Brian Eno / Another Green World
Artist Brian Eno
Album Title: Another Green World
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Alternative & Punk: Avant Rock
Format CD
Released 09/00/1975
Reissue Date 01/00/1987
Label EG Records Ltd.
Catalog No EGCD 21
Bar Code No none
Packaging Jewelcase
Tracks
1. Sky Saw (3:26)
2. Over Fire Island (1:51)
3. St. Elmo's Fire (2:59)
4. In Dark Trees (2:28)
5. The Big Ship (3:01)
6. I'll Come Running (3:51)
7. Another Green World (1:26)
8. Sombre Reptiles (2:25)
9. Little Fishes (1:30)
10. Golden Hours (4:01)
11. Becalmed (3:56)
12. Zawinul/Lava (3:01)
13. Everything Merges With The Night (4:00)
14. Spirits Drifting (2:37)
Date Acquired 06/06/1987
Personal Rating
Acquired from Northern Lights
Purchase Price 14.00

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Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by Steve Huey
A universally acknowledged masterpiece, Another Green World represents a departure from song structure and toward a more ethereal, minimalistic approach to sound. Despite the stripped-down arrangements, the album's sumptuous tone quality reflects Eno's growing virtuosity at handling the recording studio as an instrument in itself (à la Brian Wilson). There are a few pop songs scattered here and there ("St. Elmo's Fire," "I'll Come Running," "Golden Hours"), but most of the album consists of deliberately paced instrumentals that, while often closer to ambient music than pop, are both melodic and rhythmic; many, like "Sky Saw," "In Dark Trees," and "Little Fishes," are highly imagistic, like paintings done in sound that actually resemble their titles. Lyrics are infrequent, but when they do pop up, they follow the free-associative style of albums past; this time, though, the humor seems less bizarre than gently whimsical and addled, fitting perfectly into the dreamlike mood of the rest of the album. Most of Another Green World is like experiencing a soothing, dream-filled slumber while awake, and even if some of the pieces have dark or threatening qualities, the moments of unease are temporary, like a passing nightmare whose feeling lingers briefly upon waking but whose content is forgotten. Unlike some of his later, full-fledged ambient work, Eno's gift for melodicism and tight focus here keep the entirety of the album in the forefront of the listener's consciousness, making it the perfect introduction to his achievements even for those who find ambient music difficult to enjoy.
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