Having moved from jazz, Blues and R'n'B to out-and-out pop in his
various 1960s bands, keyboard player Manfred Mann went back to the
drawing board in 1971 with a new quartet, Manfred Mann's Earth Band, and
the intention of focusing on progressive rock. With a repertoire that
leant partly on radical rearrangements of songs by Bob Dylan and then
Bruce Springsteen, largely instrumental epics that borrowed from Gustav
Holst's The Planets suite, and improvisations based around the interplay
between Manfred's newly-acquired moog synthesiser and the lead guitar of
Mick Rogers, who left in 1975 but later returned, they soon built up a
formidable live reputation throughout much of Europe (particularly in
Germany) and America. Apart from the Holst-inspired 'Joybringer', a top
ten hit in 1973, British success was slow in coming, until a cover
version of Springsteen's 'Blinded by the Light' and its parent album The
Roaring Silence three years later took their status to a new level on
both sides of the Atlantic. This book examines the nine albums,
fluctuating fortunes and various line-up changes from what was to be
their best and most prolific decade.