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BBC Documentary on Brian Eno

Just watch it and be inspired :)

Comments

  • Learned a couple of things and felt inspired to just let some tones flow:

  • Ta, I love the BBC music docs, will watch this later.

  • edited April 2017
    The user and all related content has been deleted.
  • Is this going to be on the telly?

  • @Max23 said:
    Nothing new in there.
    Random, probability, generative.
    The interviewer is awful, clueless and easy to impress.

    Yeh, got my hopes up unnecessarily, it's like Brain One thinks that he invented chopping a beat up.

  • edited April 2017
    The user and all related content has been deleted.
  • Yeh, got my hopes up unnecessarily, it's like Brain One thinks that he invented chopping a beat up.

    It does sound like beat chopping but Eno is using Logic's scripter to add probability etc to the drummer so it's not exactly chopping up a beat. It seemed to me that Eno was trying show what happens with his slower ambient pieces by illustrating it with a drum loop that changes more often. Everything happens more slowly with the ambient stuff so you don't notice it as much.

  • @yowza said:

    Yeh, got my hopes up unnecessarily, it's like Brain One thinks that he invented chopping a beat up.

    It does sound like beat chopping but Eno is using Logic's scripter to add probability etc to the drummer so it's not exactly chopping up a beat. It seemed to me that Eno was trying show what happens with his slower ambient pieces by illustrating it with a drum loop that changes more often. Everything happens more slowly with the ambient stuff so you don't notice it as much.

    Yeh, I get that pseudo-random generative stuff is clever but others have done it before ... as @Max23 said the interviewer is clueless and just led Brain into a stock answer as to whether anyone else is doing this.

    I'm going to find a proper BBC music doco ... it's Friday night, it's time.

    I might even delve into my archive of Rock Family Trees episodes ...

  • Thanks for the post. Yes, its true, not much new. It's this super dumbed down world of the BBC (and other high profile media companies), its hard to tolerate. I think the word to describe the awful interviewer is 'pandering'.
    It was interesting seeing how he works and his card system is very cool.
    Thanks @yowza, I was wondering if it was Garageband but of course it's Logic. I guess you can do the same in Ableton too. This is the type of thing that will be available in ab3 midi apps very soon. Exciting times.

  • edited April 2017

    I do like some of his stuff - Evening Star is lovely, but really, watching this is the opposite of inspiring for me.

  • edited April 2017

    Love quite a bit of Eno's work and happy he's still creating. Thanks for sharing the video. I see Brian will be 70 years old in May. Hopefully we'll all still be creatives when we reach such a ripe old age.

  • @echoopera said:
    Learned a couple of things and felt inspired to just let some tones flow:

    I like what's going on here. Personally, I think it'd be cool if the notes you were playing on the main (lead?) synth were played twice or even four times as slowly.

    Anyway, thanks for the listen, glad I didnt get sucked into that documentary

  • @oat_phipps said:

    @echoopera said:
    Learned a couple of things and felt inspired to just let some tones flow:

    I like what's going on here. Personally, I think it'd be cool if the notes you were playing on the main (lead?) synth were played twice or even four times as slowly.

    Anyway, thanks for the listen, glad I didnt get sucked into that documentary

    Nice piece! Kinda cross between Eno and Vangelis.

  • edited April 2017

    Choose love or choose hate.

    It's that simple.

    One leads to inspiration.

    The other leads to desperation.

    Life is too short

    <3 o:)

  • Odd, I think the originally linked vid was only 4 minutes or so, will look at the full length version later.

  • What inspires me most of all about Eno these days, is that he's still creating stuff, still working on projects at a fairly ripe old age.

    As has been said, he repeats himself a lot in interviews, but that's as much the fault of fawning journos (like this one) asking the same old questions, as Brian himself.

  • @echoopera said:
    Choose love or choose hate.
    It's that simple.

    I would retort that polarisation only seeks to over-simplify. The good side of this, of course, is that people can ignore the complexity of the situation and get on with joining one of the two sides and throw insults at the other. Something we are very clever at doing.

  • What I really enjoyed about the piece was some insight into his Probability process. It provoked me to open Ableton Live to try and set up a randomization routine to evoke some new patterns in my setup.

    As with all things...truth and possibility opens when we allow ourselves to listen, observe and analyze our experiences.

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