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Here Come the Warm Jets
 
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Here Come the Warm Jets [Original recording remastered]

Brian Eno Audio CD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
Price: £12.07 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Music

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Biography

“In the early seventies I found myself preferring film soundtracks to most other types of records. What drew me to them was their sensuality and unfinished-ness - in the absence of the film they invited you, the listener, to complete them in your mind. If you hadn't even seen the film, the music remained evocative - like the lingering perfume of somebody who's just left a room you've entered. I… Read more in Amazon's Brian Eno Store

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Frequently Bought Together

Here Come the Warm Jets + Before and After Science: Remastered + Another Green World: Remastered
Price For All Three: £21.01

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Product details

  • Audio CD (31 May 2004)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Original recording remastered
  • Label: Eg
  • ASIN: B00022M518
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 131,278 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Needles In The Camel's Eye (2004 Digital Remaster) 3:10£0.89
Listen  2. The Paw Paw Negro Blowtorch (2004 Digital Remaster) 3:05£0.89
Listen  3. Baby's On Fire (2004 Digital Remaster) 5:19£0.89
Listen  4. Cindy Tells Me (2004 Digital Remaster) 3:25£0.89
Listen  5. Driving Me Backwards (2004 - Remaster) 5:12£0.89
Listen  6. On Some Faraway Beach (2004 Digital Remaster) 4:36£0.89
Listen  7. Blank Frank (2004 Digital Remaster) 3:37£0.89
Listen  8. Dead Finks Don't Talk (2004 Digital Remaster) 4:19£0.89
Listen  9. Some Of Them Are Old (2004 Digital Remaster) 5:11£0.89
Listen10. Here Come The Warm Jets (2004 Digital Remaster) 4:04£0.89


Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

In 1973, fed up with Bryan Ferry's domineering in Roxy Music, Eno leapt into a solo career that would find him championing the "art" in "artifice". This record is a who's who of the then-burgeoning English art-rock scene, featuring Robert Wyatt, Robert Fripp, and every member of Roxy Music except its leader (thus answering the musical question, "What if Eno had helmed the third Roxy record instead of Ferry?"). Warm Jets sports a lightheartedness that was a refreshing antidote to the pomposity of Yes and ELP on the dark side of art-rock's spectrum, with nonsensical, sound-based couplets such as "Oh headless chicken / How can those teeth stand so much kicking?" Listen to Fripp's furious guitars on "Baby's On Fire" and "Blank Frank": it's incredible, Velvet Underground-inspired rock in a scene that had forgotten what rocking meant. --Gene Booth

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Quirky debut from ex-Roxy knob twiddler, 24 Jun 2004
By 
Dr. D. B. Sillars - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Here Come the Warm Jets (Audio CD)
Eno's first song album after leaving Roxy Music and emphatically establishes his far-sighted talent that was barely hinted at within the confines of Ferry's band. There is glam, there is 50's rock and roll, pre-punk punk, art rock, avant garde all mixed together in a surreal, alien brew.

There is a simplicity and almost amateurish wilfulness about this album, though there is no denying the sophistication of the material, arrangements and playing. Eno is at his playful, naughty best here. That even stretches to the album title, the meaning of which is reflected in one of the items shown on the album cover!

Best here is "Baby's On Fire" where Fripp produces one of his most blistering solos. "Driving Me Backwards" is darkly menacing. "Cindy Tells Me" is a gorgeous pop song which ends too soon. This album is what Roxy Music would have sounded like if helmed by Eno. All members bar Ferry appear and Eno even does a good impersonation of the crooner on "Dead Finks Don't Talk"!

A couple of comments about these re-issues. They are minimally packaged in digipaks which are housed in transparent plastic slip cases. These are not remasters as such, but new transfers taken from the original master tapes using the new Direct Stream Digital (DSD) format. This is state of the art as regards mastering onto compact disc. They have been transferred by Simon Heyworth who is one of the best in the business. He has made statements about the remastering of these recordings. Why change something that was done right originally! Eno was happy with the original mastering so what is needed is just the best transfer onto compact disc that is currently feasible. Whereas the original CD's sounded flat and thin, these transfers are much livelier and offer a fuller, more detailed sound.

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A masterpiece of wonderfully great tracks. Weird Though., 11 Sep 2005
By 
Mr. Jack Gray "jackmaster" (Glasgow) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Here Come the Warm Jets (Audio CD)
There are several great reasons why I love Brian Eno's debut LP. It makes a change from the Roxy Music albums I've listened to as well as showcasing his remarkable talent for playing snake guitar, the synth, and treating the other instruments, and, oh yes!, "Baby's On Fire".

Of all the versions that were recorded by Eno, this one stands out from the pack. Simon King's brill drumming, Paul Rudolph on guitar, and bass, Screetching quality guitar from Bob Fripp, and John Wetton on second bass guitar. I think Brian Eno done the right thing by quitting Roxy Music in July 1973.

Most of the musicians who played on this album, also played on "Taking Tiger Mountain By Strategy", "Another Green World", and "Before And After Science", which contained the wonderful, "Backwater", and "King's Lead Hat".

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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Quintessential 70s artrock, 15 Jan 2003
By 
Anthony Lynas (Leicester, UK) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Here Come the Warm Jets (Audio CD)
From the moment Roxy Music's eponymous debut album hit the stands up to the release of Achtung Baby by U2 at the start of the 90s, Eno's remarkable creativity in the studio subtly guided the development of pop and rock music without ever overpowering it. Here Come The Warm Jets was his debut solo album after splitting from Roxy Music when he fell out with Bryan Ferry. It was Roxy Music's loss artistically for, as they progressed to the land of the lounge lizard, Eno set off on an esoteric and ground-breaking journey through the edges of pop and rock music.

Here Come The Warm Jets and his next album, Taking Tiger Mountain By Strategy, are both his most straight ahead records and the only albums he made without instrumental tracks on them. Eno's debut doesn't stray as far from his glam roots as subsequent albums do, and yet it still takes standard pop into a strange new world. Melodically, most of the songs on the album are very simple, almost nursery rhyme like in places, and yet two facets mean most of them stand up to repeated listening and remain compelling no matter how often you hear them.

First, Eno's ability to structure a song and not to overplay it is second to none. The excellent On Some Faraway Beach is the prime example of this - for nearly three minutes keyboards and synths build across each other and, just as it reaches a point where you feel the track has fulfilled itself, the vocal begins - and you are immediately transfixed again. It's present again on the switch between Some of Them are Old and the title track, where the strange treated percussion draws you in completely and - at exactly the point you accept it will continue ad infinitum now - the harsh electronic keyboards of the final track begin.

The second facet of his skills that make his records shine is his musical ear - tracks are perfectly instrumented and balanced, and support his limited vocals. The Paw-Paw Negro Blowtorch carries more different instrumentations and vocalisations than any other 3 minute track in the history of pop and yet, in Eno's hands, never sounds remotely clumsy, running from nervous and edgy at it's start, through a humourous mid-section, in to a disturbing finale.

The range of tracks on offer - from the jagged Needle in the Camels Eye and Blank Frank to the lilting Cindy Tells Me - mean the album never sounds bland, and Eno's production means it never sounds anything other than interesting. Yet it's actually a much more accessible record than Roxy Music's first two albums, and all the better for it. The lyrics are less obtuse as well, and often darkly humourous. To round it all off, Andy Mackay and Phil Manzanera of Roxy Music lend a hand, as does Robert Fripp, and even David Bowie is there, albeit with an assumed name.

This record simply should be in every serious music fan's collection. Together with the aforementioned Taking Tiger Mountain and Another Green World, it forms a trilogy of pop records that Eno recorded that really had a marked influence on the way people viewed the process of recording and production and, on top of that, all 3 of them are excellent. It belongs to the Glam movement, but is as different from it as The Beatles were to the rest of Merseybeat. If you do buy it, both the other albums mentioned above are well worth checking out and, of his more ambient records, Apollo is a good starting point as the most accessible. My Life In The Bush of Ghosts (with David Byrne) should be in your collection too - it's remarkable, and even more so considering it was recorded at the start of the '80s. Once you've bought those, there's the albums he worked on for Bowie (Low, Heroes and Lodger), the records he helped U2 with (notably The Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby) and Roxy Music's first two to check out next. Make no mistake - Eno has had a huge influence on the way things sound today, and this album was where he really began to expand his craft.

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