» » Klaus Schulze - Body Love - Additions To The Original Soundtrack

Klaus Schulze - Body Love - Additions To The Original Soundtrack download mp3 flac


Performer: Klaus Schulze
Genre: Electronic / Stage & Screen
Album: Body Love - Additions To The Original Soundtrack
Released: 1977
Style: Ambient, Soundtrack
MP3 version ZIP size: 1355 mb
FLAC version RAR size: 1833 mb
WMA version ZIP size: 1799 mb
Rating: 4.5
Votes: 483
Other Formats: MPC WAV MP1 MP3 AIFF XM MMF


Tracklist

A Nowhere - Now Here 29:02
B1 Stardancer II 14:15
B2 Moogetique 13:15

Companies, etc.

  • Manufactured By – Island Records Inc.
  • Distributed By – Island Records Inc.

Credits

  • Drums – Harald Grosskopf
  • Producer, Composed By – Klaus Schulze

Notes

Black Island Label.
Black company innersleeve

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
0060.097 Klaus Schulze Body Love Vol.2 ‎(LP, Album) Brain 0060.097 Germany 1977
Y8I-9510 Klaus Schulze Bodylove - Additions To The Original Soundtrack ‎(8-Trk, Album) Island Records Y8I-9510 US 1977
ILPS 19510 Klaus Schulze Body Love - Additions To The Original Soundtrack ‎(LP, Album) Island Records ILPS 19510 Italy 1977
2C 068-60249, 2C 068 - 60.249 Klaus Schulze Body Love - Additions To The Original Soundtrack ‎(LP, Album) EMI, EMI 2C 068-60249, 2C 068 - 60.249 France 1977
ZCI 9510 Klaus Schulze Body Love - Additions To The Original Soundtrack ‎(Cass, Album) Island Records ZCI 9510 UK 1977

Fordregelv
"Nowhere-Now Here" begins and progresses very slowly as mostly atmosphere; I was just about to look for something else to put on when it kicks in roughly 15-18 minutes into the track, and its killer. Very dynamic, nice bass, much arpeggiation, sci-fi."Stardancer II" is on the same level as the last half of A1, very prime, dynamic, hi-tempo space-out."Moogetique" is very dark-space, feels like falling into the void, becomes mostly atmosphere.All in all, ignore the front-cover and even the fact that it was commissioned as the soundtrack to a porno; if you didn't know that was where it came from, you would not be able to guess. It sounds exactly like what you'd want and expect from late 70s Tangerine Dream/Edgar Froese.