PERSON
Brian Eno
The musician, producer, and theorist who spent fifty years designing systems that betray their operators—and who arrives at the AI moment as the clearest available guide to the difference between competent execution and genuine surprise.
Brian Eno (b. 1948) came to artificial intelligence not as a prediction but as a description. As the originator of
generative music—music produced by systems rather than composed note by note, in which the creator designs conditions and then steps back—he had already spent five decades exploring the relationship between designed structure and emergent output. His 1978 tape-loop installation
Music for Airports established a principle he has pursued across every domain since: the most interesting creative work comes not from executing a plan but from designing conditions in which something unexpected can emerge and having the discernment to recognize and keep it. The
Oblique Strategies cards (1975, with
Peter Schmidt), his studio work with
David Bowie, Talking Heads, and U2, his concept of
scenius (the collective intelligence of creative communities, as opposed to the myth of solitary genius), his work with the
Long Now Foundation—all elaborate the same conviction: control is overrated, the accident is undervalued, and the