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  1. Aug 3, 2017 · A smutty stack of playing cards had appeared on the cover of Here Come the Warm Jets; Eno’s next rock album, Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy), was inspired by yet another set of cards,...

  2. Apr 27, 2019 · Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) is, in one sense, an extension of the perverse pop music revealed on Here Come The Warm Jets. But where Jets was varied in style and execution, Tiger focuses on the arrangements of Eno and Phil Manzanera. As a result of a shared, unified vision, the songs inhabit the same strange, exotic world, even as they ...

  3. Sep 18, 2016 · His first two solo albums, Here Come the Warm Jets and Taking Tiger Mountain (by Strategy), had reimagined glam rock as sound sculpture and established Eno not just as a practitioner of...

  4. thequietus.com › articles › 22958-brian-eno-here-come-the-warmThe Quietus | Reviews | Brian Eno

    Aug 2, 2017 · With Taking Tiger Mountain By Strategy, released 11 months after Warm Jets, Eno had taken to using the Oblique Strategies cards he'd created with artist and sleeve designer Peter Schmidt during the recording process, this time with a core band featuring Phil Manzanera and Robert Wyatt and a smaller list of guests including Phil Collins, Andy ...

  5. The full, singular sound of Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy) was a natural evolution for Eno in many ways. On his second album, he continued the drone-y, dreamlike atmosphere he had established on Warm Jets, yet the songs on Tiger Mountain were more tightly compact and immediately accessible.

  6. Jan 31, 2010 · PROG REVIEWER. Upon first listen, Taking Tiger Mountain By Strategy appears to be much weaker than Eno's first album. There's very little of the playfulness, for lack of a better term, found on Here Come the Warm Jets. However, as happens with many of these affairs, the album begins to reveal itself given repeated listenings.

  7. Taking Tiger Mountain By Strategy - Album by Brian Eno - Apple Music. Brian Eno. ROCK · 1974. Preview. As wild as Brian Eno’s 1974 debut had been, Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy)—released at the end of that same year—was even more ambitious.