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Ambient 4: On Land
Barnes and Noble
Ambient 4: On Land
Current price: $24.99


Barnes and Noble
Ambient 4: On Land
Current price: $24.99
Size: OS
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On Land
represented a significant move away from the strategies
Brian Eno
had employed in earlier
ambient
releases such as Discreet Music and
Music for Airports
. Instead of using a specific process to generate music with minimal interference from the composer, he here opts for a more gestural and intuitive approach, creating dreamy pictures of some specific geographical points or evocative memories of them. It's quite easy to imagine these works as soundtracks to mysterious footage of imprecisely glimpsed landscapes.
is an album that would become highly influential with the rising tide of
new age
composers, though few if any would capture the chilly beauty or latent romanticism that is part and parcel of
Eno
. The first piece,
"Lizard Point,"
includes an early recorded performance of
Bill Laswell
on bass, and one imagines that his association with
was a crucial factor in the
directions his later work would sometimes take.
remains a landmark event in the genre, as well as one of its high-water marks, and sounds entirely up to date 20 years after its initial release. A superb effort. ~ Brian Olewnick
represented a significant move away from the strategies
Brian Eno
had employed in earlier
ambient
releases such as Discreet Music and
Music for Airports
. Instead of using a specific process to generate music with minimal interference from the composer, he here opts for a more gestural and intuitive approach, creating dreamy pictures of some specific geographical points or evocative memories of them. It's quite easy to imagine these works as soundtracks to mysterious footage of imprecisely glimpsed landscapes.
is an album that would become highly influential with the rising tide of
new age
composers, though few if any would capture the chilly beauty or latent romanticism that is part and parcel of
Eno
. The first piece,
"Lizard Point,"
includes an early recorded performance of
Bill Laswell
on bass, and one imagines that his association with
was a crucial factor in the
directions his later work would sometimes take.
remains a landmark event in the genre, as well as one of its high-water marks, and sounds entirely up to date 20 years after its initial release. A superb effort. ~ Brian Olewnick