One record at a time: 434. Vangelis - Beaubourg

Until I owned this record I did not know that "Beaubourg" is a reference to the environs of the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. Having visited the building in 1977, Vangelis was inspired to write the music on this album and it was released the following year. 

My copy is a reissue from an unknown date that doesn't seem to be listed on Discogs. However, I'm not inclined to submit the details to the website as fellow users tend to pounce on even the slightest mistake with an aggressive zeal worthy of history's greatest despots - something I can do without. 

Listeners should be aware this is not a commercial album. Yes, it consists almost entirely of electronic music, but it seems Centre Georges Pompidou inspired the abstract and experimental side of Vangelis. "Beaubourg" is split into two parts which are contained on either side of the disc. However, unlike earlier 'two part' Vangelis albums, these are continuos pieces of music and not just separate tracks sandwiched together.

The internet tells me this album is largely the sound Vangelis manipulating the ring modulator of the Yamaha CS-80 synthesiser. Metallic noises are smeared across the soundscape as Vangelis experiments with various tunings and discordant notes. These noises go on for forty minutes. If you are persistent you may be rewarded with a short passage of melody here and there, but there is no real concession to the listener. This music is hard work. 

As this was his last album for RCA, there has been some suggestion that Vangelis simply threw down this recording to complete his contractual obligations. Personally I think this was a sincere effort to do something different and push the boundaries a bit - but this doesn't mean I have to like it. 

One of the reasons that many of the soundtracks and other works Vangelis recorded are not available commercially is because he felt there would simply be too many releases if they were all made available. But maybe, just maybe, he could have kept this one to himself and let something else slip out of the vault. I visited the Centre Georges Pompidou in 2003 but it didn't inspire me at all. However, I like to think if it had, I would have produced something more palatable than this. 1/5

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