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Mercator Projected
Mercator Projected
East of Eden / CD / 1969
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Artist
East of Eden
Format
CD
Genre
Rock
Label Name
Repertoire
Producer
Noel Walker
Release Date
2002 11 25
Style.Categories
Prog-Rock/Art Rock, Fusion, Country-Rock
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East of Eden
's debut LP is one of the hardest rocking albums to come out of the
progressive rock
movement, and maybe the best non-
Rolling Stones
albums issued by English
Decca
during all of the late 1960s. It's also one of the most daring debut albums of its period, less tightly focused than, say,
King Crimson
's
Court of the Crimson King
but otherwise equally bold and maybe more challenging. The whole record is eerie -- coming from a
pop
culture where most
psychedelic rock
tended toward the light and airy -- the way the high-impact bass, drum, and guitar parts interact with the distinctly Oriental and Central/Eastern European classical influences. The title track is a surprise coming from any British
psychedelic
band of the period, opening with a pounding
heavy metal
beat pumped out on
Steve York
's bass and
Dave Dufort
's drums, while
Dave Arbus
' electric violin subs for what would normally be the rhythm guitar part and
Geoff Nicholson
's guitar twists a
blues
riff around before setting a
Jimi Hendrix
-like wave of tonal pyrotechnics ablaze for the finale. Though most of the rest isn't as hard rocking as that, it is still
progressive rock
with balls.
"Isadora"
may have a few flute flourishes too many, but it also has a beat, and
"Waterways"
(described on the original jacket as "Niotic Landscape in 5/4"), after a meandering opening, breaks loose in a hard-edged piece of
heavy metal
raga
rock
(with a sax part that fits in perfectly), something like what
the Yardbirds
might've attempted if they'd stayed together through 1969 and forsaken their
pop
pretensions -- and then it finishes with the kind of brooding, violin-based
ballad
that anticipates the 1973-era
David Cross
/
John Wetton
/
Bill Bruford
lineup of
King Crimson
. And
"Centaur Woman"
takes us back to almost a mid-1960s
blues-rock
mode, reminiscent of the
Graham Bond Organization
, except that
East of Eden
quickly kicks out the song structures, taking
Coltrane
-like sax excursions before throwing in an extended bass guitar solo. Side two of the album opens with the brooding
"Bathers,"
perhaps the most conventional progressive cut on this album and, not coincidentally, the least interesting song here.
"Communion,"
by comparison, is a composition whose inspiration was a
Bartok
string quartet, and is dominated by
Arbus
' violin. The album finishes with the high-energy
"In the Stable of the Sphinx,"
a blazing showcase for electric guitar, violin, tenor, and alto sax that's worth the price of admission by itself and must've been amazing to hear on stage.
Mercator Projected
was reissued on CD in Japan in 2000 as part of the British Rock Legend Series by
Universal Music Group
. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
$17.39
List Price:
$20.98
Save: $3.59 (17%)
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© 2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Content provided by
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, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.
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