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London’s Heathrow Airport is hoping to get travelers into the holiday mood this summer with a soundtrack of real-life jet ...
Brian Eno’s first book in nearly three decades, co-written with artist Bette Adriaanse, offers a playful exploration of the ...
Titled Luminal and Lateral, each of these new albums from Brian Eno & Beatie Wolfe creates its own lush, immersive ambient ...
Gary Hustwit‘s documentary “Eno” on music pioneer Brian Eno premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, where it played six times and no audience saw the exactly the same film. “Eno” is the ...
Eventually, Eno agreed to allow the director, Rob Nilsson, to film only his hands and feet. “Great cat and mouse game,” Nilsson said in an email. “I think Brian made the film more ...
This month, a new documentary about Brian Eno is being released. As befits its subject, Gary Hustwit's Eno challenges its own form: for each screening, the filmmakers algorithmically assemble a ...
“Eno” documentary on musician Brian Eno uses generative technology so no two showings of the film are the same. The film will show at the Kentucky Theatre.
NPR's Scott Simon talks with documentarian Gary Hustwit about his new film "Eno" about Brian Eno, the legendary musician who produced David Bowie, U2, Talking Heads and was a member of Roxy Music.
Because Eno is also a generative work of art all on its own, a documentary that, thanks to the magic of a technology called Brain One (an anagram of “Brian Eno”), changes each time it is screened.
Brian Eno might be best known for his pioneering ambient oeuvre, but it turns out that beneath the calm exterior, the man has been battling a terrifying inner demon since the '90s.
The doc 'Eno,' about musician Brian Eno, uses "generative" technology to change the narrative every viewing, but it's not artificial intelligence.
Brian Eno has taken many musical forms: producer, technologist, glam-rock star. Eno, the new documentary about the musician, also takes many forms, though more literally.Each showing of the movie ...