Brian Eno's Apollo: For All Mankind Music by Brian Eno, Roger Eno and Daniel Lanois, Performed by Icebreaker and BJ Cole (Part of the Sounds of Space weekend)
Sat 9 Oct 7:30pm at Town Hall
Sat 9 Oct 7:30pm at Town Hall
Brian Eno's Apollo
As part of the THSH Sounds of Space weekend we present a live arrangement of Brian Eno’s seminal album Apollo, performed with NASA footage. Eno, pioneer of ambient music, conceived it for Al Reinert’s 1989 documentary on the Apollo space missions, For All Mankind. He jokingly referred to it as an attempt to write ‘zero gravity country and western,’ since that was the astronauts’ preferred on-board listening and the long reverberations of the pedal steel guitar evoke the vast emptiness of space. Music from the album was also used in the movies 28 Days Later, Traffic, and Trainspotting.
The innovative Icebreaker ensemble and renowned pedal steel guitarist BJ Cole return the music to its original conception, matching the mesmerizing beauty and tranquil mystery of images of the moon and Earth and capturing the humour of the astronauts as they skitter about on the moon’s surface.
‘…with the blown-up, grainy NASA footage and Icebreaker’s diligent musicianship, this “weightlessness” becomes moving and sublime. Apollo’s moonstruck ambience has aged gracefully, and Lee’s spare, fiercely intelligent orchestration gave it the bloom of youth.’ The Guardian *****
6.15pm Pre-concert talk: The Gift of Apollo
Between 1968 and 1972 twenty-four Americans flew to the Moon. What was arguably Mankind’s greatest achievement had taken over 400,000 engineers working round the clock for a decade to accomplish. Over forty years later the full significance of the endeavour is still being debated. As a prelude to the concert, space flight historian, writer and film-maker Dr Christopher Riley reflects on what the Moon landings meant and reminds us of the great legacy of Apollo.
£16.50
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