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Oxygène

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, seeOxygene.
1976 studio album by Jean-Michel Jarre
Oxygène
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 1976
RecordedAugust–November 1976
StudioJean-Michel Jarre's home studio, Paris
Genre
Length39:39
LabelDisques Motors/Polydor
ProducerJean-Michel Jarre
Jean-Michel Jarre chronology
Les Granges Brûlées
(1973)
Oxygène
(1976)
Equinoxe
(1978)
Singles from Oxygène
  1. "Oxygène (Part IV)"
    Released: January 1977
  2. "Oxygène (Part II)"
    Released: 1977

Oxygène (French pronunciation:[ɔksiˈʒɛn], English:Oxygen) is the third studio album by Frenchelectronic musician and composerJean-Michel Jarre. It was first released in France in December 1976 by Disques Motors, and distributed internationally in 1977 byPolydor Records. Jarre recorded the album in a makeshift studio that he set up in his apartment in Paris, using a variety ofanalog anddigital synthesizers, and other electronic instruments and effects.

French sound engineerMichel Geiss helped Jarre in the purchase, recording and programming of some instruments used on the album. Jarre's musical style was influenced bymusique concrète, developed byPierre Schaeffer. The album was supported by two singles, "Oxygène (Part II)" and "Oxygène (Part IV)". Following the international success of the latter, the album became Jarre's breakthrough, reaching number one on theFrench Albums Charts. It was inspired by the track "Popcorn" by German-American electronic composerGershon Kingsley.

Oxygène has been described as the album that "led the synthesizer revolution of the Seventies"[5] and "an infectious combination of bouncy, bubbling analog sequences and memorable hook lines".[6] The album influenced later artists such asMoby and Brian Canham ofPseudo Echo. In 1978, it would be followed byEquinoxe and in 1979, Jarre held an open-air concert at thePlace de la Concorde, causing the sales of both albums to increase, reaching worldwide figures of 15 million copies. As of 2016 it had sold an estimated 18 million copies and is one of the best-selling French, electronic and instrumental albums in history.

Background

[edit]

In 1967 Jarre travelled to London to sell his electric guitar and amplifier to be able to buy his first synthesizer, anEMS VCS 3 (one of the first units of the instrument), which he used on many of his subsequent albums.[5][7] He also played guitar in a band calledThe Dustbins and mixed instruments including the electric guitar and the flute with tape effects and other sounds.[8] Jarre began working with earlyanalogue synthesizers andtape loops in 1968, and in 1969 he joined theGroupe de Recherches Musicales (lit.'musical research group'),[9] founded and led byPierre Schaeffer,[10] who developedmusique concrete, a type ofmusic composition that is mainly based on the use of pre-recorded sounds, originating the concept ofsampling.[5] That same year he mixed the harmony, synthesizers and tape effects to record his debut single "La Cage/Erosmachine".[11] In 1971, he left the institution and dedicated himself to designing Triangle's electronic sound effects; he also went to thePathé-Marconi record company to release it.[12] Jarre had also done production work for some rock artists, earning enough to set up a small makeshift recording studio in the kitchen of his apartment on Rue de la Trémoille,[13][14] near theChamps-Élysées in Paris.[15] Initially it included very basic equipment consisting of a few guitar pedals,[16][13] aFarfisa organ, the EMS VCS 3,[17] and anEMS Synthi AKS; these last two were linked to twoRevox tape machines.[11][18]

One of Schaeffer's former students and artistic director of Disques Motors, Hélène Dreyfus convinced her husband, Francis Dreyfus, to hire Jean-Michel as an employee of his record label. Initially Francis offered Jarre a job as a copyright administrator, however he opted to sign an exclusive songwriting and recording contract.[19][20] In 1972, the American synth-pop bandHot Butter released a successful version ofGershon Kingsley's "Popcorn".[21] Jarre in that same year released his respective cover version under the pseudonyms Pop Corn Orchestra and Jammie Jefferson.[22] Although unsuccessful, the track would serve as an inspiration for his most successful single, "Oxygène (Part IV)".[23][24]

Their first two albums as well as their previous single were recorded on the label, Disques Motors, however they were not published there.[19] Jarre released on Sam Fox Productions his debutexperimental albumDeserted Palace intended to be used in films and on television.[25][11][9] It was created using the VCS 3 andRMI Keyboard Computer.[17] In 1973 he composed the soundtrack for the French drama filmLes Granges Brûlées (English:The Burned Barns).[26][27] In its beginnings in the label, he was mainly dedicated to writing music and lyrics for other artists inside and outside the label from 1972 to 1975. The royalties received by Jean-Michel during his collaborations withFrançoise Hardy,Gérard Lenorman andPatrick Juvet allowed him to purchase theARP 2600,[19][28] used in several of his collaborations with the French singerChristophe and solo works.[17]

In 1974, Jarre attended a conference on the analog synthesizer and the ARP 2600 at the TDF center inIssy-les-Moulineaux. It was carried out by radio and television engineers, and French musical instrument designerMichel Geiss.[28] Later, Jarre contacted Geiss by phone to invite him to his private apartment,[16] Geiss accepted and visited Jean-Michel's makeshift studio, where he had the ARP 2600, theEminent 310 Unique, the VCS 3 and more.[29] Shortly after meeting, Jarre and Geiss started working together during the recording of Jarre's next album. Geiss, who at that time worked as a maintenance technician atBarclay studios [fr],[30] advised Jarre on the purchase of instruments such as theRMI Harmonic Synthesizer at the Piano Center's music fair, and was in charge of the programming and recording of some of them.[29] Later, Jarre managed to finance the purchase of aScully8-track studio recorder and a mixture ofAmpex 256 and 3M tape.[10][16] In that same year, he composed the opening jingle for theA4 autoroute (also known asautoroute de l'Est), some media such asThe Telegraph pointed out the possible original incarnation of "Oxygène (Part IV)" in the jingle.[5][31]

Composition and recording

[edit]
The Korg Mini-Pops 7 drum machine was used in differentOxygène tracks

Jarre recordedOxygène between August and November 1976, using the makeshift recording studio in his apartment.[15] In the Ferber studio Jarre recovered his oldMellotron that had few functional keys to write the first piece of music for the album, "Oxygène (Part II)".[32][13][29] During the recording of the album Jarre used a Revox tape to delay the sound coming out of a speaker in order to achieve a "huge sense of space".[13] This liberal use ofecho was used on the various sound effects generated by the EMS VCS 3 synthesiser.[5] The persistent allusions to terrestrial elements and the biosphere meant that the album would frequently be associated with thenew-age musical movement.[5]

Areverb effect was made through the VCS 3. Jarre also used anAKG stereo reverb and anEMT plate reverb which was meters long in live performances, and eight different stereo echoes.[33] Some little beep sounds were played on the EMS Synthi AKS,[31] as were the waves sound used in "Oxygène (Part II)".[23] The album also included electronic "evocations of chirping birds".[6]

Jarre used various other synthesizers and electronic instruments to create the tracks of "symphonic electronic music" onOxygène.[29][34] The sounds of theFarfisa organ were heavily modified.[33] Geiss programmed specific sounds in the ARP 2600, among them the main sound of "Oxygène (Part IV)" and the "breathing" waves sound in "Oxygène (Part VI)".[16][6][29] The Eminent 310 organ as well as the VCS 3 went through a phase pedal for guitars Electro-Harmonix Small Stone Phaser in order to provide the string pads used on the album.[17][35] The mainsequence of "Oxygène (Part V)" was created with an RMI Keyboard Computer,[17] while both the Keyboard Computer and the RMI Harmonic Synthesizer were used on "Oxygène (Part IV)", "Oxygène (Part V)" and "Oxygène (Part VI)".[29]

Some of the drum sounds on the album were produced using adhesive tape to hold down two preset buttons on aKorg Mini-Pops 7 drum machine simultaneously – "Oxygène (Part IV)" mixed the "rock" and "slow rock" presets, while "Oxygène (Part VI)" mixed "rhumba" and "bossa nova".[13] "Oxygène (Part II)" instead used only the "swing" preset.[23] The album was mixed by sound engineer Jean-Pierre Janiaud and his assistant Patrick Foulon at the Gang studio, it also was mastered at Translab studio.[29][36]

Artwork

[edit]

The cover art features a skull inside a dismembered Earth and is an adaptation of a 30 x 40 cm (12" x 16") watercolor,[5][13] also namedOxygène, by the French painterMichel Granger.[37] A picture of the painting was first published in 1972 in the magazinePilote, and in 1976 the artwork was displayed at the Marquet Gallery, in rue Bonaparte in Paris.[38] Jean-Michel visited this gallery and bought it, then Granger received a phone call from the gallery director to inform him that Jarre wanted to see him in person.[39] On 15 September 1976, Jarre met with Granger so that he could modify the background of the watercolor and adapt it to the square shape of anLP record.[38]

The album title was taken from the artwork because he considered that he "perfectly adheres to the spirit of the songs".[39] Jarre said: "30 years ago there weren't so many people thinking about the planet. But I've always been interested in that, not necessarily in a political way but in a poetic, surrealistic way."[5] Jarre also told the English newspaperThe Guardian that "in a way, I wanted to link everything to nature and environmental issues". Granger stated that "Oxygène was part of a series about the damage being done to our planet. It was a pretty violent image for a record cover." He added, "That picture is the best known of all my work. It's myMona Lisa. But I don't feel like it belongs to me any more. It belongs to anyone who loves the music of Jean-Michel Jarre."[13]

Release

[edit]

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Oxygène was turned down by several record companies[40] such asIsland Records founded byChris Blackwell,[32] who later thought that he made two professional mistakes in his life: rejectingOxygène andElton John's first album,Empty Sky.[39] Jean-Michel decided to meet once again with Francis, the head of the Disques Motors label to see if he could release the album, to which he immediately agreed saying: "Right, well we have a world success...".[39]

Oxygène was released in December 1976 in France,[19][41] and the first pressing of 50,000 copies were given away to a limited number of hi-fi shops vendors. They used a few copies of the album to showcase its stereo sound qualities to their customers,[5][39] and also as an example of "state-of-the-art sound".[13] These copies were also promoted through clubs and discos.[42] In addition, Jean-Michel and Francis did a promotional poster campaign in Paris.[39]

In early 1977, Jarre together with long-time collaborator Juvet decided to put together the same team from the albumMort ou vif and set about writing the albumParis by Night [fr], which contained the hit single "Où sont les femmes? [fr]". The album was released in June and topped the charts. After another album with Christophe entitledLa dolce vita [fr] in the same year, Jarre decided to stop writing music and lyrics for other artists and preferred to dedicate himself entirely to his solo musical career.[43]

In 1977, the album was released internationally byPolydor Records,[44] and by April, it had sold 70,000 copies in France.[45] "Oxygène (Part IV)" was Jarre's breakthrough single worldwide, peaking at number four on theUK Singles Chart.[46] This success led to the album reaching number one on theFrench Albums Charts,[47] number two on theUK Albums[48] and number seventy-eight on the USBillboard Top LPs & Tape.[49] "Oxygène (Part II)" was edited to about 3 minutes to be released in France as a single.[23]

"Oxygène (Part IV)" began to play on the most important radio stations in his native country and theUnited Kingdom.[5]Europe 1 used it as the theme of two of its regular programs,Hit Parade directed by Jean-Loup Lafont and basketball showBasket sur Europe 1 in the credit titles.[31][44] The radio station also dedicated an hour and a half program in Jean-Michel's studio, and played the entire album, bringing his music to millions of people.[44] It was played on Dutch radio and television throughout the two days in 1977 thatSouth Moluccan terrorists held.[50] TheBBC used the album in a documentary,[13]BBC Radio 1 also played it[32] and was used in television programs such asAntenne 2 orRécré A2.[44]

When interviewed inBillboard magazine, Motors' director Stanislas Witold said, "In a sense we're putting most of our bets on Jean-Michel Jarre. He is quite exceptional and we're sure that by 1980 he will be recognised worldwide."[45] In Dublin, Ireland, a phone-a-disk system was used, whereby a phone call played about two minutes of the album along with an advertising message.[51] On October 2, 1977, he was invited by hostJacques Martin to an episode of his Sunday programL'orchestre d'Antenne 2, in which the orchestra performed his single "Oxygene (Part IV)". Jarre also received nearly 25gold records worldwide. In the United States it sold over 100,000 copies in Los Angeles alone,[44] and by the end of 1977, it sold 300,000 copies nationwide.[52]

Later, Francis created a label called Disques Dreyfus.[43]Equinoxe was released in that label in 1978.[53] It continued with a "familiar style, exploring the emotive power of orchestrated electronic rhythms and melody."[54] In 1979, Jarre performed an open-air concert at thePlace de la Concorde, this event caused the sales of both albums to increase, each sold around 1.5 million copies in France and were certified platinum in 1981;[53] both sold 11 million worldwide in November 1979.[55] By 1981, the album had sold an estimated 15 million copies worldwide,[53] and by 2016 an estimated 18 million,[32] being one of the best-selling French,[56] electronic and instrumental albums in history.[57][44]

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusicStarStarStarStarStar[58]
MojoStarStarStarStarStar[14]
Record MirrorStarStarStarStar[59]
The Rolling Stone Album GuideStarStar[60]

Reaction to the album upon its release in the UK in 1977 was largely negative: the British music press, more interested in the developing UKpunk scene, was oriented towards guitar-based music and hostile to most electronic music. Angus MacKinnon of theNME described the album as "another interminable cosmic cruise. The German spacers ([Tangerine] Dream,Schulze et al) mapped this part of the electronic galaxy aeons ago ... The album's [...] infuriatingly derivative. Explore its prime influences instead."[61]

Considering the album as a French version ofMike Oldfield's work,Music Week said: "Unfortunately, Jarre has produced a work that is ponderous in its self-conscious musicality – he definitely wears his art on his sleeve. Unlike Oldfield, he never stands back and laughs at his own creation. It is heavy throughout, and his influences continually jog the elbow – particularly the lugubrious touches ofMahler and the almost continuousBach underpinning." The magazine concluded by saying that "so some interest will be generated but the album is not really suited to our insular and musically antiintellectual Anglo-Saxon island."[62]

Karl Dallas ofMelody Maker was kinder towards the album, saying that "the first time I heard this album I hated it ... It seemed so bland, so undemanding, so uneventful. I've got to admit it repays further listening, and that it is not quite the electronicMuzak I had written it off as initially." He also stated that it "is not classical music" and that: "Though the track [referring to "Oxygène Part IV"] the discos are playing is, as you might expect, actually its least effective section musically, it has the same relationship to popular music asTangerine Dream, say, or Oldfield. Personally, it still does not impress me as much as either, except at a technical level. It seems to lack heart, the sense of passionate involvement in the act of music-making which makesEdgar Froese's work almost a musical equivalent of aJackson Pollock painting. It is almost too accomplished, too formally precise."[63]

The most positive review came from Robin Smith ofRecord Mirror, in which he stated that, "It's pretty tough to communicate warmth through such music and the end product is usually stilted but Jean Michael Jarre has laid down a variety of forms joined together by cohesive lines." He also described Jarre as a "French Mike Oldfield" by "possessing the same emotive powers." He concluded by saying side one "ends on ghost-like notes" while the side two "has a rushing opening like the breaking of a barrier."[59]Record World magazine commented that it is "an unusually melodic theme" that "is carried over both sides with all instruments played by Jarre himself".[64]

Retrospective reviews regard the album as a major work in the development of electronic music. Phil Alexander ofMojo listed it as one of Jarre's three key albums and wrote that it was "his conscious attempt to unite the worlds of avant-garde, electronic, classical and progressive music." He said that its "dynamic, warm sound is intoxicating" and regarding "Oxygène (Part IV)", he finished saying it is "an unlikely UK Top 5 hit from what remains an elegant cornerstone of electronic music."[14]

Jim Brenholts fromAllMusic stated that it "is one of the original e-music albums" and that it "has withstood the test of time and the evolution of digital electronica." He also considered that "Jarre's compositional style and his rhythmic instincts were his strong points in 1976" and that "the innocence and freshness provide most of its charm. Jarre's techniques and ability provide the rest."[58] The album was considered one of the most influential albums of 1976 byuDiscover Music,[65] and was included in the book1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[66] "Oxygène (Part I)" was considered byBillboard writer Lars Brandle as one of the electronic chillout tunes from back in the day.[67]

Accolades

[edit]
PublicationCountryAccoladeYearRank
FNACFranceThe Ideal Discography: 823 Indispensables Albums[citation needed]2015*
RoRoRo Rock-LexiconGermanyMost Recommended Albums[citation needed]2003*
Giannis PetridisGreece2004 of the Best Albums of the Century[citation needed]2003*
Yedioth AhronothIsraelTop 99 Albums of All Time[citation needed]199942
PanoramaNorwayThe 30 Best Albums of the Year 1970-98[citation needed]199910
Robert DimeryUnited Kingdom1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die[68]2011*
(*) designates lists that are unordered.

Legacy

[edit]

Oxygène won theGrand Prix du Disque (English: Disc Grand Prize) award byL'Académie Charles Cros,[44] and American magazinePeople chose Jarre as the "Personality of the Year".[9] A sequel,Oxygène 7–13, was released two decades later in 1997.[69][70] In 2007, a new version of the original album titledOxygène: New Master Recording was released,[37][10] and in 2016 another sequel titledOxygène 3 was released on the 40th anniversary ofOxygène.[37][71]

Welsh music writerMark Jenkins commented that the album "achieved a dynamic compromise between imaginative sound textures and accessible melodies that for one reason or another had been denied to earlier synthesizer artists".[72] The album has been used for music therapy, meditation and births.[32] Some of the music was used on the soundtracks of the 1978 filmSnake in the Eagle's Shadow and the 1981 filmGallipoli.[73][74]

Oxygène has been described as "one of the biggest catalysts to widespread use of the synthesizer in the 1970s"[75] and influenced electronic artists likeMoby, who collaborated with Jarre on his 2015 album,Electronica 1: The Time Machine.[76][7] Brian Canham of Australian bandPseudo Echo said inMusic Feeds that it was a "major influence on my production, song-writing and synthesizer programming with Pseudo Echo, and another of my projects, Origene, hence the homage in the namesake".[77]

Track listing

[edit]

All tracks are composed by Jean-Michel Jarre.

Side one

  1. "Oxygène (Part I)" – 7:39
  2. "Oxygène (Part II)" – 7:49
  3. "Oxygène (Part III)" – 3:16

Side two

  1. "Oxygène (Part IV)" – 4:14
  2. "Oxygène (Part V)" – 10:23
  3. "Oxygène (Part VI)" – 6:20

Personnel

[edit]

Personnel listed in the album's liner notes.[36]

Equipment

[edit]

Adapted from the liner notes of the 2014 remastered version.[36]

Charts

[edit]

Weekly charts

[edit]
Chart performance forOxygène
Chart (1977)Peak
position
Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[78]29
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[79]10
Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[80]65
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[81]4
Finnish Charts (Suomen virallinen albumilista)[82]12
French Albums (SNEP)[47]1
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[83]8
Italian Albums (Musica e dischi)[84]15
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[85]3
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[86]9
Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[52]4
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[87]3
UK Albums (OCC)[48]2
USBillboard 200[49]78
Chart (2005)Peak
position
Polish Albums (ZPAV)[88]36
Chart (2015)Peak
position
French Albums (SNEP)[89]146
Chart (2019)Peak
position
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[90]85

Year-end charts

[edit]
1977 year-end chart performance forOxygène
Chart (1977)Position
Dutch Albums (Dutch Top 100)[91]38
UK Albums (OCC)[92]20

Certifications and sales

[edit]
Certifications and sales forOxygène
RegionCertificationCertified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[93]Platinum50,000^
Belgium25,000[94]
Canada (Music Canada)[95]Platinum100,000^
France (SNEP)[53]Platinum1,500,000[53]
Germany (BVMI)[96]Gold250,000^
Japan32,000[94]
Netherlands50,000[94]
Poland (ZPAV)[97]Gold10,000
Sweden60,000[94]
United Kingdom (BPI)[98]Platinum300,000^
United States300,000[52]
Summaries
Worldwide15,000,000[53]

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

References

[edit]
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Bibliography

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External links

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Oxygène atDiscogs (list of releases)

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