This article explores a neglected area of popular music scholarship: the different aspects of auteur producer Brian Eno’s often complex relationship with Irish rock band, U2 and their home nation. It considers the cultural and political significance of Eno’s technical, aesthetic and philosophical innovations in his work with U2 in relation to wider debates about Irish cultural identity as articulated through music. It also explores how U2 and the Irish context may have reciprocally influenced aspects of Eno’s approach to artistic production. The article also seeks to situate these ideas within broader popular historical discourses that frame the Eno and U2 relationship
Brian Eno was one of the foremost producers of electronic music in the latter half of the twentieth ...
During the second half of the 20th century, researchers warned of the negative effects of cultural ...
This article appears in a Special Issue of Studies in Music from the University of Western Ontario: ...
This article explores a neglected area of popular music scholarship: the different aspects of auteur...
The music of Irish rock band, U2, evinces a compositional process developed by musicians of exceptio...
This study explores expressions of Irishness by fans on the official YouTube channel of the Irish bl...
Exploring U2: Is This Rock \u27n\u27 Roll? features new writing in the growing field of U2 studies. ...
This study explores expressions of Irishness by fans on the official YouTube channel of the Irish bl...
‘Ecomusicology’ is a developing field that looks to explore the interface between modern eco-theory ...
Brian Eno’s role in the development of popular music - as a composer, a producer, a collaborator, a ...
Accessibly written and well illustrated, this book explores Irish rock music's relationship to the w...
The purpose of this study is to examine the identity retained by the Irish cultural group despite ho...
This article offers a revisionist history of a key period of Belfast and Northern Ireland’s music sc...
Listening to Bono of U2 in a recent radio interview, I was struck by a comment he made. He was talki...
Reissues: a rediscovery of the past. This process of rediscovery is nowhere more evident than in the...
Brian Eno was one of the foremost producers of electronic music in the latter half of the twentieth ...
During the second half of the 20th century, researchers warned of the negative effects of cultural ...
This article appears in a Special Issue of Studies in Music from the University of Western Ontario: ...
This article explores a neglected area of popular music scholarship: the different aspects of auteur...
The music of Irish rock band, U2, evinces a compositional process developed by musicians of exceptio...
This study explores expressions of Irishness by fans on the official YouTube channel of the Irish bl...
Exploring U2: Is This Rock \u27n\u27 Roll? features new writing in the growing field of U2 studies. ...
This study explores expressions of Irishness by fans on the official YouTube channel of the Irish bl...
‘Ecomusicology’ is a developing field that looks to explore the interface between modern eco-theory ...
Brian Eno’s role in the development of popular music - as a composer, a producer, a collaborator, a ...
Accessibly written and well illustrated, this book explores Irish rock music's relationship to the w...
The purpose of this study is to examine the identity retained by the Irish cultural group despite ho...
This article offers a revisionist history of a key period of Belfast and Northern Ireland’s music sc...
Listening to Bono of U2 in a recent radio interview, I was struck by a comment he made. He was talki...
Reissues: a rediscovery of the past. This process of rediscovery is nowhere more evident than in the...
Brian Eno was one of the foremost producers of electronic music in the latter half of the twentieth ...
During the second half of the 20th century, researchers warned of the negative effects of cultural ...
This article appears in a Special Issue of Studies in Music from the University of Western Ontario: ...