Manfred Mann's Earth Band
Solar Fire
Rock/Pop
Files, 9
Tracks, 43:38
Length
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01 |
Father of Day, Father of Night |
Bob Dylan |
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09:55 |
02 |
In the Beginning, Darkness |
Manfred Mann; Mick Rogers; Chris Slade |
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05:22 |
03 |
Pluto the Dog |
Manfred Mann; Colin Pattenden; Mick Rogers; Chris Slade |
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02:48 |
04 |
Solar Fire |
Mick Rogers; Chris Slade |
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05:15 |
05 |
Saturn, Lord of the Ring, Mercury the Winged Messenger |
Manfred Mann |
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06:31 |
06 |
Earth, The Circle, Pt. 2 |
Manfred Mann |
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03:23 |
07 |
Earth, The Circle, Pt. 1 |
Manfred Mann |
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03:56 |
08 |
Joybringer |
Gustav Holst |
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03:25 |
09 |
Father of Day, Father of Night |
Bob Dylan |
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03:03 |
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Packaging |
FLAC |
Sound |
Stereo |
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Keyboards |
Manfred Mann |
Bass |
Colin Pattenden |
Guitar |
Mick Rogers |
Drums |
Chris Slade |
Musician |
Manfred Mann's Earth Band |
Producer |
Manfred Mann; Manfred Mann's Earth Band |
Engineer |
John Pantry |
Cover by |
Fin Costello |
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Index |
#
2070 |
Owner |
Dave |
Tags |
Symphonic Rock, Prog Rock |
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Fans of muscular progressive rock will love Solar Fire, a concept album loosely designed around cosmology. The album opens with the majestic "Father of Night, Father of Day," which has the drive and complexity of a prime King Crimson track. As unlikely as it may seem, the track was controversial in Mann 's native South Africa because of the "Father of black, father of white" line, implying that apartheid might not extend to infinite space. The album moves on to the progressive rock/jazz fusion of "In the Beginning, Darkness," a swinging, even funky track that benefits from soulful vocals by Doreen Chanter and Irene Chanter of the Grove Singers . The same duo contributes to the title track, a slow piece that begins with a fairly standard rock structure and incorporates a massive progressive jam in the middle. The instrumental suite which follows is a showcase for the combination of angular, sometimes slightly dissonant guitar with fluid keyboard work, and the band rocks straight through with stately grace. Once again, one is reminded of early King Crimson, which was about the only other group to turn out complex, shifting instrumentals of this quality. The album closes with the strange "Earth, the Circle, Pt. 1," which begins almost like a nursery rhyme, switches to a jazz shuffle, and fades out as an odd combination of the two. The album was groundbreaking when it was released and is still a delightful listen. If you like the hard-edged side of Manfred Mann, this may be your favorite album. -- Richard Foss (allmusic.com)
As this group moves closer to the jazzy style it no doubt covets, it begins to show the corners of its rhythmic box. As well as minimal self-knowledge--Mann's strength has always been song interpretation, after all. You think that's why this album has no writer's credits, not even for a familiar-sounding extravaganza called (here) "Father of Day, Father of Night"? I bet they wrote this silly stuff themselves. Ah, self-expression. C+ -- Robert Christgau