Brian Eno's Multi-Track Rosetta Stone

Written by Ed Driscoll
Published October 22, 2003

When I first began experimenting with multi-track music recording in the mid-1980s, a speech by Brian Eno, titled "The Studio As Compositional Tool", was the Rosetta Stone for me, opening my eyes to the incredible possibilities of multi-track recording.

I was in the process of OCR'ing my old photocopy of it, when I found someone had already typed and uploaded it to the Web--which is fine by me. One minor correction to the piece: it's subhead says, "From Downbeat [magazine], probably 1979". It's actually from two issues: July and August of 1983.

For anybody who's thinking about home music recording and has never experimented with it, this article is an eye-opener. Everything that Eno describes as possible in a commercial recording studio is now available to the home recordist with a PC and a decent soundcard. All he or she needs to get started is a program such as Cakewalk's Home Studio or Sonar or Sony's Acid, and it's off to the races.

Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
Brian Eno's Multi-Track Rosetta Stone
Published: October 22, 2003
Type:
Section: Music
Writer: Ed Driscoll
Ed Driscoll's BC Writer page
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