After the Heat is a 1978 album by Brian Eno, Dieter Moebius and Hans-Joachim Roedelius (the latter two being the core members of Cluster), credited to "Eno Moebius Roedelius".

The track "Tzima N'Arki" contains a reversed vocal track, part of which includes the chorus of Eno's song "King's Lead Hat" (from his album Before and After Science), itself an anagram of "Talking Heads", whose recordings Eno was producing during that period. "Broken Head" makes prominent use of tape flanging on Eno's declaimed vocal.

Comparing the album to the musicians' previous collaboration Cluster & Eno (1977), Pitchfork wrote in their favourable retrospective review: "A few piano-centered instrumentals hint at the sound of the earlier record, but After The Heat exists in a fantastic sphere of its own."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wp_rQULxNZA

#eno #roedelius #moebius #ambient #cosmiche #1978inmusic

Waillee Waillee by Dorothy Carter, released in 1978 on Celeste.

Grayson Haver Currin wrote for Pitcfork:

"..The imaginative music she made with them has long been hidden away on 1978’s Waillee Waillee, a private-press gem coveted by crate diggers and Discogs hounds that has at long last been reissued, salvaged from nearly five decades of obscurity. It is the start of a loving and stepwise quest to get her prescient records—and her compelling story, in book form—into public view at last. A seamless hybrid of clarion folk arrangements and coruscant drones, Waillee Waillee functions as a signal flare for that effort, its strange permutations articulating the shapes that acoustic and new-age music would take together in the coming years. A beautiful, sad, and bemused record, Carter’s opus is a joy to behold, as alive and vital now as it was then..."

https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/dorothy-carter-waillee-waillee/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5P_rKKccLAw&list=PLI4Ej6aD_bJpqKYs_c0cSf1PSxGzVa2EO&index=1

#dorothycarter #folk #privatepress #psaltery #dulcimer #WailleeWaillee #1978inmusic

Birth and Rebirth is an album by American jazz drummer Max Roach and saxophonist Anthony Braxton. It was recorded in 1978 for the Italian Black Saint label

The AllMusic review by Scott Yanow stated: "Braxton (who performs on alto, soprano, sopranino and clarinet) and Roach continually inspire each other, which is probably why they would record a second set the following year. Stimulating avant-garde music." - Wikipedia

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gUfeqgWNsUs&list=OLAK5uy_lxsH2VZ2x4__4ARSyk2AW8H3AlOKmp_r0

#maxroach #anthonybraxton #freejazz #blacksaint #1978inmusic