Beatie Wolfe and Brian Eno beam their new album into the dark matter

To celebrate the release of Liminal, Brian and Beatie, with the assistance of Nobel Prize winning physicist Dr. Robert Wilson, will be employing the legendary Holmdel Horn antenna to broadcast the album into space on the 15th of October. The antenna is a monument of major historic significance located at Crawford Hill, in the newly established Robert Wilson National Park. Built by Bell Laboratories in 1959, it played a crucial role in the discovery of the cosmic microwave background radiation, which substantiated the Big Bang Theory, as well as picking up the earliest echoes of the birth of our Universe.

“This music, to us, feels like an exploration of new territories, imagining future worlds that we want to live in,” says Eno. ”And so it felt fitting to broadcast it into the unknown, into dark matter.”

You can buy the Brian Eno and Beatie Wolfe album ‘Liminal‘ here

Read all about the trilogy of albums for Eno and Wolfe and get the limited edition purple vinyl seven-inch single from Electronic Sound here.

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