﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?>
<album>
  <review>Revolutions is the sixth overall studio album by Jean Michel Jarre, first released in 1988. The album spans several genres, including symphonic industrial, Arabian inspired, light guitar pop and ethnic electro jazz. The album reached number #2 in the UK charts, Jarre's best chart position since Oxygène. The Destination Docklands concert in London coincided with the release of the album.</review>
  <outline>Revolutions is the sixth overall studio album by Jean Michel Jarre, first released in 1988. The album spans several genres, including symphonic industrial, Arabian inspired, light guitar pop and ethnic electro jazz. The album reached number #2 in the UK charts, Jarre's best chart position since Oxygène. The Destination Docklands concert in London coincided with the release of the album.</outline>
  <lockdata>false</lockdata>
  <dateadded>2022-08-16 13:34:01</dateadded>
  <title>Revolutions</title>
  <rating>6</rating>
  <year>2015</year>
  <premiered>2015-01-01</premiered>
  <releasedate>2015-01-01</releasedate>
  <runtime>44</runtime>
  <genre>Electronic</genre>
  <genre>Synth-Pop</genre>
  <audiodbartistid>111568</audiodbartistid>
  <audiodbalbumid>2113397</audiodbalbumid>
  <musicbrainzalbumid>5e8ef471-2d2f-4c45-ad6e-d71130b277fb</musicbrainzalbumid>
  <musicbrainzalbumartistid>86e2e2ad-6d1b-44fd-9463-b6683718a1cc</musicbrainzalbumartistid>
  <musicbrainzreleasegroupid>2cc8fe44-5a30-39c9-aea1-9a85724c0c9d</musicbrainzreleasegroupid>
  <art>
    <poster>/media/data/media5/Music/Jean‐Michel Jarre/Revolutions (1988)/folder.jpg</poster>
  </art>
  <actor>
    <name>Jean‐Michel Jarre</name>
    <type>AlbumArtist</type>
  </actor>
  <actor>
    <name>Jean‐Michel Jarre</name>
    <type>Artist</type>
  </actor>
  <artist>Jean‐Michel Jarre</artist>
  <albumartist>Jean‐Michel Jarre</albumartist>
  <track>
    <position>1</position>
    <title>Industrial Revolution, Overture</title>
    <duration>05:10</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>2</position>
    <title>Industrial Revolution, Part 1</title>
    <duration>05:09</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>3</position>
    <title>Industrial Revolution, Part 2</title>
    <duration>02:17</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>4</position>
    <title>Industrial Revolution, Part 3</title>
    <duration>04:12</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>5</position>
    <title>London Kid</title>
    <duration>04:26</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>6</position>
    <title>Revolution, Revolutions</title>
    <duration>04:56</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>7</position>
    <title>Tokyo Kid</title>
    <duration>05:21</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>8</position>
    <title>Computer Weekend</title>
    <duration>04:41</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>9</position>
    <title>September</title>
    <duration>04:04</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>10</position>
    <title>L’Emigrant</title>
    <duration>03:56</duration>
  </track>
  <artistdesc>Jean-Michel André Jarre (French: [ʒɑ̃ miʃɛl ɑ̃dʁe ʒaʁ]; born 24 August 1948) is a French composer, performer and record producer. He is a pioneer in the electronic, ambient and new-age genres, and is known for organising outdoor spectacles featuring his music, accompanied by vast laser displays, large projections and fireworks.
Jarre was raised in Lyon by his mother and grandparents and trained on the piano. From an early age, he was introduced to a variety of art forms, including street performers, jazz musicians and the artist Pierre Soulages. But his musical style was perhaps most heavily influenced by Pierre Schaeffer, a pioneer of musique concrète at the Groupe de Recherches Musicales.
In the late 60’s Jarre started to experience analog visuals with large scale overhead projection systems with images and fluids mix.
His first mainstream success was the 1976 album Oxygène. Recorded in a makeshift studio at his home, the album sold an estimated 12 million copies. Oxygène was followed in 1978 by Équinoxe, and in 1979, Jarre performed to a record-breaking audience of more than a million people at the Place de la Concorde, a record he has since broken three times. More albums were to follow, but his 1979 concert served as a blueprint for his future performances around the world. Several of his albums have been released to coincide with large-scale outdoor events.
As of 2004, Jarre had sold an estimated 80 million albums and singles. He was the first Western musician officially invited to perform in the People's Republic of China and holds the world record for the largest-ever audience at an outdoor event for his Moscow concert on 6 September 1997, which was attended by 3.5 million people.</artistdesc>
  <label>Sony Music</label>
</album>