Egg - The Civil Surface
Facts
| Artist(s) | Egg |
| Studio | Esoteric |
| Release Date | September 17, 2007 |
| Buy this item | $20.98 at Amazon.com As of Nov 22 8:57 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Import, Original recording remastered |
About Egg - The Civil Surface
Tracks
- Germ Patrol
- Wind Quartet I
- Enneagram
- Prelude
- Wring Out the Ground (Loosely Now)
- Nearch
- Wind Quartet II
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Emerson or Rick have nothin' on ya, Dave |
| Classic! |
Although I've read/heard some Egg fans say that they prefer The Polite Force (plus, the band themselves), this one always did it for me. November 2, 2007
| Great Cantebury Style Prog |
On this effort, their is a cohesive and organic flow to the wide range of changes and the improvisations tend to be even more provocative in the range of contrast and color. Their music categorized in the Canterbury - prog toward experimental/avant garde but very harmonically and melodically pleasing with a great deal of subtle humor, much better than similar contemporaries such as Gong or Matching Mole.
Their lack of commercial success is regrettable in that they were as talented as any band at the time and the potenetial was unlimited had they stayed together. this, however, represents the greater challenges and artistic rewards which distinguishes the progressive rock medium.
The Virgin Jap remaster is THE definitive cd vrsion to have, the Brit import sounds rather compressed and flat. December 30, 2005
| Perfection |
| ANOTHER CANTERBURY GEM |
Led by the keyboard work and composing abilities of Dave Stewart (and NO, not the same Dave Stewart who played in the Eurhythmics with Annie Lennox...), Egg also enjoyed the amazing contributions of Mont Campbell (these days calling himself Dirk Campbell) - on bass, French horn, piano and vocals; and the equally-able Clive Brooks on drums and percussion. The group is joined here by several very capable co-conspirators: Lindsay Cooper (oboe and bassoon) and Tim Hodgkinson (clarinet) from the great band Henry Cow; Jeremy Baines (`germophone' and `bonk' - he's a flute player, and often gives whimsical names to his contributions to various albums); Amanda Parsons, Ann Rosenthal and Barbara Gaskin contribute WONDERFUL vocals (they are credited as `The Northettes' on later albums by Hatfield and the North, Dave Stewart's later project); Steve Hillage (of Gong, guitar on `Wring out the ground); and, finally, performing the two wind quartets with Mont Campbell are Maurice Cambridge (clarinet), Stephen Solloway (flute) and Chris Palmer (bassoon).
The three albums released by this trio are similar in structure, but it's easy to hear the musicians mature with each successive recording. Although always imbued with a dash of whimsy, the compositions created by these musicians were extremely intricate and stimulating. While allowing for some degree of improvisation within their structure, these pieces are for the most part composed - even the most cursory listening by anyone familiar with the complexities of written music will reveal that. Dave Stewart's work has several `feet' - they're firmly planted in classical, jazz, rock, experimentation, and more areas. The tracks here are played in a variety of time signatures - some very odd, which Egg fans had come to expect by the time this album appeared - and the band handles them easily and naturally, never stumbling or sounding lost or random. Most of the pieces are instrumentals - Campbell handles the lead vocals on `Wring out the ground loosely now', with the ladies providing beautiful, airy wordless vocal support on `Prelude'. The two wind quartets are stunning examples of thoughtful chamber music - they would sound at home on any orchestral program, and are further evidence that this band has more (and varied) `chops' than most.
The band's first two albums - EGG and THE POLITE FORCE - are EXTREMELY hard to find. The first is available only as an expensive Japanese import, and I'm not sure if the second is available at all right now. They're all first rate - no collection of modern progressive music is truly complete without them. February 11, 2004
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