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Cluster & Eno

Cluster & Eno
Cluster & Eno.jpg
Studio album by Cluster and Brian Eno
Released 1977
Recorded June 1977
Studio Conny's Studio, Cologne, Germany
Genre Ambient
Length 36:10
Label Sky
Producer Conny Plank, Cluster
Cluster chronology
Sowiesoso
(1976)Sowiesoso1976
Cluster & Eno
(1977)
After the Heat
(Eno, Moebius, Roedelius)
(1978)After the Heat1978
Brian Eno chronology
Discreet Music
(1975) Discreet Music1975
Cluster & Eno
(1977) Cluster & Eno1977
Before and after Science
(1977) Before and after Science1977
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars
Spin 6/10 stars
Pitchfork Media (8.7/10)

Cluster & Eno is a collaborative album by the German electronic music group Cluster and English ambient musician Brian Eno. The style of this album is a collection of gentle melodies: a mixture of Eno’s ambient sensibilities and Cluster's avant-garde style.

In June 1977, the duo of Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius joined with Brian Eno for recording sessions at Conny Plank's studio. The first release from those sessions on Sky Records was Cluster & Eno. Guest musicians on the album included Can bassist Holger Czukay and Asmus Tietchens on synthesizer. The association with Eno, already well known for involvement with pop acts like Roxy Music, brought Cluster a much wider audience than previous albums and international attention.

Sky records issued the album on CD in 1989, shuffling the running order. The American Gyroscope label reissued Cluster & Eno on CD in 1996. The album was also reissued in the United States by the San Francisco-based Water label in 2005.

Bryan Reesman, in his editorial review for Amazon.com, writes, in part:

"Meshing Cluster's affinity for loops and repetition and Eno's penchant for processing sounds, the trio proves that ambient music does not merely consist of drawn-out drones and insipid keyboard tapestries. Certainly many of these nine tracks play off of sustained sounds and atmospheres, but their shorter running times make them more digestible, as does their variety of moods and textures. Highlights include the angelic atmosphere of "Für Luise," the classically inspired piano interlude "Mit Samaen," and the Indian-influenced "One," a trippy progenitor of ethnoambient music, ripe with sitar drones, guitar noises, and exotic percussion that features contributions from Okko Becker and Asmus Tietchens."


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