« Back to Top Level | Egg

Egg - Egg (1970)

Track listing:
  1. Bulb 0:09
  2. While Growing My Hair 4:03
  3. I Will Be Absorbed 5:12
  4. Fugue In D Minor 2:49
  5. They Laughed When I Sat Down At The Piano... 1:21
  6. The Song Of McGillicudie The Pusillanimous (or Don't Worry James, Your Socks Are Hanging In The Coal Cellar With Thomas) 5:10
  7. Boilk 1:02
  8. Symphony No. 2: First Movement 5:47
  9. Symphony No. 2 Second Movement
  10. Symphony No. 2: Blane 5:28
  11. Symphony No. 2: Third Movement 3:10
  12. Symphony No. 2: Fourth Movement 3:13
  13. Seven Is A Jolly Good Time 2:48
  14. You Are All Princes 3:45

Notes


With a strong Canterbury influence implanted into their sound, Egg's first album has the band looking to establish their niche as a progressive group, with Dave Stewart's sharp, effective keyboard work outlining much of the album's overall feel. Mixing jazz and progressive rock drifts, the tracks on Egg contain rhythms and meters that are never at a standstill, with ongoing instrumental action encompassing nearly every track. Numerous classical overtones make for a familiar listen against a backdrop of loose-ended jazz fusion and an unordered yet inviting array of haphazard progressive spillages. The fragmented instrumentals sport an attractive inexperience, especially on "Bulb" and "The Song of McGillicudie the Pussilanimous," which also introduce Egg's lighthearted whimsy. Both "Blane" and "I Will Be Absorbed" represent the most colorful example of Egg's progressive rock fundamentals, with quick tempos and assertive keyboard runs. Although Egg's cohesiveness as a band is in its early stages, Dave Stewart ascertains himself as an elite keyboard player throughout the album, later moving on to play with Hatfield and the North and National Health. Egg's next album, 1971's Polite Force, has them sounding firmer and more self-contained, but their debut presents an entertaining example of different progressive genres playing off of one another.