Watch the video for “Like a Spectator,” a new song from Brian Eno’s “Apollo” reissue.
An upcoming reissue of Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks, the 1983 album by Brian Eno, Daniel Lanois, and Roger Eno, features 11 new tracks by the original musicians, including "Like a Spectator."
Apollo was first recorded for Al Reinert's documentary For All Mankind, which tells the stories of astronauts who've traveled to the moon. After a lengthy re-editing process, the film was re-released in 1989, and included a different soundtrack by Lanois, the Enos, and others, which can be heard on Music for Films III (Spotify).
At first listen, this new track feels like an extension of the original Apollo (Spotify), exploring similar themes of hope and tenderness. In other words, a vision of a space utopia that humanity at large was never going to let happen:
It’s natural to want to leave the moon undisturbed; it’s also clear that humanity will disturb it. But do we need to live there? Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, envisages zoning the moon for heavy industry, and Earth for light industry and residential purposes. Bezos’s company Blue Origin is developing reusable rockets intended to bring humans reliably back and forth from space, with the long-term goal of creating manufacturing plants there, in zero gravity. Earth would be eased of its industrial burden, and the lower-gravity conditions would be beneficial for making certain goods, such as fibre-optic cables.
“There’s the argument that we’ve destroyed the Earth and now we’re going to destroy the moon. But I don’t see it that way,” Metzger said. “The resources in space are billions of times greater than on Earth. Space pretty much erases everything we do. If you crush an asteroid to dust, the solar wind will blow it away. We can’t really mess up the solar system.”
Oh yeah, then by all means let's get out there and blow up some fucking moons.