Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks
Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates {{safesubst:#invoke:Unsubst-infobox||$params=italic_title,name,type,longtype,artist,cover,border,alt,caption,released,recorded,venue,studio,genre,length,language,label,director,producer,compiler,chronology,prev_title,prev_year,year,next_title,next_year,misc|$extra=italic_title,longtype,border,caption,language,director,compiler,chronology,year,misc|$aliases=italic title>italic_title,Italic title>italic_title,Name>name,Type>type,image>cover,Cover>cover,Border>border,Alt>alt,Caption>caption,Longtype>longtype,Artist>artist,Released>released,Recorded>recorded,Venue>venue,Studio>studio,Genre>genre,Length>length,Language>language,Label>label,Director>director,Producer>producer,Compiler>compiler,Chronology>chronology,Misc>misc|$flags=override|$B={{#ifeq:{{#invoke:Is infobox in lead|main|[Ii]nfobox [Aa]lbum}}|true|{{#if:Template:Has short description | |Template:Short description|noreplace}}}}{{#invoke:Infobox|infobox}}Template:Template otherTemplate:Category handlerTemplate:Main other{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:Infobox album with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y|italic_title |type |name |image |cover |border |alt |caption |longtype |artist |released |recorded |venue |studio |genre |length |language |label |director |producer |compiler |prev_title|prev_year|next_title|next_year|chronology|year|misc}}{{#if:{{#invoke:String|match|error_category=Music infoboxes with Module:String errors|A|1=Ambient 4: On Land1982Music for Films Volume 21983studioApollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracksbrianenoapollo.jpgBrian Eno with Daniel Lanois & Roger EnoTemplate:Start date<ref name=MWJul83/><ref name=CBAug83/>1981–1982Grant Avenue Studio, Hamilton, Ontario, CanadaAmbientTemplate:DurationEGBrian Eno, Daniel LanoisBrian Enox|2=</?t[drh][ >]|nomatch=}}|Template:Main other}}Template:Main other}} Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks is a studio album by the British musician and producer Brian Eno, the Canadian producer Daniel Lanois, and the composer Roger Eno, who is Brian Eno's brother. It was released on 29 July 1983 through EG Records.<ref name=MWJul83/><ref name=CBAug83/> The music was originally written for a documentary film about the Apollo program, For All Mankind, though the film was not released until 1989.<ref name=":0" /> The music was written and performed by the trio.
Music from the album has appeared in the films 28 Days Later, Traffic, and Trainspotting, whose soundtrack sold approximately four million copies.<ref name="hyperreal-indie">Template:Cite news</ref> Two of the songs from the album, "Silver Morning" and "Deep Blue Day", were issued as a 7" single on EG Records.
OverviewEdit
The music was originally composed in 1983 for a documentary film, For All Mankind, that was released in 1989.
In the liner notes, Eno describes his experience of watching the Apollo 11 landing in 1969 and his sense that the strangeness of the event was compromised by the low quality of the television transmission and an excess of journalists' commentary. He thus wished to avoid the melodramatic and uptempo way the event was presented. Template:Music ratings The album was released on 29 July 1983 by EG Records.<ref name=MWJul83>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=CBAug83>Template:Cite news</ref> A release in the US followed in September 1983.<ref name=BBSep83>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
The tracks from the album that remain on the final edit of the film are:
- "Always Returning"
- "Drift"
- "Silver Morning"
- "Stars"
- "Under Stars"
- "The Secret Place"
- "An Ending (Ascent)"
The newer tracks from the film that are not on the album (but appear on Music for Films III) are:
- "Sirens" (Brian Eno, Daniel Lanois)
- "Theme for 'Opera'" (Brian Eno, Roger Eno)
- "Fleeting Smile" (Roger Eno)
- "Tension Block" (Daniel Lanois)
- "Asian River" (Brian Eno)
- "Quixote" (Roger Eno)
- "4-Minute Warning" (John Paul Jones)
- "For Her Atoms" (Lydia Kavina (Theremin), Misha Malin)
On 19 July 2019, in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon landing, a special version of the album was released, featuring the remastered original, as well as an accompanying album of 11 new instrumental compositions by Brian Eno, Roger Eno & Daniel Lanois that reimagine the soundtrack to For All Mankind.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Album cover photographEdit
The orbital photograph of the lunar surface is a hand held Hasselblad-camera photograph made during the Apollo 17 mission in December 1972. It shows a closeup view of the most southern section of Mare Serenitatis on the eastern part of the Moon's near side. Also visible are Promontorium Archerusia (the oblong system of hills), Brackett (the shallow crater), Dorsum Nicol (the wrinkle ridge), Rimae Plinius (the three grooves), and the northern part of the rim of the pronounced crater Plinius. On the album cover, the upper margin of the orbital Hasselblad photograph is rotated 90 degrees to the right. Also visible on the cover photograph is the brightness of Mare Serenitatis to the north (rightward) of the shallow crater Brackett and Rimae Plinius. When observed through a telescope, this region shows a subtle yellowish or tannish grey color. The region to the south (leftward) of Mare Serenitatis shows a subtle bluish grey, which is the overall color of Mare Tranquillitatis. On the cover these subtle real colors are not reproduced, only the abrupt change of brightness is visible.
Hasselblad photograph AS17-150-23069 is also seen as Figure 59 in Part 1 of Chapter 4 (The Maria) in NASA SP-362: Apollo Over The Moon, a view from orbit.<ref>NASA SP-362: Apollo Over The Moon, a view from orbit, Chapter 4: The Maria (Part 1), Figure 59: Southern part of Mare Serenitatis</ref>
Small photographEdit
The small photograph on the back side of the LP cover is AS14-73-10116,<ref>AS14-73-10116 in the LPI's Apollo Image Atlas</ref> made during the Apollo 14 mission in February 1971. It shows small sections of the walled plains Fra Mauro and Bonpland. The grooves on the floors of both walled plains are known as Rimae Parry. The distinct and largest one of the small bowl shaped craters in this photograph is Fra Mauro F.
MusicEdit
The album contains a variety of styles. "Under Stars", "The Secret Place", "Matta", "Signals", "Under Stars II", and "Stars" are all dark, complicated textures similar to those on Eno's previous album Ambient 4: On Land. "An Ending (Ascent)", "Drift", and "Always Returning" are smoother electronic pieces. "Silver Morning", "Deep Blue Day", and "Weightless" are country-inspired ambient pieces featuring Daniel Lanois on pedal steel guitar.
Country music, which Eno listened to as a child in Woodbridge on American armed forces radio, was used to "give the impression of weightless space."<ref name=SOS>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
"Under Stars" is a recurring theme in the album, first appearing as an ambient electronic bed behind a treated guitar. "Under Stars II" is the same composition, but with different effects and treatments. "Stars" is the pure background texture without the guitar.
The track "An Ending (Ascent)" was sampled in the song "Hear Me Out" by the group Frou Frou, in "Forgive" by British producer Burial, in "Ascent" by Michael Dow, a London electronic music producer, and in "The Ending" by British DJ Graham Gold. It has also been used in several films, such as Traffic and 28 Days Later, and in the memorial wall section of the London Olympiad opening.
Many of the tracks on the album were recorded with soft "attacks" of each note, then played backwards, with multiple heavy echoes and reverb added in both directions to merge the notes into one long flowing sound with each note greatly overlapping each adjacent note, producing the "floating" effects that Eno desired.
Daniel Lanois stated in an interview with Noisey about the album that the "foundation" of the song "Deep Blue Day" was a Suzuki Omnichord that was heavily slowed down from the original tempo that it was recorded at. In an interview with Gearspace, Lanois has also mentioned that a Yamaha CS-80 synthesizer, a Strat guitar, and a Sho-Bud steel guitar were used in the song.<ref>Gearspace: Interview with Daniel Lanois</ref> Eno once stated regarding the soundtrack: "...so many processings and reprocessings – it's a bit like making soup from the leftovers of the day before, which in turn was made from leftovers..."<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Eno said, ".... Well, I love that music anyway .... what I find impressive about that music is that it's very concerned with space in a funny way. Its sound is the sound of a mythical space, the mythical American frontier space that doesn’t really exist anymore. That's why on Apollo I thought it very appropriate, because it's very much like 'space music' — it has all the connotations of pioneering, of the American myth of the brave individual...."<ref name=SOS/>
Live versionEdit
In the summer of 2009 a live version of the album was performed at two concerts in the IMAX cinema of London's Science Museum and in an arrangement by South Korean composer Woojun Lee for the ensemble Icebreaker with featured artist B J Cole on pedal steel guitar. The album was performed in its entirety, with the tracks in a different order, to a silent and edited version of For All Mankind, closer to the original conception than the released version of the film. A revised version was performed twice at the 2010 Brighton Festival, where Eno was guest artistic director, before subsequent touring in the UK, Ireland and mainland Europe.
Due to the heavily processed nature of the studio-based sound on the original tracks, an exact reproduction would have been impossible to reproduce in a live context, so Woojun Lee chose to apply a free interpretation of the sound world and to make an impression of the original tracks through use of Icebreaker's instrumental resources.
The performances from Brighton were recorded and an album of the live interpretation was released in June 2012.
Track listingEdit
PersonnelEdit
- Musicians: Brian Eno, Daniel Lanois, Roger Eno
- Cover art by Russell Mills
- Mastered by Greg Calbi at Sterling Sound
- 2019 remaster by Miles Showell at Abbey Road
VersionsEdit
Country | Release date | Music label | Media | Catalogue number | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Netherlands | 1983 | Editions EG | LP | 813 535-1 | |
US | 1983 | EG Records | LP | EGLP 53 | |
US | 1983 | Caroline | CD | 0 1704-61514-2 9 | |
UK | 1983 | Virgin | CD | 0777 7 86778 2 6 | |
UK | 1986 | EG Records | CD | EGCD 53 | |
UK | 2005 | Virgin | CD | 7243 5 63647 2 1 | |
Europe | 2005 | Virgin | CD | ENOCD 10 | Remastered |
US | 1983 | Editions EG | 11 x LP | EGBS 2 | Working Backwards 1983–1973 (Box set) |
ChartsEdit
Template:Album chartTemplate:Album chartTemplate:Album chartTemplate:Album chartTemplate:Album chartTemplate:Album chartTemplate:Album chartTemplate:Album chartChart (1983) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
New Zealand Albums Chart<ref name="rianz">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation | CitationClass=web
}}</ref> |
48 |
Chart (2019) | Peak position |
CertificationsEdit
Template:Certification Table Top Template:Certification Table Entry Template:Certification Table Bottom
Uses in other mediaEdit
Template:More citations needed section
- "An Ending (Ascent)":
- Concert – Coldplay Live at the Royal Albert Hall (2014), intro music<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- TV – London 2012 opening ceremony, during a sequence where a collection of photographs of lost loved ones of stadium guests and terrorism victims was shown
- TV – James May on the Moon, opening sequence
- TV – Chris Morris's surreal TV comedy series Jam
- TV – American drama Nip/Tuck, in numerous episodes
- TV – Top Gear (Series 13 Episode 7), during the final sequence of the series and closing credits as Jeremy Clarkson drives the Aston Martin Vantage V12
- TV advertisement – for Cancer Research UK<ref name="YouTube">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- TV advertisement – for BMW<ref name="campaignlive">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- TV – BBC 9/11 10th anniversary
- TV – BBC Doctor Who Night 1999 ('How To Live Forever' segment)
- Film soundtrack – Traffic (2000)
- Film soundtrack – Ghosts of Cité Soleil (2006)
- Film soundtrack – 28 Days Later (2002)
- Film soundtrack – Clean (2004)
- Film soundtrack – Beatriz at Dinner (2017)
- Museum exhibit – The National WWII Museum, New Orleans, LA
- "Deep Blue Day":
- Film soundtrack – Trainspotting
- TV – Chris Morris's surreal TV comedy series Jam
- "Always Returning":
- Film soundtrack – Me and Earl and the Dying Girl.<ref name="WhatSong">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Film soundtrack – Love.
- "Weightless":
- Film soundtrack – Static.
- "The Secret Place":
- Film soundtrack – The Lovely Bones.