stuartypoorty
05-26-2009, 02:10 AM
Artists; Brian Eno/Jah Wobble
Title; Spinner
Label; All Saints
Released; 1995
Track listing;
01. Where We Lived
02. Like Organza
03. Steam
04. Garden Recalled
05. Marine Radio
06. Unusual Balance
07. Space Diary 1
08. Spinner
90. Transmitter And Trumpet
10. Left Where It Fell
This music originated as a soundtrack for Derek Jarman's final film "Glitterbug", which was released shortly after his death in 1994.
Eno worked alone in the studio, recording on digital stereo and occasionally watching the movie. Unsatisfied with the result, he passed his labours over to Jah Wobble who left some alone, added bass to others or used the material for entirely new compositions.
The music can be sombre, ominous, brooding and uneasy. The soundscapes are very evocative - of what - well that depends on the listener, their mood and a willingness to stay the distance. My guess is stillness, like eerie lounge music. Bass playing is terrific - watch that bass cone move.
If this is your introduction to Eno's work I'd suggest you look elsewhere first, "Here Come The Warm Jets", "Taking Tiger Mountain(by strategy)", the sublime "Another Green World" or "Before And After Science" are all wonderful.
Title; Spinner
Label; All Saints
Released; 1995
Track listing;
01. Where We Lived
02. Like Organza
03. Steam
04. Garden Recalled
05. Marine Radio
06. Unusual Balance
07. Space Diary 1
08. Spinner
90. Transmitter And Trumpet
10. Left Where It Fell
This music originated as a soundtrack for Derek Jarman's final film "Glitterbug", which was released shortly after his death in 1994.
Eno worked alone in the studio, recording on digital stereo and occasionally watching the movie. Unsatisfied with the result, he passed his labours over to Jah Wobble who left some alone, added bass to others or used the material for entirely new compositions.
The music can be sombre, ominous, brooding and uneasy. The soundscapes are very evocative - of what - well that depends on the listener, their mood and a willingness to stay the distance. My guess is stillness, like eerie lounge music. Bass playing is terrific - watch that bass cone move.
If this is your introduction to Eno's work I'd suggest you look elsewhere first, "Here Come The Warm Jets", "Taking Tiger Mountain(by strategy)", the sublime "Another Green World" or "Before And After Science" are all wonderful.