MP3 2576 mb.
Performer: Brian Eno, Bang On A Can
Title: Music For Airports / In The Ocean
Country: Europe
Catalog Number: 3077558
Label: Medici Arts
Released: 2008
Style: Minimal, Ambient
Rating: 4.5
Votes: 636
| 1 | 1/1Arranged By – Michael Gordon | 17:04 |
| 2 | Music For AirportsComposed By – Brian Eno | |
| 3 | 2/1Arranged By – Julia Wolfe | 11:54 |
| 4 | 2/2Arranged By – Evan Ziporyn | 12:27 |
| 5 | In The OceanConcept By [Scenario] – Benedict Weisser, Frank SchefferFilm Editor [Edited By] – Riekje Ziengs | 52:43 |
| 6 | 1/2Arranged By – David Lang | 9:11 |
| Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VBM 0108 | Bang On A Can | Music For Airports / In The Ocean (DVD-V, NTSC) | Medici Arts | VBM 0108 | Argentina | Unknown |
| 3077558 | Brian Eno, Bang On A Can | Brian Eno, Bang On A Can - Music For Airports / In The Ocean (DVD-V, NTSC) | Medici Arts | 3077558 | Europe | 2008 |
Comes in a 6-panel DVD-digipak with a 12-page booklet.
A DVD produced for Medici Arts
DVD Premastering: TVS, Paris
Photos: © Frank Scheffer
Editorial: texthouse, Hamburg
© 1999 Allegri Film (Music For Airports)
℗ 2000 Allegri Film / NPS (In The Ocean)
Artwork & Editorial: © & ℗ 2008 Ideale Aucience International
Similar to Music For Airports / In The Ocean but the artwork has different colors.
Brian Eno, Jon Hassell - Fourth World Vol. 1: Possible Musics Full Album 2014 Remaster - Продолжительность: 45:27 ibnpatuta 204 Eno's 1979 milestone Music for Airports was the first album to feature his term ambient music, although 1975's Discreet Music and 1978's Music for Films had already been exploratory steps in that direction. It's entirely possible that Eno knew at the time that he was inventing a new form of music, but he might not have known just what a milestone Music for Airports would turn out to be, or that it would be the first ambient work to get its own tribute album. The New York-based new music collective Bang on a Can celebrated Music for Airports' 20th anni. This release features the music from Brian Eno's Ambient 1 - Music for Airports album played on classical instruments cello, bass, piano, guitar, clarinet and percussion. Recorded at Avatar & Looking Glass Studios, NYC, August 1997. Mixed at Looking Glass Studios. Mastered at Masterdisk. 1998 POINT music, a joint venture of Euphorbia Productions, Ltd. and Philips Music Group. A PolyGram Company. US version is 'Printed in USA' and contains text on rear insert reading 'File Under: New Age, Brian Eno'. Codice a barre e altri identificatori. Point Music. Publication date. 1: Music for Airports is the sixth studio album by English musician Brian Eno, released in 1978 by Polydor Records. Help improve the Brian Eno: Music for Airports Live page. All About Jazz musician pages are maintained by musicians, publicists and trusted members like you. Interested Tell us why you would like to improve the Brian Eno: Music for Airports Live musician page. Bang On A Can. Brian Eno: Music for Airports. Critic Score. Based on 1 review. User Score. Submit Correction. 1998, Release Date. LP, Format. Point Music, Label. Suggest a Genre. New Album Releases. The 1975. Notes on a Conditional Form. It was the precursor for the broad spectrum of music that is today called ambient, a term Eno himself invented. To this day, the All-Stars frequently perform the classic work live, most recently, in the middle of the night at this past year's Bang on a Can Marathon in New York City. The Village Voice was there for the performance along with hundreds of fans and had this to say . Songs in album Bang On A Can - Music For Airports 1998. Bang On A Can - 11. Bang On A Can - 12. Bang On A Can - 21. Bang On A Can - 22. Neoclassical Avant-Garde. Brian Eno coined the term ambient music for a certain kind of complex environmental music his own that rewarded any level of attention. His liner notes for the 1978 album Music for Airports says it must be as ignorable as it is interesting. He was claiming his own section of a musical canvas stretching from Erik Satie's furniture music at the high end to, at the most reviled and popular end, the sort of easy-listening pop discussed in Joseph Lanza's brilliant book Elevator Music