Brian Eno biography


The following biography was written by Mark Edwards, provided by Opal, Ltd, and made available to In Motion Magazine by Capretta Communications in connection with the Imagination Conference in San Francisco, June 8, 1996.



What Eno brings to all his work is an ability to take ideas from one area of life and apply them to another. Thus, his ambient music resulted from applying ideas that were floating around the classical world and applying them to new instruments and recording technology.

Similarly his production technique is more akin to the way a management consultant works than the way a conventional record producer works; that is, rather than sit behind a mixing desk for months on end, Eno likes to pop in regularly, but only occasionally, enough to steer the project, but not so much that he can't hear the music with a fresh pair of ears.

Brian Eno is not, as most people seem to believe, some kind of a boffin. He has very little interest in new technology for its own sake, preferring technology that you can get a result out of now, this minute, without studying the manual.

Brian Eno is a patron of War Child. In addition to hosting several fund-raising events in which he cajoled his famous collaborators into creating art and fashion to auction for charity (Little Pieces from Big Stars and Pagan Fun Wear), he performed on and executive produced the Help benefit album and sang with Bono, The Edge and Pavarotti at 1995's Modena Festival to benefit War Child.

-- Mark Edwards, 1996



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