The Ezra Klein Show - A Breath of Fresh Air With Brian Eno
Episode Date: October 3, 2025Brian Eno’s music opens up worlds I love to step into during trying times. And this conversation with Eno did the same thing.Eno is a trailblazing musician and producer who’s worked on seminal rec...ords by U2, David Bowie, the Talking Heads and Coldplay, among others. But Eno isn’t just a great collaborator with other artists; he’s also a great collaborator with machines. He’s been experimenting with music technology for decades. Long before we started worrying about ChatGPT replacing human creativity, Eno was tinkering with generative systems to pioneer ambient music – a genre that has deeply influenced how we listen to music today. Eno’s use (and playful misuse) of technology has expanded the possibilities of what music and sound can be.Many of you emailed in asking for a break from the news. Here it is.This episode contains strong language.Mentioned:What Art Does by Brian Eno and Bette AdriaanseEast West Street by Philippe SandsSilence by John CageBook Recommendations:Printing and the Mind of Man edited by John Carter and Percy H. MuirA Pattern Language by Christopher AlexanderNaples ’44 by Norman LewisMusic Recommendations:The Rural Blues“The Velvet Underground” by the Velvet UndergroundThe ConsolersThoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at ezrakleinshow@nytimes.com.You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast, and you can find Ezra on Twitter @ezraklein. Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at https://www.nytimes.com/article/ezra-klein-show-book-recs.This episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” was produced by Annie Galvin. Fact-checking by Mary Marge Locker, Kate Sinclair and Michelle Harris. Our senior engineer is Jeff Geld, with additional mixing by Aman Sahota. Our executive producer is Claire Gordon. The show’s production team also includes Marie Cascione, Rollin Hu, Kristin Lin, Jack McCordick, Marina King and Jan Kobal. Original music by Aman Sahota and Pat McCusker. Audience strategy by Kristina Samulewski and Shannon Busta. Transcript editing by Sarah Murphy. The director of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie-Rose Strasser. And special thanks to Geeta Dayal, Jack Hamilton, Victor Szabo and Sophie Abramowitz. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I don't know.
I've got an email from a lot of you lately, saying,
can we do a show just off the news?
Can one show not be in the grim march of events?
So here it is.
How do you intro Brian Eno?
Eno has a claim, as much as anyone does,
to have invented the genre of ambient music.
So there's no narrative quality to the music.
It just sort of starts, stays pretty much in one place, and then ends.
He certainly coined the term, built out the philosophy, sort of has eaten a lot of the music we now listen to.
But also, he's just done so many other things.
He's produced seminal albums by you two.
David Bowie.
I'm so glad, but we're strangers when he meets.
The Talking Heads.
Lori Anderson
In our sleep
As we speak
Listen to the jump seat
In our sleep
Coldplay
I can't explain
I know St Peter won't call my name
Never an honest word
But that was when I ruled the word
the world. Hell, Eno composed the sound that plays when you boot up Windows 95.
Do you remember that one? A lot of sound we just take for granted. A lot of the way sound is now made.
Eno helped bring that into existence. A lot of his work on creating generative systems that make music
that can be seen as a forerunner to much of today's AI systems.
Anino is more than just a sonic technician or tinkerer.
He's this wonderful thinker and philosopher of art and just being a human being.
And he's got this really delightful new book out,
What Art Does, An Unfinished Theory, as well as a new album with Beattie Wolf called Liminal.
I wanted to talk to him about all of it, or at least as much of it as I could.
As always, my email as Recline Show at nviteimes.com.
Hello, Ezra. Nice to meet you.
So your new book is called What Art Does? And I guess tell me, what does Art do?
Well, perhaps I should tell you first why I thought that question needed answering.
Because in education in England, and in fact, I think probably in most parts of the world,
the budgets that always get cut are the arts budgets, because there are apparently more important things
that we should be teaching people. Science, engineering,
financial technology, that kind of thing.
Yeah, you should be making short trades.
Exactly, exactly.
Are you really alive if you can't short a stock?
So I've always thought that art is actually one of the most important things that humans do with their time.
In my book, there's a long list of things that I consider could come under the headline of art.
And it includes, of course, obvious things like symphonies and photographs and paintings.
but it includes cardigans and jewelry and makeup and tattoos and all the things that humans do
that they don't have to do. None of those things have survival benefits in the obvious sense.
They're things we do to do something in our mind, to change our mind in some way.
So what does art do? Why do we like it? I have this phrase in the book that children learn through play
and adults play through art. And I think that's really what it does. When we look at children and we watch
them playing, we don't think, oh, they're just wasting their time. They should do something more
serious. We realize that when children play, they're learning. They're understanding about materials,
about social relationships, about their own bodies, their own minds, about where they live,
all of those things that are very important to understand. And
They do that infallibly and with a huge appetite. That's what children like doing. And we understand, all of us understand that that's the way they learn things. Art is grown-up play. It's a way of imagining things and imagining what they would feel like and imagining how they connect to other things that we know about and then feeding that knowledge back into our lives and into our relationships.
I want to zoom in on a word you use there, which is feel.
One of the central arguments of the book is that art is a way we explore or attune to our feelings.
And I guess that raises another question.
You say, and I agree with this, that feelings have a bad reputation.
So to you, what do feelings do and why do they matter?
Yes, so they have a bad reputation because they're very hard to quantify and measure.
and of course science wants things that are easily comparable and easily
describable in some kind of language of quantity and measure.
Feelings, because they're subjective, are very difficult to do that with.
However, the first response we have to most things is a feeling response,
particularly if they're unfamiliar things.
What's the first thing that happens when you meet somebody?
You kind of form an impression of them quite quickly.
You think he looks like a decent person. He looks quite friendly. He doesn't look hostile. I think I could get on with him. Or she looks pretty interesting and I think I'm in love with her.
Feelings form very quickly, actually, and they form without really much volition on our part. And they are, in fact, our first antennae, our first judgment of a situation, our first sense of whether it's dangerous or friendly or.
useful or useless, is made on the basis of feelings.
And then after that, we backfill with other information we find.
And we sometimes find that our feelings, the quick response, were incorrect.
But surprisingly often, we find that they were actually exactly on the money.
I knew that as soon as I saw her.
One thing that I was thinking about while you were talking is a way, I think, to say
what our modern relationship is here,
is that we think feelings lie and we think facts don't.
Yes.
And I've come to believe that's a very simplistic way
to think about both feelings and facts.
Yes.
But what I am doing to make form into content here
while you talk, I have this whole list of questions.
And in a rational, coherent, factual way,
I know what the next question should be.
What I'm actually doing
is watching a feeling
that is moving around in my chest
while you speak.
And there's a moment when I know
that you said something
that's at the next place we should go
and it's not the thing on my sheet of paper.
Right.
It's this whole thing I'm doing right now in a way.
And maybe it's wrong.
But no great interviews
are logical.
Like they just aren't.
Like we're working in a medium
that does not work that way.
Conversation does not work logically.
And I do think we've degraded
our relationship, our attunement, to what we feel.
Yes.
And that's actually a mistake.
So I understood one argument you're making about art, which feels true to me, is that it's a way of practicing our attunement to our feelings.
I think that opens something interesting here.
One thing in the book that connected for me was you quote a musician friend of yours, John Hassel, who you says, asks the question, what is it that I really like?
and says being able to answer that is the most important question. Why?
So we're being told probably about 10 or 12,000 times a day what we ought to like,
what other people like, what some people would prefer that we like. We're told that in the form
of advertising and the form of political messages, in the form of all of the things that try to
persuade us to think or believe one thing rather than another. It's the biggest index.
in the Western world, actually, persuasion. And it's very easy in that flood, actually, of
that tsunami of suggestions about what we ought to like to forget what we actually do like.
So I think what he's doing there, he's suggesting that the deepest feelings we have are actually
the most reliable things that we know about. One of the things that happens when you're
looking at art or listening to art, something connects to you, and you think, that's what I really
like. That's what really moves me. And I think when that happens, you should pay attention to that.
You should think, why do I really like that? What does that mean that I like that thing?
What does that connect me to that's so important to me? And we frequently don't do that because
the distraction rate is so high. There are so many things to think about all the time.
I think this question of what is it that I really like and trying to pay attention to your response to different pieces of art is interesting because it gets it a mystery to me about being human, which is why things that are legendarily beautiful works leave me completely cold, even as they have inspired thousands of books and comiums from others.
And then I'll hear something, or I'll see something, and my soul will leap into my throat.
I've been obsessed this year with an album by an artist named Drum, and the album is called Underentangled Silence, and this one song, wax cap I just keep listening to and listening to.
When I give my headphones to somebody else, they quite rarely have the experience I am having with that song.
Right.
In a way, that makes me feel lonelier, but also a little bit more unique.
So you're an artist, but you're also an artist who both yourself creates and helps others create things for mass consumption.
And so how do you think about that difference of attunement in different people?
how some people can hear something, and it is their favorite thing ever.
Yes.
And others will put that same thing on.
Yes.
And they hear nothing but noise.
I think the answer to that is that, of course, when we look at any piece of art,
we're not looking just at that piece of art.
We're looking at this piece of art in terms of our own personal history.
So it's like you're hearing the latest sentence in a conversation you've been having for your whole life.
I wrote this little story once about somebody finding
in some post-apocalyptic time
finding an art museum
and the whole place is wrecked
but there's lots of pictures still around
and they find one picture
that obviously hasn't been finished
which is just a white canvas
which of course
in fact is Malievich's
white on white
so it has no meaning
to that person who doesn't share its history
part of the value of any piece of work
and the power of it is
how it sits in the
cultural conversation in general and in your cultural conversation in particular. So a little
difference that is very significant to you may be meaningless to somebody else. For instance,
I've always had a rather blind spot for Shakespeare. No English person is ever supposed to
admit that, but Shakespeare's never thrilled me. I find it hard to read and quite unrewarding.
So when a critic, a writer, picks out a Shakespeare sentence and talks about it significant,
They do that because they know the rest of the Shakespeare canon, and they know where it sits in there, and what value it therefore has.
It doesn't mean anything to me because I don't know any of those things, and I don't care about them in that case either.
Well, let me offer a cliched concern, which is that this is a way that art fails.
I think when people think of art now, they don't first think of music or food on a plate, or, you know,
or the way a building looks.
I think of something you see in a museum.
And I go to a fair number of shows or try to,
and am often left cold in part because it feels
like there is so much cultural conversation going on.
And I'll read the little placard on the wall
next to a piece by an artist working at the peak of their powers,
who is being venerated as one of the great artists of our age.
And this little placard is telling me what a meditation this is
on identity and borders,
And I'm looking at like, is it, though?
And one of the ways art it feels locks people out is by demanding so much literacy in a cultural conversation.
And it's one reason music is so interesting.
Well, one of the problems that fine art faces is the problem of its own irrelevance to most people's lives.
You know, nobody buys a two million pound or a 20 million pound painting just because they like it.
they buy it because there's a good chance they'll be able to sell it again at a profit or it
secures them a sort of social status that is not easily obtainable otherwise. So you have to make it
seem very important. You have to pretend that it isn't just an object of commerce. It's an
attempt to build something up by repackaging it in this kind of crust of usually incomprehensible
language. I think some of the worst writing in the world is writing about art, about fine art.
And it ought to be much simpler. One of the reasons you like it is because it doesn't translate
into words. It doesn't turn into sentences. It hits you in some other place, some other part of your
mind. You did an album in the last couple of years with Fred again, who I think you've been a mentor to
and who's another artist who I really love.
And there was a song on that album that became big.
And I remember the first time I heard it.
The song is called Come On.
And I've probably listened to it.
It was one of my top listened songs that whole year.
I want to play a little piece of it.
I want to ask you about it.
So we've been talking about feelings,
and the thing that happened to me
when I listened to that song
and every single time I've listened to it
since including in that moment
is something about the way you've distorted that sample
is incredibly physical for me.
I don't really know why that works,
but I think it's something to do
with the sense of a,
of near incoherence of the voice.
It's like somebody trying to say something, and it's broken, you know, it doesn't come out clearly and straightforwardly.
So there's a sort of either a reticence or a feeling of the machine doesn't work any longer.
The machine that is me speaking isn't quite working.
It's defective in some way.
But the way you describe it there is almost frightening, where to me, it's extraordinarily comforting.
It's a feeling
I almost never have
I mean there's very little I can put on
that gives me the exact feeling of that song
and nor would I be able to describe the feeling
but it's not jarring for me
it's like a caress
If you had to name the emotion
that that song has what would you call it
I mean for me it's there's something
melancholy
and like a nostalgia
for a different future or something
and nostalgia for a future that didn't happen, which isn't sad, but it's a, to me, it's a very
moving song, actually.
I love hearing you say that because I have such a different experience. I find it enormously
comforting, that song.
That's lovely.
And that there's something, yeah, very physical. It's like having a blanket pulled over you.
And I even find this interaction so interesting. I had Jeff Tweedy on this show years ago.
from Wilco, and we were talking about the song
His Impossible Germany, and I was asking about the lyrics of it,
because I've always found it to be such a beautiful song
about the dislocations of travel.
And that is not what he was doing with that song at all.
It was like a misremembered line from a murder novel, as I remember his description.
And just the idea that you can create something that it's not just that it's evoking such feelings in me or others,
but that the feelings are so different than even the ones it gives you.
Yes.
When you're making something, it starts to come alive when you start to have feelings that you didn't expect from it.
You think, well, I'm going to make this, that, the other.
And as it starts to form, it starts to change.
it starts to become something that you hadn't imagined.
And you can either say, okay, I don't want that, which is what a lot of people do.
They shut that down and try to get back to what they're supposed to be doing.
But I don't do that, and I think a lot of artists don't do that.
We say, oh, I wonder where it's going.
I wonder where it's taking me.
And you just carry on then and think there's a certain point you reach.
Either way, you can't make it any better.
you notice that what you're adding is starting to subtract rather than to add, or you've hit
the deadline. A lot of the best things I've made have been because I hit the deadline and I
couldn't spend any longer fucking them up. I think this gets another interesting distinction.
So I think we've been talking about the exposure to pieces of art here, if I'm going to try
to define it more tightly. And the way that they create a space,
should be attentive to feelings arising in you that you might not have expected.
Then once you have discovered that it gives you that feeling, it can become a tool to re-evoke it.
I put on that song, Come On, to feel a certain way. I put on, you know, your series of ambient albums
because I actually know how they will make me feel. And I'm trying to shift my emotional
landscape in that direction at a certain moment. And I always think this is really interesting,
this difference between art is something you pay attention to, or music is maybe something
you pay attention to, and then music as something you use to change the way you pay attention
to everything else. That's a very nice distinction. I wish I'd thought of that myself.
Well, it's very built on things you've written. But I'd be curious to hear how you think about that.
I think when you're working as an artist, you're always world building. You're creating a world. It might be a huge world like George Orwell's 1984. That's a whole world completely thought out. And when you read that book, you decide to live in that world for a time. And you decide to experience the feelings of living in a world like that. Because the wonderful thing about art is that it isn't dangerous.
You can live in that terrible totalitarian world, and then you can shut the book and go and put on a Fred Again song or whatever else you want to do.
I'm always sort of trying to find something that suddenly makes me think, oh, there's a different kind of world.
I've never been in a world like that before.
If we go back to the idea of adults playing, I think that's what we're doing, pretending, imagining, imagining situation.
and then sort of figuring out the mechanics of them by imagining them
is the clue to everything that makes humans such a powerful
and probably dangerous species.
So even if you thought art was not valuable for anything else at all,
you would have to say that this process of giving our minds
a way of imagining futures and virtually living in them, actually,
living in them in our imagination,
must be a very important thing for human beings.
I hear this so often from artists and in books I've read about art.
This cultivation of humanity, this cultivation of different futures.
I know you're doing a lot of work on Gaza, and I've been doing a lot of podcasts on this topic,
and as part of that work, I was reading a book by Philippe Sands, who will, by the time this comes out, I've been on the show.
and this is a book about the Holocaust and the development of the idea of genocide and one of the essential characters this book tracks is a man named Hans Frank
who is under Hitler the governor of Poland the worst things in history happen under Hans Frank and a point Sanz makes about him that is very very very present in his biography is how cultured a man he was a beautiful classical pianist
somebody who much more so than most people does really did care about art, about literature,
about music, about paintings, that he got it.
And at the same time, was so much more capable of inhumanity and callousness.
And so some part of me rebels on this.
I often hear novelists and others as if it is an equation with a single output.
If you expose yourself to more of these worlds, more Beethoven, more Bach, you will become a more civilized person.
And yet, so much of the most uncivilized civilizations or parts of our civilizations have been driven by people who were enormously cultured.
In fact, that was part of what they believed made them so superior to everybody else.
Yes. Now, you're absolutely right.
And in saying that it helps us use our minds in that way, I'm not saying,
necessarily for good things. It just makes our minds better imagining, but they can just as easily
be imagining terrible things. You know, one of the great art collectors of the 20th century was
Himmler, had a huge collection, which he'd stolen mostly from Dutch and low country's Jews,
French Jews, and he was apparently very learned in that area. But to your point, the ability of
something to make a mind work better, isn't the same as the ability of something to make a mind
work to good ends. That's a different problem. That's a problem of morality, spirituality,
something like that. I'm not going to stay on this topic for very long because I want this
to be a somewhat lighter conversation than this, but after reading Sands book, I started reading
a biography of Martin Buber, the great Jewish deologian and one of the great humanists of the 20th
Yes.
And it was, again, so strange, Hans Frank loved Bach, and Buber loved Bach and says that
much of who he is as an adult is formed in sitting in concerts listening to the contradictions
inside Bach's music.
And that two people, two souls can, I mean, far from our, like, is come on, melancholic
or comforting that these works of art can take people in such different directions. I'm not
blaming Bach for anything that Hans Frank did, but it just speaks to something very, very
complex and like the feeling faculties and what we bring to them.
That's a very good way of putting it, I think. We've been told somehow that art is this
very important thing that is good for you. And I think it is, but I don't think it's good
for you in that way. I don't think it necessarily improves you in any moral dimension whatsoever.
I think it's quite possible that, as some people now insist, Picasso was a bit of a shit.
He was more than a bit of a shit. I mean, remarkable artist. I'm going light on it.
Complicated person to say the least. Yeah. But it's funny that we expected it would be otherwise.
It's because we've sort of imputed a moral dimension to art.
And all I'm saying is that, no, I think it's much more biologically functional than we think it is.
I don't think it's such a spiritual, moral business being an artist.
I've always found this very interesting.
You read the Roberto Blano book, The Savage Detectives.
It's a beautiful fiction book.
And one of the reasons I love it is it's because it's about a personality that I have always been fascinated by and do not myself have,
which is the personality that would give everything, anything to create art.
in this case, young poets.
There are people, I mean, you know them.
I've known some of them who, for them, art is everything.
They put their whole souls or whole lives into projects
that most people would walk by if they were hung on a wall or playing in a store
and not give a second thought to.
And then I know other people who see no role or understand no role for art in their life.
What do you differentiate those people, the people for whom art becomes,
everything, the most important thing,
even when society could not give a damn about what they are creating
and that people feel no resonance to it.
Have you ever heard of a place in Switzerland,
Lausanne, called the Muse de L'Arcbrite?
It's the, I think, the greatest museum of outsider art in the world.
So these are people who, none of whom were called artists in their lifetime.
A lot of them were in mental institutions
and they had nothing much else to do,
and they painted for their whole lives.
Some of them did it completely in secret.
Nobody even knew until they died
that they had been working as artists for their whole life.
And my kind of feeling about that is that if you can invent a world
that you prefer to live in,
which is sort of what those artists were doing,
then why not stay in it?
You know, if the rest of the world is all,
and you don't fit into it. It's got lots of sharp corners, and you can make this world
where suddenly you're sort of in control of it. You've decided the terms of that world.
And I think a lot of what's happening when artists are working is that they're trying to make
the world they would prefer to be in. Now, that sometimes gets dismissed as escapism, but I don't
think it is. And anyway, I don't think there's anything wrong with escapism. It's sometimes a really
good idea to escape and to get out of things and think about them from a distance rather than
from being in the centre of them. But this is another of the misconceptions about art that it ought
to be difficult to do. And I think there are many people who I would call artists who never
experience any difficulty with what they're doing. It's just what they do. People who make beautiful
cakes, for example. One of my daughters loves doing mausipan decorations on cakes.
and they're beautiful the things she makes
but I'm sure she wouldn't call that being an artist
but I can't see what the difference is
you know why is that not being an artist
so that's one of the other art world things
that in order to make it valuable
to justify the high prices
we've got to think of some way of
kind of making it seem abnormal
making it seem like something
that only abnormal humans can do
What are you doing with art?
When I think of your library, it's not all creating a world that you would like to live in.
You've sort of given all these legible motivations for other people, is your motivation is legible to yourself?
At best, what I'm doing is thinking, I often start something by thinking, I wish there was a piece of music like this, whatever this means in my mind.
For instance, one of my best known records is music for airports.
And that came from a very direct experience like that
of sitting in a newly built airport in Germany near Cologne.
And everything about the airport was dazzlingly beautiful.
It was lovely structure.
And they had terrible German disco music playing really loud
through the whole PA system in the airport.
And I just thought, nobody's thought about this issue of what kind of music would belong in this place.
You know, we use music in public all the time, but does anybody actually sit down and think seriously?
What would be the best kind of music to have in this important place where people are arriving, leaving, going on to important new phases in their lives?
or going back to loved ones or whatever,
it ought to be something a bit more.
I started thinking, what should it be more of?
And so I started thinking and trying to make a kind of music
that I thought would make the airport experience feel important and special.
And there were quite a lot of technical considerations,
like, obviously, it mustn't interfere with communication.
it mustn't keep stopping and starting
it must not matter if it gets interrupted
so on and so on
so that was a very conscious
act of making a
work of art
but most of what I do
isn't really motivated by such high sounding
ideas. Most of the time I'm fiddling around and something starts to happen. Something
intrigues me or some feeling starts to happen. I think I like that feeling. How can I bring
that forward? How can I make more of it? And I often don't know why I'm doing that or how it will
end up. I have an archive of about 11,000 unfinished pieces of music and what I
I do occasionally is pull one of those out. And suddenly, I haven't seen it for 15 years,
maybe. 11,000 unfinished pieces of music. Yeah, some of them are very short. Let me hold you on
Music for Airports for a minute. One of my favorite albums, and the second song on that album,
2-1, the tracks are not so evocatively named, given how evocative they are,
is like a very important piece of music to me.
So I want to play a couple seconds of it.
When you were saying that you wanted music that
that matched what you felt that experience should be,
It should be more something.
Two one on there.
What is it more of to you?
I think it's more contemplative.
I think it makes you relax into the situation that you're in,
whatever that happens to be, presumably in an airport in this case,
rather than tries to pretend that you're not in that place.
So my nightmarish form of music is getting on an airplane
and hearing a piece of music coming like this
because they haven't got the machine to work properly.
And you have two thoughts then.
You have a thought they're playing music
because they want to stop us thinking
about the possibility we might crash.
And secondly, they can't even get the bloody player
to work properly.
So we're going to crash.
You know, you can use music as a mask,
which is what is normally done in public situations,
as a way of covering up the noise or you can use music that invites the noise to sound like
it's part of it. So with all of that kind of music, what I call ambient music, I don't want
there to be an edge to the music. I want it so that you don't know whether some of the
things you're hearing are in the world around you or are part of the music. So I want it not
to have a sharp boundary. I want it to sort of fade out into the rest of the world.
noises around you.
I always think about that as being on an album called Music for Airports.
Because that both is very discordant and then as I thought about it more exactly correct,
that is to me one of the holiest pieces of music I have ever heard.
That piece of music just feels holy.
And in a way, it gets to something true about airports,
which is that this is a place where human beings go to fly.
where they're forced into, I mean, I feel this when I get on planes,
a confrontation with their own mortality.
There's never a time when a plane,
when I'm in a plane that is having turbulence during takeoff
or I don't think to myself in a way,
I usually do not think in my day.
I could die.
Yes.
There are all these people.
They're going to places that are many cases
incredibly important to them.
And the airport is this, like, extraordinary combination
of a place that is so banal lines and you're taking off your shoes
and you know you're waiting in line for food that is mediocre at best
and you know you're late and your plane is late and you're annoyed
and then also the absolute most remarkable place
that a human being can possibly find themselves
something that for most of human history was completely unimaginable
and two one to me on an album called Music for Airports
is such a perfect song because it's,
more true about the airport than my experience of the airport is.
That's a nice way of putting it, yeah.
So I wanted to make flying feel like a more spiritual experience if I had to put it into a
sentence with a controversial word in it.
And by that, I mean, I used to be very frightened of flying, and of course I had to do it
at that time in my career.
And I thought, well, what about if you could make it?
a kind of music that made you less worried about the idea of dying? What about if you could make a
piece of music that made your life seem less the center of your attention? If you could see
yourself as just being one atom in a universe of complicated molecules, would that make things
feel better? So in a way, it was intended to take the stress off yourself.
not by pretending you weren't flying, so let's make it just sound like a disco or a nightclub or something
like that, which is what most of the music tries to do. Let's not do that. Let's say we're having an
unusual experience and let's experience it as a beautiful experience. One of the things in that
album, Music Airports, your liner notes are very famous, and I know you've been asked about a million
times, so I don't want to stay here too long, but you do talk about wanting that music to cultivate
different modes of attention.
And that's been very influential,
this idea that music is a cultivator
of different forms of attention,
not all of them,
an attention that is spent on the music.
Yes.
I guess in the years since then,
the decades since then,
how do you think
the relationship
between music and attention has changed?
Do you see it as a success
of what you were trying to do?
Do you see it as a nightmarish world
that you accidentally summoned
into existence. What is your relationship to it? Well, I think what's happened is that it's changed
in both directions. So I think people are ready to accord music, a level of attention that they
never have done in the past. For instance, when you go to these extremely long concerts
sometimes, 10 hours long, where you're basically listening to three sign tones for a very long time.
that's a level of attention that really people never thought of giving until at least the middle of the 20th century and later.
So there's that. And then on the other hand, you have TikTok or very short pieces of music like that, which of course right at the other end of the scale.
But I think in culture, this is a general rule that every single standard, every single metric has increased in both directions.
We now have extremely long pieces of music and extremely short ones.
We have extremely loud bands and very, very, very quiet ones.
It's as if we've taken every dimension in which music can exist and tried to expand it and say,
what would happen at the edges now?
Let's make a new edge.
But I also was thinking about that in terms of the movement towards music that what it is doing is saying,
we are going to cultivate this form of attention or feeling for you. So the rise of the Spotify,
but they're on every streaming network now. The playlist that are, well, here's your happy beats
playlist. Here's your beast mode at the gym playlist for when you really need to be pumped up.
But here's your melancholy, rainy day playlist. Here's studying at a coffee shop, which is different,
of course, than studying at the library playlist. Here's your ambient playlist, your ambient
essentials. But here's your, and now we're seeing this move into these place being in some ways
generated, right? I don't know how much of it is happening.
how, but clearly we're moving towards AI generating a bunch of these songs at functionally
no cost mass-produced mood-altering music. Music is Xanax, music is Adderall, music as music is
mood alteration. Yeah. And done not as a relationship between the artist and the listener,
but like you hire the music to perform a service and to do so quite unobtrusively.
Some of that music is good, some of it is bad, obviously.
But how do you feel about that?
Well, you're right in your previous question.
You asked, did I feel any responsibility for that?
And I do, actually.
I mean, I was very excited about the idea of generative music.
I invented the phrase, I believe.
And I was very excited by the idea of making a music like a seed.
you know, a seed is something that has a genetic message in it, and every manifestation of it
will be a little bit different depending on where you plant it and what time of year it grew
and so on and so on. So I thought wouldn't it be nice if you had music like that?
So, I mean, there's a very simple example of that. Wind chimes. A wind chime is a simple enough
machine. Let's say you've got five chimes. Each one is a particular pitch. It's not going to
change. It's only that pitch. But how and when they strike depends on the wind. So it's sort of
semi-random. So you can't really say that you composed that particular performance, though you can say
that I built the system from which that performance emanated. A wind chime is basically a simple
piece of generative music. And so it shifts, and I know you've talked a bit about almost
wishing you could sell people, not the album, but the system behind it. It shifts.
the artistic act into the creation of the conditions that will create the artistic product.
Yes, that's right. So two things becoming important. What is the structure of rules, if you like?
What are the possibilities that the system has? What are the limitations that it has? And what are the
materials you put into it? So if you make a wind chime out of glass, for instance, or out of bamboo rods,
or out of metal, they're all going to be slightly different results,
but each one is a kind of package of possibilities.
You're not specifically saying which possibilities you want to happen,
but you're conditioning which group of possibilities can happen.
And I thought that was a sort of a nice area for music to be in,
because if you think about it,
up until the turn of the 20th century,
you could never have the same musical experience.
twice. There was no way that you could precisely repeat a musical experience. As soon as records
came along, you could do that. You could hear exactly the same performance of exactly the same
song over and over and over and over. And that became how most of us listened to music,
unless we happen to be born into a musical family or a church group or something like that.
Most of the music we heard was repetition. So what I thought was, I wonder if you could
use the technology of repetition to make music that constantly changes. And my first clue to that
was when I first got hold of a tape recorder, I'd wanted a tape recorder my whole childhood.
I just thought the idea of being able to catch a piece of sound and make it physical was
most magical thing I could think of, actually. And I had this obsession with, you could play it
backwards, and I just wanted to hear what things would be like if they were played backwards,
discovering that, first of all, you can capture sound and make it physical. That was something new
for the 20th century. But then I thought, if you can make it physical, can't you also make it
mutate in certain ways? Can't you make it so the physical medium, for instance, is not reliable?
It will play slightly differently each time. And so my first experiments in that direction were
I had a collection of broken tape recorders, which I just got from junk shops, you know, or thrift stores, as you might say.
And I would try to break them a little bit more, but so that they would still play things.
So a tape playing through it would change into something else, you know, it would have a lot of distortion or it would run unevenly like this, you know.
I discovered that if I connected two tape recorders together, put one tape through one and coming out through the other, so that the playback head is separated by several feet from the record head, you get a very late echo.
And then you can build up those, you can work on top of those.
I mean, I discovered this in the 60s, so did Terry Riley and a few other people, I think.
It just happened that I had two tape recorders for a while, so I could try this out.
And then I could build up these huge sort of orchestras of music live on my own.
So I think that became an obsession.
try to make a recorded music that somehow changed every time.
I finally achieved it in the 1990s,
and I'm still doing it now.
You draw this distinction when working with generative systems
where you say you don't want to be an architect,
you want to be a gardener.
What's the difference?
So the conception of an architect is somebody who thinks about an end result
in great detail.
You know, the archetype is Frank Lloyd Wright,
who designed everything down to the teaspoons in his houses.
And so the whole thing kind of pre-exists in the architect's mind
and then is bought into being by builders.
What a gardener does is put some seeds in the soil
and then watch us how they develop.
Oh, these ones over here are doing better than those ones over there.
So next year I'll plant them differently.
But you know that if you're making a garden,
you're only starting something.
So one of Stuart Brand's books, it's called How Buildings Learn.
It's a great book.
And in that, he says, you never finish a building, you only start it.
And I think that's what I kind of mean by generative music.
You start the piece, but it finishes itself.
It carries on finishing itself for the rest of time.
But so you up create this idea of generative music, and now we have launched into this world of generative AI.
the way you were using the term generative and the way what it is describing, when we're saying now generative AI, which are things like chat GPT and all these large language models, is it the same word for you, right? Are the two generatives equal?
I think they mean the same thing. Now, of course, as a set of techniques, mine is much, much, much cruder and simpler and much more analog,
than the techniques that are generally being used in LLMs.
And of course, the other big difference is that mine are not owned by mad billionaires.
And I think that's an important difference.
In fact, with all the discussion about AI, to me, the single most important question is who should be in control of it?
And we've seen in this century what happens when billionaires control new technologies, social media I'm talking about.
And we're saying that you get completely unpredicted and quite disastrous results sometimes.
You know, the collapse of democracy in most of our countries, I think, is very traceable to social media
and to the kind of misunderstanding that underwrote it, that, oh, let's make this amazing new medium
where everyone can communicate with each other.
oh but we've got to make a lot of money from doing it you know in a way the big mistake was when
the algorithm became maximise engagement which means maximize profits of course if maximize
engagement is what you're going for then you end up with what we have now an internet
that flourishes on anger and nastiness in some ways I'm not saying of course that everything
like that is like that on the internet but
what seems to have happened in the race for profits we've managed to sidestep the friction that
normally comes with things being born into the world friction is very important friction gives you
a little time to see what's happening it makes something ease into your life more slowly so you can
start to correct it as it's easing in i always say it's like we've invented an amazing new type of car
that can travel at 750 miles an hour
but we haven't put any brakes in it
because breaks slow down the profits, basically.
So there's this question of who controls it
and then also as you get at there,
this question of who profits from it.
One of the things I find very morally complicated
to think about with generative AI
is that it is generative.
And the seed of it, and more than the seed of it,
the substance of it,
the sum total of knowledge that human beings have made in a way that is legible to the crawling
software developed by the AI companies.
And you can see that it's really about that because, in fact, these companies are mostly
neck and neck with each other for how good their systems are.
It's not like one of them came up with like an algorithm that no other human being could come
up with.
They're sort of going back and forth because they have the same training data, which is us.
And so on one level, that's like everything else's.
Scientists are coming up with new scientific discoveries built on every scientific discovery before them.
You have a lovely bit in your book about all the human genius over how many years it goes into getting you to work in the morning.
There's nothing new about creations just being a marginal step forward built on the shoulders of us all.
And yet I can never escape this feeling with the AI systems.
There is something about the scale of the use here that should change who profits from it and how.
The fact that they have absorbed everything I have ever written for the Internet and fed it into the machine, I kind of think somebody should send me a royalty check.
It doesn't have to be a big one.
And it maybe shouldn't go to me.
It should go to society.
Yes, yes.
But something about it feels, I don't want to call it theft.
It isn't theft, but nor is it just like a standing on the, like there's something here that feels like it needs new ways of thinking about it because, you know, just for a couple of these companies to profit off of the transformation of everything we've all ever done.
This is the question I'm asking myself.
Should it be that we automatically have a system that says this is a social good, all this knowledge, it's a socially produced good, and therefore,
its usage should reward society. That's quite hard to meter, of course. It's hard to put a meter on it.
I think it has to be written into the whole machinery itself so that nobody has to make a
decision. For example, it wouldn't be a bad idea if everything that was generated in that way,
50% of all the profits from it immediately go back to society in some way. It would be saying,
we're not claiming to be the geniuses here. We're claiming to be the people who know how to
corral it all, how to put it together, how to make it available to you. But thank you for all
the stuff you've written, Ezra and Brian and everybody else. And with your permission, we'll
redistribute this to society. It's so obvious to me that that should be the way. But of course,
that is not the American way at all. That sounds like socialism of some kind.
Oh, at least taxation. That seems true to me.
too. I mean, at the moment, these companies are not making such big profits that even doing something like that would be that meaningful to the treasury. They're sucking in much more venture capital than they are producing revenue in general. But in the future, if it is what they think it will be, you know, if it is what they are promising their venture capitalists, it will be. I mean, I guess you just saw that to the tax system, but it seems like you need a way of thinking about it that's a little bit clearer than the ways we have.
And it's funny, if you go into the writings of a lot of them, Sam Altman and others, from a couple of years ago, they're talking about this.
Like, this is a thing they imagine.
I mean, Allman has, you know, ideas for what's functionally like a universal basic wealth grant coming out of taxing the AI companies.
But I'm sort of with you on this.
I think it deserves a different conceptual category that is not merely the category of taxation, that is more something of sharing.
Right? It is not confiscatory taxation. It is a reflection of the nature of these systems.
Yeah. And sort of my view of them is they actually should be able to crawl the sum total of human knowledge that is, you know, at least that people are willing to make accessible to them.
Yes.
But that part of that is that there's a contract between those companies and the rest of us that we both know what we're doing here.
And we're in this together.
Yes, especially if you're trying to inspire confidence in them. You want people to willingly
participate in them rather than having it forced upon them. Do you know this word that I came up
with years ago, which is Seneas? Yes. Okay, so that was an attempt to try to understand that.
I had been studying the early 20th century painting in Russia. There was a 20-year period when
there were amazing amount of innovation going on, you know, suprematism, constructivism,
rayonism, all these different isms appearing.
And I discovered that the scene was very complex.
It wasn't just that there were a few brilliant artists like Kandinsky and Rodchenko and
Tatlin and so on.
It turned out that some of the very important people were the collectors
who would specifically target certain artists and say,
I want to keep this person alive.
I'm going to support this person.
Or they would go to Paris and buy pictures that they brought back to St. Petersburg and Moscow
to show to painters there and say, look, this is what's going on in Paris now.
And then there were the people who ran the salons who would invite artists to meet up with each other and talk to and so on and so on.
The cafe owner at the cafe that everybody used to hang out in who was quite conscious that they had a part to play in the
scene and they would let people not pay for their meals and so on and put it on the tab.
And so I thought there was a whole scene here that was fertile, that was operational.
There was a whole support system.
And so I had got sick anyway of hearing this word genius being used all the time because
it never seemed to me like it was just one person who was doing everything.
So I came up with this word seniors, which is seen with an IUS on the end.
And that seemed to me to much better understand the ecology of systems like that.
And I think that's what it is.
It's an ecosystem, and we still don't understand ecosystems.
It's still not intuitive to most of us to understand how a thing like an ecosystem works,
how there are lots and lots of nodes, and they're collected in very complicated ways.
And if you move one of the nodes to a different place, everything else in the system has to shift.
anyone who's become interested in the environment has started to become aware of how complex natural systems are.
But human society is a natural system as well, and the society of knowledge that we all share is a natural system.
This is a way in which, and I'm not an anti-AI person, I use chatypD a lot.
I am fascinated.
I feel a sense of both, I do feel some fear, but I feel a tremendous amount of wonder around these technologies.
I find watching it formulate a response that in some ways reads more human than the response is most humans give me to most things.
It does. It generates a form of awe in me.
One thing that frightens me is somebody who came up on the Internet and understands, I think, fairly well how knowledge production works on the Internet, is they're breaking the fundamental social contract of the Internet, which is you even take something like Google, the value of Google.
is that there is so much
that other people have created
that is valuable.
And Google connects you to it.
But it does connect you to it.
Yes.
And now chat GPT or Anthropic or whomever
inhales the internet.
And it's all right there.
And I never go to the underlying sites.
And the creation of all this data,
which was incentivized by ways people were able to
monetize and not just monetize,
but have their work discovered.
That was, for many of us on the internet, when I started a blog with no ever intent of a job or a profit from it, I was a college student, just the idea that anybody would ever find their way to me and read something I did and care about it was such a tremendous incentive to create.
But there is something very problematic about this, a huge amount of the internet and the intellectual commons we are now built on is traffic moving around the internet, people moving around the internet, and then the advertising that comes from that, the whatever that comes from that, keeping that whole ecosystem healthy.
And these AI systems by nature, you go to the system and then for most people it stops there.
Even Google search is trying to become more like that.
the whole thing they're built on, they're going to destroy, or at least substantially degrade.
Yes, that's right. When I was a kid and I liked watercolor painting a lot, and I used to notice that after a day of painting, the water that I was dipping my brush into, which was, of course, a mixture of all the colors I'd touched that day, was always the same color.
actually. I called it Munge, M-U-N-G-E. Munge is sort of purply browny, horrible colour, basically.
And whenever I've tried creating things on chat G-P-T, I haven't done that much of it, actually,
but I work very hard to get my prompts right and to filter what I'm saying to it and trying to edge it into something interesting.
but the color of munch covers all of it. It's so over-digested. And of course, it's quoting things,
it's using things on the basis of how frequently they have appeared. I don't know whether
you've ever tried making anything, let's say, artistic using chat GPT or any of the other
programs. It has a very interesting progression when you're doing it. The first thing you make, you think,
bloody hell, that's pretty amazing. And then after half an hour or so, you think, I'm so bored.
And I remember that thing that Samuel Johnson said about something, I can't remember what it was about now, but he said,
it's a little bit like watching an animal walk, a dog walk on its hind legs. You're not interested in how it walks, but just that it can.
You know, you're sort of impressed by the fact that it can do something that is really quite like a human being.
But then you find out that it's like a quite dull human being.
And it kind of doesn't get more exciting unless you can trick it into some sort of aberration, which is what I've been trying to do.
I've been amazed on the one hand at how good it is, but then I also have the exact experience.
I love your description of it as Munch.
And I think it goes back to something we were talking about at the beginning of this conversation, which is the information and possibility that is encoded in factual knowledge.
And then the more amorphous forms of intelligence and intuition that are encoded in feelings.
So I have experimented a lot with using different forms of AI as help in this show.
and they are helpful for things
that are very specific
but they are never helpful
for the actual work of creating the conversation
and what's absent in the output
is I think what we're talking about
I could not give you a description
of how this conversation is structured
it is just structured
by me having
intuitive reactions to what is happening with it
and then moving with those reactions
Yes.
And Chachypity is structured as a probabilistic output of what the entire Internet would have done.
Yes.
And so it's not even that it always lacks surprise, but it always has a very visible internal logic.
Yes.
And then over time, that internal logic becomes overpoweringly annoying.
Some people who work at these companies said, oh, I keep my diary in it.
And that's very interesting.
You should try that.
So without giving too much personal information, I did that.
And the first couple of responses, I was amazed at how psychologically insightful they were, how supportive they were.
I mean, it was better than what human beings in my life gave me.
And then on response, 9, 10, 11, 12, 15, 20, it was the same fucking feelings.
It was the same glazing and sycophancy and the same kinds of insights.
And I think it's one of these things that you couldn't look at it.
at the response to say there's anything wrong with it. But there is something human beings
are tuned to in the way we do not travel a perfectly logical or well-structured path. We're
not supposed to. It's not how our intelligence works. And it is funny. You do begin to feel
the divergence there. Yeah. It's not even what we like, actually. As humans, we like a certain
amount of predictability, but only a certain amount. We don't want it exactly the same each time. So,
you know, we rely on our interest being taken by a deviation we didn't expect. The sycophancy
is the thing that really drives me mad when it says, good question, Brian. That's a really good
question. That's not just an insight. That's a revelation. That's not an X. It's a Y formulation.
Yeah. So you first of all, if you're going to do work with AI at all, you have to, as my friend, Danny Hillis says, you have to start off by saying, please don't flatter me.
You've done so much of your work in collaboration, but also in collaboration with machines.
I mean, it is something you are known for.
Yes.
So to you, what makes you good at creating healthy collaborations between humans and technologies,
and what for you typifies a healthy collaboration as opposed to an outsourcing, an unhealthy form of the
of the human beings behind her. Yes. So I have a few mental tricks that I use, which I think
are just naturally part of me. One of them, when I'm faced with a piece of technology, which can
do something, I immediately don't want to know about what it can do. I want to know what it can do
that the makers didn't imagine it would ever be used to do. And with the type of technology that I work
with musical technology, that's a very rich open territory. And it's rich and open because not that
many people explore it. You know, they have something that says, this will make your mixes sound
louder. And they use it to make mixes sound louder. Well, you know, don't blame them. That's what it
says on the box. But you will also find out that that can do something else that nobody had ever
thought of doing with music before. So that was an example of using something that was meant to
do a particular job, record something and play it back later on. So build something new in real
time. So I think that's to do with technology, to do with people. So the first thing I think about
when I look at a band, I think, okay, so there are, let's say, five people in that band.
How many possible duets is that? How many possible trios? How many possible quartets? How many possible
how many solo is five, obviously, and how many everybody won.
Now, it very often happens that that space has not been explored properly by the band.
People haven't thought, what about if only three of us play in this?
And then another slightly different configuration of three play.
So it's a very simple thing, but it suddenly unlocks a set of possibilities
that probably hadn't been explored before.
You know, what happens if we only have vocalist drums and bass?
None of the other instruments that usually fill in the harmonic information in between.
There are lots of tricks like that, but they're sort of ways of looking at the system as it stands and thinking,
what hasn't been done yet with this system?
What might excite people?
You see, I think that music grows out of excitement, and if you aren't feeling excitement,
then you try to create it in some way.
If the situation isn't turning you on,
then you try to change it until it does turn you on.
Because when you're excited, you are at your most alert, I think.
And when you're at your most alert,
you're most likely to spot the little thing
that is going to turn into the big thing.
One thing that makes me think about
that feels relevant in both directions
is I think it's often
a very important question
where the agency
resides in something.
So I think we always say
we use social media.
But no, social media uses us.
Yeah. Yeah, yeah. And over time,
if you watch anybody on it for long enough, you
watch them become the social media that's using
them, right? They begin to bow to its incentives,
to its habits, to its form.
What you were just saying I thought was so interesting about
the set of possibilities in a band.
Initially, it's a bunch of musicians playing in a band.
Eventually, the band, through its
habits through what's expected of it, is playing the musicians.
Yes.
And I think this is very true with technologies.
You know, when you talk about you discovering, or Terry Riley discovering what you can do
is two tape recorders, you are playing the tape recorders.
And I think this is probably not always true, but when you think about a lot of the digital
possibilities people have had in the last couple of decades, like Ableton and other things,
it's still people playing the synthesizer.
are playing the music library.
I think the fear that a lot of us have
about generative AI is it
we're not going to be playing it.
It's going to be playing us.
Often because we prefer it to play us, right?
You can use AI to help you write a better essay,
but a lot of people just want the AI to write the essay.
The whole essay.
The whole essay.
And I think that that space between
are you playing the technology
or is the technology playing you
is a very tricky one.
And I think that's one of my
more dystopic versions of our AI future,
my kid's future in AI,
is a world in which they've given up
a lot of their own agency
because it seems a little bit ridiculous to take it.
Yes.
And that could always have been true.
I mean, there's a million technologies that I hand,
like I'm happy I have Google Maps.
I have a bad sense of direction
and I'm not trying to make it better.
But there is some line
where you are acting upon the world
versus the world is just acting through you
that I think is going to be very hard to please.
Yes, I think what bothers me, which is exactly part of what you're saying, is the possibility of not making a mistake at all, of making things that always come with this sort of professional finished gloss of what a real pop song looks like or what a real picture looks like.
And I think that's lethal. I have a friend, an architect friend called Rem Koolhaas, he's a Dutch architect.
and he uses this phrase, the premature sheen.
So in his architectural practice,
when they first got computers
and computers were first good enough
to do proper renderings of things,
he said, everything looked amazing at first.
You could construct a building
in half an hour in the computer
and you'd have this amazing looking thing.
And he said, but it didn't help us make good buildings.
It helped us make things that looked like
they might be good buildings, but he said, in the end, we went back, and I went to visit him
one day when they were working on a big new complex for someplace in Texas. And what they were
using were matchboxes and pens and packets of tissues. It was completely analog. And there was
no sense at all that this had any relationship to what the final product would be in terms of how
looked. So it meant that what you were thinking about was, how does it work? What do we want it
to be like to be in that place? You started asking the important questions again, not what kind
of facing should we have on the building or what kind of colour should the stone be. And when I see
people fiddling around with synthesizers, this has always been a problem with synthesizers.
They always come with a bank of sounds ready made for people who don't want to learn how to program
them, which it turns out is most people. I remember talking to Yamaha once, who produced the
most successful synthesizer of all time, which was the DX7. And I said, you know, you should
really make these a little bit easier to program. And they said, well, we don't bother because
nobody tries to change them anyway. We often get them back for repair. And we can tell if somebody's
tried to change the programming. And nobody's ever done it. They've just used the presets. And
That seems to me a kind of mental laziness that I really don't think fits well with making new things.
I think that's strange, a little bit inspiring as a principle.
You've worked, corresponded, known, so many just fascinating people and people admire that I want to see if you'd be up for me, just reading a few names, not a lightning round, you can answer at whatever length you would like, but you just tell me, you know, something, inspiration and insight, something that you took from that person, if you'd be up for you.
for it.
Sure, yes.
Let me start just at the composer John Cage.
I think the thing that really impressed me about Cage was not his music, which I didn't
particularly care for after the 1940s, but his idea that being a composer was a kind of a practice
in the sense of a religious or a spiritual or a philosophical practice.
And I thought that's the kind of artist I want to be.
I want to have a practice.
practice. I want there to be resonances into other parts of my thinking. I don't want it to just be
something that I do on the weekends and then forget about. So Cage with his book Silence was
very important for me. That came along at just the right time for me. David Bowie.
One of the most committed artists I've ever worked with in the sense that he really
thought about what he was doing just to tell you a short story. I remember being in the studio
with him doing, he was doing a vocal on one of the songs. I can't remember the song. So he does the
vocal and he comes back into the control room listening back to it. He says, it's a bit lumberjack,
isn't it? And I knew exactly what he meant. And he said, I think the guy should sound a little bit
nervous, like he's working in an office and he hasn't been there very long and doesn't quite
know how you're supposed to behave in the office. Then he goes back out and does this other
vocal and suddenly you hear the transition from this confident, strong, hairy, macho guy
to somebody who's a little bit timid and doesn't quite know whether he should be saying
the things he's saying. And seeing him fine-tune that was very impressive. Steve Reich.
Well, Steve Reich was a very important part of my listening
because he made a piece called It's Gonna Rain that opened a door for me.
And the door it opened was not just to do with the way in which he made it,
which was itself very impressive, using an absolute minimum of material,
0.8 seconds of material, I think it was.
that piece works by making your brain behave in a certain way. You are not an inactive listener
in that. All of his work, I think, depends on making your brain perform and watch itself
performing in a certain way. So I suddenly thought then, oh, the composer isn't just Steve Reich.
It's Steve Reich and my brain that's making this composition what it is. And that thought never left me
that you actually are engaging the technology of the listener's brain to complete the piece.
They're not passive.
Listening to his music completely changed my relationship with music, I think.
It's like power washing your own mind.
To really sit through it, it's as psychedelic as any, as I think, any drug out there really does.
It's so rhythmic and it forces your brain to adjust to it in a way that feels like when you come out the other end,
of it. Yes. Some sort of reprogramming has happened. Yes, yes, certainly. That definitely happened
with me. I can definitely say from the moment I heard, it's going to rain. Music was a different
thing. Laurie Anderson. Oh, such a sweet friend. Probably the hardest working artist I know.
she absolutely never stops and she is always working on half a dozen projects in 10 different
parts of the world and I think she's the only person I know who can fly all night not sleep
come straight into a meeting and be absolutely there she's remarkably low maintenance person
She's always there and always sharp.
And Stuart Brand.
Well, all these people you're naming are people who had a huge impact on me.
Stuart was in the army during, I guess it was the time of career or just afterwards.
Yes, just after career, I guess.
He was in the army and I don't think he was ever ashamed of being in the army.
I think he enjoyed it.
And he left the army and became a hippie, became one of the,
the sort of foundational hippies around Timothy Leary and Ken Kesey and that group of people.
And he's always been a very big thinker and a very long-term thinker.
And one of his early thoughts was if people on Earth could see a picture of the Earth from the
moon, it would change our consciousness of the Earth.
A thought he had sitting on a roof while on acid, if I remember the story.
correctly. That's absolutely true, yes. Ascad does produce good results in some people,
not in me, unfortunately. So Stuart sort of gave birth to this idea, I think, that if we could
show the world from the outside, if we realized what this tiny, what an amazing, extraordinary
a unique gift that was this tiny little planet teeming with life swimming around in a dead
universe as far as we know we still don't know that there's any other life in the universe which
is phenomenal if you think about it we still don't know we might be the only life in the universe
i think about that nearly every day i think it's the most sobering thought i think that should
be shouted from the rooftops every day. That's my version of seeing the whole earth from space,
is getting people to understand that we might be the only life. It might all be on this one place.
And bloody hell, shouldn't we look after it a bit better then? Those things make me constantly think
and constantly be sort of grateful for the fact that I'm alive. I remember reading this comment
from a New York taxi driver
who's driving the taxi
and he says, he turns to the customer,
he says, oh, life, I'm so glad
I got in.
I just love that.
The idea that it's like an amazing show at a theater
and you manage to get a ticket to see it.
I appreciate that kind of gratitude.
That is lovely.
And then always our final question,
what are three books you'd recommend
to the audience. Okay, so this was a very hard question. Three is not very many books, and I thought
quite hard about them. So one of the books is called Printing and the Mind of Man. It was the
catalogue, really, of an exhibition that was at the British Museum in 1963, and it was about the
history of printing. But actually, the book is about the most important books in the Western
and the impact that they had when they were released starts with the Gutenberg Bible.
But it's such a fascinating book because you really start to understand where the big
fundamental ideas that made Western culture, it doesn't have any Arabic books or any Indian
books or any Chinese books. So it's really about the last 500 years in Western culture.
And it's probably the most fascinating book about intellectual history that I've ever read.
and it's a very beautiful book
because it was put together by a great printer
who used lots of beautiful types
and so on. It's a wonderful book.
So the second book, I think I'm going to suggest,
is a book by the architect Christopher Alexander
called A Pattern Language.
And it's really a book about habitat
about what makes spaces welcoming and fruitful
or hostile and barren
and it's the most beautiful book
it talks about things
at the biggest scale possible
you know,
countrywide, nationwide scale
down to the scale
of the molding of a
banister or something like that
and tries to understand
why some of those things work
and why they don't
and it's such a lovely book to read
over the course of my life
I've bought
I would say 60 copies of that book now
because I always give it to anyone
who is about to renovate a house
or about to build a house.
So that's my second one.
It's a great read and you would love it.
My third one is Naples 44 by Norman Lewis.
Norman Lewis was a British intelligence officer
who was sent to Naples
when the Germans had been beaten out of there
and he was sent there to find out whether there were nascent fascist groups still working in Naples.
And he kept a diary.
And this is the most fabulous diary you'll ever read.
It's just both hilariously funny, deeply moving and totally confusing.
And you realize that Naples was like another planet.
It's like reading sci-fi some of it, the strangeness of that little world.
Naples with its intertwining of deep religiosity, deep criminality, deep love of the senses,
incredible attention to food, weird decaying aristocracies all woven in with crooks and priests
and so on. So there's three books, and I just want to suggest one other thing, which is a subscription
to the London Review of Books, probably the best intellectual reading in the English
language, I think. It's amazing. It comes out every two weeks, and it's, if you're interested
in books, the London Review of Books, for me, beats the New York Review of Books or the Times
literary supplement or any of those things. Well, let me try to do this because I've loved these
recommendations so much, and I didn't offer this to you before, so maybe it's too hard, given
all that'll flood into your mind.
But how about three albums?
Three albums that have influenced you,
that they sort of form part of your bass layers.
Okay, I can respond to that.
One that really made a huge impression on me
was a folkways record called the Rural Folk Blues.
And they were sort of semi-field recording.
Some of them were actually records that had been made,
but they all dated from the 20s, 30s, and 40s,
and they were black American music.
I'd make you happy in the morning as any woman can be.
Now, I'd been listening to a lot of black American music
because of where I grew up in Suffolk,
which had a lot of American air bases,
but it was pop music, duop and stuff like that.
I loved it.
when I heard those recordings I thought okay this is the soil that that stuff grew out of
and I loved it it was such such rich soil I think the second one that I have to name because
it still remains as one of the most moving records to me is the Velvet Underground's third album
which had the song pale blue eyes linger on
Beautiful, beautiful record, beautifully controversial in many ways
because, in fact, I think it was probably without that record,
I wouldn't have been a pop musician.
I don't know what I would have done.
I've probably been an art teacher or something,
but that record made me think this is something I could do.
And I think it made a lot of other people think that.
I know so many musicians who've been.
say that was the record that really made things happen for me. Now I've got to do number three.
That means I only got one choice left. This is very difficult. See, so much of the music that has
really affected me as religious music, which is funny because I'm sort of an atheist. But
the thing about religious music, I think, that is so special is that it's made by people
And it's made by people for other reasons than I want to pull a chick, I want to make a lot of money, or I want to dance.
Now, all of those things are fine.
I have no problem with them.
But the majority of popular music comes out of those kinds of feelings, I think.
I am very moved by the old conception of beauty, that when we recognize beauty, it is recognizing a nearness to God.
Yep.
Well, I take that.
Yeah, even an atheist like me would say, it depends how big the word God is for you.
And if it's big enough, I can accommodate ideas like that.
So I'm going to choose a gospel record.
And it's a strange one.
It's the Consolas.
The Consolors were a couple, Sullivan and Iola Pew, P-U-G-H.
You know, I asked myself the question after going to this museum I mentioned in Lausanne,
the Museum of Outsider Art. I thought, what's outsider music, I wondered. And then I thought,
well, actually the whole of pop music is really outsider music, in that it didn't come out of
academies or institutions. It's just people doing stuff together. And I think as outsider artists,
the Consolors, Sullivan and Iola, stand absolutely unmatched.
Brian, you know, truly what a pleasure.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
It's lovely to talk to you, Ezra.
This episode of Issaqueline, is produced by Annie Galvin, fact-checking by Michelle Harris.
Our senior audio engineer is Jeff Gelb, with additional mixing by Amman Zahota.
Our executive producer is Claire Gordon.
The show's production team also includes Roland Hu, Marie Cassione, Jack McCortick,
Marina King, Kristen Lynn, and Jan Kobel.
Original music by Amman Zahota, Isaac Jones, and Pat McCusker.
Audience Strategy by Christina Samaluski and Shannon Busta.
The director of New York Times-pending audio is Annie Rose Strasser.
Thank you.