Brian Eno's pioneering Ambient album from 1978. Music for Airports is so delicate, lovely, and aesthetically moving, that it has been known to give rise to sensations of flying, being enfolded in warm blankets, or watching a vision take place in the heavens. If this sounds like an overstatement, you haven't heard the album. A four part 'piece' performed entirely on synthesizer and piano, Eno's composition finds a referent more in abstract painting (one visualizes bold blocks of colour in warm hues) than in any musical genre. resonant synthesizer notes resembling bells or voices are interwoven with bits of melody, overlapping each other, and fading in and out of an architectural silence.
Essentially, it's the kind of music one might hear in heaven, and Eno manages to present it without the pretense or cheese that typify most of what later became 'new age' music. Music for Airports stands against the prejudices of even the staunchest ambient music critics, partly because Eno did it first, but mostly because this disc is genuine, pure, and achingly beautiful.
Originally recorded in 1978. Mastered DSD at Super Audio Mastering. All titles published by BMG Songs Ltd except 1/1 published by BMG Songs Ltd / EMI Music (Publishing) Ltd. ℗ 2004 Virgin Records Ltd. This label copy information is the subject of copyright protection. All rights reserved. © 2004 Virgin Records Ltd. The Copy Control Logo is a trade mark of IFPI and is used under licence. Virgin Music is a Capitol Music label. Catalogue numbers: 7243 8 66496 2 1, UK: F: Marketed and distributed by EMI. Printed In the EU. This Original Masters release presented as a digipak with a clear plastic cover sleeve and barcode sticker.