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Author Topic: Brian Eno: Reflection review: A chance to experience Eno's music as he intended it  (Read 356 times)
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« on: January 15, 2017, 04:05:14 pm »

Brian Eno: Reflection review: A chance to experience Eno's music as he intended it

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<p>Brian Eno invented ambient music, starting with his 1975 album Discreet Music. Its 30-minute title track was “generative music.” Eno acted as a clockmaker, creating phrases and melodies that were then played through equalizers, echo units, and tape machines, to create a work that had no fixed direction, but that unfolded  with an element of chance.</p><p>Over the years, Eno released a number of recordings of generative works—Thursday Afternoon, Neroli, and others—and each of these albums was, in effect, a small section of a potentially unlimited stream of music.</p><p>On January 1 of this year, Brian Eno released a new album called Reflection, which repeats this technique. In his description of the record, he says:</p><p class="jumpTag"><a href="/article/3156405/software-entertainment/brian-eno-reflection-review-a-chance-to-experience-enos-music-as-he-intended-it.html#jump">To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here[/url]</p></section></article>

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