News
March 1, 2024
50th Anniversary of PHAEDRA
Half a century ago, a groundbreaking electronic music masterpiece was born.
August 19, 2022
TD in Syracuse & Berlin
Thank you, Syracuse & Berlin , you were amazing! These were truly two magical nights! ✨
March 15, 2022
La Divina Commedia Box Set
In memory of Dante Alighieri (700th Anniversary of Death in 2021) and Edgar Froese (7th Anniversary of Death in 2022)
INFERNO PURGATORIO ...February 25, 2022
New Album 'Raum' released
Tangerine Dream are happy to announce their latest studio album 'Raum' which was released on February 25, 2022.
Nov 26, 2021
Probe 6-8 Release
Out now! 'Probe 6-8' is the band's preview to their upcoming album in March 2022, the second studio album after the passing of the founder Edgar ...
From 19th July 2021
Exhibition scheduled to reopen in July
Exhibition has been prolonged until 15th December 2021! Tangerine Dream: Zeitraffer is the first exhibition about ...
21 Feb – 25 Oct 2020
"K"-PROJECT - Franz Kafka - The Castle
Open again & extended until 25th October!Martin Kippenberger’s legendary artwork "The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ...
May 2020
EFMD 2019 - Klangtraube Release
A dignified and extraordinary session of four exceptional musicians in memory of Edgar Froese: Hans Joachim Roedelius, Paul Frick, Thorsten ...
Music
2025
From Virgin To Quantum Years: Coventry Cathedral
In 1975, Tangerine Dream - then composed of Edgar Froese, Peter Baumann and Christopher Franke - performed a now-legendary concert set against the ...
2025
Platz der Republik, West-Berlin, August 1st 1987
This famous concert presents the line-up composed of Edgar Froese, Christopher Franke & Paul Haslinger.
2025
Phaedra Anniversary Box Set
Phaedra is one of Tangerine Dream’s most successful and acclaimed albums and this limited edition 5CD/Blu-ray box set is a deep-dive celebration of ...
2024
Live at the Kelvin Hall Glasgow, November 20th 197
This famous concert presents the line-up composed of Edgar Froese, Christopher Franke & Peter Baumann.
2023
Live au Palais dès Congrés 1978 (Paris)
This famous concer presents the line-up composed of Edgar Froese, Christopher Franke, Steve Jolliffe & Klaus Krüger.
2022
The Sessions Box Set
The Sessions Box Set: United Kingdom & Ireland 2022
2022
Live At Reims Cinema Opera 1975
During this famous concert, which features the iconic 1975 line-up of Edgar Froese, Chris Franke and Peter Baumann, Tangerine Dream performs the ...
2022
La Divina Commedia Earbook (Box Set)
In memory of Dante Alighieri (700th Anniversary of Death in 2021) and Edgar Froese (7th Anniversary of Death in 2022)
INFERNO PURGATORIO PARADISO2022
Raum
On their new album 'Raum', Tangerine Dream develop the concept of its precursor EP ('Probe 6-8') further.
2021
Probe 6-8
'Probe 6-8' is the band's preview to their upcoming album in February 2022, the second studio album after the passing of the founder Edgar Froese.
2021
Live at Reims Cathedral 1974
The concert at Reims Cathedral has gone down in Tangerine Dream history as a legendary event.
2019
Recurring Dreams
RECURRING DREAMS contains music of a magical combination of old and new.
2019
Live at Augusta Raurica - Switzerland 2016
September 8, 2016 - the open air live concert of Tangerine Dream at the amphitheatre Augusta Raurica in Switzerland (close to the city Basel) was one ...
2018
Run To Vegas/Leviathan
Record Store Day 2018 item (Limited Edition)
2017
Quantum Gate
Tangerine Dream's studio album QUANTUM GATE was due for release on September 29, 2017, coinciding with the 50th anniversary of the foundation of the ...
2017
Light Flux
This CD was an addition to Edgar Froese's printed autobiography 'Force Majeure'.
2017
Light Flux EP
This CD was an addition to the pre-sale of Edgar Froese's printed autobiography 'Force Majeure'.
2017
The Sessions I
The EP contains real time live compositions from the TD line-up Thorsten Quaeschning, Ulrich Schnauss, Hoshiko Yamane. (60 min)
2017
Revolution of Sound
A tribute to the musician Edgar Froese and the era of electronic music.
2016
Particles
A wonderful mixture of live and studio tracks will surprise your ears.
2016
Starmus - Sonic Universe
Recorded at the Starmus Festival 2011 on Tenerife Island (Spain) with guest appearances of Brian May. The festival was held in honour of the 50th ...
2016
Live at the Philharmony Szcecin
This was the first official concert for the three remaining TD members to perform live within the new musical period of THE QUANTUM YEARS, the period ...
2015
Phaedra Farewell Tour 2014
The London concert of the PHAEDRA FAREWELL TOUR 2014 on 23rd May at O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire was the second concert in a row of a long multi-week ...
2015
Quantum Key
The continuation of the Quantum Years...
2015
Supernormal – The Australian Concerts
Recorded during the first concerts of the line-up Froese, Quaeschning, Yamane, Schnauss.
2015
Out of this world
This is the first album compiled by Bianca Froese-Acquaye (Edgar Froese's wife) after the passing of her husband on January 20, 2015.
2014
Zero Gravity
For his album Electronica, Jean Michel Jarre collaborated with Tangerine Dream on the track Zero Gravity. Jarre has dedicated the limited vinyl ...
2014
Mala Kunia
Mala Kunia is the first compositional work of the line-up comprising Edgar Froese, Ulrich Schnauss, Thorsten Quaeschning and Hoshiko Yamane.
2014
Phaedra Farewell Tour 2014 – The Concerts
Material from Tangerine Dream’s Phaedra Farewell Tour through various places around Europe in 2014.
2014
Sorcerer 2014 - The Cinematographic Score
At the time Sorcerer was composed in 1976, Tangerine Dream had about ninety minutes on tape and another sixty minutes written down on sheet paper.
2014
Josephine the Mouse Singer
This album is a limited edition release on the occasion of the Phaedra Farewell Tour from 2014/2015.
2014
GTA 5 - The Cinematographic Score
The score for the groundbreaking game GTA 5 was based on the merging of four different artist inputs, a procedure the music supervisor of the game ...
2014
Chandra The Phantom Ferry (Part II)
The continuation of the Chandra story: Part two – exciting and unique music developed from of a mysterious unusual story.
2013
Cruise to Destiny
A sonic ghostly gig on a vessel that happens even if no one of the band was present…
2013
Franz Kafka - The Castle
There is a hidden secret behind this unfinished story of Franz Kafka.
2013
Lost in Strings - Vol. I
Edgar Froese's guitar landmarks.
2013
One Night In Africa
This album reflects the timeless atmosphere of those African spirits sprayed out over the globe in hundreds of years.
2013
Live at Admiralspalast
This is not just a concert, it’s a historic document.
2013
Starmus - Sonic Universe
Recorded at the Starmus Festival 2011 on Tenerife Island (Spain) with guest appearances of Brian May. The festival was held in honour of the 50th ...
2012
Live in Budapest
The Budapest concert was the opener for Tangerine Dream’s Electric Mandarine Tour on April 10, 2012.
2012
Booster V
The fifth release of the Booster series (Booster I – VII)
2012
Live at Admiralspalast
Enjoy a warm early summer night in Germany's capital with a score by TD.
2004 / 2012
Machu Picchu
Machu Picchu at first was never meant to be released. Edgar Froese dedicated it to John Peel who passed away in Cusco, Peru in 2004. The BBC Radio DJ ...
2011
Booster IV
The fourth release of the Booster series (Booster I – VII)
2011
The Gate of Saturn - Live
The Lowry concert in Manchester from May 28, 2011 in FULL LENGTH.
2011
Knights of Asheville
Tangerine Dream live in concert at Thomas Wolfe Auditorium during the Moogfest 2011.
2011
The Gate of Saturn - Studio
Limited album out of Eastgate's Cupdisc series, released in 2011.
2011
Finnegans Wake
Finnegans Wake is based on the book by James Joyce.
2011
Mona Da Vinci
This Cupdisc (EP) "Mona Da Vinci" doesn't sound like Mona Lisa's smile looks like - but the music on this brand-new disc is also very mystical and ...
2011
The Angel of the West Window
The album is based on the novel The Angel Of The West Window by Gustav Meyrink, written in 1927 by Gustav Meyrink (original German title: 'Der Engel ...
- more
Biography
Biography
Founded by Edgar Froese in 1967, Tangerine Dream were formative in the genre of electronic music, with long instrumental tracks based on synthesizer ...
The TD-history (extended)
When the term Berlin School is used in the music scene, a musical style is being referred to which has influenced electronic music up to and ...
Tangerine Dream 1967 – 1973
The first concert ever given by Tangerine Dream was in January 1968 in the Technical University of Berlin.
Tangerine Dream 1974 – 1983
TD’s first release on Virgin Records was the album Phaedra in 1974. The album marked the beginning of the group's international success, achieving ...
Tangerine Dream 1984 – 1988
Tangerine Dream then reduced their number of live appearances and increased their activity in the film music industry.
Tangerine Dream 1988 – 1990
Optical Race moved the band's sound into a different direction when compared to recordings from the 1970s.
Tangerine Dream 1990 – 2000
At the beginning of 1990, Edgar Froese was looking for a saxophone and flute player. Friends in Vienna recommended Linda Spa.
Tangerine Dream 2001 – 2014
On January 2001 TD started working on Dante Alighieri´s La Divina Commedia. This deeply philosophical and mysterious story tells the reader the paths ...
Tangerine Dream 2014 – 2019
Edgar Froese, founder of Tangerine Dream, died in Vienna on the 20th of January, 2015 from a pulmonary embolism.
Members
Lineup
Edgar Willmar Froese
In 1967, Edgar founded the band Tangerine Dream and started to experiment with sequencers and synthesizers, exploring and innovating with sound and ...
FAQs
Answered by Edgar Froese
Any chance in considering a TD sound without electronics?
What is normally called music has nothing to do with electronics in the first place. Music is what a composer and/or musician wants to say or portray in terms of sound and a structured pattern. The second step is to find the shortest and most effective ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Have you ever regretted taking the step from classical rock instruments to the "musical switchboard?"
In 1971, when we gave our first concert performed with synthesizers only, no one had ever before seen this kind of a stage setup. It revolutionized the entire music business and what happened is that a huge industry was created and would continue to ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
"Eat more s…, 100.000 flies can’t be wrong," was the headline in the Melody Maker review of your unexpected hit release Pheadra in the UK in May 1975. Did this upset you?
I remember the feeling of reading it for the first time in London. It was like eating marshmallows topped with vinegar. I didn’t understand the story behind it at all. Did we produce the wrong recording at the wrong time for an unprepared audience? ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Some people argue that electronic music is nothing other than a bunch of dogs barking at the moon?
I love dogs and that’s their way of sending bio e-mails with a very strong message. Seriously, it’s the same story all over. If people don’t have a clue about something, they start whining about the way things have to be. They get upset if something ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Is it true that the final part for soundtrack for the film Thief ended up being locked in an LA restroom?
Sitting with Director Michael Mann in a Burbank Studio finishing the Thief score, suddenly someone ripped open the door and pushed us into a broom closet filled with cleaning articles .It was a very tight squeeze and very dark. I thought I was getting ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
You drove in a military tank to a concert in Spain – is that trash or a true story?
Trash and truth often go hand in hand as we all know, but here the story is slightly different. We played at the great sports hall of Bilbao back in 1978. In the middle of the concert something showered against the glass walls of the building. It ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
There is supposed to be a book on the market which covers the entire lifespan and development of TD as well as Edgar’s experiences as founder. Will it be available in 2006?
The book is still in the process of being written because my schedule doesn’t allow me to continuously work on it without interruption. All I can say is that it will reflect all areas and experiences I went through with or without TD within more than 40 ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
What has been your main instrument as far as composing is concerned?
Definitely the piano. It always has been my sketchbook while in the Studio. Polyphonic, monophonic and percussive playing techniques can’t be performed on any other instrument in the same complexity. If I’m on the road I always have my laptop with a ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Does playing guitar still touch you as “deeply as it did” – in your own words – 40 years ago?
Yes, it does – but surprisingly it’s different. Many years back, playing guitar was really just linked to my ego. It sounds strange at first, but identifying yourself with what you do can easily get you into a trap of pure egotism. Inundated with ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Musicians do not always focus their careers on politics and social movements. What is said in public very often reflects the public’s naivety and ignorance about the subject in question. There are of course exceptions, like Bono or Geldorf, but is there a better way to go about changing the world and humanity?
It’s astonishing how much energy and careful thinking has been put into various projects set up by colleagues of mine through the years. It would be a false and inhuman reaction to capitulate about what we experience every day worldwide. That fact that ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
The 9/11 crisis has increased spiritual awareness in the USA. What are your thoughts on spirituality?
I am doubtful as to whether 9/11 has really increased spiritual awareness in the world. It seems more accurate to say that it has given mankind’s greatest fears a concrete image. An increase in spiritual awareness would bring people to begin questioning ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Your successful collaboration with former band mate Johannes Schmoelling on the Kyoto recording triggers the hope of further co-projects together with other former members of TD. Any plans?
Yes, the both of us had real fun jumping into our musical time machine and travelling back a few years. We’ve also released a studio CD with compositions by Ralf Wadephul and myself. The material was originally composed in 1988 for the summer American ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Record companies and distributors are obviously an important part of the business who set up a functional link between musicians and fans/customers. Which company have you been most happy with during the years of your artistic career?
Maybe there is an unknown planet somewhere in our solar systems with a race just like humans and lots of happy artists who feel perfectly represented by agents, record companies or distributors. I would be very pleased – along with thousands of other ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Do you think it is really just a problem with the music business which doesn’t have any new ideas and keeps using the same old ideas and then suffers from its own mediocrity? Or is it due to the dream of young artists to achieve the wealth and fame, their hopes of living a glorious lifestyle, that drives them to sign every last crazy paragraph?
If someone is dying of thirst, whose fault is it if vinegar is given to him instead of water? I can say from experience that companies search with great effort to find young, inexperienced, but very talented musicians who would do anything to have a ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Why popular art forms are so often nothing more than hype machines – the deeper meaning, the wounded flesh of the artist, the philosophy, the tears and pain under which much work has been brought to life seems to be just worthless on the screaming marketplace. Is that part of the Zeitgeist in the 21st century?
Let me answer with a perfect statement from Ken Egbert of Tone Clusters magazine who wrote the following notes for a TD anthology release a few years ago: “The eternal problem: music cannot exist in a vacuum. It needs patrons to thrive; unfortunately, ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Fans sometimes argue that you’ve ruined the original version of a sound or record by adding new layers and/or changing parts of the original composition.
Nothing on the planet has an immortal value, nothing will survive forever. Every life form exists because of the fact that changing forms is a vital part of existence. Should an artist be jailed and locked in a mental framework by a group of fans who in ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Has America never been a real alternative as a place to live and work?
It’s just right after flying over from Europe that you get a very positive impression of the lifestyle and the easy way of putting the artistic possibilities into practice. You really get the feeling of living in an open society. This will work out, as ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Have you never experienced anything you like to remember when working in the USA for such a long time?
Once again – my relationship with the USA is excellent and there are many things in the US that I still appreciate very much. Due to the tough competition, a professionalism emerged in many fields of art that you will hardly find anywhere in Europe. You ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Are there any spots in Europe you feel especially attracted to?
Paris, Amsterdam, London and Vienna are the most inspiring cities in Europe. But Barcelona is also important. It’s the city of my youth. I hitchhiked there at the age of 17, when I pissed off from home for the first time, believing Spain was the country ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
In 1974, Tangerine Dream left their birth place Berlin for London – was this decision important for their career?
It was the most important decision in the forty years TD’s existence. If we had stayed in Berlin and in Germany then, a diffusion of our music at an international level wouldn’t have been possible. Concerning progressive rock music, Germany was nothing ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Who was your most faithful audience and which social classes do your fans come from?
At the beginning, we played nearly exclusively in the lecture auditoriums of universities, then in larger locations for artistic events and expositions or at special events, where a group of parrots or birds of paradise making music were required. But ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Do you have any direct contact with your fans? Do you know what they really think about TD and what the group means in their daily life?
Well, the only personal contact occurs during the various concerts around the globe. Often we spend some time after gigs giving autographs and talking to fans. A lot of fans are quite cool and open-minded. It’s interesting how they’ve managed to make ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
But without fans or an audience, an artist has nothing to reflect his art off of. Do you sometimes feel you need to put your artistic desires aside and give your fans what they are looking for? Do you feel the need to serve your customers?
Of course you have to respect those people who are following you and spending their hard earned money on concert tickets or buying your records. It would be totally arrogant to ignore such facts and an artist should be very conscious of the way die hard ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
On one of your latest releases, Paradiso, which was composed by you exclusively, what was the most crucial part as far as the orchestration goes?
There were both major and minor problems. To name them all here would take half of the FAQ on this Site. After composing most of the stuff on a grand piano and arranging everything on synth modules and plugs, the two hour and eight minute long piece had ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Were these tasks of composition and performance technology in any way similar to the tasks accomplished for the first two parts “INFERNO” and “PURGATORIO”?
Thematically, this was the third part, following the first and the second one. Of course, this fact did have an influence on the composition. Transforming a linguistically difficult contents into music was very difficult here. Some fans of our music ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
There were some really strange comments on the representation of part 2, “PURGATORIO”, in the Royal Festival Hall in London in 2004. Can you give any background information about this concert that might make these comments easier to understand for some fans?
It was definitely a very strange premiere of this 2nd part. An invitation for a concert in the RFH was put on our table by a promoter in London in November 2003. We only got the information that is was a special cycle of performances with several ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Sharp tongues say that TD had already worked with tapes and other sound storage media in the seventies. Is live also live when it is not “now” does live remain ?
Good advertising slogan. In many old fotos and in films you can see that all three band members are having a very slow Revox tape machine. Of course, you might come to the idea that the music you can hear there comes from the sound storage media. The ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
What about new technologies? In former times TD was a current topic in professional magazines. The music has stopped in the TD Hightech Laboratories.
If you stop shouting out loud and driving certain gazettes crazy with hightech spins, that doesn’t mean that our development has stopped. It’s just the opposite. It should be clear that, given the incredible oversupply in electronic rubbish on CD-ROM, ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
What does TD music mean to someone who has composed and produced the largest part of this music himself or together with other musicians?
As I am a professed dadaist and surrealist, I think that, in addition to many statements in the corresponding Russian and French manifests, a sentence of Hugo Ball is very pertinent: "What we call Dada, is an extremely serious fool’s game coming ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
In his book “Digital Gothic” Mr. Paul Stump did not exactly write extremely positive comments on TD. Why has TD never tried to adjust some of the statements – some parts are apparently pure fiction.
The writer has the right to give his opinion on a matter. It would really be a very good book if some pages had remained white. Stump is a little sorcerer’s apprentice who is extremely sure of himself when permanently chosing exactly the wrong way of ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
What do you think about money? Do you charge a lot of money for your music?
I want to answer an intelligent question like this one with an even better citation of Kurt Schwitters, one of the greatest dadaists: „We invest our money in Dada. Dada is the only savings bank that will pay interests in eternity.“ If anybody believes ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
According to TD, is there beauty in music?
Beauty exists just because there is ugliness, how could you define beauty otherwise? Beauty is as abstract as the pretended ugliness. In music, beauty is mostly kitsch, but for the only reason that you consider the noise of a tram on the rails to be ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
In most productions where you can hear songs you work only with women. Tyger, Shy People, Dante Trilogy etc. Is there any reason for that?
I don’t know how other groups handle this, but we have experienced that working with women makes a very good atmosphere. There might be exceptions, but fortunately we have never had any real stress situations. According to our experience, women are much ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Within your Press Clips Library you must have tons of stuff that’s not even worth reading twice, but some of it would be quite interesting to if released to the public to give others an impression of how you’ve been treated around the world by the professional critics. If you had to say just one good thing about their work, what would it be?
Yes, definitely not everything that’s been written about us is crap and I’ve never claimed that it was. Unfortunately, in the public eye, the positive side of something isn’t half as interesting than dirtying someone’s reputations. Is that odd? But one ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Why TD did never get into making scores for video games or producing music and sounds for PC entertainment in general?
There is definitely good earning potential in that, but the price you have to pay as an artist is far too high in my eyes. I don’t want to see all of the violence and crap that characterizes most of the games that exist. Killing, fighting, monsters ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
What if you composed, improvised and produced some music in the way you did your masterpieces within the seventies and early eighties?
As you said, we did that over and over again back in the seventies and eighties. These products are all spread out nearly everywhere. It doesn’t make any sense to reproduce yourself again and again. It also makes no sense to compare the different TD ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Can I record and/or videotape a TD show I am attending for my personal use?
It wouldn’t be a very wise decision. A recording of live concerts is against the law in most countries (all of the EU and, nowadays also most South American and former countries of the Eastern Block). Your recording will likely be confiscated and the ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
There are a few paperbacks about TD on the market. Anything you like?
The covers of these books are too far apart (note by Ambrose Bierce). I can´t think of a better answer.
Answered by Edgar Froese
What is TD’s stance on bootlegs?
The group accepts and tolerates the deep desire of many die hard fans to obtain every single note ever performed. Thus, as long as no one is earning a profit and as long as no recordings are commercially available are exchanged, we tend not to ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Who discovered TD before they were well-known internationally?
The recognition for TD’s discovery and entrance onto the international market have to go to the BBC DJ Idol John Peel. He has featured TD so often on his weekly show that Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin record label, found out about the group and ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Where did the name for the band’s first Virgin release Phaedra come from?
It was taken from Greek mythology. Phaedra was the daughter of Minos. This mythological story was adapted for the stage in a number of plays.
Answered by Edgar Froese
What does the album title Rubycon stand for?
It is derived from the writings of the famous Roman Emperor Galus Julius Caesar. When he crossed the Rubycon (Italian River) symbolically it was a “point of no return.” He could only go for all or nothing. “To cross the Rubycon” has thus come to be an ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
What does the album title Tangram stand for?
Tangram is an ancient form of a Chinese puzzle.
Answered by Edgar Froese
What is the meaning of the album title Hyperborea?
“Hyperborea” is a term often used in conjunction with the history of the planet earth. In some anthroposophical writings, “hyperborea” is defined as the second race of pre-history. It was preceded by the Polarian race and succeeded by the Lemurian and ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Is it true that Nick Mason of Pink Floyd was brought to the Hansa at the Wall studios in Berlin in 1976 to do the final mix for Stratosfear?
Yes, that’s true. Nick was with us on the mixing for about a week. He was a very nice guy and pleasant to work with. He liked our stuff a lot. For some reasons we finalized the mix on our own. The way we set our recordings up at that time wasn’t easy to ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
When surfing through various TD mailing lists one can spot a few comments which are far more than just impolite, sometimes expressing a very aggressive attitude specifically to Edgar. How do you react to such comments?
I don’t react at all. Such people reveal themselves for what they are: little frustrated people who always like shooting out of the dark. Some of them are always telling me what I should do or which direction I have to go. If people know better than I ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
What about the UFO’s? Any belief in their existence?
What human eyes can perceive represents just a very small fragment of the frequency spectrum of light which ranges from ultraviolet to infrared. That very little part of a vast expanse of frequencies is what we call our visible world. What we can’t ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
Live Aid and Live 8 are two remarkable musical events that attract attention worldwide noticed. Are they worth it? Do you have any suggestions?
Everything which can function as a wake up call is worth it, even if the probability of a positive reaction is very low. On the other hand, all these events remain limited as long as the weapon industry continues to be the strongest and wealthiest ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
What books do you have on your night stand?
Lots because I am a “crossfade” reader, which means that what I read depends on my mood or the way I’m feeling at the moment. What I want to “eat” with my eyes depends on whether I have had a “musical” day or a business struggle that I had to deal with. ...
Answered by Edgar Froese
What play would you travel 500 miles to see?
Only Robert Wilson’s epic “Civil War” had he been given the chance to complete it. He is a great illusionist on a platform in outer space showing the little pigs in the mirror and all are clapping, is that surreal? I saw DDD (Death, Destruction and ...