LP - Cluster & Eno - Cluster & Eno - Reissue
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BACK IN PRINT!!!!!!
- 2016 re-release of Bureau B's 2009 reissue of the first 1977 collaborative release by Brian Eno and Cluster (Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius).
- This record has been credited with inventing ambient music.
- Guest musicians on the album included Can bassist Holger Czukay and Asmus Tietchens on synthesizer.
- Produced by Conny Plank.
- Liner notes by Asmus Tietchens.
- File under: ambient/electronic music history/kosmische musik/new age/avant-garde.
- For fans of: Roedelius, Tangerine Dream, Harmonia, Neu!, etc.
- "Brian Eno's first collaboration with Cluster, the best of this album's instrumental pieces are too emotionally rich to waste as mere background music, evoking feelings of hesitancy and regret that rescue the music from mere vapid prettiness." --All Music Guide
- "Overall, the music on Cluster and Eno seems to reflect perceptions of -- and connections with -- nature: water and sky; landscape and countryside. Most importantly, this somewhat unassuming record offers a warm look back into a brave new era, when analog sythesizers and human pop musicians got together to explore the manifold and fecund possibilities of their interactions." --Dusted
-Bureau B
031201512
- 2016 re-release of Bureau B's 2009 reissue of the first 1977 collaborative release by Brian Eno and Cluster (Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius).
- This record has been credited with inventing ambient music.
- Guest musicians on the album included Can bassist Holger Czukay and Asmus Tietchens on synthesizer.
- Produced by Conny Plank.
- Liner notes by Asmus Tietchens.
- File under: ambient/electronic music history/kosmische musik/new age/avant-garde.
- For fans of: Roedelius, Tangerine Dream, Harmonia, Neu!, etc.
- "Brian Eno's first collaboration with Cluster, the best of this album's instrumental pieces are too emotionally rich to waste as mere background music, evoking feelings of hesitancy and regret that rescue the music from mere vapid prettiness." --All Music Guide
- "Overall, the music on Cluster and Eno seems to reflect perceptions of -- and connections with -- nature: water and sky; landscape and countryside. Most importantly, this somewhat unassuming record offers a warm look back into a brave new era, when analog sythesizers and human pop musicians got together to explore the manifold and fecund possibilities of their interactions." --Dusted
-Bureau B
031201512
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