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In the late Sixties and early Seventies East
of Eden were one of the hardest working bands in the country. Countless
personnel changes and a curious hit single obliterated the original
purpose of the band. Yet when they started out they were at the
forefront of experimental music of that era.
After a gap of more than 25 years the three
founder members, Saxophonist Ron Caines, Violinist Dave Arbus and
Guitarist Geoff Nicholson started recording again They have since
released 2 albums- 'Kalipse' in 1997 and 'Armadillo' in 2000 They
are currently finishing a new album.
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IF YOU ASK ANYONE WHO inhabited the Rock venues
of the late 60's and early 70's who the most memorable bands on
the circuit were, the name East of Eden will always crop up. Yet
now they are largely forgotten, over shadowed by the obvious names
such as King Crimson The Nice and Yes, and their uncharacteristic
hit 'Jig-a-Jig' only served to confuse people as to the kind of
music they were actually producing at the time. The original incarnation
of the band were never categorised in the general mainstream of
'progressive' rock which invariably relied on guitar and keyboard
pyrotechnics. Instead their front line of electric violin. played
in an almost Hendrix-like mode, saxophone bordering on free form
jazz mixed with bluesy guitar, gave them a unique identity.
Their utilisation of jazz in a much purer form
than their contemporaries was the prime element which defined their
music. Also use of eastern scales, reggae rhythms and influences
of classical composers such as Bartok crossed musical boundaries
years before the term 'World Music' was coined. The band were originally
formed in Bristol in 1967 but moved to London in 1968 taking on
board ex-Graham Bond bass player Steve York (later with Vinegar
Joe) and drummer Dave Dufort. This line-up made their first album
'Mercator Projected'. The curious production by a Decca pop producer
high- lighted a soft-edged eastern influenced style rather than
the rawer improvisational qualities of their stage performance.
Their second album 'Snafu' was more representational incorporating
reggae and Charles Mingus and John Coltrane influenced tracks. This
time on bass was Andy Sneddon and drums Geoff Britton (who went
on to join Paul McCartney's Wings) Both albums clocked up respectable
sales. 'Snafu' made the top 30 in the UK and a single 'Ramadhan'
reached No.2 in France in 1970 'Jig-a-Jig', which was the encore
number in their set, an ironic throwaway twist to the rest of their
show, became a top ten single on it's re-release in 1971. Dave Arbus
then made two rather more conventional albums on the Harvest label
(with David Jack. guitar, Jeff Allen, drums and Don Weller, Sax).
By this time Ron and Geoff had quit the band, Ron to concentrate
on playing jazz and Geoff to join the band Bubastis. Since reuniting
in the 1990's they have concentrated on playing mainly jazz based
instrumental material. In the recent 'Classic Albums' TV Series
on The Who's album 'Who's Next' Dave Arbus was featured as he contributed
the long Violin solo ending the legendary track 'Baba O'Reilly'.
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