Bill Bruford's Earthworks
A Part, And Yet Apart

Summerfold Records    BBSF003CD  (1999)

Jazz
CD, 9   Tracks, 48:52  Length
01 No Truce with the Furies Bill Bruford; Steve Hamilton 04:58
02 A Part, and Yet Apart Bill Bruford; Patrick Clahar; Steve Hamilton 05:37
03 Some Shiver, While He Cavorts Bill Bruford 04:15
04 Footloose and Fancy Free Bill Bruford 06:41
05 Sarah's Still Life Bill Bruford 07:08
06 The Emperor's New Clothes Patrick Clahar; Steve Hamilton 05:30
07 Curiouser and Curiouser Bill Bruford 03:56
08 Eyes on the Horizon Steve Hamilton 05:09
09 Dewey-eyed, Then Dancing Bill Bruford 05:38
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Drums Bill Bruford
Piano Steve Hamilton
Saxophone Patrick Clahar
Bass Mark Hodgson
Musician Bill Bruford's Earthworks
Producer Bill Bruford
Engineer Mark Chamberlain; Simon Burwell
Personal Details
Index # 438
Owner Dave
Tags Contemporary Jazz, Fusion
Links

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Notes
When Bill Bruford led his jazz-oriented Earthworks combo in the '80s and '90s, jazz supporters were hoping that he was turning a lot of rockers on to jazz. After all, he had been Yes' drummer from 1968-1972 and was highly regarded by progressive rock lovers. And, to be sure, some Yes fans bought Earthworks CDs simply because it was Bruford's band. Of course, A Part, And Yet Apart is a long way from the music Bruford played on classic Yes albums like Fragile and Close to the Edge (which was his last album with the band -- by the time Tales from Topographic Oceans was recorded in 1973, Alan White had become Yes' drummer). This is acoustic-oriented jazz, and the playing of Bruford and his Earthworks sidemen Patrick Clahar (tenor and soprano sax), Steve Hamilton (piano, keyboards) and Mark Hodgson (acoustic bass) is swinging and mostly straight-ahead. For those who knew Bruford for his aggressive, high-decibel work on "Roundabout" and "Siberian Khatru," it's interesting to hear all the nuances and reflections of intellectual post-bop pieces like "Sarah's Still Life," "Some Shiver, While He Cavorts" and "Curiouser and Curiouser." The material isn't cutting-edge or innovative -- most of it isn't unlike what post-boppers were doing before Bruford joined Yes in 1968. But it's likable, and the drummer has a cohesive and competent unit in Earthworks. [A Japanese version added a bonus track.] -- Alex Henderson (allmusic.com)