Night is the longest day, here come the warm jets, served on a cold plate.
Play it back at half-speed and you've got auditory wallpaper,
it must be as ignorable as it is interesting.
His own world spins within a device: cacophony of sound mixed in a blender and xeroxed; a little snake guitar, a little Leslie piano
— music to resign you to the possibility of death.
Then came 1983 and beyond just him.
Tamper tantrum hotline, amplifiers on the balcony, secretly taping Edge and Adam Clayton on a 4th of July.
The numbered streets and desert rain add soul to this heartland, it's the gospel truth he wiped the deck clean. (sort of and maybe).
His device spins within its own world: manageable hums, danceable drones, welded into night; daytime variations held together no better (and no worse) than a cloud.
Then there's sfumato: music without lines or borders, in the manner of smoke — theatrical fog — a different kind of blue.
Densely layered, so impossible to track, this being lost in the magnetic hush of airports and other strange kiosks, it all falls into a creative lull.