Jean-Michel Jarre- Oxygène Pt. 1-3 (First Listen)

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  • čas přidán 1. 01. 2021
  • Hey there, welcome to my channel! I hope you enjoy my clean content as I listen to music and bands I'm unfamiliar with, or digging deeper into. Stick around with me and maybe we can all discover some new music together. Let me know YOUR thoughts on the song and leave me your suggestions as well.
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Komentáře • 723

  • @lancecornell9978
    @lancecornell9978 Před 3 lety +157

    In a million years I would not have imagined a reaction to Jarre. Congratulations

    • @michaelhernandez6446
      @michaelhernandez6446 Před 3 lety +8

      And quite the Jarre Tour Guide Justin just provided for us.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +16

      I like a good surprise 🎁

    • @michaelhernandez6446
      @michaelhernandez6446 Před 3 lety

      @@JustJP Nicely Summarized Justin ! You have a Talent for these Endeavours. And we thank you. Try to check out on CZcams, (perhaps to the Following) Jean-Michel's Live Berkeley 'Greek Theater'. Performance from 2016 or 17'. I was very near, I believe, to where the Video Poster was positioned. To the Visuals, you will beholding 5-7 back layers of Diod (?) Curtains able to create an illusion of 3D.

    • @MarquisDeSang
      @MarquisDeSang Před 3 lety +6

      I should have filmed my reaction to his latest concert in Notre-Dame in VR (real VR, not movie VR) just a few days ago. It was beyond amazing.

    • @wendellwiggins3776
      @wendellwiggins3776 Před 3 lety +1

      me too...Nice surprise.

  • @emdotambient
    @emdotambient Před 3 lety +88

    "This doesn't SOUND like 1976. This sounds like 2020."
    Brother, you should have HEARD it in 1976! Let me tell you, it SOUNDED like ... 2020! (I only wish 2020 actually did sound like this.)

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +7

      Lol!

    • @piotrrybka318
      @piotrrybka318 Před 2 lety +2

      I agree. It's a terrible so called remaster. In the older versions from 80. and early 90. you won't hear this hissing throughout the pieces.

    • @PeteMOBie1
      @PeteMOBie1 Před rokem +4

      Ditto! When this came out in 1976 I first heard Part 1 on some TV documentary and had to know who did this awesome spacey music with those hypnotic scaling runs. Then I heard Part 4 first on the radio then JMJ was on Top Of The Pops with some ARP synths (2500 and 2 Pro Soloists) and his Eminent U320 organ. This album sounds amazing for the stereo sound staging, either through headphones or sitting between the speakers. I preferred laying on the bed with the lights out and a speaker by each ear listening to sounds ping pong and move around the sound stage and drift into the music. Oxygene was my oasis in the musical desert along with Kraftwerk (Autobahn) and Space (Magic Fly). When you consider this was 1976 and he was using mostly monophonic (1 note at a time) instruments and a few polyphonic keyboards like a Korg Ensemble and Eminent organ for the chord pads, recording on to an 8 track recorder, it still holds its own today. I still get goose bumps hearing Oxygene 47 years later.

    • @pianocovers4227
      @pianocovers4227 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @emdotambient ! I was 19yo and it was a .... WOOOOOSH !!

  • @jeffgeoffens5363
    @jeffgeoffens5363 Před 3 lety +30

    Jarre is a pure genius. Oxygene is a masterpiece composed in 1976 and it really sounds as a composition of 2020. When I listened this masterpiece it was like receiving a gadget from future. It was and still is outstanding!!

  • @eschalecdesign2009
    @eschalecdesign2009 Před 3 lety +19

    My dad used to play this when I was 2. I am now 38. This is my favorite album of all time, and it's permanently burned into my consciousness. Thank you so much for exposing your CZcams audience to it!

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety

      Ty thats awesome!

  • @Nidels
    @Nidels Před rokem +11

    I'll tell you a few things about Oxygene's A-side. All I know for now
    The album begins with some very echoy notes made with the magnificent Eminent 310U electronic organ to which, little by little, other instruments are added. The human voice that makes the main melody is made with the AKS synthesizer and this sound is Jarre's favorite, according to his own words. In the middle part of the song, some low notes made with a Minimoog that was barely used on the album and that is out of the credits, give way to some powerful rising brass programmed in the ARP 2600 synthesizer. Finally we come to the last minutes of the theme, in which, a background noise made with the VCS3 will accompany us until the end of the theme while we resume with some strings of the Eminent 310U the main melody that was previously made by the human voice of the AKS. Meanwhile, some sound effects produced with the VCS3 begin to be heard, which will conclude the song, giving way to the second Part of the Album.
    Part 2 links directly to part 1 of the album beginning with a rolling sequence performed on the AKS synthesizer. The sound of the bass seems to have been done with the ARP 2600, while almost all the special effects were done with the VCS 3. The rhythm is handled exclusively by the Korg Mini pop 7 Rhythmi Computer drum machine.
    There is no data on what instrument he used to perform the main melody, although the flute sound was surely made with the ARP 2600. The human choirs are, of course, made with the Mellotron. The wind sound is made with the VCS 3 processed by an Electroharmonix Smalltone pedal.
    The song begins with the farfisa organ that ends in a C minor chord while some low notes of a Minimoog make a melody that will soon be accompanied by some higher notes throughout the song made by the RMI Harmonic synthesizer.. The human voice is made with the AKS synthesizer. The song ends with the sound of some birds. Surely a real recording.
    These are the instruments he used on the album.
    ARP 2600 synthesizer
    Eminent 310 organ
    AKS Synthesizer
    VCS3 Synthesizer
    Farfisa Organ
    Korg Mini pop 7 Rhythm Computer
    RMI Harmonic Synthesizer
    RMI Keiboard Computer
    Mellotron
    Minimoog Monophonic Synthesizer (Excluded from credits for hardly being used)
    ARP 2500 Synthesizer (Excluded from the credits and without actual confirmation of its use by Jarre)
    A hug.

  • @mvjonsson
    @mvjonsson Před 3 lety +57

    Jean-Michel Jarre did a really cool online concert at the Notre Dame cathedral in Paris on New Year's Eve.

    • @joemaurone7923
      @joemaurone7923 Před 3 lety +7

      He puts on a hell of a show. I remember the Texas concert where he turned the skyscrapers there into the backdrop for his performance. Not to mention the "laser harps"...

    • @SharpblueCreative
      @SharpblueCreative Před 3 lety +4

      Yep. Saw New Year’s Eve in watching that live

    • @MrSinnerBOFH
      @MrSinnerBOFH Před 3 lety +3

      @@joemaurone7923 yeah, the “Rendez-vous Houston” concert. Fantastic!
      And let’s remember that he wanted to have a piece played from space, with the astronaut Ron McNair playing sax from the space shuttle Challenger... the one that blew up 😢 Now, that piece is called “Ron’s Piece”

    • @IGC067
      @IGC067 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/VKjFjFtKBRI/video.html

    • @bauhausbastard
      @bauhausbastard Před 3 lety

      It was a blinder

  • @sombrehero3738
    @sombrehero3738 Před rokem +7

    I listened to jarre when I was a kid, I'm now 37 and the album hasn't aged a bit. I would even say that it is timeless.
    In tune with the times.
    Equinoxe - Oxygène and - Chants magnétiques are 3 masterpieces.

    • @Duaner244
      @Duaner244 Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/LzAui_gcdhM/video.html

  • @katequick3602
    @katequick3602 Před 3 lety +29

    I always loved his music. I discovered somewhere in the very early 80s (maybe even 1980). It was kind of mind blowing at the time and I still enjoy it. It was perfect for putting the headphones on and laying outside at night to stare at the stars. Spent many nights lost in the music. The Concert in China, Zoolook, Équinoxe and Rendezvous were also excellent.
    On Rendez-Vous there is a piece called called Last Rendez-Vous (Ron's Piece) named for Ron McNair, one of the astronauts killed in the Space Shuttle Challenger. It was named that because McNair was supposed to record the saxophone part while in space as the first piece of music recorded in space. While another saxophonist eventually recorded the part, the song was dedicated to McNair and the other astronauts who were lost.
    I remember watching the shuttle launch specifically because I was tracking it for this recording as I was a fan of Jean Michel's work and also was a obviously a stargazer. It was such a gut-punch when the disaster happened. That song has always been poignant for me as a reminder of that shocking day.
    Oddly, this past year I started a job in which the department I'm in is in a building named for McNair. It felt a bit full-circle after all these years.
    So glad to see people still taking an interest and appreciation for it. Great reaction. I really enjoy how you break it down and your obvious enthusiasm. Enveloping is indeed the right word to describe it.

    • @papaquonis
      @papaquonis Před 3 lety +3

      They also incorporated some of the story surrounding Ron's Piece and NASA into the massive 1986 Houston anniversary show. McNair was supposed to play his saxophone part from space for that show. I remember watching that as a kid, being completely blown away by the entire spectacle using the skyscrapers as projection screens, all the fireworks etc. With over a million people in the crowd, it was just a show on a whole new level.

    • @katequick3602
      @katequick3602 Před 3 lety +2

      @@papaquonis I remember that happening but only saw parts of it on video. I would have loved to have seen that in person.

    • @MrSinnerBOFH
      @MrSinnerBOFH Před 3 lety +1

      Rendez-vous always reminds me of the Challenger 🙏🏼

    • @147sterling6
      @147sterling6 Před 3 lety

      I never knew this. A poignant tragedy indeed.

    • @martinweber8299
      @martinweber8299 Před 2 lety

      All fantastic albums, but I never understand why "Les chants magnetiques" (Magnetic fields) is so underrated and not mentoned here,

  • @alainchiaroni5149
    @alainchiaroni5149 Před 9 měsíci +2

    JM Jarre is the greatest musical genius of our time. He will be remembered in the same way we remember Beethoven and Mozart. This is all I have to say.

  • @Lichfeldian--Suttonian
    @Lichfeldian--Suttonian Před 3 lety +3

    Jean-Michel Jarre’s _Oxygène_ is timeless! I have been a fan since 1986 and I am never tired of listening top this whole album.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety

      Its just that good!

  • @boborman5537
    @boborman5537 Před 2 lety +2

    I have been listening to jarre since 1977, he is amazing ahead of his time

  • @davidyoung7418
    @davidyoung7418 Před 3 lety +14

    That album is a trip. Ahead of it's time.

  • @RoverT65536
    @RoverT65536 Před 3 lety +3

    Laying with my head between two speakers listening to this has been therapy for me many times in my life.

    • @147sterling6
      @147sterling6 Před 3 lety

      I remember doing that as a child with Kraftwerks Man Machine. A few years later i got to hear this at my friends house after smoking my first joint.

  • @R---66---R
    @R---66---R Před rokem +2

    Man, you just opened a bottle of the best champagne ever! Good luck on this journey

  • @PassengerMX
    @PassengerMX Před 2 lety +1

    Jarre taught me to dream and travel with music

  • @biraoliverio
    @biraoliverio Před 3 lety +29

    Another Jean-Michel Jarre work that deserves a listening is Zoolook his incursion in the pop/world music fields, this album has participations of Adrian Belew and Laurie Anderson, is a very different beast from his previous works.

    • @neilloughran4437
      @neilloughran4437 Před 3 lety +5

      It's a close call for me with Zoolook and Oxygene as my favourite JMJ. Ethinicolor was a big tune.

    • @biraoliverio
      @biraoliverio Před 3 lety +4

      @@neilloughran4437 For me two songs that uses samples in a very creative way, Ethnicolor and Zappa's G-Spot Tornado.

    • @vince14120
      @vince14120 Před 3 lety +1

      And the first samples in the music world 🌎

    • @paulgnsn554
      @paulgnsn554 Před 3 lety

      I loved that album too, especially the monumental opening track. I was amazed when I recently discovered JMJ had been a musician alongside Ray Parker Jr on one of Christophe's albums.

    • @jeanlima2674
      @jeanlima2674 Před 2 lety +1

      Zoolook is another Jarre's masterpiece!

  • @justink5585
    @justink5585 Před 3 lety +42

    You should also check out some Kraftwerk eventually. They pioneered electronic music in the 70s just like Jean Michel Jarre did, but took a very different approach. Maybe listen to their 1974 Album "Autobahn" as an introduction. Some might even call Kraftwerk as influential as the Beatles.

    • @galier2
      @galier2 Před 3 lety +4

      Yes, American Hip-hop acknowledges the Kraftwerk influence (Afrika Bambaataa).

    • @bobholtzmann
      @bobholtzmann Před 3 lety +8

      "Wir fahr'n, fahr'n, fahr'n auf der Autobahn".

    • @TuckertonRR
      @TuckertonRR Před 3 lety +7

      Jarre, Tangerine Dream, etc are "Berlin school" electronic. Kraftwerk (& others) are "Dusseldorf school" electronic.

    • @bobholtzmann
      @bobholtzmann Před 3 lety

      @@TuckertonRR I like Ralf and Florian's early albums, with the wonderful flute playing - I guess Klink Klank studio is in Dusseldorf?

    • @freudsigmund72
      @freudsigmund72 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TuckertonRR From Tangerine Dream my favourite album is the live performance Poland, just three songs topping nearly 1 hour of constantly progressing synth pop.

  • @lugiakane470
    @lugiakane470 Před 5 měsíci

    jmj music inspred me to be obsessed with synthesizers even after 30 year years later im still in awe by it today it will never be dated

  • @taniatank1
    @taniatank1 Před 3 lety +6

    This was my father's album and Mike old field tubular bells, loved them as a child, also introduced me to vangelis

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +1

      Thats awesome! Ty for sharing Tania🙂

  • @galier2
    @galier2 Před 3 lety +52

    Michel is pronounced "me shell"

  • @MrLazze69
    @MrLazze69 Před 3 lety +1

    Jean-Michel Jarre is a classical trained composer, which is probably why it ages so well. There is nothing, or at least very little, contemporary about his music and I think that's why it seems timeless. As a side note, his father, Maurice Jarre, was also a composer, who, among much else, composed the music for the movie "Lawrence of Arabia".

  • @papaquonis
    @papaquonis Před 3 lety +3

    His Rendez-vous album from 1986 was the first album I ever really binge listened to, when I was around 10 years old. My mom randomly got it for her birthday, but I was the one who got hooked.
    Also, one of my most memorable concert experiences was JMJ - standing in a field in the middle of nowhere in the pouring rain for hours and hours, waiting for the show to start. I was absolutely miserable. But when the show started with this music and the impressive light show in the rain with a whole bunch of windmills as the backdrop (which is why it was out in the countryside in the first place), it was just pure magic.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +2

      Thats awesome, sounds like a great show

    • @Dragonpuncher123
      @Dragonpuncher123 Před 2 lety +1

      The famous windmill concert in Aalborg in 2002, that’s the stuff of legends. I was too young to go back then, but I did see him in a nice dry theater in Copenhagen in 2008. Also an amazing experience.

  • @murdockreviews
    @murdockreviews Před 3 lety +19

    Grounbreaking album for electronic music. I love the retro-futurism it oozes today!
    Thumbs up, Justin.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +3

      Ty Murdock!

    • @iosyn5896
      @iosyn5896 Před 3 lety +3

      indeed. nothing else. tape echos. 8 track recorded at a kitchen and a handful of real vintage gear like VCS3 etc. right, a sound of 1976 likes 2020. this is how JMJ was called "pioneer of electronic music". he used the gear in a way noone thinks about, with orchestral structures/arrangements. influence of his father maurice jarre (filmcomposer) is already beside.

  • @tonk82
    @tonk82 Před 3 lety +57

    Tangerine Dream is a good recommendation after this. Stratosfear, for example.

    • @-davidolivares
      @-davidolivares Před 3 lety +5

      Yes, my favorite from them also. Great album. Another review read that made me buy it. Plus, the Sorcerer movie soundtrack.

    • @neilloughran4437
      @neilloughran4437 Před 3 lety +1

      I'd go with Tangram or Force Majeure for T-Dream.

    • @Partyschreck-kq3rm
      @Partyschreck-kq3rm Před 3 lety +5

      Tangerine dream are great. Rubycon and Tangram are my favorites.

    • @ErikGoosen
      @ErikGoosen Před 3 lety +14

      I would seriously recommend the old stuff: Rubycon, that’s the one that put Tangerine Dream on the map. Has an immense audience around the world. Real German: dark, mystic an imaginative. The opposite of the French melodic electronic music from the early seventies.

    • @a.k.1740
      @a.k.1740 Před 3 lety +6

      Yes, Stratosfear and Rubycon are real classic TD at their best !

  • @neilloughran4437
    @neilloughran4437 Před 3 lety +16

    Still an amazing record 45 years later... beautiful sound design in both tone, processing and positioning... I can hear a lot of ARP2600, Mellotron and Eminent... but the way they sound and combine is really smooth and all the more remarkable considering it was all done on 8 track. The sound you mention as a horn is a mellotron flute but its so beautifully processed it doesn't sound so typical. Track 1 is very classical... Gm Fm Cm D7 chords with the Eminent going through a Small Stone phaser.. beautiful..
    Jarre never really topped this record or me. I'm surprised there hasn't been a multitrack breakdown of this LP (like has been done with Steely Dan, Queen and Stevie Wonder a'la Classic Albums) as it would be an education to everyone.

    • @philt4346
      @philt4346 Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for the details. Those simple changes made this material accessible to me as a boy.

    • @Wesker1984
      @Wesker1984 Před 3 lety +2

      I put Equinoxe on par to Oxygene tbh.

    • @neilloughran4437
      @neilloughran4437 Před 3 lety

      ​The albums I mostly listen to from Jarre are Oxygene and Zoolook.. maybe a little Rendezvous and parts of China concerts too... but I tend to avoid the well known pieces...
      For someone who is new to this genre it's a complete rabbit hole of beautiful muisc... for me it peaked with Johannes Schmoelling's original Zoo of Tranquility CD on Theta (not the remake).. after that I was onto other music and genres but I still treasure this period of discovery.

    • @YouHaventSeenMeRight
      @YouHaventSeenMeRight Před 3 lety

      @@Wesker1984 I actually prefer Equinoxe to Oxygene as it feels more mature. That is probably because after the success of Oxygene JMJ was able to invest in a proper studio and more equipment (Oxygene was famously recorded in JMJ's kitchen). The use of more equipment allowed him to create more complex soundscapes in Equinoxe.

  • @creativitycell
    @creativitycell Před 2 lety +1

    I have all his albums on vinyl n CD, his London Docklands concert 1988 was my first gig as a teenager.....was hooked on synth music. Absolute Genius.

  • @SpaceCattttt
    @SpaceCattttt Před 3 lety +3

    If we all wake up tomorrow with no vocal chords, all future music will hopefully sound like this.
    Just kidding, but we need to bring the instrumental epics back! This is an extraordinary piece of work. Timeless and (ironically) breathlessly beautiful.

    • @joemaurone7923
      @joemaurone7923 Před 3 lety

      I agree! That's why I've been doing electronic instrumental music since the 90's, under the name Spaceplayer. It's a shame instrumentals are so rarely done now. Last mainstream I can personally remember is "Cliffs of Dover" by Eric Johnson.

  • @royleggitt3307
    @royleggitt3307 Před 3 lety +3

    This was our background music while we played DnD in the early 90's. Thanks for the trip on memory lane.

  • @paulcharity7451
    @paulcharity7451 Před 3 lety +1

    I was 16 in 76 and when I listened to Oxygene it was so out of this world, still fresh and futuristic today.
    I now have the Oxygene Trilogy (3 albums decades apart) and Equinox Watcher (3 albums decades apart) and it’s like the gift that keeps on giving.
    Fantastic music, nearly as good as Pink Floyd.

  • @Scatherfirst
    @Scatherfirst Před 2 lety +3

    He is the son of Maurice Jarre who composed the Oscar winning soundtrack for Lawrence of Arabia

  • @thomasmcintosh390
    @thomasmcintosh390 Před 3 lety +5

    I've never heard of this artist. I'm not very far into it and am enjoying it. It immediately brings to mind Isao Tomita, another artist whose work I also enjoy.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +1

      I'm glad youre enjoying it!

  • @diehandgottes6721
    @diehandgottes6721 Před 10 měsíci

    This is exactly the album I was looking for in the 70s.
    There were also with us in Germany in this time the Sunday driving bans.
    Empty streets and even empty highways on which we went for a walk at that time and with this mood also came a film about a virus that has wiped out everything the film was called "The Hamburg disease" and in it this music was played that I have been looking for a very long time.
    There was no Internet and the search was not easy and then I came across the German band Tangerine Dream where I'm still a big fan today and only much later on Jean-Michel Jarre and finally found this album and for me the best album ever by this artist.
    There are also following albums with this title
    meanwhile Oxygene Part 1 to 20

  • @alireza-vq6ul
    @alireza-vq6ul Před rokem

    One of my favourite music. Thanks.

  • @stevemiller859
    @stevemiller859 Před 3 lety +15

    Great Album, Pt 5 is actually my personal favourite. His music is quite haunting. As a side note i feel his music is a logical progression from his fathers. Maurice Jarre was a multi Oscar winner, composing many of David Lean's films, Dr Zhivago etc. (He also did Mad Max, Beyond the Thunderdome.) His influence on his son is unmistakable

    • @jamesdignanmusic2765
      @jamesdignanmusic2765 Před 3 lety +1

      Triple Oscar-winner - most famously for the "Lawrence of Arabia" soundtrack.

    • @14478100
      @14478100 Před 3 lety

      Wow, I did not make that connection!! Will re-listen to those soundtracks

    • @gdkey8025
      @gdkey8025 Před 3 lety

      there was a Kevin Jarre too who wrote films (maybe a brother?)

    • @jamesdignanmusic2765
      @jamesdignanmusic2765 Před 3 lety

      @@gdkey8025 adopted brother of Jean-Michel

    • @jean-louispech4921
      @jean-louispech4921 Před 3 lety +2

      in fact the father had little influence on jean-michel because he left his family when JMJ was young.
      JMJ was educated by his mother who had relation in the world of music including jazz musicians.

  • @denisfuenzalida3746
    @denisfuenzalida3746 Před 3 lety +3

    It's easy to overlook, but this album was released in December 1976 (44 years ago!). Mike Oldfield's "Tubular Bells" and Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" were released in 1973. I remember being a kid in the early 80s and hearing this on tape with my parents, thinking "THIS is the future of music". It was so different to anything I had heard before! No vocals, no "real" instruments I could identify. The idea of sound synthesizers was simply mind blowing. Also: so much theremin sounds :-)
    Edit: there's a version of JMJ playing this album live using the original hardware called "Oxygen in your living room" and there are a few clips on CZcams.

  • @ErikGoosen
    @ErikGoosen Před 3 lety +22

    Justin, if you go down this path you know you’ll end up with Kraftwerk, Tangerine Dream and Klaus Schulze. All fathers of EDM. All worth a listen.
    BTW, it’s so nice of you to go through my record collection and add something every now and then. Really enjoy it. Keep it up and best wishes for 2021.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +2

      Ty so much Erik, im glad youre enjoying going down memory lane!

    • @Merlinsgames
      @Merlinsgames Před 3 lety

      Absolutely! Have you hear The Sorcerer? If so what are your thoughts?

    • @cosmin98684
      @cosmin98684 Před 3 lety

      I own 95 Tangerine Dream, all Kraftwerk and a few Schulze.... he has a long way to go.... TD is my favorite band along with Depeche Mode.... however JP thinks DM is just another synth pop band (how wrong he is), and I don't think he heard TD.

    • @gdkey8025
      @gdkey8025 Před 3 lety +2

      @@JustJP Kraftwerks run of albums from Autobahn-Radio activity-Trans Europe express-Man Machine and Computer World are something else!

    • @MrRezRising
      @MrRezRising Před 2 lety

      @@cosmin98684 Have you seen the 80s movie Miracle Mile? TD did the score and it's excellent.

  • @Muushondje
    @Muushondje Před rokem +1

    Superb first listen ! Oxygene is pure Avant-garde. There is nothing like it

  • @mgman6000
    @mgman6000 Před 2 lety +1

    it's fun to watch your reaction we know what's coming and to see you hear for first time brings me back 45 years ago when I was 30 and bought this album mainly because of the cover then found out what was inside imagine hearing this when the airwaves we're dominated by disco

  • @onemerlin
    @onemerlin Před 3 lety +9

    Just a second thought note: I saw a video on YT some time back (a year?) with Jarre playing the full Oxygene live on his original old synths. He had 5-6 assistants to play the simultaneous parts, but it gave me a lot of insight into how some of the sounds were created. Once you've finished the studio album (and relistened because it's amaze-balls), go check that out on your own time for some insight... which you can share when you react to Equinoxe for us. :) (Edit: the link: czcams.com/video/H9UzNh_2TXk/video.html)

  • @Merlinsgames
    @Merlinsgames Před 3 lety +3

    I saw Jean-Michel performing at a Tower Records in Seattle. It was life changing!

  • @jag731
    @jag731 Před 3 lety +1

    Discovered Jean-Michel in the early years by a whim. My first "Jarre" experience was "Equinoxe" ... amazing musical journey. Next up, was Oxygene and the rest is history. Master & pioneer for sure.

  • @JackMellor498
    @JackMellor498 Před 2 lety +1

    I adore how much this album sounds like it’s the personified Vision of the Future making music.
    It’s a future we never got, I get that a lot with synthesiser music, it sounds like the music of the future we haven’t reached yet, so as long as that vision persists of a utopia to strive for, it’ll stay in that way timeless.
    The soundscapes Jarre creates are out of this world!

  • @manhattenman6075
    @manhattenman6075 Před 3 lety +8

    This is my first time hearing this too and I am blown away. Part IV is most famous song on here, and it’s Jean-Michels Most successful single

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety +1

      Awesome, glad you liked it!

    • @cerealfreakonline
      @cerealfreakonline Před 2 lety

      You should watch his concerts then, playing the laser harps is just as ethereal as listening to him. It adds a whole new dimension to his music.

  • @Richard_Jones
    @Richard_Jones Před 3 lety +3

    Don't worry about how 'engaging' your reaction seems. There are plenty of reactors out there giving it the big eyes and 'oh ma gods!" and we don't need another. What I like about you JP is your good taste, your honesty and those little nods (like to a friend) when a good bit comes on. Keep doing what you're doing!

  • @JamesHowe
    @JamesHowe Před 3 lety +3

    I've always been fascinated with synthesizer music ever since my 8th grade music teacher brought in a very simple synth that he owned. This was back about the time Switched On Bach came out, so this was pretty early on. What I find incredible, looking back on things, is how creative both musically and technically these artists were. Back then there was no digital recording, you had to put everything on tape. Most tapes had few tracks, I think JP said 8 tracks for this album. What this meant is that to compose a piece you had to record on your limited number of tracks, and then mix them down so you could free up more space to record some more. Edits were literally done by cutting and pasting tape together.
    I remember getting this album when it first came out. I think I was attracted to the cover since I didn't know anything about Jean Michel Jarre. I'm sure the album was in the 'imports' section and was in a category that caught my eye. When I played it, I wasn't disappointed. I really do think of this album as the equivalent of a classical music composition. The work is best experienced by putting the album on and simply listening to it from start to finish. You get the most out of it by really absorbing it. I'm looking forward to side 2.
    As others have mentioned, you might want to look at Tangerine Dream (particularly from the early/mid 70's), Klaus Schulze, and others.

  • @charki40
    @charki40 Před 2 lety +1

    I fell in love with this album when I was 11 years old. Ive listened to it many many times. With that I fell in love with the Universe. He is an absolute genius in my 55 year old opinion. Voyager was sent out into the unknown with music of human creation but not his. When I think about it, I fancy this as her headphone music as she cruises beyond our solar system. I also fall to sleep to the soundscapes capture by Voyager of our solar system. Its so similar. He is a true musical pioneer before our time.

  • @stephendennis8739
    @stephendennis8739 Před 3 lety +2

    Absolutely love this from Jean michel jarre

  • @MarkTheMorose
    @MarkTheMorose Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for respecting the artist and his work by not pausing and interjecting. This was the first music I heard that I knew was 'for me', and 40 years later it, with Equinoxe and Magnetic Fields still reward me.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety

      Absolutely Mark! Ty

  • @gaiaeternal5131
    @gaiaeternal5131 Před 3 lety +4

    Hi JP. Dave from the UK. The ethereal beauty of Pt 1 brings to mind Vangelis. His track 'So Long Ago So Clear' (from the album Heaven and Hell) has the added bonus of a simply magical vocal performance by Jon Anderson (for me it's on a par with 'Soon' from Gates of Delirium). Music from the spheres!

  • @UltimaxGame
    @UltimaxGame Před 2 lety

    Best part in electronic music history

  • @mvjonsson
    @mvjonsson Před 3 lety +1

    Electronic masterpiece, and my favourite of Jarre's work.

  • @alfredvannetburg8871
    @alfredvannetburg8871 Před 3 lety +2

    Listening to this music gives me two visions: Diving along a pristine coral reef, with some shark drifting by... Or: a slideshow of large images from the Hubble space telescope... pure relaxation.

  • @-davidolivares
    @-davidolivares Před 3 lety +12

    First of all, don’t sweat the visual reaction, I too just closed my eyes and listened most of the time. When the big synth notes happened I looked up just when you looked up and that was cool.
    I think I read a review back then that made me buy this album... later in college with an artist friend, he had it also and we really got into this music. Later bought the Concerts in China double album probably for its striking red, white and black cover.
    Along with Tomita, Jean Michel synthesized my brain, for the good.
    So mind expanding... love it still.
    Hopefully you can do some Tomita. Snowflakes Falling, Firebird, The Planets are monumental reimagining of classical music albums.
    Edit: Ok, you went and done it again and I just can’t let it go... 1976.
    So much great music happened that year. Tangerine Dream’s Stratosfear is terrific... Another album that expanded my young little mind in a different way was, wait for it... David Sancious’s Transformation (The Speed of Love), for reals, 1976 was mega.
    Also, while listening to JMJ I kept thinking of another Jean, Jean Luc Ponty. His Cosmic Messenger album was/is one of my absolute favorites. Highly recommended.
    Peace and synthy

    • @markspooner1224
      @markspooner1224 Před 3 lety

      I once gave the China album to my sister for Christmas but she didn't like it.

    • @-davidolivares
      @-davidolivares Před 3 lety +1

      @@markspooner1224
      More for us...

  • @phase2dennismcgranry771

    Thank you JP. For Enjoying this the way we All did back in 76. With our jaws on the ground and our minds in the Skys!!!💯💯☮️🤟🌈❤️

  • @colinthomson7518
    @colinthomson7518 Před rokem +1

    Amazing Album

  • @psychmike1717
    @psychmike1717 Před 3 lety

    In my teens/twenties i loved this.... haven't listened to JMJ for decades. Thanks for the reminder.

  • @nylonburning
    @nylonburning Před 3 lety +1

    Jarre was an integral part of my childhood

  • @albarton7189
    @albarton7189 Před 3 lety +1

    When I was much younger, not fitting in with the local high school crowd, I stated listening to “new age” music.
    It started with Tubular Bells and then I bought anything I could find on the Virgin Records label: Jean-Michel Jarre’s Oxygene and Equinoxe, Tangerine Dream’s Phaedra and Stratosphere , Klaus Schulze’s Timewind, Edgar Froese’s Aqua, Pekka’s Mathematician’s Air Display, David Bedford’s Star’s End and Instructions for Angels, to name a few. And everything Mike Oldfield released. And all things Yes. And the entire pre- Dark Side of the Moon Pink Floyd. And Premiata Forneria Marconi. And Aphrodite’s Child’s 666. And after close to 50 years later, I still have all of these on vinyl. And they still sound great.
    I saw Jarre’s Rendez-vous Houston in 1986 along with 1.5 million other people. I sat in my car parked off the freeway overpass and watched the light show and fireworks displayed on the skyscrapers and listened to the music transmitted over the FM radio. Spectacular to say the least.

  • @orion7296
    @orion7296 Před rokem

    Jean Michel Jarre is the master number one of the electronic music. His concerts are of the 500,000 people at least.

  • @terryroxburgh3276
    @terryroxburgh3276 Před 2 lety

    Back in 1976 I borrowed this from a friend to listen and bought for myself the same afternoon. one of my top 5 artists and still producing unique sounds to this day.

  • @strumdynasty3050
    @strumdynasty3050 Před 3 lety +3

    Oh, man. I’m glad you liked this. Personally, Jarre is not my cup of tea. Something about his music has just never...quite sat right with me. I just can’t get into it. It’s kind of uninteresting in my own mind. So, I guess since I think everyone’s preferences are like my own, I thought you would hate it. Glad you found stuff to appreciate. That’s awesome.

  • @btannereagle
    @btannereagle Před 3 lety +1

    OMG this brings back wonderful memories. My Jazz dance teacher choreographed a routine to this for a performance. I bought the album and always enjoyed listening to it. Thank you.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety

      Thatd be an interesting dance! Ty Bonita!

  • @routemaster19
    @routemaster19 Před 3 lety +1

    Your comments about how this sounds today and that it fits in with today's soundscapes is interesting. I guess for those of us who have lived with this since it's inception it feels a bit like a circle. The mid 70's was a huge melting pot of different styles and genres - some more mainstream than others - but generally you could hear all sorts moving from one environment to another. In the UK at that time we had a lot of Rock, Glam Rock, Folk Rock, Pop, novelty (!), Easy Listening all making the charts - very rich and diverse - if not all quality! This album made a lot of people in the UK reconsider electronic music as a viable musical compositional genre in it's own right which would stand the test of time. Yes it still sounded futuristic or a bit other worldly but in the Uk we were used to a lot of these sounds from our own BBC Radiophonic workshop who were true pioneers in using un-tuned oscillating tones into sound effects and simple tune structures for programmes, public information films and adverts etc. In 1962 we had the hit single "Telstar" by the Tornadoes which used a Clavioline - an early electronic keyboard. A year later we had the seminal theme to Doctor Who and so on. By the late 70's and into the 80's synths became so commonplace they were not futuristic but current and by the late 80's were considered more of a fad than futuristic and there was a resurgence of indie rock bands which almost eclipsed the next era of synth music which was their use in Rave, acid house, trance and EDM. These early sounds of JMJ were considered not futuristic but old fashioned and quaint. Now synths (or their plug in counterparts) are just part of the fabric of our soundscapes and the re-emergence of their original clean electronic voices has began to make them sound like a new sound to our younger generations unaware of their heritage.

  • @digibirder
    @digibirder Před 3 lety +1

    This was ground-breaking when it came out. JMJ is one of the masters of the genre. Still a timeless classic. JMJ is still going. Saw him live a few years ago. He puts on an amazing show. Find a way to see him when thats possible. Its a trip!

  • @g06sfj76
    @g06sfj76 Před 3 lety

    Lights out, headphones on, any Jean Michel Jarre album. Transported to another dimension.

  • @Nidels
    @Nidels Před 3 lety +10

    Wonderful reaction. To this day, jarre is considered the father of electronic music and in its day, this album marked the frontier in which electronic music was considered as something without soul and cold, to be warm music and with feelings. Jarre didn't have it easy at all. He barely had a few monophonic analog synthesizers when he recorded this work of art with an 8-track recorder in his kitchen. He even had to borrow some instruments in order to perform it. Most of the sounds in the first part are made with the Eminent organ and although it is not among the list of instruments used, he also used a minimoog. The Fxes in part two were basically done with EMS brand monophonic synthesizers. These are the VCS3 and the AKS. The beats were made with the Korg Minipop drum machine. The human voice in part 1 and 3 is made with the AKS synthesizer and if the wind does it with a sine wave and white noise on the VCS3 synthesizer. The choirs in part 2 are made with the mellotron. Today these instruments are true museum gems and highly coveted by modern musicians. The third part is dominated by the Farfisa organ and the minimoog monophonic synthesizer. I am looking forward to tomorrow to listen to parts 4,5 and 6. And I hope that after that you will give a good review of his next album. Equinoxe, which is considered his masterpiece. To date, oxygene has sold 18 million copies. A hug and happy new year 2021.

    • @ErikGoosen
      @ErikGoosen Před 3 lety +4

      Before Jean Michel Jarre the Germans paved the path: Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze and Kraftwerk. Jean Michel did make electronic music more popular.

    • @philipchambers4165
      @philipchambers4165 Před 3 lety +3

      Who considers Jean Michel Jarre as the 'father of electronic music'? Surely there were many before him who are more deserving of that title, e.g. Stockhausen, or many bands in the 60s who were incorporating electronic elements in their tracks/albums.

    • @RushfanUK
      @RushfanUK Před 3 lety +2

      Nidels Way off base here, Jarre was not the Father of anything, as Erik says TD, Schulze and Kraftwerk were way ahead, Jarre had the single hit with O4 and for some reason every idiot who had no idea went wow a new genre of music, TD first came together in 1967 and I saw them live here in the UK and in Germany in the late 70's. I saw Jarre at the Royal Albert Hall play Oxygene live on analogue synths, there were 4/5 other musicians with him and a ton of equipment, it was musically good but as a show pretty crap, TD much better live.

    • @Nidels
      @Nidels Před 3 lety +2

      @@ErikGoosen I agree with you, but also keep in mind that long before oxygene, jarre was already conducting his own novel experiments with themes such as erosmachine, la cage, deserted palace, or the old TV version of equinoxe 5. All these musicians came out to the pair. Tangerine dream, Kraftwerk, Jarre, Tim blake, and many others who quickly realized the tremendous potential that these new musical instruments had. Of course, jug with oxygen popularized electronic music to the masses. Before synth artists were seen as freaks. I believe that it was from Jarre and the approach to the general public that electronic music was better accepted.

    • @Nidels
      @Nidels Před 3 lety +1

      @@philipchambers4165 Well ... about the father of electronic music, I'm not saying it. Many music experts say so. Whoever the father of electronic music was, I don't care. As you say, there were others before him. I think jarre took advantage of the best of other musicians of the time to reach the public with a great effect. Kraftwerk gave us the beats, Vangelis the melodies and Tangerine dreams the sequences. I think jarre knew how to put all this together to bring music to the general public, with a completely new style that unfortunately they badly called "cosmic music". They also pigeonholed Vangelis in that style. A hug and happy new year 2021

  • @tommycanadasmobazimmer

    JMJ - Gotta luv this music. College years....and beyond

  • @TheMkamix
    @TheMkamix Před 2 lety +1

    I've listened to this album numerous times. It still sounds futuristic. Thank you for this reaction. Subscribed!

  • @edwardthorne9875
    @edwardthorne9875 Před 3 lety +2

    Jarre did an outdoor concert in downtown Huston TX where dancing lasers were projected on the sides of the buildings. The live album even included the local radio reports reflecting the excitement. The event shut traffic down for miles. Can you imagine an entire city joining in unison for a night. What a joy it must have been.
    It was albums like this -- Vangelis, Tomita, Larry Fast's Synergy, Dick Hyman, Walter Carlos, Tangerine Dream -- that nicely complemented what Prog was doing. I love them all.

    • @schuylersouthwell2554
      @schuylersouthwell2554 Před 3 lety

      Dick Hyman!! "Topless Dancers of Corfu" or 'Kolumbo".

    • @edwardthorne9875
      @edwardthorne9875 Před 3 lety +1

      @@schuylersouthwell2554 I was about 15 years old... take a guess.
      Hyman is still alive (b. 1927) and has made great contributions to jazz and other genres. Total Bells and Tony anyone?

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety

      Thats so awesome Ed, I can only imagine

  • @jamespaivapaiva4460
    @jamespaivapaiva4460 Před 3 lety +4

    The first part had me looking to bond, the second I found carbon and we got a drink of water, and the third just had me lost in the ozone! Peace and breath in the air.

  • @andrewmaher9297
    @andrewmaher9297 Před 3 lety

    I was one of the lucky ones (there were hundreds of thousands of us) who saw him perform in London (the Docklands Concert). Being London, it rained, and there's Jean-Michel on stage, on a boat (raft) on the river Thames, moving gently up and down river throughout the concert so everyone gets a good view. One of his opening statements was "don't worry about the rain, us frogs love the rain". Sorry, but anyone who's happy to take the mick out of himself is okay in my book, instant legend and a fantastic musician. Great concert, saw the laser-harp, the fireworks, projections, everything. If you don't get to see him live, at least watch a concert or two online, there's so much to experience.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 3 lety

      That sounds like an amazing experience Andrew

  • @Lichfeldian--Suttonian

    For your information - in case you didn’t know - the Mellotron wasn’t a sampling keyboard, it was a replay keyboard because it had _analogue_ recorded sounds in it. It had different racks of tapes, each rack having different analogue recorded sounds on it; classically (as I remember it): male choir, female choir, male/female choir, flute, and brass, each tape had a 7 second play on it. Edgar Froese of Tangerine Dream took his Mellotron Mark 5 to the BBC in London to get sounds that he needed so that the manufacturers, Streetly Electronics, could get the sounds on to the tapes.
    Towards the last part of _Part 2_ , just as the white noise comes in, I think Jean-Michel plays the lower notes of the Mellotron with the flute rack, just as the Mellotron with the male/female choir rack comes in a little later.

  • @CanigoCatala
    @CanigoCatala Před 2 lety

    The best Jean Michel Jarre album.

  • @deliuslyndon8340
    @deliuslyndon8340 Před 2 lety

    I never thought when I searched 'Jean Michel Jarre Reaction' that something would actually come up! great job!

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 2 lety

      Ty Delius! Have an album review coming for it soon as well! And I've also done Eqiunoxe 😁

  • @damonramirez
    @damonramirez Před 3 lety

    Well.. Jp.. This is the time, 1976ish where electronic music explodes!! And all the comments will recommend some of the best for sure!! I'll give you mine after 4-6. Love that you are doing this!!

  • @maruad7577
    @maruad7577 Před 3 lety +5

    Yeah, this guy was ahead of his time. Wendy Carlos's Switched on Bach was the beginning of synth music for most folks. JMJ kicked it up a notch and set the bar very high. Some other folks in comments have made some excellent suggestions to follow in this vein so I will recommend a folk/prog song (I think) called "Badlands Flashback" by Bruce Cockburn. Other Cockburn fans may have other suggestions i.e. "Silver Wheels" or "Hoop Dancer" or some of his more popular songs ("Wondering Where the Lions Are", "Tokyo", "Lovers in a Dangerous Time" or "If I had a Rocket Launcher").
    Great in depth review. Thanks.

    • @cornellrosiu8818
      @cornellrosiu8818 Před 3 lety

      Agree absolutely! Wendy Carlos 'Ode to Joy' czcams.com/video/0MCnnfXPSHw/video.html

  • @peanutgnome
    @peanutgnome Před 3 lety

    Yes, 1976! I've been listening to JMJ since the early 80's when I bought the cassette from a 99 cent bin and I've been listening to him ever since - though that tape wore out long ago. Welcome to his world!

  • @josephwhirlwind6086
    @josephwhirlwind6086 Před 10 měsíci

    The first part that you did hear was JeanMichelle playing on an electronic organ , the Eminent 310 Unique , with a smallstone phaser and also a minimoog synth, he was the grand master of electronic music , I became an instant fan hearing Oxygene for the first time in 1976 being 12 years old, and now , 59 years of age still a fan !!

  • @davidhansen2748
    @davidhansen2748 Před 3 lety

    As a college freshman in 1978, I saw the album in a dusty bin at the record store, and bought it based on the cover art alone. A tape I made for my car became my sound track driving between home and school. It somehow kept me awake on the more boring parts of the drive and kind of made me feel like I was in a movie. Fun stuff.

  • @paulvalletta01
    @paulvalletta01 Před 3 lety

    I love this album, the sound production blew me away, on phones..wow!!

  • @berryfail
    @berryfail Před 3 lety

    handmade in Jarre’s kitchen absolutely stunning ❤️❤️❤️

  • @reactionsaccount3955
    @reactionsaccount3955 Před 2 lety +1

    I can only imagine how much of a pain staking task, it must of been, to program all these sounds and tones into synthesizers 45 years ago.

  • @wendyt7958
    @wendyt7958 Před 3 lety

    This is amazing...love this. Electronic music has soul and emotion and can take you places if you just open your mind

  • @ramoncardinali
    @ramoncardinali Před 3 lety

    This is total masterpiece! Have it on vinyl and listen to it regularly.

  • @charlescole645
    @charlescole645 Před 2 lety +1

    Oxygene part 1, one of my favorite tracks. Good to listen to lying on bed at night in the dark.

    • @JustJP
      @JustJP  Před 2 lety

      Defintitely. Let it swirl all around you :D

  • @jfergs.3302
    @jfergs.3302 Před 3 lety +1

    So similar, your impressions. Much the same as mine, back in the day. This was new, clever, atmospheric, and exciting. I wore the LP out. That said, It's not an album that's stayed with me. Much of a time, and mood. It's one of those you really have to want to listen to, not something you'd just throw on. There's no denying it's impact, and JMJ's artistry, but years on, had you not played it I may've never heard it again. A walk down memory lane. Roll on side B.

  • @user-JM1967
    @user-JM1967 Před 3 lety +1

    Jarre forever

  • @LH-po3up
    @LH-po3up Před 3 lety +2

    Brilliant.

  • @sjazzp
    @sjazzp Před 3 lety

    I got the LP back in 1979 or 1980, I don’t know how many times I listened to it as it was showing the future of the music. There are several videos on CZcams with Jean Michel playing Oxygene and other tracks, it’s worth watching them.
    I enjoyed this video a lot as it’s always great to learn what the new generations think of the music I listened when I was your age.

  • @The-Rose-and-the-Cross
    @The-Rose-and-the-Cross Před 3 lety +16

    Is no one going to mention the slight resemblance between his background and the cover of _Équinoxe_?
    -(Well I just did)-

  • @robertduszczakowski6813

    Bardzo ciekawe i wnikliwe uwagi. Dziękuję.

  • @neilhinks5734
    @neilhinks5734 Před 3 lety +1

    Oh yes yes yes Justin 😊 ❤️. What a wonderful surprise doing Jean Michel Jarre butty.. This album is as dreamy gas it gets imho. ❤️ I love this, the sounds, transendent keyboard's.
    Just gorgeous... Parts 1- 6 *
    For me are just beautiful.. Ive seen him live twice in my life.. And they were both so memorable butty.
    Wiw, im blown away you doing Oxygene by the man..
    Thank you so much butty.. Another video ill be blasting out in the coming week's
    Just, have a wonderful day butty... Gid bless you for this masterpiece ❤️
    Oh, and your review is out of this world butty.. 👍

  • @philshorten3221
    @philshorten3221 Před 3 lety

    Great reaction - again! Always put me in mind of different coastlines, from mudflats, & sand dunes to towering cliffs.

  • @onemerlin
    @onemerlin Před 3 lety

    So glad (and so unexpected!) to see you do Jarre. I was introduced to this in the summer after sophmore year of high school, in 1977. It blew my mind, and I've been a huge Jarre fan ever since. I was so deep into what would one day be called "electronica", but was then referred to as "avant guarde". :) Jarre, Tangerine Dream & Klaus Schulze's later solo work, Isao Tomita, Larry Fast (Peter Gabriel's keyboardist, who recorded solo under the name Synergy), Fripp & Eno and the new ambient music, Kraftwerk and the roots of EDM, ... it was all formative for me. I love this stuff beyond words.

  • @stephenmccormack5750
    @stephenmccormack5750 Před 3 lety +3

    Its so strange I listened to JMJ since 1976 and mainstream popular music scarcely acknowledged him, let alone review him. I had to wait all these years for someone to finally examine his stuff. He did eventually become famous to be fair but not mainstream.
    Jarre managed to put out diverse and dramatic compositions. My favorite album was his follow up album (1978) - Equinox, more variety in sounds and music and with an even better cover. Jarre's signature sound was his organic/complication ability. That was him at his best.

    • @papalaz4444244
      @papalaz4444244 Před 3 lety

      LOL Everything I was into was "weird" according to everyone else. Now all my faves are being reacted to and praised. The pop albums long forgotten. Even Black Sabbath which everyone seemed to really hate and slag off. Oh how I wish I had a time machine...... :)

  • @davidwatchesyoutube
    @davidwatchesyoutube Před 3 lety

    My first exposure to Jean-Michel Jarre was when I was a DJ on a cruise ship in Alaska in the late 80's. It was one of the cassettes the bar used for background music, especially late at night after I shut down. I liked the ambiance so much that I bought a blank tape in port to copy it. I still have that copy, but it's pretty worn out...

  • @Volcaniced
    @Volcaniced Před 3 lety

    Omg ...wish I could remember my first feeling when I got JMJ...

  • @fredholland1169
    @fredholland1169 Před 3 lety

    I first heard this in 1976. It got me hooked on what would eventually become known as ambient music.

  • @stefanstock953
    @stefanstock953 Před 9 měsíci

    Greetings and Love from Germany 💚..damn, cool an d rare reaction..has anyone told in the comments bout his live shows.? You get a total different vibe and understanding to his genious stuff. I wonder no one had reacted to him at all. Dude, his live shows in the late seventies and in the eighties were not from this world, no one had done something like that before. His light and laser show included whole cities, skyscrapers and literaly the whole sky. Thanks for reminding me to him. Been at least 20 years isince i watched some live stuff of him. Have a peaceful sunday, my friend❤

  • @relayer27
    @relayer27 Před 3 lety +21

    Justin, you should try Vangelis' Heaven and Hell album, it even has a beautiful song song by Jon Anderson of Yes

    • @joemaurone7923
      @joemaurone7923 Před 3 lety +1

      Not to mention that a portion of it was famously used as the theme for Carl Sagan's COSMOS!

    • @altair8598
      @altair8598 Před 3 lety

      Stunning cover art too...