Small Craft On A Milk Sea

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Small Craft On A Milk Sea album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 49:30

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Flimsy

AG

Eno Revisits the sound of The Drop amongst other familiar soundscapes withoug adding anything of substance to what he's already done. Overall, it's a pretty dissapointing follow-up to Another Day on Earth or his previous ambient record Drawn From Life. In Eno's defense, this probably made an effective non-intrusive movie soundtrack (its original intention). The filmmakers were probably wrong to shelve this but when that happened Eno should have just moved on or tried to work it into another film. It's just not very interesting as a stand-alone album.

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It's Just OK.

scottphillips

I'm a fan from the beginning. If there's an Brian Eno release I don't have I'd be surprised. With that said, this release is just okay. In the early years when Eno was one of only the artists making ambient music this record would probably be considered a gem. The problem is, today Eno has a lot of competition. There are a ton of young talented electronic artists out there making great records. The sounds many of these guys are creating makes this record seem rather passe. Another problem I have with this record is that it seems to have an identity crisis. The first three tracks are okay ambient tracks but, 4 through 10 are just noisy experiments that should have been left in the can. Track 11 resumes the quieter feel of the first tracks but by track 17 he's back into the noise. And it's not good noise either. I say skip this one and go for folks like Tim Hecker, Biosphere, krill.minima, Rapoon, Loscil, Marsen Jules, Susumu Yokota or just about anybody on Kompakt's Pop Ambient series.

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Eno Punk?

gertiestn

I've listened to the samples & downloaded this one, but I gotta say: eMusic, when I think of Brian Eno, Alternative Punk doesn't come to mind. I've waited forever to find Eno on eMusic; little did I expect to find him in this genre.

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They Say All Music Guide

Brian Eno’s best recordings are timeless. Even his great recordings are practically timeless. His recordings after the ’80s, however, gradually acquired a different description: dated. Released in 1992, Nerve Net attempted to cross both his ambient and pop records of the ’70s with faddish techno, while The Drop invoked his ambient period to a sterilizing effect. (Even ambient records need some ambience.) His work of the 2000s was heavily collaborational, fortunately showing him to be still curious about the varieties of musical expression — beyond what he’s been able to display while producing for U2 and Coldplay. Small Craft on a Milk Sea regains the timeless, ageless feel of his best ambient work. It stands as his first record for Warp, a label that has long worshiped at the altar of headphone electronica, although much of this album is the fruit of sessions originally recorded (but declined) for the Lovely Bones soundtrack; some of it was written and recorded by Eno and frequent collaborator Leo Abrahams while they were touring Everything That Happens Will Happen Today, Eno’s 2008 pop album with David Byrne. Warp has been known for quality control for over 20 years, and this one is no different — it’s the best Eno record in 20 years (although that’s not saying much). The opener, “Emerald and Lime,” is a piece of bright ambience — as close to a Starbucks soundtrack as a stereotypical Eno work can get. The title track has the dark textures of the later ambient works (Ambient 4: On Land), while the middle section has nods to contemporary electronic music — “Flint March” is pummeling, percussive techno, and the next track, “Horse,” also indulges — then it’s back to opaque, spacious ambience with “Calcium Needles” and “Emerald and Stone.” Here too, some tracks have the earthy bass of Ambient 4: On Land, others the formless but inviting void of Discreet Music, still others the heart-stopping piano isolationism of the original Ambient 1: Music for Airports. Eno may be trading on his earlier developments in ambience to a small degree, but Small Craft on a Milk Sea is a good and proper balance of curiosity and expression. – John Bush

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