Image via YouTube.

Eno, Gary Hustwit’s new generative documentary on the life and works of Brian Eno, is finally available in select cities across the globe, with screenings beginning this week in New York. The unique conceptual undertaking amassed a great deal of buzz following its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year, chiefly as no two screenings of the film are the same. Created by Eno, director Hustwit and technologist Brendan Dawes, the project arrives finally as the culmination of countless hours of archival footage, interviews and music paired with generative software, producing unique combinations of scenes and music each night.

Though the accompanying soundtrack of previously released Eno tracks and an additional trio of unheard songs debuted on April 19, fans can now watch a new music video for “Stiff.” Hustwit’s video for “Stiff,” which was penned in 1991 for the shelved project My Squelchy Life and later offered with a deluxe repress of Nerve Net in 2014, consists of never-seen-before footage from the 1990s, curated alongside the content featured in the film. The pairing of leftfield clips with vintage footage of Eno singing highlight the track’s absurdist undertone, making a blast from the past perfect for an unpredictable present.

The two-week NYC run–which began on Friday, July 12 with a special Q&A from director Gary Hustwit–continues through Thursday, July 25 at Houston Street’s Film Forum. In the coming weeks, Eno is set for similar stints around the world, with upcoming premieres in the UK, Nashville, Austin, Dallas, Toronto, San Francisco and Los Angeles, many of which also include pre or post-show commentary with Hustwit. For tickets and more information on upcoming screenings, go to https://www.hustwit.com/events.

Watch the new “Stiff” video and stream the original sountrack for Eno below.