing one of his tracks
| live: [2]
|
| [1] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gUzIbphUL0Q
|
| [2] - Performance starts at 1'36" in
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3b1xJYCrKDU
| gghhzzgghhzz wrote:
| poor example compared to his lifetime of work, but this was a
| beautiful advert
|
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EsyyJaX0j3Y
| als0 wrote:
| Incredible composer. Very sad news.
| sydthrowaway wrote:
| How did people learn synths back then without the internet?
| Saint_Genet wrote:
| I've been listening mostly to his 70s proggish stuff lately, but
| the opening of Blade Runner still gives me goosebumps. It
| wouldn't have been half the film it was without his music.
|
| https://youtu.be/P1jXmJmmj3o
| subculture wrote:
| He did incredible work.
|
| The Four Horsemen from his band Aphrodite's Child really shows
| off his impressive prog-rock chops as well as showcasing a
| fantastic video of the band's persona (as well as a lot of Ouzo
| shots): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KCbqhJt16k
| WesolyKubeczek wrote:
| I remember that back in the late 1990s, when I had just learned
| how to use Internet, one of the first thing I went looking for
| was more information about Vangelis and his music. All I had back
| in the day was Portraits and Voices on cassettes. Oh, and a local
| radio station had Metallic Rain as its evening news jingle.
|
| The Internet did not disappoint:
| https://www.vangelislyrics.com/vwr/ (Vangelis webring). One of
| the first websites I visited in my life.
|
| And this webring is still alive.
|
| RIP.
| subpixel wrote:
| I recently found out about the work he did with the (also)
| inimitable Irene Papas:
|
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aq1hodbSDkg
| greenhorn123 wrote:
| I love Soil Festivities, still decades after hearing it for the
| first time. Amazing album. Not to diminish his other work, but
| that one really stands out for me.
|
| Also, if you don't know about it yet, check out his
| collaborations with Jon Anderson, as Jon & Vangelis, two awesome
| musicians at their peak.
|
| What a pity...
| chasil wrote:
| My favorite was Opera Sauvage. It had a flow and consistency
| that was, for me, unique in his works.
|
| He will be missed.
| seydor wrote:
| Yes what remarkable, 'organic' sound. Also 'l'apocalypse des
| animaux' and his other early albums really. Despite being old
| synths, they still sound classic
| rffn wrote:
| First Klaus Schulze and now Vangelis. So sad. Rest in peace!
| dav_Oz wrote:
| The opening track to Carl Sagan's Cosmos is actually taken from
| Vangelis' - still prog-rock influenced album - _Heaven and Hell_
| (1975); the 3rd movement.
|
| I still really enjoy his early/progressive stuff and to this day
| cannot quite relate to his later stuff (80s and beyond) as much;
| nevertheless, amazingly, he always maintained a very unique style
| throughout all his years and certainly is deeply woven into the
| beginnings of synth music.
| FlyingCapybara wrote:
| Rachel's Song : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YnwKeiJflBw I
| strongly suggest every BR's fan to play Observer :
| https://www.eurogamer.net/goodbye-rutger-hauer-its-such-a-sh...
| Agamus wrote:
| Sad to hear! I had just this month sent myself on a deep dive of
| Vangelis' work. He composed so many amazing things - here are a
| few tracks that have stuck out for me. Something about them is
| just hard to "get out of":
|
| Jon and Vangelis: "I'll Find My Way Home"
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rKqLAVyRaXw&list=PLHgJlrCztl...
|
| Vangelis: "Juno opening its solar arrays"
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXqt2EQIG5g&list=PLHgJlrCztl...
| TheOtherHobbes wrote:
| Massive, epic talent. Did everything by ear and instinct, never
| learned to read or write music. Incredible feel for timbre,
| melody, and structure.
|
| The DX7 synth used to have a ridiculous "chuff chuff chuff DING!"
| comedy steam train preset. It sounded terrible and was utterly
| useless except as a 10 second novelty.
|
| He used it in one of his soundtracks - and somehow made it
| perfectly _musical_ in that setting.
| seydor wrote:
| which one was it?
| pmoriarty wrote:
| _" Did everything by ear and instinct, never learned to read or
| write music."_
|
| He seems to have had his own musical notation, of a sort. You
| can see him using it at the beginning of this video:
|
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3b1xJYCrKDU
| pnemonic wrote:
| I guess there is a point where convention just slows you
| down. I would say it is a hallmark of true genius.
| lb1lf wrote:
| This was sad news indeed. I have just listened to his works again
| for the first time in years, after a random encounter with a guy
| wearing a faded Chariots of Fire T-shirt - next thing I knew, I
| spent several hours in my hotel room, listening to several albums
| to kill time and rekindle my on-and-off love affair with his
| music.
|
| Today, as I flew home from working overseas for a few weeks, I
| listened to Opera Sauvage over and over again - then landing at
| my destination to see news of his passing.
|
| Sigh.
| leblancfg wrote:
| This makes me very, very sad. One of my favourite composers are
| artists, with an amazing knack for melody. And he was still
| cranking out new music!
| BLKNSLVR wrote:
| This video introduced me to Vangelis' existence, and only after
| looking up the artist did I realise he did Blade Runner and
| Chariots of Fire.
|
| https://youtu.be/GoW8Tf7hTGA
|
| The combination of audio and content of this video gives me
| chills.
| sheinsheish wrote:
| one of his more esoteric and probably less known tracks :
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P6qoTPhhv9w La petite fille de la
| mer
| bborud wrote:
| That track was almost impossible to get hold of back in the
| day. I had heard _of_ it, but never heard it. After years of
| asking around in record stores I finally found a really
| scratchy sounding cassette tape (no doubt a pirated copy) in a
| German record shop in East Frisia the summer of 1985.
| sheinsheish wrote:
| i was 13 in 85. Got my fist walkman some years after that.
| But i doubt i had some Vangelis on tapes. No, we had to buy
| records then..
| [deleted]
| WalterBright wrote:
| It's on the Themes album.
| pmlnr wrote:
| Also on Portraits :)
| pmlnr wrote:
| Just chipping in: "To The Unknown Man" is less famous from him,
| and it shouldn't be.
| netsharc wrote:
| RIP. I remember watching the movie 1492 Conquest of Paradise,
| being wowed by the music, and then downloading the MIDI of the
| theme song on my 28.8k modem: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nd-
| DlMOLCY4 (not a MIDI).
|
| I even saw the movie on Laser Disc, geez, ultimate 90's nostalgia
| trip.
| languagehacker wrote:
| Damn, RIP. Dude wrote my favorite song describing what color each
| horse of the apocalypse is
| poulpy123 wrote:
| the four horsemen ?
| james-skemp wrote:
| For those that want to know more, this is referencing the album
| 666 by Aphrodite's Child.
|
| Got a copy from Germany sometime between '00 and '03.
|
| Amazing album, especially for someone that had only known him
| for Blade Runner at the time.
|
| His stuff with Jon Anderson is also fairly good. The Friends of
| Mr. Cairo is one of my favorites.
| [deleted]
| PAGAN_WIZARD wrote:
| link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QVExlaxaweo
| termios wrote:
| the leading horse is WHITE the second horse is RED the third
| one is a BLACK the last one is a GREEN
| Saint_Genet wrote:
| Most people know him from his brilliant film scores, but his
| prog rock era is up there with the greatest of the genre too
| skyechurch wrote:
| He wrote the theme song to the Carl Sagan series "Cosmos", both
| the song and the show had me transfixed as a kid.
|
| https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=7FW_wOUUTT8
| sebastianconcpt wrote:
| I feel you...
|
| :')
| colomon wrote:
| To be more precise, he wrote the music which was used as the
| theme song for "Cosmos" -- it originally appeared on Vangelis's
| album "Heaven and Hell", five years before "Cosmos" came out.
| Apparently it was called Movement 3 from "Symphony to the
| Powers B", though on my old CD copy of the album it just
| appears in the middle of the track "Heaven and Hell Part 1".
| Really powerfully evocative music, takes me right back to being
| a 10 year old watching "Cosmos".
| yardie wrote:
| I don't know much about Vangelis other than Chariots of Fire,
| he's Greek, and my neighbor when I was a kid loved the shit out
| of him. I assumed for a very long time Vangelis was an entire
| band and not just one person.
|
| RIP amongst so many others, lately.
| seydor wrote:
| He could be an entire orchestra not just a band yes
|
| He had an album based on Greek folk music (Odes, 1979). This is
| a cretan dance: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hc9_qVAflzk
| mudlus wrote:
| RIP. One of the most influential musicians on me, for sure. A
| legend...Love to his family and friends.
| MikeDelta wrote:
| This is very sad, his music has been an inspiration for me for a
| large part of my life. This is one of those days you knew were
| coming but hoped they didn't.
| zoomablemind wrote:
| My memory holds that magical feeling, when in the mindnight
| darkness and quietness of home, suddenly heard a gentle stream of
| silver bells and a beautiful, maybe melancholic, melody from a
| tiny radio speaker... with no announcement of the author or name
| of the song. It was then just used as a last song of the day.
|
| Took me a veeery long time and other side of the globe to hear it
| again, again by chance, but with attribution in that case. Then
| some hours trying to locate the recording...
|
| La Petite Fille de Mer
|
| https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=P6qoTPhhv9w
|
| Truly as if having a chanceful glimpse of a Mermaid.
|
| Thank you for the magic, Master Vangelis. RIP.
| nixass wrote:
| Man, never knew this was his song. Even tho I am fan of his
| work I never end discovering knew masterpieces he made.
| dancemethis wrote:
| I had no idea it was a _person_ named Vangelis. The word sounds
| like a band name.
|
| And really, the exquisite textures are a workload which would
| ordinarily require multiple talents. Guess he was THAT good.
| nixass wrote:
| It's actually common Greek name. I was in shock (positively)
| when I got two new colleagues at work both named Vangelis. They
| remind me of the Vangelis every single day, funny stuff
| MomoXenosaga wrote:
| That's sad. Don't care about music much but for synthesizer I
| always make an exception. Guess I'll be listening to the Blade
| Runner OST tomorrow at the gym in remembrance.
| gsoto wrote:
| Just sharing one of my favorite pieces of him:
|
| "Memories of Green" (from the album "See You Later")
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pW9D6agp794
|
| I think this piece shows the range of his musical expressiveness,
| apart from his virtuosity or synth programming skills. Just a
| piano passed through a flanger effect with some ambient sounds.
|
| The electronic bleeps in that track are recorded from a handheld
| electronic game (Bambino UFO Master Blaster [1]). Talk about
| giving a whole new meaning to those sounds.
|
| [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-sEOW8wAqG0
| wcarss wrote:
| I couldn't play that video for some reason (says it's
| unavailable), so here's another link to (I think) the same
| song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1KfOMkyU_w
| gsoto wrote:
| It is the same song. Thanks :)
| the_af wrote:
| "Memories of Green" was also used to great effect in Blade
| Runner. I love how well it works there. It's so sad and
| evocative.
| jug wrote:
| Wow, I thought it was written for the film until now! How
| embarrassing... Not only for the song suiting, but the title
| too. As it's a bleak post-ecological society.
| ffhhj wrote:
| >> "Memories of Green" (from the album "See You Later")
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pW9D6agp794
|
| That title and that album cover: a woman wearing bikini and
| low-light glasses for snow, with the sun on the back and broken
| floating ice. A prediction of climate change from 1980?
| janci wrote:
| Can somebody shed som light on Miami Vice song? I always thought
| it's Jean Michel Jarre and Vangelis song, but apparently it is
| called Crocket's Theme by Jan Hammer
| ArekDymalski wrote:
| That's one of these posts that it's unsettling for me to
| upvote/like. Sad news, great composer of someny incredible
| tracks.
| bigpeopleareold wrote:
| My first introduction to Vangelis was a vinyl of the album Spiral
| when I was younger ... I didn't even know he did Blade Runner
| until years later, but I really liked that album. Sad to hear he
| passed away though.
| tgv wrote:
| Spiral and Albedo 0.39 were my introduction to his work. Great
| albums, quite possibly the best instrumental "pop" albums of
| that time.
| gmas wrote:
| Super bummed, Vangelis got me into electronic music back in the
| early 90s. I've since made it my mission (obsession) to collect
| all of his albums, which I'm still working on.
| troyvit wrote:
| Maaaaaan about the time Blade Runner came out I was a fourth
| grader fumbling with the Chariots of Fire record pretty much
| every day. That was the first record I remember associating the
| different reflections on the grooves with the length of the song.
| Pretty clear given that side 2 was all one song.
|
| So many elementary school crushes I dreamt of to that album.
|
| Didn't get whacked upside the head by Blade Runner until like
| 1989 or something and then went on that endless quest to find the
| version of the soundtrack that most matched what you hear in the
| movie (there was some legal crap about releasing the original
| music). Ended up with a few of the CDs floating around.
|
| My world wouldn't be the same without his music.
| the_af wrote:
| > _(there was some legal crap about releasing the original
| music)._
|
| That crap resulted in multiple bootleg versions of the Blade
| Runner soundtrack. I don't know if there is a definitive one :/
| Maybe with the Special Edition blue-ray?
|
| I like the voiceover version of the tracks from the original CD
| ("do you like our owl?"), but I also like listening to the
| tracks without voiceovers.
| IndySun wrote:
| http://www.brmovie.com/FAQs/BR_FAQ_Soundtrack.htm
| the_af wrote:
| Oh, I must have read every nook and cranny of that website.
| Used to be my go-to website on all things Blade Runner!
| DonHopkins wrote:
| "I've seen things you people wouldn't believe... Attack ships on
| fire off the shoulder of Orion... I watched C-beams glitter in
| the dark near the Tannhauser Gate. All those moments will be lost
| in time, like tears in rain... Time to die."
|
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NoAzpa1x7jU
| genjipress wrote:
| Oh no. I own all of his albums, including many bootleg issues. He
| was productive right up to the end, though; his last album came
| out in July of last year.
| arrakis2021 wrote:
| What a talent.
| Kaibeezy wrote:
| _So Long Ago, So Clear_ , in our headphones, on a foggy night, on
| the Pont au Double, when the Bateau-Mouche passed under,
| searchlights setting the air on fire. Pure, pure magic. Thanking
| you.
| trh0awayman wrote:
| Spiral is one of my all-time favorite albums - and the opening
| song is my favorite: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-0Z5D7eRh8
| hmahncke wrote:
| I listened to this album constantly as a teenager...
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