Brian Eno's Obscure label
Guzzo
8,611 Posts
I recent;ly found an LP on this label by a dude named Gavin Bryars. I don't want this to come off lightly but this may very well be one of the most beautiful pieces of music I have ever heard! The LP is made up of two 20+ minute compositions (each one taking up an entire side of the rackord). The track "Jesus Blood Never Failed Me Yet" is so moving that attempting to describe it would be pointless cause no matter what I couln't praise its beauty enough.
I found a discography online and I'm wondering if anyone has any other releases on this label and if so if they could break down what they sound like.
Obscure No.1
Gavin Bryars, "The Sinking of the Titanic", 1975.
Obscure No.2
Christopher Hobbs, John Adams, and Gavin Bryars, "Ensemble
Pieces", 1975. (some vocals by Eno)
Obscure No.3
Brian Eno, "Discreet Music", 1975.
Obscure No.4
David Toop and Max Eastley, "New and Rediscovered Musical
Instruments", 1975.
Obscure No.5
Jan Steele and John Cage, "Voices and Instruments', 1976.
Obscure No.6
Michael Nyman, "Decay Music", 1976.
Obscure No.7
Penguin Cafe Orchestra, "Music from the Penguin Cafe", 1976.
Obscure No.8
John White and Gavin Bryars, "Machine Music", 1978. (bottle
and electric guitars by Eno)
Obscure No.9
Tom Phillips, Gavin Bryars and Fred Orton, "Irma - An Opera",
1978.
Obscure No.10
Harold Budd, "The Pavillion of Dreams", 1978.
I found a discography online and I'm wondering if anyone has any other releases on this label and if so if they could break down what they sound like.
Obscure No.1
Gavin Bryars, "The Sinking of the Titanic", 1975.
Obscure No.2
Christopher Hobbs, John Adams, and Gavin Bryars, "Ensemble
Pieces", 1975. (some vocals by Eno)
Obscure No.3
Brian Eno, "Discreet Music", 1975.
Obscure No.4
David Toop and Max Eastley, "New and Rediscovered Musical
Instruments", 1975.
Obscure No.5
Jan Steele and John Cage, "Voices and Instruments', 1976.
Obscure No.6
Michael Nyman, "Decay Music", 1976.
Obscure No.7
Penguin Cafe Orchestra, "Music from the Penguin Cafe", 1976.
Obscure No.8
John White and Gavin Bryars, "Machine Music", 1978. (bottle
and electric guitars by Eno)
Obscure No.9
Tom Phillips, Gavin Bryars and Fred Orton, "Irma - An Opera",
1978.
Obscure No.10
Harold Budd, "The Pavillion of Dreams", 1978.
Comments
I just double checked and Gavin Bryars released 2 versions of this.
the original from '75 uses a homeless man to sing the words you hear looped.
about 15 years later he rerecorded the track with Tom Waits singing the part.
but yes this track will melt your skull
Are you going to start championing "modern experimentation" now?
yup
Obscure No.3
Brian Eno, "Discreet Music", 1975.
Classic ambient stuff...
Obscure No.4
David Toop and Max Eastley, "New and Rediscovered Musical
Instruments", 1975.
Quite good and interesting...they made their own instruments and twiddle around on em..
Obscure No.5
Jan Steele and John Cage, "Voices and Instruments', 1976.
hmm, not too blown away by this - maybe need to relisten.
Obscure No.6
Michael Nyman, "Decay Music", 1976.
Very good minimalist stuff with decaying tones.
Obscure No.7
Penguin Cafe Orchestra, "Music from the Penguin Cafe", 1976.
Good but maybe an acquired taste - they do very polite sounding 'palm court music'. It might give you the 'eh?' reaction at first...
Obscure No.8
John White and Gavin Bryars, "Machine Music", 1978. (bottle
and electric guitars by Eno)
Very good - I like the track with Derek Bailey and Brian Eno playing guitar together!
Obscure No.10
Harold Budd, "The Pavillion of Dreams", 1978.
Yes - awesome. Marion Brown plays on it...
I've spoken to you before about my love of Godspeed You black emperor and like groups and I seriously see this as the blueprint from which all that music was created. D*****s, if you know of more stuff like this you need to let me hear it.
I'm talking some serious Crenshaw Ave bloodshit get down
Guzzo's hypberbole overload to end all hyperbole overloads, Catchdubs talking like an Englishman, Young Phoniks' zing meter working at full capacity, and a very left of center musical description by BeardedD...
Add a post giving out the address of a breaks/electro houseparty in Austin and we may have the thread of the millennium on our hands.
this album is dope.
YES!
In 1971, when I lived in London, I was working with a friend, Alan Power, on a film about people living rough in the area around Elephant and Castle and Waterloo Station. In the course of being filmed, some people broke into drunken song - sometimes bits of opera, sometimes sentimental ballads - and one, who in fact did not drink, sang a religious song "Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet". This was not ultimately used in the film and I was given all the unused sections of tape, including this one.
When I played it at home, I found that his singing was in tune with my piano, and I improvised a simple accompaniment. I noticed, too, that the first section of the song - 13 bars in length - formed an effective loop which repeated in a slightly unpredictable way. I took the tape loop to Leicester, where I was working in the Fine Art Department, and copied the loop onto a continuous reel of tape, thinking about perhaps adding an orchestrated accompaniment to this. The door of the recording room opened on to one of the large painting studios and I left the tape copying, with the door open, while I went to have a cup of coffee. When I came back I found the normally lively room unnaturally subdued. People were moving about much more slowly than usual and a few were sitting alone, quietly weeping.
I was puzzled until I realised that the tape was still playing and that they had been overcome by the old man's singing. This convinced me of the emotional power of the music and of the possibilities offered by adding a simple, though gradually evolving, orchestral accompaniment that respected the tramp's nobility and simple faith. Although he died before he could hear what I had done with his singing, the piece remains as an eloquent, but understated testimony to his spirit and optimism.
Gavin Bryars
by the way, if you enjoy this I'd say it might be time to delve into *gasp* classical music[/b] !
the harold budd album is good. not the most mindblowing ambient album ever but still nice. lots of piano. some female vocals. bit of harp. first track is keys and borderline cheese sax.
the sinking of titanic is fucking incredible but you seem to know that.
i've heard a couple of others but they seem to blend in. i think the michael nyman was dead good.
In terms of newer stuff, this album is slightly similar to what you posted and I personally think it's one of the best albums of last year:
There are a few other groups in the GS!YBE vein I can think of if you're interested too.