| Brian Eno |

Brian
Eno in 2006
|
| Background information |
| Also known as |
Brian Peter
George St. John le Baptiste de la Salle Eno |
| Born |
May 15, 1948 (1948-05-15) (age 59) |
| Origin |
Woodbridge,
Suffolk, England |
| Genre(s) |
Experimental
rock
Art
rock
Glam
rock
Electronic music
Ambient
music |
| Occupation(s) |
Producer,
musician |
| Instrument(s) |
Synthesizer
Keyboards
Vocals
Guitar |
| Years active |
1970 – present |
| Label(s) |
EG
Astralwerks
Thirsty
Ear |
Associated
acts |
Roxy Music
Robert
Fripp
David
Bowie
Talking
Heads
David Byrne
Kevin
Ayers
Phil Manzanera
John
Cale
Nico
Daniel
Lanois
Harold
Budd
Michael
Brook
Laurie Anderson
Jon
Hassell
Laraaji
U2
Toto
James
Devo
Television
801
Ultravox
Quiet Sun
Depeche Mode
Primal Scream
Icehouse |
| Website |
http://www.enoshop.co.uk/ |
Brian Eno (pronounced
['braɪ.ən
ˈinəʊ]) (born Brian Peter George St. John le
Baptiste de la Salle Eno on 15 May 1948 in Woodbridge,
Suffolk, England)
is an English
electronic
musician, music theorist and record
producer. As a solo artist, he is probably best known as the father of
modern ambient music, though he is also a
highly celebrated record producer.
With an art school background and inspiration
from minimalism,
Eno first came to prominence as the keyboard
and synthesizer
player of the 1970s glam and art rock band Roxy
Music. After leaving the group, Eno recorded four highly
idiosyncratic and original rock albums, before turning to more
abstract soundscapes on records such as Discreet
Music (1975) and Ambient
1/Music for Airports (1978). Since then he has
made dozens of albums, many with similarly-minded collaborators such as
Harold
Budd, Cluster, John
Cale, David Byrne and Robert
Fripp.
Eno also became involved in pop
music collaborations beginning in the late 1970s, joining David
Bowie on his avant-garde 'Berlin
Trilogy' and helping to popularise the band Devo and the punk rock-influenced "No Wave" scene.
Eno is also notable for introducing the concepts of chance
music to pop
and rock
and roll.
Eno's production and songwriting credits include critical and
commercial successes by Talking Heads and U2, such as Remain
in Light and The
Joshua Tree, as well as work with James,
Slowdive
and Paul
Simon.
Eno has pursued several artistic ventures parallel to his
music career, including visual art installations, a regular column
in the newspaper
The
Observer and, with artist Peter
Schmidt, Oblique Strategies, a deck of
cards recommending various artistic strategies.
|
Contents
- 1 Education
and early musical career
- 2 Roxy
Music
- 3 Solo
work
- 4 Producing
records and other projects
- 4.1 Record
production
- 4.2 The
Microsoft Sound
- 4.3 Generative
music
- 4.4 Other
work
- 5 Personal
life
- 6 Discography
- 7 Bibliography
- 8 Appearances
in popular culture
- 9 Notes
- 10 References
- 11 External
links
|
Education and early musical
career
Eno was educated at the St. Joseph's College, Birkfield, Ipswich, [1]which
was founded by the Saint Jean-Baptiste de La Salle
teaching order of brothers, from whom he took part of his name, Ipswich
Art School and the Winchester School of Art,
graduating from the latter in 1969. While at art school, he developed
an interest in using tape recorders as musical instruments,
and he experimented with his first (sometimes improvisational)
bands. While at Ipswich, his interest in music was encouraged by one of
his teachers, the painter Tom Phillips. Phillips recalls
devising "Piano Tennis" with Eno in which, after having amassed a
number of second-hand pianos they stripped them and lined them up in a
hall striking tennis balls at them. It was through Phillips that Eno
became involved in Cornelius Cardew's Scratch
Orchestra. The first released recording Eno was involved with as a
musician is the Deutsche Grammophon edition of
Cardew's The Great Learning (recorded in February
1971). Eno is thus one of the many voices to be heard in The Scratch
Orchestra's recital of Cardew's The Great Learning
Paragraph 7.
Roxy Music
Eno started his professional musical career in London, as a
member of the glam/art-rock band Roxy
Music, working with them from 1971 to 1973. As a
self-described "non-musician," Eno performed from behind the mixing
desk at the band's earliest live shows, where his efforts went far
beyond the usual sound balancing of the volume levels: he would alter
the sounds by processing the other band members' instruments through
his VCS3
synthesizer, tape recorders and other electronic devices, frequently
singing backing vocals as well. Eno soon joined the rest of Roxy Music
on stage, where his flamboyant costumes became a hallmark of the band's
visual appeal. Eno left the group after completing the tour to promote
their second album, For Your Pleasure.
By Eno's later account, his departure was partially result of
disagreements with Roxy's lead singer and principal songwriter, Bryan
Ferry, and partially due to his growing boredom with the life
of a touring rock star.
Solo work
Eno embarked on a solo career almost immediately. Between 1973
and 1977 he created four influential solo albums of
electronically-inflected pop songs – Here Come the Warm Jets,
Taking
Tiger Mountain (By Strategy), Another
Green World and Before and after Science.
Tiger Mountain contains the galloping "Third Uncle",
one of Eno's best-known songs, due in part to its later being covered
by Bauhaus. Critic Dave
Thompson writes that the song is "a near punk attack
of riffing guitars and clattering percussion, "Third Uncle" could, in
other hands, be a heavy metal anthem, albeit one
whose lyrical content would tongue-tie the most slavish air
guitarist."
Brian Eno pictured on his 1977 album Before and After Science.
During this period, Eno also toured with Phil
Manzanera in the band 801, a "supergroup"
that played more or less mutated selections from albums by Eno,
Manzanera, and Quiet Sun, as well as
covers of classic songs by The Beatles and The
Kinks.
In 1972, Eno developed a tape-delay system first utilized by
Eno and Robert
Fripp (from King Crimson), coined as 'Frippertronics',
and the pair released an album in 1973 called Fripp & Eno
(No Pussyfooting). It is said the technique was
borrowed from minimalist composer Terry Riley, whose tape delay feedback
system with a pair of Revox tape recorders (a setup Riley used to call
the "Time Lag Accumulator") was first used on Riley's album Music
for The Gift in 1963.
In 1975, Fripp and Eno released a second album, Evening
Star, and also played several live shows in
Europe.
Eno was a prominent member of the performance art-classical
orchestra the Portsmouth Sinfonia - having
started playing with them in 1972. In 1973 he produced the orchestra's
first album The Portsmouth Sinfonia Plays the Popular Classics
(released in March 1974) and in 1974 he produced the live album Hallellujah!
The Portsmouth Sinfonia Live At The Royal Albert Hall of
their infamous
May 1974 concert (released in October 1974.) In addition to producing
both albums, Eno performed in the orchestra on both recordings -
playing the clarinet. Eno also deployed the orchestra's famously
dissonant string section on his second solo album Taking
Tiger Mountain (By Strategy). The orchestra at this time
included other musicians whose solo work he would subsequently release
on his Obscure label including Gavin Bryars and Michael
Nyman. That year he also composed music for the album Lady June's
Linguistic Leprosy, with Kevin
Ayers, to accompany the poet June Campbell Cramer.
Eno continued his career by producing a larger number of
highly eclectic and increasingly ambient electronic
and acoustic albums. He is widely credited with coining the term
"ambient music",
low-volume music designed to modify one's perception of a surrounding
environment.
His first such work, 1975's Discreet
Music, is considered the landmark album of the
genre. This was followed by his Ambient series (Music
for Airports (Ambient 1), The Plateaux of Mirror
(Ambient 2), Day
of Radiance (Ambient 3) and On Land (Ambient
4)). Eno was the primary musician on these
releases with the exception of "Ambient 3" where the American composer,
Laraaji was the sole musician playing the zither and hammered dulcimer.
In 1981, having returned from Ghana and before On
Land, he discovered Miles Davis' 1974 ambient jazz dirge "He
Loved Him Madly": "Teo Macero's revolutionary production on
that piece seemed to me to have the "spacious" quality I was after, and
like "Amarcord",
it too became a touchstone to which I returned frequently."
Eno describes himself as a "non-musician" and coined the term
"treatments" to describe his modification of the sound of musical
instruments, and to separate his role from that of the traditional
instrumentalist. His skill at using "The Studio as a Compositional
Tool" (the title of an essay by Eno)
led in part to his career as a producer. His methods were recognized at
the time (mid-1970s) as unique, so much so that on Genesis's
The Lamb Lies Down on
Broadway, he is credited with 'Enossification'
and on John
Cale's Island albums as playing the 'Eno'.
Eno started the Obscure label in Britain in 1975 to release
works by lesser-known composers. The first group of three releases
included his own composition, Discreet
Music, and the now-famous The Sinking
of the Titanic by Gavin Bryars. The second side of Discreet
Music consisted of several versions of Pachelbel's
Canon to which various algorithmic transformations have been applied,
rendering it almost unrecognizable. Side 1 consisted of a tape loop
system for generating music from relatively sparse input. These tapes
had previously been used as backgrounds in some of his collaborations
with Robert
Fripp, most notably on Evening
Star. Only ten Obscure albums were released,
including works by John Adams, Michael Nyman, and John Cage.
At this time he was also affiliating with artists in the Fluxus movement.
In 1980-81 Eno collaborated with David Byrne of Talking
Heads on My
Life in the Bush of Ghosts, which was built around radio
broadcasts Eno collected while living in the USA, along with sampling
recordings from around the world. He worked with David
Bowie as a writer and musician on Bowie's influential 1977-79
'Berlin
Trilogy' of albums, Low, "Heroes"
and Lodger, on
Bowie's later album Outside, and
on the song "I'm Afraid of Americans". In
1980 Eno developed an interest in altered guitar tunings, which led to
Guitarchitecture discussions with Chuck Hammer, former Lou Reed
guitarist. Eno has also collaborated with John Cale, former member of Velvet
Underground, on his trilogy Fear,
Slow
Dazzle and Helen
of Troy, Robert
Wyatt on his Shleep CD, with Jon
Hassell, with the German duo Cluster, with composer Harold
Budd and others.
In 1992, Eno released an album featuring heavily syncopated
rhythms entitled Nerve Net,
with contributions from several old chums including Robert
Fripp, Benmont Tench, Robert
Quine and John Paul Jones.
This album was a last-minute substitution for My Squelchy Life,
which featured more pop oriented material, with Eno on vocals. (Several
tracks from My Squelchy Life later appeared on
1993's retrospective box set Eno Box II: Vocals.)
Eno also released in 1992 a work entitled The
Shutov Assembly, recorded between 1985 and
1990. This album embraces atonality and abandons most conventional
concepts of modes, scales and pitch. Much of the music shifts gradually
and without discernible focus, and is one of Eno's most varied ambient
collections. Conventional instrumentation is eschewed, save for treated
keyboards.
During the 1990s, Eno became increasingly interested in
self-generating musical systems, the results of which he called generative
music. The basic premise of generative music is the blending of several
independent musical tracks, of varying sounds, length and, in some
cases, silence. When each individual track concludes, it starts again
mixing with the other tracks and allowing the listener to hear an
almost infinite combination. In one instance of generative music, Eno
calculated that it would take almost 10,000 years to hear the entire
possibilities of one individual piece. Eno has presented this music in
his own, and other artists, art and sound installations, most notably
"I Dormienti (The Sleepers)", "Music for the Marble Palace" and "The
Quiet Club".
In 2004, Fripp and Eno recorded another ambient
collaboration album, The
Equatorial Stars.
Eno returned in June 2005 with Another
Day on Earth, his first major album since Wrong
Way Up (with John Cale) to prominently feature
vocals. The album differs from his 70s solo work as musical production
has changed since then, evident in its semi-electronic production.
In early 2006, Eno collaborated with David Byrne to reissue My
Life in the Bush of Ghosts in celebration of the influential
album's 25th anniversary. Eight previously unreleased tracks, recorded
during the initial sessions in 1980/81, are featured. An unusual
interactive marketing strategy that coincided with its re-release, the
album’s promotional website features the ability for anyone to
officially and legally download the multi-tracks of two songs from the
album, "A Secret Life" and "Help Me Somebody". Individuals can then
remix and upload new mixes of these tracks to the website so others can
listen to and rate them.
In late 2006, Eno released "77 Million Paintings", a program
of generative video and music specifically for the PC. As its title
suggests, there is a possible combination of 77 million paintings where
the viewer will see different combinations of video slides prepared by
Eno each time the program is launched. Likewise, the accompanying music
is generated by the program so that it's almost certain the listener
will never quite hear the same arrangement twice.
Eno is currently working on the soundtrack to Will
Wright's upcoming game, Spore.
In 2007, Eno's music will be featured in a movie
adaption of Irvine Welsh's best-selling collection Ecstasy:
Three Tales of Chemical Romance.
Producing records and other
projects
Record production
From the very beginning of his solo career in 1973, Eno has
been much in demand as a producer - though his management now
describe him as a "sonic landscaper" rather than a producer. The first
album with Eno credited as producer was Lucky Leif and the
Longships by Robert
Calvert. Eno's lengthy string of producer credits includes albums for Talking
Heads, U2, Devo, Ultravox and James.
He also produced part of the 1993 album When
I Was a Boy by Jane
Siberry. He won the best producer award at the 1994 and 1996 BRIT
Awards.
Despite being a self-professed "non-musician", Eno has
contributed to recordings by artists as varied as Nico, Robert
Calvert, Genesis, Edikanfo, and Zvuki Mu, in
various capacities such as use of his studio/synthesizer/electronic
treatments, vocals, guitar, bass guitar, and even just as being 'Eno'.
In 1984, he composed and performed the "Prophecy Theme" for the David
Lynch film Dune, the rest
of the soundtrack was performed by the
group Toto.
Eno produced performance artist Laurie Anderson's Bright Red
album, and also composed for it. The work is avant-garde spoken word
with haunting and magnifying sounds. Eno played on David Byrne's
musical score for The Catherine Wheel,
a project commissioned by Twyla Tharp to accompany her Broadway
dance project of the same name.
Eno co-produced The Unforgettable Fire
(1984), The Joshua Tree
(1987), Achtung Baby
(1991), and All That You Can't
Leave Behind (2000) for U2 with his frequent
collaborator Daniel Lanois, and produced 1993's Zooropa
for the band alone. In 1995, U2 and Eno joined forces to create the
album Original Soundtracks 1
under the group name Passengers. Notable songs from OST1
include "Your Blue Room" and "Miss
Sarajevo".
Eno played on the 1986 album Measure for Measure
by Australian band Icehouse. In 1993, he remixed two
tracks for Depeche Mode, I Feel You
and In Your Room,
both single releases from the album Songs of Faith and
Devotion.
In 2006, he produced Paul Simon's album Surprise.
As of 2007 he is producing what will be U2's 15th studio album, along
with Daniel Lanois, in Morocco, as well as Coldplay's
forth studio album.
The Microsoft Sound
In 1994 Eno was approached by Mark
Malamud and Erik Gavriluk, senior designers at Microsoft on
the Cairo project. The result
was the six-second start-up sound for the Windows 95
operating system, commonly called The
Microsoft Sound. From an interview with the San Francisco Chronicle:
| “ |
The
idea came up at the time when I was completely bereft of ideas. I'd
been working on my own music for a while and was quite lost, actually.
And I really appreciated someone coming along and saying, "Here's a
specific problem – solve it." The thing from the agency said, "We want
a piece of music that is inspiring, universal, blah-blah, da-da-da,
optimistic, futuristic, sentimental, emotional," this whole list of
adjectives, and then at the bottom it said "and it must be 3¼ seconds
long." I thought this was so funny and an amazing thought to actually
try to make a little piece of music. It's like making a tiny little
jewel. In fact, I made 84 pieces. I got completely into this world of
tiny, tiny little pieces of music. I was so sensitive to microseconds
at the end of this that it really broke a logjam in my own work. Then
when I'd finished that and I went back to working with pieces that were
like three minutes long, it seemed like oceans of time. |
” |
The Windows XP Welcome music, heard during
the last part of Windows XP Setup, is also composed by Eno.
Generative music
He collaborated on the development of SSEYO's Koan generative
music system (created by Pete Cole and Tim Cole of Intermorphic), which
he used to create his hybrid album Generative Music 1.
Brian Eno, 1996:
| “ |
Some
very basic forms of generative music have existed for a long time, but
as marginal curiosities. Wind chimes are an example, but the only
compositional control you have over the music they produce is in the
original choice of notes that the chimes will sound. Recently, however,
out of the union of synthesisers and computers, some much finer tools
have evolved. Koan Software is probably the best of these systems,
allowing a composer to control not one but one hundred and fifty
musical and sonic parameters within which the computer then improvises
(as wind improvises the wind chimes).
The works I have made with this system symbolise to me
the beginning of a new era of music. Until 100 years ago, every musical
event was unique: music was ephemeral and unrepeatable and even
classical scoring couldn't guarantee precise duplication. Then came the
gramophone record, which captured particular performances and made it
possible to hear them identically over and over again.
But now there are three alternatives: live music,
recorded music and generative music. Generative music enjoys some of
the benefits of both its ancestors. Like live music it is always
different. Like recorded music it is free of time-and-place limitations
- you can hear it when and where you want.
I really think it is possible that our grandchildren
will look at us in wonder and say: "you mean you used to listen to
exactly the same thing over and over again?"
|
” |
Using the pseudonym CSJ Bofop, 1996:
| “ |
Each
of the twelve pieces on Generative Music 1 has a distinctive character.
There are, of course, the ambient works ranging from the dark, almost
mournful Densities III (complete with distant bells), to translucent
Lysis (Tungsten). These are contrasted with pieces in dramatically
different styles, such as Komarek with its hard edged, angular
melodies, reminiscent of Schoenberg's early serial experiments, and
Klee 42 whose simple polyphony is similar to that of the early
Renaissance. But of course, the great beauty of Generative Music is
that those pieces will never sound quite that way again. |
” |
Other work
Eno has also been active in other artistic genres, producing
videos for gallery display and collaborating with visual artists in
other endeavours. One is the set of "Oblique
Strategies" cards that he produced in the mid-70s, which was described
as "100 Worthwhile Dilemmas" and intended as guides to shaking up the
mind in the process of producing artistic endeavors. Another was his
collaboration with artist Russell Mills on the book More
Dark Than Shark. He was also the provider of music for Robert
Sheckley's In the Land of Clear Colours, a narrated
story with music originally published by a small art gallery in Spain.
In 1996, Brian Eno and others started the Long
Now Foundation to educate the public into thinking about the very long
term future of society. He is also a columnist for the British
newspaper The Observer.
In 2002 a song called "An Ending (Ascent)", which he wrote and
performed for the NASA film Apollo, was used in the
film 28 Days Later.
In 2003, he appeared on a Channel 4 discussion about the Iraq war with
a top military spokesman. Eno was highly critical of the war. In 2005,
he spoke at an anti-war demonstration in Hyde
Park, London. In March 2006, he spoke at an anti-war demonstration at Trafalgar
Square. He noted that 2 billion people on this planet do not have clean
drinking water, and that water could have been supplied to them for
about one-fifth of the cost of the Iraq war.
2006 saw the release of "77 Million Paintings", a
software/DVD/booklet package which provides a permanent version of the
kind of visual and sound art which Eno has featured in his installation
pieces.
In 2007, he appeared playing keyboards in Voila,
Belinda
Carlisle's solo album sung entirely in French.
Personal life
In March 1967, then aged 18, Eno married Sarah Grenville.
Their daughter Hannah was born in July 1967.
It has been frequently claimed that Eno dated British actress Julie
Christie in the late 1970s and that they conceived a child together;
this is entirely fictitious, and was based solely on the fact that they
were once seen sharing a taxi. In January 1988, Eno married his
manager, Anthea Norman-Taylor. They have two daughters, Irial and Darla.
He is the brother of fellow ambient musician and composer Roger
Eno. The brothers collaborated with Canadian composer Daniel
Lanois on the soundtrack album Apollo.
Discography
-
Main article: Brian
Eno discography
Bibliography
- 1986: More Dark than Shark
with Russell Mills
- 1996: A Year with Swollen
Appendices
- 2000: I Dormienti with
Mimmo Paladino. Limited edition of 2000.
Appearances in popular culture
- Brian Eno was the inspiration for the character Brent Mini
in the 1981 novel Valis. The author of
the book, Philip K. Dick, preferred classical
music and was an aficionado of Eno's Discreet
Music album. Another literary semi-personification of Brian
is the keyboardist character Eno Barber, in Salman
Rushdie's The Ground Beneath Her
Feet.
- The character of I-No (pronounced the same as "Eno"), in the
videogame series Guilty Gear is
most likely a reference to Brian Eno.
This is one of dozens of music references in the series.
- The music for the game Fallout
was inspired by Eno's music (especially Music for Films).
- He once guest appeared as Father Brian Eno on the
television sitcom
Father
Ted.
- The song "Lay My Love" with John
Cale was on the soundtrack More Music From Northern
Exposure (1990-95) released in 1994.
- The song "By This River," from the 1977 album Before and After Science,
is featured in Alfonso Cuaron's 2001 film Y
tu mamá también.
- "Two Rapid Formations" and "Inland Sea" are featured in two
Miami
Vice episodes
- 1/1 from Music for Airports is featured
in the file 9½ Weeks.
- The Nokia
8800 Sirocco Edition mobile phone features exclusive music composed by
Eno.
Between January
8, 2007 and February
12, 2007,
ten units of Nokia 8800 Sirocco Brian Eno Signature Edition mobile
phones, individually numbered and engraved with Eno's signature were
auctioned off. All proceeds went to two charities chosen by Eno: the Keiskamma
Aids Treatment program and The World Land Trust.
- The Swarovski crystal museum (or in German,
Swarovski
Kristallwelten) in the small town of Wattens, near Innsbruck in
Austria,
has its own exhibition dedicated to Brian Eno. One walks in, and
watches a screen with vivid flashing lights, and a recording of Brian's
voice plays, proclaiming peaceful and calming sentences.
- Eno's song "By This River" was featured in Nanni
Moretti's film La Stanza del Figlio (The Son's
Room) and Alfonso Cuarón's Y
tu mamá tambien in 2001.
- The opening scene of the first episode of Saxondale
had the main character Tommy Saxondale state "I love the way Eno can
paint a picture with music".
Notes
References
- Bracewell, Michael Roxy Music: Bryan Ferry, Brian
Eno, Art, Ideas, and Fashion (Da Capo Press, 2005) ISBN 0-306-81400-5
- Eno, Brian, Russell Mills and Rick
Poynor More Dark Than Shark (Faber & Faber,
1986, out of print)
- Eno, Brian A Year with Swollen Appendices: Brian
Eno's Diary (Faber & Faber, 1996) ISBN 0-571-17995-9
- Tamm, Eric Brian Eno: His Music and the Vertical
Color of Sound (Da Capo Press, 1995, first published 1989) ISBN 0-306-80649-5 (Full text available at
author's website [2])
External links
| v • d • e Roxy Music |
| Bryan Ferry | Andy
Mackay | Phil
Manzanera | Paul Thompson |
| Brian Eno
| Eddie
Jobson | Graham Simpson | Paul
Carrack | Andy Newmark |
| Discography |
| Studio albums: Roxy
Music | For
Your Pleasure | Stranded
| Country Life
| Siren
| Manifesto
| Flesh + Blood
| Avalon |
| Live albums: Viva!
| The High Road
| Heart Still Beating
| Concert Classics
| Concerto |
| Compilations: Roxy Music
Greatest Hits | The First Seven Albums | The
Atlantic Years | Street Life 20 Great Hits
| The Ultimate Collection | More
Than This | The Thrill of It All
| The Early Years | Slave To Love
| The Best of Roxy Music |
| Related
Articles |
| New Wave music | Glam rock | New
Romantic | EMS
VCS 3 | Chris Thomas |
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Eno, Brian |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES |
Eno, Brian Peter George |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION |
Producer, musician |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
15
May 1948 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH |
Woodbridge, Suffolk, England |
| DATE OF DEATH |
|
| PLACE OF DEATH |
|