eMusic Review 0
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 »
