Brian Eno recently released a new album, The Ship, which was made up primarily of his usual atmospheric drones. What was different, though, was his decidedly inspired cover of the Velvet Underground’s “I’m Set Free,” from that band’s self-titled album. Eno’s take is titled “Fickle Sun (iii) I’m Set Free,” and it’s just been released as a standalone track.
With the release of the song, Eno gave a pretty long statement elucidating on his own decision to record a cover. And, as could be expected from Eno, it’s not your typical explanation.
The first time I ever heard [The Velvet Underground] was on a John Peel radio show… it was when their first album came out and I thought “This I like! This I want to know about!”. I was having a huge crisis at the time. Am I going to be a painter or am I somehow going to get into music. And I couldn’t play anything so music was the less obvious choice. Then, when I heard The Velvet Underground I thought, “you can do both actually”. It was a big moment for me. That particular song always resonated with me but it took about 25 years before I thought about the lyrics. “I’m set free, to find a new illusion”. Wow. That’s saying we don’t go from an illusion to reality (the western idea of “Finding The Truth”) but rather we go from one workable solution to another more workable solution. Subsequently I think we aren’t able and actually don’t particularly care about the truth, whatever that might be. What we care about is having intellectual tools and inventions that work. [Yuval Noah Harari in his book “Sapiens”] discusses that what makes large-scale human societies capable of cohering and co-operating is the stories they share together. Democracy is a story, religion is a story, money is a story. This chimed well with “I’m set free to find a new illusion”. It seems to me what we don’t need now is people that come out waving their hands and claiming they know the Right Way.
Listen to the song below.