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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the greatest U.K. psych bands EVER!
Kaleidoscope's Tangerine Dream is an absolute classic of the genre.Equally ranking with such classics as Syd Barrett era Floyd,Tomorrow,Blossom Toes,Zombies(Odessey and Oracle),and of course,The Beatles.Peter Daltry's fairytale lyrics and the groups exquisite playing with beautiful harmonies and memorable hooks simply captivate the listener transporting them into a...
Published on August 29, 2001 by Bryan Russell

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The other KALEIDOSCOPE is more fun
Its 1967, you need a "psychedelic" name to pin on your old blues/R&B covers band, and the most obvious purveyors of psychedelia are the Beatles with their SGT PEPPER album. So, why not use KALEIDOSCOPE as a name? Or, TANGERINE DREAM for an album title? Both words figured largely in LUCY IN THE SKY. Back in those days, apparently you couldnt find out that the same name was...
Published 15 months ago by W. T. Hoffman


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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the greatest U.K. psych bands EVER!, August 29, 2001
This review is from: Tangerine Dream (Audio CD)
Kaleidoscope's Tangerine Dream is an absolute classic of the genre.Equally ranking with such classics as Syd Barrett era Floyd,Tomorrow,Blossom Toes,Zombies(Odessey and Oracle),and of course,The Beatles.Peter Daltry's fairytale lyrics and the groups exquisite playing with beautiful harmonies and memorable hooks simply captivate the listener transporting them into a colorful kaleidoscopic dream.This totally demonstrates what was so great about the fertile U.K.pop psych scene of 67 thru 69.If you like this CD please search out their 2nd LP which was also put on CD called Faintly Blowing.It pretty much follows the same path with a few more progressive textures added but is also a masterpiece.I would still give Tangerine Dream the edge of the two but not by much. Bryan
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Quintessential English psych, songwriting still holds up well, October 21, 2007
By 
Elliot Knapp (Seattle, Washington United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Tangerine Dream (Audio CD)
From a ways away, the cover of Kaleidoscope's (not to be confused with the US band of the exact same name) debut album, Tangerine Dream, resembles many other late 60's psychedelic album covers from both sides of the Atlantic; weird, swirly text, and a bunch of guys dressed in the outlandish fashion that was popular during those acid-fueled days. If you look a little closer, you'll notice that these guys were really just baby-faced kids when this album came out (even if one of them could grow a mustache). Despite their apparent fresh-faced youth and their attachment to a VERY popular musical movement that spawned as many middling bands as it did classics, today Tangerine Dream sounds like a cohesive, well-crafted psychedelic pop rock album, thanks especially to Peter Daltrey and Eddie Pumer's engaging songwriting, and some more original sounds and hooks that the band packed into the music.

The opener, "Kaleidoscope," makes it clear that this is 1967 British psych: a driving piano riff backs harmonizing vocals as they describe a vibrant perception of busy streets. Yep, we're in trip-land now, and if you don't like that kind of music, you're probably in the wrong place, because Tangerine Dream is catchy, trippy rock from start to finish. What's great is that even though Kaleidoscope is playing in an idiom sparked by the Beatles with Sgt. Pepper etc., they certainly aren't derivative. Less hard-rocking than, say, The Move or the Small Faces, and not quite as virtuosic as The Soft Machine--more along the sweet, off-kilter sounds of The Piper at the Gates of Dawn-era Pink Floyd, or Tomorrow.

The rest of the album is chock full of accessible moments, but also the British quirk and charm that makes this type of music resonate so well with some people. The creatively-titled "Please Excuse My Face" is a tender, vulnerable heartbreak tune set to nylon-stringed acoustic. "Dive Into Yesterday" might be my favorite track, with staccato morse-code-sounding guitar, shifting tempo and dynamics, snaky vocal harmonies, and a blissed-out, swirling bridge. You can tell Daltrey was influenced by Dylan (unsurprising, and not a bad thing), but he manages to go some really interesting and unique places with his writing.

Many of the songs have the dark themes of isolation commonly found in British psych, like "Mr. Small, The Watch Repairer Man," "Flight From Ashiya" (about a doomed airline flight), and "The Murder of Lewis Tollani." Despite these weighty themes, Daltrey pulls it off with grace, a light hand, and manages to back the words with music that isn't depressing. "In The Room of Percussion" has edgier echoes of the Byrds, and the album's closer, the epic "The Sky Children," is absolutely sublime, dreamy, and perfect. In my opinion, the only misstep is "A Lesson Perhaps," a spoken-word/classical guitar story that gets a bit too caught up in forced poetics to really make a strong point.

Overall, this is one of the better British psych albums I've come across--I've enjoyed it enough to check out their second, Faintly Blowing. As with their usual standards, Repertoire's reissue is great--glossy digipak case, lots of photos (check out those guys' clothes and hairstyles!), some enlightening notes, and some worthwhile bonus tracks--single versions of a few, and the flawless, jaunty pop of "Jenny Artichoke." Since Kaleidoscope had to make a few hit singles before a record company would invest in Tangerine Dream, it's cool to hear the songs that got them their record deal. If you like British psychedelic, chances are you'll enjoy this record.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful Bewitched amazing psychedelic trip, December 11, 2001
By 
Ziv Livni (Kibbutz Yehiam, Western Galilee, Israel) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Tangerine Dream (Audio CD)
absolutely splendid sparkling british 60s' jewell,a delicate legendary druggy atmosphere album,that will lead you slowly softly into a dream world of a magical trippy purple hazed experience."relax your eyes,for after all,we can but share this minute".sweet dreams.......
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars It's a psych classic from UK!, April 18, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Tangerine Dream (Audio CD)
Don't care about the previous review. It is a real classic from the British psychedelia. There are all the wonderful tracks from that period. If you like the Syd Barrett's Pink Floyd, or the Soft Machine, this is a must. There is a more complete compilation called "Dive Into Yesterday" that has many tracks from this album and the complete second album. But this one has some previously unreleased BBC radio tracks.It used to be very rare and expensive. I recomend!
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars GREAT, February 4, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Tangerine Dream (Audio CD)
I'm not sure why you would give this cd a low rating just because it wasn't the band they thought it was... This is a really oustanding album. Nearly every song is amazing British pychedelic pop, much in the same vein as Syd's Pink Floyd, Tomorrow and Small Faces.

Its great. If you like the beatles, or early floyd or anything decent, you'll like this cd.

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A GREAT PSYCHEDELIC ALBUM, December 19, 2000
This review is from: Tangerine Dream (Audio CD)
What can I say about Kaleidoscope...they are great!! When I first listened Flight from Ashiya, my mind blew out...I thought..What is this!!??? great album this one, I went mad for it, it sounds like early Floyd, with the great Syd...I loved the lyrics, Peter Daltrey is a genuine psychedelic poet, from the arthurian woods...
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars great uk style psyche pop ala early floyd, January 6, 2007
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This review is from: Tangerine Dream (Audio CD)
Ive been recently hunting down all the long lost 60s psyche albums from both sides of the ocean and stumbled upon this. Kaleidoscope's debut is heavily debted to Syd Barrett in both lyrical and musical sense but in many ways theres a more orchestrated approach here that makes this stand on its own rather well. Sometimes theres a hint of very early Bee Gees and the Byrds. Bonus tracks and great liner notes fill this cardboard flipcase remaster- and if youre a fan of any summer of love or LSD fueled recording this is a must own- out of the original tracks almost all are great- nice vocal harmonies quirky story telling and interesting arrangements. Ofcourse it has all the trappings of psychedelia- the effected vocals- chimy organs and guitars and sound effects but again the songs are memorable. In fact i would put this in my top ten of psyche recordings along with piper-sf sorrow-pet sounds-sgt peppers- forever changes and others.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The other KALEIDOSCOPE is more fun, October 9, 2010
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This review is from: Tangerine Dream (Audio CD)
Its 1967, you need a "psychedelic" name to pin on your old blues/R&B covers band, and the most obvious purveyors of psychedelia are the Beatles with their SGT PEPPER album. So, why not use KALEIDOSCOPE as a name? Or, TANGERINE DREAM for an album title? Both words figured largely in LUCY IN THE SKY. Back in those days, apparently you couldnt find out that the same name was in use in the USA, by a much better "underground" psychedelic band doing freak out folk/blues music. Oh well, nicking the ideas of your peers must have been big back then, cos we all know what happened to the TANERGINE DREAM album title in Germany. At least their music sounds original, right? Well...Actually, even tho I cant place this album among the great achievements of 1967, its not a total failure. Many of these songs didn't survived the years without sounding precious and coy, but the album does have its moments worth hearing.

About a third of the songs deserve to be remembered as part of the SUMMER OF LOVE psychedelic scene. IN THE ROOM OF PERCUSSION i'd first heard on a MOJO MAGAZINE CD, and thought it sounded sort of trippy, and unusual. Along with their "single" FLIGHT FROM ASHIYA, its one of the outstanding gems found here. Overall, the band sounds like an amalgamation of DONOVAN, the folk-pop BEE GEES from that era, and at its best, some of Syd's childlike composistions off the first PINK FLOYD album. Throw in a bit of MOODY BLUES, and you got the recipe. On the second side of the album, there's an 8 minute song, but dont get your hopes up for a ASTRONOMY DOMINE freakout, or a Dylanesque wordstew. Instead its an overly long folk song talking about a "magic pixie island", which is a total gas if your thing is magic pixies climbing on the breeze tinkling bells, etc. Marc Bolan's TYRANNOSAURUS REX, or Donovan's WEAR YOUR LOVE LIKE HEAVEN might have been what they were after, but these guys just didnt have the stuff. Along with the whole first album, you get three additional singles, A and B sides, all of which failed to chart. The horn charts off HOLIDAY MAKER (Ashiya's B side), make the song trite, even if the jumpy melodies and oddly stacked harmonies give the song that "Kaleidoscope" trademark sound. A DREAM FOR JULIE doesnt cut it either, neither does the B side's folk song. JENNY ARTICHOKE must have sounded stale even in 1968.

Overall, not an album for people who don't enjoy DONOVAN's quaintest moments, MOODY BLUES, or early folk BEE GEES. It's not an album I'll listen to much outside of the three really cool songs that surpass the dross. That's the problem with some of these albums whose reputations rest more on their rarity and a handful of cool songs. For British Psychedelic folk or pop, these guys aren't the worst you can do, but they're not anywhere near the best work done in those heady days. Overall, this album was a bit of a disappointment for me.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Great Psych Pop, November 16, 2009
This review is from: Tangerine Dream (Audio CD)
This is a great reissue/remaster by Repertoire. This comes with a nice booklet as well as several bonus tracks. To me the closet band to compare this to would be Syd Barretts Pink Floyd. This album is absolutely essential for any fan of psychedelic rock, as every song on this album is great.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Insanely Good, February 14, 2007
This review is from: Tangerine Dream (Audio CD)
This album is pretty representative of the late-60's British psychedelic scene. It's very similar to Syd Barrett's music, and I'd say it's equally as good.
My favorite one on here is the funny "Please Excuse My Face". The first time I heard that I just burst out laughing.
If you are into psychedelic music and progressive rock, this album should please you. The whole thing is really good. We need record labels to find more of these old relics and re-release them.
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Tangerine Dream
Tangerine Dream by Kaleidoscope (Audio CD - 2006)
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