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Epic Forest

Artist Rare Bird
Title Epic Forest
Release Date Monday, April 16, 2018
Genre Rock > Rock > Prog Rock / Art Rock
Copyright © Rock Fever
Country GERMANY

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Third album of British Charisma label prog heroes; now more Rock than Prog

When they recorded their third album, Rare Bird had recently undergone some personnel changes that had a serious effect on the band's musical direction. One of the band's two keyboardists, founding member and primary songwriter Graham Field, had left, marking an end to the group's nearly unique organ-electric piano-drums-vocals lineup. Rather than replace him with another organist, the group added guitarist/second lead vocalist Ced Curtis, with singer Steve Gould taking up guitars as well. The changes naturally steered the group toward a more conventional rock sound, and not just in the specifics of their instrumentation. The band also moved away from the progressive rock of their first two albums, and toward material that, if not exactly pop, admitted some pop influences and was certainly closer to mainstream rock. Unfortunately, the results weren't as memorable as the original, more adventurous Rare Bird records, instead sounding at times like a nondescript cross between Yes and Crosby, Stills & Nash. Those elements weren't always prominent (and are more Yes than CS&N) , but much of it was middling early-'70s British rock that wasn't quite either mainstream hard rock or progressive. [The LP came with a free three-track single, all of whose contents have been added to the 2007 CD reissue on El as bonus cuts.


Rare Bird came together in October 1969 when organist Graham Field, keyboardist Dave Kaffinetti, drummer Mark Ashton, and vocalist Steve Gould envisioned a two-keyboard rock sound without guitars. They released their debut before the end of the year, featuring the minor radio hit "Sympathy." The next year they released As Your Mind Flies By, a dark and heavier album that put further emphasis on Gould's melodramatic singing style. Field and Ashton left the group before Epic Forest, which saw new drummer Fred Kelly bring in guitarist Andy Curtis to revamp their sound into a more folk-oriented direction. Gould also picked up the guitar at this point, and the music became much more about their guitar interplay than anything else. By 1973's Somebody's Watching, interest had waned in their efforts, leaving the group with a dwindling fan base. Still, they managed to release one more album, 1974's Born Again, which featured an entirely different sound than the progressive rock of their first two albums. The band's demise was followed by a collection, Sympathy, which took its material from the first two albums only.

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