The Keep | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by Tangerine Dream | ||||
Released | 1997 | |||
Recorded | 1983 | |||
Genre | Soundtrack | |||
Length | 60:06 | |||
Label | TDI | |||
Producer | Tangerine Dream | |||
Tangerine Dream chronology | ||||
|
The Keep (1997) is the soundtrack to the movie The Keep (1983) by the German electronic music group Tangerine Dream. A limited run of 150 CDs were sold at a concert by the group in the UK in 1997. Virgin soon announced that the album would be available for general release in early 1998, but legal issues with the film studio stopped the release. In 1999, Tangerine Dream's own record label sold 300 copies of the Millennium Booster album set that included The Keep with a different cover.
Contents |
"Puer Natus Est Nobis" is a Christmas mass composed by Thomas Tallis around 1554 - this track is from the introit, "Gloria", and is credited as "Gloria" from the "Mass for Four Voices". This theme appears in the film when the demon saves Eva from the soldiers. "Heritage Survival" and "The Night In Romania" first appeared in several live concerts during the 1982 "Logos" tour, but were not titled as such until the soundtrack release. The tracks appear in the film when Dr Cuza rejects the demon. "Canzone" appears to be an original composition for the film and is used in the scene where Prof Cuza triumphantly brings the Talisman to the surface. None of the other tracks were included in the actual film score.
A rerecorded version of "The Challenger's Arrival" was released on the album Tangerine Dream Plays Tangerine Dream in 2006, and in 2007, "Ancient Powerplant" was included in the Ocean Waves Collection, available for download from the Tangerine Dream website.
A persistent story that The Keep was released on 12" vinyl in 1984 has become an urban legend. Several Tangerine Dream fans relate a story whereby they saw the record in the shops but were not able to purchase it due to a lack of funds. Upon returning to the shop, they found that the record has been withdrawn for some nebulous legal reason, and that all copies have been destroyed.[1][2] No actual copies of such a vinyl release have ever been noted by any collector to date.
In 1987, Sender Freies Berlin interviewed Edgar Froese, and three tracks from The Keep were played.
Westdeutscher Rundfunk interviewed Froese in 1989 and played three tracks from The Keep:
A counterfeit version of The Keep CD appeared using the same cover and liner as the 1997 TDI release. It was packaged in a standard jewel case instead of a digipak.
|