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Another Day On Earth

Another Day on Earth
Another Day on Earth.jpg
Studio album by Brian Eno
Released 13 June 2005 (UK, Europe)
14 June 2005 (US)
Recorded 2001-2005
at Brian Eno's Wilderness Studio,
Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK
Genre Ambient
Length 46:50
Label Hannibal
Producer Brian Eno
Brian Eno chronology
The Equatorial Stars
(2004, with Robert Fripp)
Another Day on Earth
(2005)
Beyond Even (1992–2006)
(2007, with Robert Fripp)
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 71/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 2.5/5 stars
Spin A−
Entertainment Weekly B+
Robert Christgau (dud)
Pitchfork Media 6.1/10
Mojo 4/5 stars
The Guardian 4/5 stars
Tiny Mix Tapes 4/5 stars
PopMatters 7/10 stars

Another Day on Earth is the twenty-third solo studio album by Brian Eno, released in June 2005 on Hannibal Records.

This is the first Eno album to chiefly contain vocals in more than two decades. Speaking of the album, Eno said, "The first one I've done like that for a very long time...25 years or so". In addition, he explained his current thoughts on lyrics in music; "Song-writing is now actually the most difficult challenge in music," he confessed.

Eno recorded and mixed most of the album on a Mac, using Logic, over a period of four years. He also engineered it himself, "because otherwise I would have had to spend six years in a commercial studio and pay staff, and that would have become too expensive".

"Bottomliners" and "Under" were first worked on about six years previously, on a DA88, the latter songs' drumming being supplied by Willie Green. On the former, and on the ballad "And Then So Clear" he pitch-shifted his voice up an octave, using the gender-changing function on a Digitech Pro Vocalist creating a vocoder-like effect. His studio features a selection of hardware including a Lexicon Jam Man loop sampler and an Eventide H3000 Harmonizer.

The album is actually built around the "And Then So Clear" song. He says "... In one day, actually, I pretty much finished it ... I liked it so much, and I thought, how I am going release this song, and I thought, I have to write some others."

On the title track he repeatedly cut up the main phrase, so that "the listener had little windows on it." Similar "cut-up" methodologies were used for the lyrics of "This," in that he used his computer to generate some of the words.

"Under" is a nearly-identical version of a song that was on the unreleased 1991 album My Squelchy Life, which was released in 2014 as a bonus disc with a reissue of Eno's 1992 Nerve Net.

For the ambientesque "A Long Way Down" Eno manually synchronised his vocals with an out of time keyboard melody, and on "Going Unconscious" he went back to using Koan generative music software for the textural background.

The distinctions between songs and instrumentals which contain vocals are deliberately blurred, particularly on the track "How Many Worlds": "There's just enough voice in there to make you hear it as a song, making it a bluff, a deceit."


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