Without Wind, Without Air Roger Eno

Album info

Album-Release:
2025

HRA-Release:
31.10.2025

Label: Deutsche Grammophon (DG)

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Classical Crossover

Artist: Roger Eno

Composer: Roger Eno (1959)

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Forgiveness 03:53
  • 2 Mist 03:10
  • 3 Tapestry 03:40
  • 4 Massacre of the Innocents, Pt. 1 03:14
  • 5 Saudade 02:52
  • 6 There Was a Ship 02:45
  • 7 Without Wind, Without Air 04:46
  • 8 Alembic Distillation 03:21
  • 9 The Final Year of Blossom 04:48
  • 10 Spell 02:24
  • 11 The Moon and the Sea 03:16
  • 12 After Rain 04:04
  • Total Runtime 42:13

Info for Without Wind, Without Air



British composer and multi-instrumentalist Roger Eno’s 3rd album for DG Without Wind, Without Air follows on from the success of The Turning Year (2022) and the skies, they shift like chords (2023). The latter was described by Spectrum Culture with the words: “a remarkable release that unsettles with haunting lines and simultaneously makes one tingle with warmth at a display of beauty”.

The new album includes both solo piano pieces and tracks orchestrated for various combinations of clarinet, guitar, bass, strings, synths, percussion and electronics. There are guest vocal appearances from soprano Grace Davidson and Roger’s daughters Cecily and Lotti Eno, with Roger himself singing on The Moon And The Sea. Jonathan Stockhammer conducts the Scoring Berlin strings on three tracks, while Eno’s friend and producer Christian Badzura arranged and plays on several tracks as well as having co-written the opening and closing numbers Forgiveness and After Rain.

The album title comes from the lyrics of Doubled by the Sun, by Italian band The Doubling Riders. “My friend Pier Luigi Andreoni and I worked on various projects together in Italy in the 1990s,” says Eno. “He kindly gave me permission to use this line, which has a wonder-filled, late-summer atmosphere of almost motionlessness and peace.”

The sheer poetry of the lyric was enough for him at first, but has recently taken on a new meaning, as he explains: “I was forced to look at the fragility of species and climate, and their dependence on ‘turns of chance’ and carelessness. This alters ‘without wind, without air’ into a warning, a vision of a terribly bleak future – if any future at all.”

That shift of meaning is audible in the dissonances of the title track, which call to mind an impending storm. Roger’s subtle, slowly moving piano line is joined by the dark sounds of low strings, synths and electronics; high, wordless vocals from Grace Davidson; and the piercing wail of Alexander Glücksmann’s clarinet. There is a similar feel to The Final Year Of Blossom, again featuring the pure tones of Davidson’s voice, a track inspired by the fear that one day the Japanese cherry trees will fail to bloom.

Happier days are conjured by There Was A Ship, a folk ballad about reunited lovers, sung by Cecily Eno. She performed this song with both her father and her uncle in the amphitheatre of Herodes Atticus in Athens, as part of the acclaimed and first-ever joint concert given by Roger and Brian Eno (available to stream on STAGE+). In There Was A Ship’s mournful counterpart, The Moon And The Sea, Roger tells a tale of unrequited love – his poignant vocal line was captured in one take.

"a beautiful reflection on the here, the now, and an uncertain future”

Roger Eno, piano, vocals, electronics
Grace Davidson, soprano
Cecily Eno, vocals (tracks 3, 6)
Lotti Eno, vocals
Scoring Berlin
Jonathan Stockhammer, conductor



Roger Eno
grew up in the idyllic setting of Woodbridge, Suffolk, with an East Anglian postman father and a Flemish mother, who gave he and his younger sister “one room of the house, which was devoted to whatever we children wanted to do. We could write on the walls, there was a sandpit, there was a busted-up piano we could knock seven bells out of. The town had a lovely river, so there was swimming, great places to cycle, and it was perfectly acceptable for a child to leave in the morning and not turn up till tea time.” It’s therefore little surprise he continues to live in the same locale, spending spare time wandering the countryside on foot or by bike. “What keeps me in a not entirely enlightened country is my continuing love of the area in which I live”.

Like its bucolic, tranquil qualities, a timeless character is key to the magic of Roger’s music. That’s as true of 1983’s Apollo: Atmospheres And Soundtracks – which, composed with his brother, Brian Eno, and producer Daniel Lanois, launched his recording career – as it is of The Turning Year, his debut solo album for Deutsche Grammophon, due on April 22nd, 2022. Recorded during summer, 2021, largely at Berlin’s legendary Teldex Studio and in part at the studio of producer Christian Badzura (also the label’s Director of New Repertoire), it’s an album of grace, purity, melancholy and solace which showcases his free-flowing inspiration and deeply affecting compositions. It’s also given him a chance to remind us of his talents as an arranger, with its compelling piano melodies elevated on some tracks by Scoring Berlin’s 20-piece string ensemble, and clarinettist Tibor Reman, who adds enchantment to the elegiac ‘On The Horizon’.

From the hypnotic calm of the opening ‘A Place We Once Walked’ to the closing ‘Low Cloud Dark Skies’, whose rippling arpeggios are lent gravity by the string section’s sustained chords, The Turning Year uses so-called classical orchestration, so it’s rooted in a tradition. But it’s a tradition that’s taken further rather than abandoned - for example a great deal of thought was put into the running order of the recording, allowing each piece to become a short story in a volume. These ‘stories’ were compiled from pieces written both very recently and longer ago, and manifest themselves in the likes of ‘Slow Motion’, a piece for strings whose unhurried pace provides a gentle passage towards the devotional ‘Hymn’, and ‘Intimate Distance’, whose solitary piano projects a quiet sense of yearning. The frugal simplicity, too, of the emotionally eloquent ‘Clearly’ and intimate ‘Bells’ are counterbalanced by the slow-burning elegance of ‘Hope’, whose ghostly silences are met with moments of unblushing, touching sentimentality, while the understated optimism of ‘On The Horizon’ evokes the still minutes after a storm. The brittle beauty of ‘Something Made Out Of Nothing’, meanwhile, refers with its title to “how 'a thing' can be made of all but nothing, like the movement of reeds caused by the weakest of breezes,” but its title could also encapsulate Roger’s improvisational techniques, illuminating The Turning Year’s singular mix of formality and informality. “I'm not a fan of 'the precious',” he agrees, “and don't like the idea of exclusive clubs.”

This is evident in how this composer has always worked. Roger began his studies at music school aged 16, before moving a year later to Colchester. His public career began after he was inspired by the pioneering proto-minimalist composer Erik Satie to stretch his methodology to its logical conclusion. “I came up with this 90-minute tape where virtually nothing happened whatsoever,” he recalls, and on its strengths his brother invited Roger to join him and Lanois in Canada to record Apollo..., the highly acclaimed score to For All Mankind, Al Reinert’s documentary about the Apollo moon landing. The following year EG Records released Roger’s first solo album, Voices, a piano record which nonetheless owed a similar debt to both Satie’s influence and Brian’s production, while 1988’s Between Tides saw him step away from such electronic embellishments, exploiting both his love for baroque music and his arranging skills to write something more akin to chamber music.

For 1992’s The Familiar, Roger teamed up with Kate St John – then best known with The Dream Academy – to mix pop, classical, ambient, folk, minimalism and more for a vocal record which defied genres, and on 1994’s Lost In Translation and 1996’s Swimming he expanded his horizons further, singing for the first time and adding new instruments to his armoury. (The latter, for example, opens with ‘The Paddington Frisk’, performed on accordion and named after an 18th century term for the disquieting dance of the hanged.) Over the next two decades, more solo albums followed, most recently 2018’s Dust of Stars, which, produced by Youth, returned him to the style of Voices.

Amid all this, he scored Trevor Nunn’s acclaimed 1998 production of Harold Pinter’s Betrayal at London's National Theatre, and he recently finished work on his second series of Nick Hornby’s celebrated State of the Union, directed by Stephen Frears. He and his brother also continued collaborating on film music, contributing to David Lynch’s Dune (1984), Adrian Lyne’s 9 ½ Weeks (1986), Dario Argento’s Opera (1987) and Danny Boyle’s Trainspotting (1996) while their score for Boyle’s BBC mini-series Mr. Wroe’s Virgins (1993) wasnominated for a BAFTA. In addition, Roger’s joined the likes of Lol Hammond, Peter Hammill, No-Man (co-founded by Steven Wilson) and Italian ensemble Harmonia, as well as his first ‘band’, Channel Light Vessel, formed with Laaraji, Bill Nelson, Kate St John and Japanese cellist Mayumi Tachibana. He’s also teamed up as a session musician and band member with artists as diverse as The Orb, Lou Reed, Jarvis Cocker and Beck, and that’s not to mention his three-year stint as Musical Director for Tim Robbins and his band, The Rogues Gallery. Furthermore, he’s hosted events as an accompanist, performing improvised music to well-known early 20th century silent films and archive home footage, obtained and licensed from the British Film Institute, and he’s a member, too, of the Spiritual Humanist Church, which recognises humanity’s need for rites and rituals, even among those of a non-orthodox leaning, and for whom he’s officiated over multiple “non-religious but sensitive services”.

The Turning Year follows 2020’s Mixing Colours, his first full-length album recorded exclusively with his brother and compiled from pieces Roger had shared for over 15 years with Brian, who worked on them further with his own renowned digital enhancements. It was released in the same month that the Covid pandemic forced global lockdowns, when it swiftly became a staple of people’s newly muffled lives.

Listening to Roger’s impressive discography, it’s clear he’s always been prescient, and one year after Mixing Colours, he and Brian joined one another for the first time on stage bolstered by Roger’s daughter Cecily and Brian’s regular collaborators, Leo Abrahams and Peter Chilvers. In the extraordinary surroundings of Athens’ Acropolis, they performed material new and old from across their mutual catalogues, and the packed, enthralled crowd was yet another sign that the world is at last catching up with their innovative, inventive aesthetic. Now, with The Turning Year, there’s no escaping the fact that, though he’s never sought it, Roger Eno is in the spotlight.

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