Jean-michel-jarre---oxygene--new-master-recording-2007--dts-cd.rar May 2026
Jean-Michel Jarre’s Oxygène is one of electronic music’s touchstones: an album that in 1976 helped define ambient synth composition, proved that electronic instruments could carry emotional and melodic narratives, and opened a mainstream door for experimental timbres. The 2007 “New Master Recording” — later issued in formats including a high-resolution DTS CD release — is a deliberate reimagining of that landmark work, and it raises questions about fidelity, authorship, nostalgia, and the evolving relationship between technology and musical meaning.
Historical context and significance
Why re-record in 2007?
Sonic differences and the question of authenticity
Interpretive implications
Cultural reception and legacy
Conclusion The 2007 New Master Recording of Oxygène (DTS CD and related releases) is both tribute and transformation. It showcases Jean-Michel Jarre’s ongoing engagement with his seminal work and invites listeners to hear familiar material through contemporary sonic lenses. Whether one prefers the original’s analog imperfections or the later version’s crystalline expanse depends on priorities: historical authenticity and atmosphere versus clarity and spatial immersion. Ultimately, both recordings coexist as complementary statements — one anchored in the era that birthed the piece, the other demonstrating how composition and production remain living practices shaped by changing tools and intentions.
The file you’ve mentioned — Jean-Michel-Jarre---Oxygene--New-Master-Recording-2007--DTS-CD.rar — is a specific archived DTS Audio CD image of Jean-Michel Jarre’s seminal 1976 album Oxygène, using the 2007 “New Master Recording” and encoded in DTS (Digital Theater Systems) surround sound.
Below is a detailed breakdown of what this file likely contains, its technical specifications, historical context, and playback requirements. Why re-record in 2007
Jean-Michel Jarre completely remastered Oxygène for its 30th anniversary. Compared to the original 1976 or 1997 remasters:
This DTS-CD version is not the same as the stereo CD or the DVD-Video 5.1 (which is 48kHz/16-bit). DTS-CD is 44.1kHz — CD-compatible.
| Problem | Likely cause | Solution | |--------|-------------|----------| | White noise / hissing | Playing DTS as PCM | Use DTS decoder or passthrough | | No center/sub in VLC | VLC decoding to stereo | Go to Audio → Audio Device → 5.1, enable passthrough | | Burned CD plays as noise | Player doesn’t support DTS | Needs DVD/BD player with DTS logo | | Can’t open .dts file | Missing codec | Use Foobar2000 + DTS plugin or VLC |
If you hear clean 5.1 separation (synth pads in rears, sequences moving around), it’s working. Sonic differences and the question of authenticity
Would you like help converting it to a stereo format or fixing a specific playback error?
In summary, the file appears to be a RAR archive containing a 2007 remastered version of Jean-Michel Jarre's 1976 album "Oxygène," encoded in DTS-CD format for high-quality audio, possibly for use in surround sound systems.
Proper Title: Jean-Michel Jarre - Oxygène (New Master Recording 2007) - DTS-CD
Artist: Jean-Michel Jarre
Album: Oxygène
Release Year: 2007 (New Master Recording)
Format: DTS-CD (DTS Surround Sound on a CD) sequences moving around)