Oxymore by Jean-Michel Jarre
Jean-Michel Jarre's 2022 album Oxymore is a bold instrumental work of immersive, spatial electronic sound.
Jean-Michel Jarre is a French composer and pioneer of electronic music, born in 1948. His 1976 album "Oxygène" helped bring synthesiser music to a mass audience.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 2022 album Oxymore is a bold instrumental work of immersive, spatial electronic sound.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 2021 instrumental work, an immersive electronic journey through the sound and spirit of the rainforest.
A late discovery of Jean-Michel Jarre's 1988 album, electronic music that folds machines and world sounds together.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 2018 electronic album, a sequel to Equinoxe asking how we will live with machines.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 1986 album, an instrumental record of grand synth suites that I found long after its release.
Jean-Michel Jarre's second Electronica volume is a sprawl of collaborations, an instrumental tour through decades of electronic sound.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 2016 album closes the Oxygène trilogy, warm analogue electronic music marking forty years of the original.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 1997 sequel to his landmark, six wordless movements I came to long after the original.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 2015 album, a sweeping collaboration record where the electronic pioneer works with many artists.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 1984 album built from sampled human voices, a strange record I discovered long after.
A later discovery: Jean-Michel Jarre's 2000 album adds voices to his electronic sound, turning instrumentals into strange, warm songs.
A 1981 electronic landmark I found years later, Jarre's Magnetic Fields, four parts of pure synthesiser music.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 1993 electronic suite on the theme of time, an instrumental record I came to long after it appeared.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 1978 instrumental electronic suite, a flowing eight-part work I found decades after its release.
A 1990 instrumental record by Jean-Michel Jarre, found years later: bright calypso pieces and a long, calm ocean drift.
Jean-Michel Jarre's 1976 electronic landmark, six wordless movements I discovered long after they reshaped the genre.