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----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve Goodman" <spgoodman@earthlight.net> > > >In Eno's original definition of Ambient Music, which appeared in early > > >copies of Music For Airports, he declared "Ambient Music must be able > > >to accomodate many levels of listening attention without enforcing one > > >in particular; it must be as ignorable as it is interesting." > > I've always tried to adhere to the Eno Ambient Rule whenever I did >anything > I decided to call "ambient", though I should say that I'd read Eno as >saying > it "must be as ignorable as it is listenable." Here's my source for that quote: http://music.hyperreal.org/artists/brian_eno/MFA-txt.html That short essay and the ones for Discrete Music and On Land ( which can also be found there at the same site at http://music.hyperreal.org/artists/brian_eno/liners.html ) quite clearly lay out the ideas that the term Ambient Music was based on and its "functions". The EnoWeb site is a terrific resource for all things Eno. http://music.hyperreal.org/artists/brian_eno/index.center.html > Slightly BOT: The other night BBC2 ran a show named something like "Dave >and > Joe Go Tokyo", which apparently is a weekly - beautiful contrasting >pieces > with "what's new in Japan", ostensibly... and one of the items on the >show > was presented as an "Ambient Toy", a huge seller apparently. All it is >is a > small round figurine (more like a fat Pokemon than a 'Buddha' visually), > whose head rocks gently right and left. It looked very quasi-hypnotic, >and > yes, Ambient if you will. > > Has anyone seen these little fellas? Or for that matter the "Go Tokyo" > show? > > Steve Goodman I just did a quick search on Google (and WiseNut) on "Ambient Toy" but found nothing related. Cheers, Scott M2 http://www.dreamSTATE.to ambientelectronicsoundscapes http://www.THEAMBiENTPiNG.com