Thursday Afternoon is the tenth solo studio album by English musician Brian Eno, released in October 1985 on EG Records. Consisting of one 60-minute eponymous composition, it is the rearranged soundtrack to an 80-minute video production of the same title made in 1984.

Thursday Afternoon
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 1985
Recorded
  • 1984
  • 1985
GenreAmbient
Length60:56
LabelE.G.
Producer
Brian Eno chronology
The Pearl
(1984)
Thursday Afternoon
(1985)
Hybrid
(1985)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Mojo[2]
Pitchfork8.8/10[3]
Tom Hull – on the WebB[4]
Uncut[5]

Background

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Since recording Discreet Music in 1975, Eno had shown a strong interest in creating music that can influence the atmosphere of the space in which it is played, rather than be focused on directly. The Thursday Afternoon video was conceived as a series of seven "video paintings" which can be looked at in passing without demanding full attention from the viewer. Each of the segments depicts simple imagery that has been treated with visual effects, much in the same way as Eno's music is often made up of simple instrumental performances that have been treated with audio effects. The work was filmed on a Thursday afternoon and named as such.

Thursday Afternoon consists of multiple tracks of processed piano and electronic textures. The layers of the composition are phased so that their relationships to each other are constantly changing in a way similar to his previous Discreet Music piece. The album was also one of the first to take advantage of the (then new) extended running time of the compact disc format, containing only one 60-min track.

Composition

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At just one track lasting 60 minutes, the music is ambient: beatless, flowing and ethereal.[6] Remixing and rearranging from the soundtrack to suit the CD medium, Eno stated: "... the music wasn't recorded digitally. It was recorded on a 24-track analogue machine, and then digitally mastered."[7]

An acoustic piano plays a series of notes and simple chords against a background of synths, which eventually dominate the entire soundscape. Though the composition sounds "static", in the sense that its length makes it seem like a solid "lump" of sound, it features many unstable elements that change in both timbre and volume over its entirety.[8]

Music video

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The original video, made at the request of and released by the Sony Corporation of America, was filmed in San Francisco in April 1984 and treated and assembled at Sony in Tokyo. Produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, it features seven "video paintings" of actress and photographer Christine Alicino, a friend of Eno's, and has a running time of 82 minutes. It was filmed in "vertical format," which necessitated the viewer either lie on their side or turn the television on its side, which often proved impractical for many viewers, and it most affected the picture tube's color purity adjustments. The DVD reissue presents it in both portrait and landscape formats so that this is no longer necessary. The soundtrack was recorded at Lanois's studio in Canada and is a longer, different mix.[citation needed]

The content is a series of images that stay static for some time and then slowly move forward, often to pause again. Various video techniques were implemented, such as image feedback, to create a very different interpretation of video and the nude[citation needed].

Eno himself was aware of the newness of what he was doing. "I was delighted to find this other way of using video because at last here's video which draws from another source, which is painting ... I call them "video paintings" because if you say to people "I make videos", they think of Sting's new rock video or some really boring, grimy "Video Art". It's just a way of saying "I make videos that don't move very fast"."[9]

Track listing

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All tracks composed by Brian Eno.

  1. "Thursday Afternoon" – 60:56

Personnel

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Versions

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Video

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  • Released on VHS; Beta (NTSC, cat# 2929); Laser disc; Videodisc (probably bootleg)[citation needed]
    • Japan: Sony, OOZM 70 (VHS) / OOQM 70 (Beta)
    • UK: Hendring, Hen 2 133 (VHS)
    • Germany: Video Edition Markgraph, VEM 101 (VHS)

The video has been repackaged with Eno's 47-minute ambient video "Mistaken Memories of Mediaeval Manhattan" (1981) as 14 Video Paintings (Hannibal Records, 2005/2006, HNDVD 1508)[10] (Region 1 NTSC, Region 2 PAL).

Music

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Country Label Cat. no. Media Release date
UK E.G. Records EGCD 64 CD 1985
Germany E.G. Records 827,494 2 CD 1985
UK Virgin ENOCD11 CD 2005
Japan EMI 68746 CD 2005
UK Polydor 827,494-2
USA Caroline 1518-2

References

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  1. ^ Thursday Afternoon at AllMusic
  2. ^ Mojo [issue #/date?]: 5 stars out of 5 – "[A] seamless 61 minutes of random [!] piano notes falling, like raindrops from a leaf, onto a shimmering synthesizer puddle." (p. 114).
  3. ^ pitchfork – Brian Eno Music for Films – Apollo – Thursday Afternoon – More Music for Films
  4. ^ Hull, Tom (12 November 2023). "Grade List: Brian Eno". Tom Hull – on the Web. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
  5. ^ Uncut [issue #/date?]: 4 stars out of 5 – "Magnificently evocative..." (p. 117).
  6. ^ "MOJO: To Infinity and Beyond". Music.hyperreal.org. 1 June 1974. Retrieved 14 November 2012.
  7. ^ "E&MM: The Sound of Silence". Music.hyperreal.org. Retrieved 14 November 2012.
  8. ^ "The Observer: Over and Over". Music.hyperreal.org. 23 February 1986. Retrieved 14 November 2012.
  9. ^ "NME: Proxy Music". Music.hyperreal.org. 9 November 1985. Retrieved 14 November 2012.
  10. ^ "14 Video Paintings by BRIAN ENO – DVD – Boomkat – Your independent music specialist". Boomkat. Archived from the original on 13 August 2012. Retrieved 14 November 2012.
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