Brian Eno - Music For Films (1978) {2009 Virgin DSD Remaster}
Experimental / Avant-Garde / Ambient
The basic core
of tracks making up Brian Eno's Music for Films was originally assembled
in 1976 for inclusion in a promotional LP of prospective cues sent to
film directors. In early 1978, a bit before Music for Airports, Editions
EG released Music for Films with little more than Eno's cryptic
comment: "some of it was made specifically for soundtrack material,
(and) some of it was made for other reasons but found its way into
films." As with most things Eno, this led to a good deal of speculation
and controversy. One filmmaker long ago stated, "All of that is crap --
this music was never used in any films," and another film student who
had tried out some of the cues: "this is the worst music for films ever.
These cues don't synch to anything." However, the second filmmaker
unintentionally discovered the essence of Music for Films -- the 18
pieces here are little films, stimulating the visual part of one's brain
and thus fulfilling their promotional purpose. In that sense, Music for
Films was revolutionary in 1978.
Eno's analog
music definitely benefits from presentation in the digital domain. The
American LP of Music for Films was terrible, crackly sounding, and
impossible to track properly. In this new Original Masters "Soundtracks
Works" edition, this additional layer of sonic sludge is gone, revealing
that the musical textures are simpler than they seemed on the vinyl,
rendering details previously inaudible, such as the bass line in Two
rapid formations. This CD offers only the same 40 minutes of music
issued in 1978 -- "extras" are included on the newly compiled companion
disc More Music for Films. The pieces are quite short; some, such as
Sparrowfall (1) could have gone longer without wearing out their
welcome. The upside is that Music for Films can function as "ambient
music for people with short attention spans" -- somewhat oxymoronic, as
ambient music is not designed to be paid attention to.
The mid-'70s were still a rather angry period in electronic music at the
academic level. Eno's approach differed significantly from both that,
and from others, in that his music was not pop-oriented either. Music
for Films is the unrecognized link between Discreet Music and Music for
Airports -- it is essential Eno, and a landmark collection drawn from
among his work. |
Personnel:
Brian Eno / synthesiser, keyboards
John Cale / viola
Phil Collins / percussion
Rhett Davies / trumpet
Fred Frith / guitar
Robert Fripp / guitar
Percy Jones / bass
Bill MacCormick / guitar
Dave Mattacks / percussion
Roderick Melvin / keyboards
Paul Rudolph / guitar
tracklist:
01 - Aragon
02 - From The Same Hill
03 - Inland Sea
04 - Two Rapid Formations
05 - Slow Water
06 - Sparrowfall (1)
07 - Sparrowfall (2)
08 - Sparrowfall (3)
09 - Alternative 3
10 - Quartz
11 - Events In Dense Fog
12 - 'There Is Nobody'
13 - Patrolling Wire Borders
14 - A Measured Room
15 - Task Force
16 - M386
17 - Strange Light
18 - Final Sunset
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