Skip to content

Tag: Eno

On gospel, Abba and the death of the record: an audience with Brian Eno

A really curious interview with Brian Eno by one of my favorite writers, Paul Morley today at the Guardian.

The interview is really a short paragraph on a number of subjects, my favorite being the answer on Abba (or Group Abba – if you will).

On Abba
“In the 70s, no one would admit that they liked Abba. Now it’s fine. It’s so kitsch. Kitsch is an excuse to defend the fact that they feel a common emotion. If it is kitsch. you put a sort of frame around something – to suggest you are being ironic. Actually, you aren’t. You are really enjoying it. I like Abba. I did then and I didn’t admit it. The snobbery of the time wouldn’t allow it. I did admit it when I heard…”

Follow this link for the whole story

Brian Eno in his studio. Photograph: Harry Borden (from the Guardian)

Leave a Comment

Bang on a Can performing Music for Airports at University of Maryland

“Ambient Music must be able to accommodate many levels of listening attention without enforcing one in particular; it must be as ignorable as it is interesting.”

Brian Eno – September 1978

Music for Airports is hardly ignorable. It has become a piece of music that has both alienated listeners as well as brought interested parties together. I’ve been able to see the music twice in my life; first at an installation at d.c. space in May of 1981 and lately, yesterday at the University of Maryland’s Bang on a Can Marathon.

The Maryland Bang on a Can Marathon is a first for the University, but hardly the first for Bang on a Can. In fact it is this type of marathon that they feel is the best way to experience the band. About 20 years ago the first such marathon was held at Exit Art in New York and the marathon has become a staple of their performance schedule ever since. A few years ago, Bang on a Can released a version of Music for Airports – created without tape loops (as the Eno version is) and have sporadically performed it live.

I admire the approach to staging the performance in the lobby of the Smith Center a location that is similar to an airport terminal – a transitional space within a larger structure, is an excellent choice of location. The performance is viewable from practically every angle in the building, and the music with it’s dreamlike sequences, make for a great foreground or backdrop to time spent in that space.

Bang on a Can’s performance was just as ignorable as the music they played, as well as just as unmistakable.

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=3926729&server=vimeo.com&show_title=0&show_byline=0&show_portrait=0&color=00ADEF&fullscreen=1

Endnote: I love the fact that if you refer to Bang on a Can as BOAC, you are also calling them the British Overseas Airways Corporation, one of England’s first commercial airlines, following a merger in the 70’s it is now known as British Airways.

Leave a Comment

Art students (called Brian) observed

I speak of Brian Eno far too much. Thankfully AFC is linking today to a post by imomus deconstructing a piece of the book, Art Students Observed by Charles Madge and Barbara Weinberger (Faber and Faber, 1973).

ASO is a sociological study of art students at two British art schools at a very interesting moment, the late 1960s. A period of time I am more and more interested in. The book, according to Imomus, shows the tutors and students circling each other with wariness, coolness, misunderstanding, despair, appreciation. Then we meet a student named Brian. Imomus then makes his case that this is indeed Mr. Eno.

The post is a great detective story, I think you might enjoy it.

Leave a Comment

There is a ton of interest in Jeff Krulik right now.

The thing is, there should always be a lot of interest in Jeff Krulik.

I would say that most people know him for the best rock documentary ever made, Heavy Metal Parking Lot. HMPL was filmed in the parking lot at the Capital Center in the early eighties before a Judas Priest/Scorpions show. The movie pretty much gives you all you would ever want as far as mullets, perms, pubestaches, and general hessian behavior. The thing is though the interest in these folks seem real and genuine. I do believe that Krulik’s work bears a interesting resemblance to one of the primary male preoccupation’s (after sex) record collecting.

What I mean in particular is that the cataloging and (nerdy) interest in the groups of people that he films seems to be overly rich in detail and cultural signifiers, he allows the subjects to simply be and in that approach his work has a biting sincerity that is far superior to the only other artist who is as interested in the “trainspotting gene” as he is, Richard Prince. I love Richard Prince, but Krulik is less removed and more in the moment and for me, that makes a big difference in the experience of the work. I guess you could say that where Krulik is hot, where Prince is cool.

Sidebar: if anyone has a vinyl version of Television’s Double Exposure let me know, the songs with Richard Hell are a bonus. The interesting thing to me is the two pre-Marquee Moon sets of studio recordings, including their very first demos with a relatively new producer named Brian Eno.

Leave a Comment

New from David Byrne and Brian Eno

Brian Eno and David Byrne recently finished their first collaboration in about 30 years. The name of the new record is Everything That Happens Will Happen Today and the music will be available on the web on August 18th (free streaming) and can be purchased as a download and in physical formats.

Right now, however you can download one of the songs; Strange Overtones. go to www.everythingthathappens.com and get yours today.

Leave a Comment