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His dad was also a geography teacher and was also called Brian. I suspect they were keeping a family tradition going. Got me through my O’level, so I shouldn’t complain.
With all those wonderful names, why did his parents lead it off with Brian!!??
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Jean-Baptiste de la Salle was a French priest (and saint) but the order he founded was exiled to Belgium. I remember the local school. Apparently he is the Patron Saint of teachers. Presumably Eno was named in his honour.
Last edited by Alain Maréchal; 05-01-17, 13:34.
Reason: edited after research proved memory faulty
Yes, it’s the Brian bit I don’t get. I wouldn’t even call a snail Bryan.
It must be a British thing, along with the deprecation. I know nobody called Brian (or Bryan). I don't think I ever did, even in England. A little research tells me that it is exclusively English language, not even connected to Bruno or Brunehaut.
I do, as might be expected. But I also once knew an Australian of that name, whose parents decided to be original by spelling it Brein.
Which reminds me that Mr Eno is often referred to anagramatically by colleagues as Brain One. I quite liked The Ship. Last night I listened through his latest release, a more straightforwardly "ambient" piece called Reflection which runs continuously for 54 minutes. I'm not generally that keen on music that comes with an explicit suggestion that one might use it for background, but in this case listening to it in the middle of the night on headphones while doing some not very interesting work was a rather pleasant experience.
I do, as might be expected. But I also once knew an Australian of that name, whose parents decided to be original by spelling it Brein.
Which reminds me that Mr Eno is often referred to anagramatically by colleagues as Brain One. I quite liked The Ship. Last night I listened through his latest release, a more straightforwardly "ambient" piece called Reflection which runs continuously for 54 minutes. I'm not generally that keen on music that comes with an explicit suggestion that one might use it for background, but in this case listening to it in the middle of the night on headphones while doing some not very interesting work was a rather pleasant experience.
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