[ambient] (1983) Brian Eno -Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks [...
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- Type Lossless
- Language English
- Total size 182.9 MB
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(1983) Brian Eno -Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks
Review:
A decade into a solo career dedicated to aural novelty, Brian Eno released an album intended to transform weightlessness into a kind of spiritual exaltation. On Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks, the former Roxy Music keyboardist/troublemaker took a break from the fractured narratives and lissome grooves he had helped create for David Bowie and Talking Heads, respectively. The occasion? In its original, 1983 form, a documentary consisting of 35-millimeter footage of the six moon missions; the score composed by Eno, brother Roger, and guitarist Daniel Lanois complement its static, clean images. But in the era of The Return of the Jedi, maybe audiences didnât respond well to static cleanliness in space movies. After director Al Reinartâs re-edit, the documentary was released in 1989 as For All Mankind. The backstory inspires less interest than the soundtrack itself, which excels at simulating a visual experience from the sparsest means: Call it Another Gravity-Free World. Long a favorite among Enophiles, Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks gets a sparkling remaster and almost an albumâs worth of okay-to-pretty-good new tracks. Listeners familiar with consistent royalty generators like âDeep Blue Dayâ (used to beatific effect in 1996âs Trainspotting) will note the bell-like clarity of these souped-up versions, the better to savor the tension between Enoâs occasional dissonance and Lanoisâ penchant for gauze, especially on the friendlier second half. âThe idea was to try and make a frontier space music of some kind,â Eno said in a 1998 interview. âWhen I was asked to do the music for the film, I discovered that the astronauts were each allowed to take a cassette with them on those missions, and they nearly all took country and western songs. I thought it was a fabulous idea that people were out in space, playing this music which really belongs to another frontierâin a way, seeing themselves as cowboys.â Tickled by the protean sampling possibilities of new synthesizer technology, the Enos and Lanois constructed a suite of tracks that approximate Duane Eddy on Mars (thereâs another possible album title). This is the albumâs real innovation, still under-discussed. Ambient music is called many things, but âcornballâ isnât one of them; the way the guitar twang on âAlways Returningâ schlocks up the pretty ripples of Enoâs keyboards and the purr of tape manipulations should have produced three dozen offspring by now. (Imagining the electric piano on âWeightlessâ anchoring a Jack Wagner hit is not out of bounds.) Lanois stars on âSilver Morning,â the ur-text for the well-behaved producer-goes-singer exertions of 1989âs Acadie. âDeep Blue Dayâ has earned its rep as Enoâs most recognized instrumental thanks to the turquoise density of the synths and the warmth of Lanoisâ pedal-steel playing; itâs emphatic¸ unlike other Eno ambient recordings, like 1975âs Discreet Music and 1992âs The Shutov Assembly. When Eno goes on his own solo exploratory missions the results are predictably immersive. Ominous gurgles turn âMatteâ into a quiet nightmare: trapped in an oil drum at the bottom of the Pacific. On other tracks he gives Lanois a heads-up on future arrangement ideasâPeter Gabriel, whom Lanois would produce a couple years later, might have concluded after listening to the prominent bass and faint, stately wash of organ on âStarsâ that theyâd do nicely for âMercy Street,â 1986âs So mediation on poet Anne Sexton. Credit Enoâs discovery of the Yamaha CS80, one of the first polyphonic synthesizers; it formed, according to Lanois in a 2012 interview about the album, âan essential part of the work we did together.â The new tracks donât sully the original recordings so much as recontextualize them in sometimes rather garish ways. The gleam of the synthesized chords on âLike I Was a Spectatorâ doesnât summon outer space; it summons boutique hotel elevator music, which might be the idea. Perhaps thatâs as it should be. As the excitement about manned space missionsâa consequence of Cold War politics intersecting with Great Society notions about what the federal government could fundâhas waned in the last 35 years, Apolloâs clear lines and our memories of, say, National Geographic back issues with photos of the moonâs surface fuse into a nostalgia of the mildest evocatory power. The following year Eno and Lanois would produce U2âs The Unforgettable Fire, an album on which anthems, Eurodisco, and modest, modish synth doodles rub against each other with nary a fuss. The Unforgettable Fire presents itself as a book of prayers; Apollo: Soundtracks and Atmospheres limns an eternity without a heaven.

Tracklist:
01. Under Stars 4:30
02. The Secret Place 3:30
03. Matta 4:20
04. Signals 2:47
05. An Ending (Ascent) 4:26
06. Under Stars II 3:23
07. Drift 3:09
08. Silver Morning 2:39
09. Deep Blue Day 3:59
10. Weightless 4:35
11. Always Returning 4:04
12. Stars 8:00
Media Report:
Genre: ambient
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec, 16-bit PCM
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits
Files:
(1983) Brian Eno -Apollo Atmospheres and Soundtracks [FLAC]- 01. Under Stars.flac (16.3 MB)
- 02. The Secret Place.flac (12.4 MB)
- 03. Matta.flac (17.4 MB)
- 04. Signals.flac (9.6 MB)
- 05. An Ending (Ascent).flac (18.5 MB)
- 06. Under Stars II.flac (13.5 MB)
- 07. Drift.flac (10.9 MB)
- 08. Silver Morning.flac (11.0 MB)
- 09. Deep Blue Day.flac (15.5 MB)
- 10. Weightless.flac (17.6 MB)
- 11. Always Returning.flac (14.5 MB)
- 12. Stars.flac (25.5 MB)
- cover.jpg (153.8 KB)
- Torrent_downloaded_from_Demonoid.is_.txt (0.1 KB)
- Torrent_downloaded_from_glodls.to_.txt (0.1 KB)
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