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Pick of the Day: ‘Here Come The Warm Jets’ by Brian Eno (1973)

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Certain albums are most fun when the volume knob is cranked to 11, but others demand to be maxed out in order to absorb their many textures, layers and nuances. Brian Enoā€™s first solo album, 1973ā€™s Here Come The Warm Jets, is packed to the brim with masterful soundscapes. If it doesnā€™t feel like a fleet of F-16s has flown through your living room by the LPā€™s end, chances are the volume dial is in need of a sharp turn to the right.

Eno left Roxy Music earlier in 1973 and partnered with Robert Fripp of King Crimson for the Fripp & Eno collaboration (No Pussyfooting). Fripp returns on The Warm Jets. His guitar work is hostile and omnipresent on his three tracks ā€” ā€œBabyā€™s On Fire,ā€ ā€œDriving Me Backwardsā€ and ā€œBlank Frank,ā€ the latter of which finds him using his guitar to mimic machine gun fire. While Eno sings ā€œLook at her laughing like a heifer to the slaughterā€ in ā€œBabyā€™s On Fire,ā€ Fripp plays the mad arsonist as his solo engulfs the track in flames, taking no prisoners.

Like any great Eno release, itā€™s chalk full of bizarre noises that shouldnā€™t work but fit like the final piece of a jigsaw puzzle. The chicken-like clucking squeals of ā€œOh no!!ā€ in ā€œDead Finks Donā€™t Talkā€ and the computer orgasm in ā€œThe Paw Paw Negro Blowtorchā€ add a breadth to the songs that few other artists would even consider including. From the dreamy sway of ā€œOn Some Faraway Beachā€ to the raucous guitar in ā€œNeedle In The Camelā€™s Eye,ā€ Here Come The Warm Jets boasts a breadth of sounds, but none are more compelling than those in the title track.

The title comes from the ā€œWarm Jetā€ guitar tone utilized in the albumā€™s stunning closing track. ā€œSome Of Them Are Oldā€ segues into the ā€œHere Come The Warm Jetsā€ as the introductory note bends into pitch, revealing a note that carries a sense of perfection only reached by happy accident. The ā€œWarm Jetā€ guitar resembles a fuzzed-out, electric bowed cello. And itā€™s doubled, creating an eerie effect on the listener. Itā€™s always unclear what the sounds actually are, but the clarity is in what the song conveys. The trackā€™s layers and textures unfold as it progresses, but the opening guitar line is welcoming enough to distract from everything else going on.

When the double tracked drums come in, taking over for the metallic pipe percussion sounds, they crash into each other and whirl around before finally syncing. They serve as a chaotic centerpiece, much like the wall of a hurricane, only thereā€™s no momentary safety in the center. As other instruments enter, the swirling feeling grows when the guitars begin to play in a round.

The music crescendos until the vocals arrive (ā€œNowhere to beā€), and at that point, the sound has grown so large it has no choice but to dissipate. So it fades into oblivion. Eno has said the lyrics in this album are meaningless, but as the album fades out, he sings ā€œNothing to say,ā€ as if nothing further could benefit the song. When this song is playing, thereā€™s little else that can be done except to listen. This is not passive background music; itā€™s a multi-layered masterpiece.

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Craig Wright is the founder and editor-in-chief of Split Tooth Media. He once made Nick Frost laugh and was called "f***ed in the head" by Slayer. He also hosts the Split Picks podcast.