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Another Green World

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Another Green World album cover
01
Sky Saw (2004 Digital Remaster)
3:25
$1.29
02
Over Fire Island (2004 Digital Remaster)
1:49
$1.29
03
St Elmo's Fire (2004 Digital Remaster)
2:56
$1.29
04
In Dark Trees (2004 Digital Remaster)
2:30
$1.29
05
The Big Ship (2004 Digital Remaster)
3:01
$1.29
06
I'll Come Running (2004 Digital Remaster)
3:48
$1.29
07
Another Green World (2004 Digital Remaster)
1:28
$1.29
08
Sombre Reptiles (2004 Digital Remaster)
2:26
$1.29
09
Little Fishes (2004 Digital Remaster)
1:30
$1.29
10
Golden Hours (2004 Digital Remaster)
4:01
$1.29
11
Becalmed (2004 Digital Remaster)
3:56
$1.29
12
Zawinul/Lava (2004 Digital Remaster)
3:00
$1.29
13
Everything Merges With The Night (2004 Digital Remaster)
3:59
$1.29
14
Spirits Drifting (2004 Digital Remaster)
2:44
$1.29
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 40:33

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eMusic Review 0

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Philip Sherburne

eMusic Contributor

Philip Sherburne has been writing about music in print and online since the late '90s, with a focus on electronic music (for dancing and otherwise). A native of...more »

05.18.11
The original chillwave
2004 | Label: CAROLINE ASTRALWERKS - CAT

More even than its predecessor, Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy), Another Green World sounds like a collage rather than a rock record; there's nothing to suggest that the slouching funk of "Sky Funk" and the aquatic "Little Fishes" necessarily came from the same ensemble or even the same room. That's not to suggest that it's incoherent, but its cohesion takes place at a higher level than mere instrumentation or atmosphere.

Eno, a studio savant yet an untutored musician, surrounded himself with a number of talented colleagues, including the Velvet Underground's John Cale and several veterans of his previous albums — Paul Rudolf, Brian Turrington, Phil Collins, Robert Fripp. Rhett Davies, who had begun his engineering career on Taking Tiger Mountain, also returned. (The Oblique Strategies also played a key role, earning their first album credit.) But the studio is the real star, gathering together disparate strands of guitar, piano, synthesizer, drum machine and fretless bass into configurations that highlight the malleable nature of electronic sound. Notably, Eno went into the studio with no demos; only after four days of dead ends did songs begin coalescing.

The record swings, pendulum-like, between flickering incidental sketches — Erik Satie as re-engineered by the… read more »

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Stellar Second Sides

EMUSIC-00948B62

Another album on which the B-side just enters this other-wordly place of lush, gorgeous perfection (see also Before and After Science, Spiritualized's Lazer Guided Melodies). The instrumentals are of course beautiful, but don't sleep on the songs with lyrics either, especially "Golden Hours" and "Everything Merges with the Night."

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his best "rock" album

dougm

ok, its not 4x4 rock and its not overtly complex but the tunes are quite memorable. i love the ballad "i'l coming running to you", the fripp smoker on "st. elmos fire" and for ambient music fans, i give you "the big ship"

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if you like it you'll love it

flatfive

There's really nothing else like this, or at least there wasn't when it came out in the mid-70s. It's stark, atmospheric, sometime's a little scary. There's some of the sound of Eno's previous two albums here, but more along the lines of track 1, Sky Saw.

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eMusic Features

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Six Degrees of Brian Eno’s Another Green World

By Richard Gehr, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

They Say All Music Guide

A universally acknowledged masterpiece, Another Green World represents a departure from song structure and toward a more ethereal, minimalistic approach to sound. Despite the stripped-down arrangements, the album’s sumptuous tone quality reflects Eno’s growing virtuosity at handling the recording studio as an instrument in itself (à la Brian Wilson). There are a few pop songs scattered here and there (“St. Elmo’s Fire,” “I’ll Come Running,” “Golden Hours”), but most of the album consists of deliberately paced instrumentals that, while often closer to ambient music than pop, are both melodic and rhythmic; many, like “Sky Saw,” “In Dark Trees,” and “Little Fishes,” are highly imagistic, like paintings done in sound that actually resemble their titles. Lyrics are infrequent, but when they do pop up, they follow the free-associative style of albums past; this time, though, the humor seems less bizarre than gently whimsical and addled, fitting perfectly into the dreamlike mood of the rest of the album. Most of Another Green World is like experiencing a soothing, dream-filled slumber while awake, and even if some of the pieces have dark or threatening qualities, the moments of unease are temporary, like a passing nightmare whose feeling lingers briefly upon waking but whose content is forgotten. Unlike some of his later, full-fledged ambient work, Eno’s gift for melodicism and tight focus here keep the entirety of the album in the forefront of the listener’s consciousness, making it the perfect introduction to his achievements even for those who find ambient music difficult to enjoy. – Steve Huey

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