Music for Civic Recovery Centre
Music for Civic Recovery Centre | ||||
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Studio album by Brian Eno | ||||
Released | 2000 | |||
Recorded | 2000 | |||
Genre | Ambient, dark ambient | |||
Length | 44:50 | |||
Label | Opal | |||
Producer | Brian Eno | |||
Brian Eno chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Music for Civic Recovery Centre is an ambient Installation album from British musician Brian Eno, released in 2000.
Track listing
- The Quiet Club - 44:50
Overview
An Opal release, with no catalogue number, this title is only available from EnoShop.
The music on the album is taken from an Installation—a show featuring music and visuals—that took place at the Sonic Boom exhibition of the Hayward Gallery, London, in April–June 2000. The event, featuring over 30 other artists, was curated by David Toop.
Part of Eno's Quiet Club series of Installations, it combined 12 audio elements with 10 visual light-sculpture generative elements, which was, itself, part of a series of multi-dimensional generative music pieces using asynchronous CD players, carousel projectors and video monitors used in other Installation pieces.
In a conversation with Toop, Eno's view is of a quiet "recovery area" situated within a city area, a theory which he has spoken of since the mid eighties; a "critically functioning public space", a (preferably) darkened room containing large-format screens, lots of CD players and sculptures.
Eno has said of his Installations "I want to make places that feel like music. I want to make things which are like music for the eyes. I want to extend music out into space, into the three dimensions of space, and into colour".[2]
The album contains only one track, which is based upon, and essentially an extended remix / melding of the tracks Ikebukuro, from his 1992 album The Shutov Assembly and Kites II & Kites III from his 1999 album Kite Stories.
The heavily treated, slowed-down vocals of the Kite Stories part are based on a Japanese ghost-story, Onmyo-Ji, by Reiko Otano and was read by Kyoko Inatome, a waitress from his favorite sushi restaurant.[3]
Eno calls this process "composting" .... "...so many processings and reprocessings - it's a bit like making soup from the leftovers of the day before, which in turn was made from leftovers...",[4] "some earlier pieces I worked on became digested by later ones, which in turn became digested again. The technique is like composting: converting what would otherwise have been waste into nourishment".[5]
In that same year, 2000, Eno issued a limited-edition 2-CD album with Reiko Okano, Baku Yumemakura & Peter Schwalm called Music for Onmyo-Ji, the first CD of which consists of Japanese music played on traditional instruments.
Credits
- Music: Brian Eno
- Main Voice: Kyoko Inatome
- Translation: Charmian Norman-Taylor
A "Quiet Club by Brian Eno" Installation was held in the Galleria of Frankfurt Fair and Exhibition Centre, 18 to 24 April 2004, as the contribution of Light+Building 2004 to Luminale. The music was remixed each time by a different musician.[6]
References
- ↑ Mills, Ted (1974-06-01). "Allmusic review". Allmusic.com. Retrieved 2012-08-29.
- ↑ "Brian Eno - Music For Civic Recovery Centre (CD) at Discogs". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2012-08-29.
- ↑ "The News Big Media Corporations Refuse To Cover!". Music.hyperreal.org. Retrieved 2012-08-29.
- ↑ "Sound On Sound: A fervent nostalgia for the future - Part 2". Music.hyperreal.org. Retrieved 2012-08-29.
- ↑ "Ambient 4 - On Land - Brian Eno". Retrieved 2012-08-29.
- ↑ "Brian Eno'S Quiet Club". Bek.no. Archived from the original on 2007-10-30. Retrieved 2012-08-29.
External links
- Images from Civic Recovery Centre by Odd Marthinussen
- Eno Land feature
- Interview; questions from the Sonic Boom Exhibition
- SlashSeconds feature on Quiet Clubs
- Beep discography entry
- Discogs.com entry