Brian Eno - Another Green World
Island, 1975The cover is a detail from "After Raphael" by Tom Phillips

Brian Eno - synthesizer, guitar, bass guitar, percussion, drum machine, pianos, keyboards, Farfisa, Hammond, sound effects, bass pedals, vocals, tapes, production
John Cale - viola
Phil Collins - percussion, drums
Robert Fripp - guitars
Percy Jones - fretless bass
Roderick Melvin - Fender Rhodes, keyboards
Paul Rudolph - bass, bass guitar, guitar, snare drum
Brian Turrington - bass guitar, piano
Rhett Davies - production, engineer
This is an amazing album... My first introduction to Eno was a record I picked up back in my Manifest days-- Harold Budd & Brian Eno - The Pearl. I liked it very much and was intrigued, so I picked up Eno's "Taking Tiger Mountain" album next. Surprised, but not disappointed, I put my Eno search on hold. I now had an ambient, piano/synth album and a quirky art rock album. Later, as I got into current ambient-electronic music more and more I decided to go back and rediscover Brian Eno-- known as the father of ambient. While his first albums and stint with Roxy Music are very much psych/glam/art/prog rock, his later albums are exquisite ambient experiments. Many people consider "Another Green World" to be an important transitory album from the early music to the later ambient sounds. While it's absolutely NOT ambient music yet, I can see how it is a transitional phase. Mostly this is noticeable in the great synthesizer sounds and recording techniques that Eno was experimenting with in the context of rock songs. The closest thing to ambient in my opinion is the track "The Big Ship", which no one else seems to talk about much...
Eno is a great figure of experimental 70's music, working with the likes of John Cale, Robert Fripp, Percy Jones, Robert Wyatt, Kevin Ayers, Holger Czukay, Harold Budd, Cluster, Daniel Lanois, etc... he had a great influence on all sorts of bands from King Crimson to Matching Mole to Gong, and even today bands like Stars of the Lid, Tim Hecker, Moby, and Aphex Twin wouldn't be doing what they are if they hadn't absorbed Brian Eno's ambient works. He also produced albums for many bands, including Roxy Music, Talking Heads, and U2.
"Eno first emerged as a member of Roxy Music, where the synthesizer player electronically "treated" the band's other instruments, the first indicator that the recording process was itself Eno's chosen instrument. His subsequent career has been one of the most provocative in pop, for not only did he devote himself to such obscure pursuits as "ambient music," but he produced vital albums by David Bowie, Talking Heads, and U2. Eno made a handful of relatively conventional pop albums in the 1970s, and Another Green World ranks with Before and After Science as his most enduring solo work. Another Green World finds Eno mixing distorted guitars (courtesy of Robert Fripp) with a variety of keyboards and exotic rhythms to create a meditative wash of sound that is nonetheless awash with colorful touches. Particularly appealing is the bubbling "St. Elmo's Fire," with a stunning guitar part by Fripp, and "I'll Come Running," in which Eno shows that even a dedicated experimentalist can have a soft heart. From the strange-but-true file, Phil Collins contributes drums and percussion to three tracks." --John Milward
"This 1975 recording catches the ex-Roxy Music member in transition between art rock and his more progressive-ambient recordings. With an all-star cast including drummer Phil Collins, guitarist Robert Fripp, and John Cale on viola, Another Green World explores instrumental landscapes and aural textures not normally associated with rock recordings. Drawing on musical influences ranging from Weather Report to La Monte Young and Terry Riley, Brian Eno created layers of quirky sonic atmospheres and electronic tone poems. Using synthesizers, artificial percussion devices, and additional electronic accouterments, he found that the studio itself could become a useful instrument of creativity. Compositions like "Becalmed," "Sombre Reptiles," and the title cut all anticipate Eno's later ambient excursions. One of the many utterly essential Brian Eno albums." --Mitch Myers
FILL YOUR EARS
1 comments:
i had to revisit this post just to say how much this album has come to mean to me... one of my favorite albums of all time, it contains my favorite guitar solo (robert fripp on st. elmo´s fire) and the glowing track "the big ship" brings the tears up just under the edge of my eyelids....
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