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Biography
Use dmy dates|date=April 2011Primary sources|article|date=July 2008Infobox musical artist|name = Manfred Mann's Earth Band|image =|200px|caption = Manfred Mann's Earth Band in concert|image_size =|background = group_or_band|origin = England|genre = progressive rock , jazz rock , hard rock , blues rock , jazz |years_active = 1971–present|label = Philips Records|Philips , Vertigo Records|Vertigo , Bronze Records|Bronze , Warner Bros. Records|Warner Bros. , Arista Records|Arista , Virgin Records|Virgin , Kaz, Grapevine, Cohesion|associated_acts =|Also Known As =|website = URL| http://www.manfredmann.co.uk/|current_members = Manfred Mann (musician)|Manfred Mann Mick Rogers (musician)|Mick Rogers Steve Kinch Jimmy Copley Robert Hart (musician)|Robert Hart |past_members = See: Manfred_Mann's_Earth_Band#Personnel|Manfred Mann's Earth Band Personnel '''Manfred Mann's Earth Band is a British progressive rock group formed in 1971 by Manfred Mann (musician)|Manfred Mann .
History
Formation
Having started in the 1960s with a British band that had such hits as "Do Wah Diddy Diddy" and "The Mighty Quinn", then moving on to Jazz Fusion with Manfred Mann's Chapter Three, Manfred's third band, "The Earth Band' is still alive and recording. In his 2003 biography, former member of Manfred Mann's earlier Manfred Mann (band)|Manfred Mann Band and The Beatles|Beatles -associate Klaus Voormann alleged to have inspired Mann for the Earth Band's name by having besought Mann several times throughout the 1960s that Mann's soft pop style of those days had to become more "earthier" and rockier, not least of all because of the seemingly effeminacy|effeminate image of Mann's earlier band which had led to a number of close encounters with violence particularly in Ireland .Klaus Voormann, Warum spielst du Imagine nicht auf dem weißen Klavier, John? Erinnerungen an die Beatles und viele andere Freunde ("Why Don't You Play Imagine (song)|Imagine on the White Piano, John? : Memories of the Beatles and Many Other Friends"), Heyne 2003. ISBN 3-453-87313-0
The original line-up consisted of Mick Rogers (musician)|Mick Rogers ( guitar , vocals), Manfred Mann (musician)|Manfred Mann ( Organ (music)|organ , synthesizer , Singing|vocals ), Colin Pattenden ( bass guitar ) and Chris Slade ( Drum kit|drums ). In its very earliest stages, the band was simply billed as "Manfred Mann". This did not mean the band was a solo project, but rather a continuation of the earlier 1960s group Manfred Mann in which Mann was a member. This iteration of the group released their first single "Please Mrs. Henry" in 1971, billed to "Manfred Mann". Their second single, Randy Newman 's "Living Without You" was also released as by Manfred Mann in Europe, but as by Manfred Mann's Earth Band in the USA, where the track became a minor chart hit. Thereafter, "Manfred's Mann Earth Band" was the band name used on all releases.
The membership of the Earth Band was stable through 1976, in which time they released their first six albums.
Themes
The Earth Band combines the stylistic approach of progressive rock with Mann's jazz -influenced Moog synthesizer playing and keen ear for melody. Beside producing own material, a staple of the band's music and live performances from the beginning has been also relying on covers of songs by other modern pop/rock artists, notably Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen , in MMEB's progressive rock style.
Mann's interest in English 20th century European classical music|classical music saw him adapt Gustav Holst 's The Planets|Planets Suite , garnering an unlikely UK hit with a version of the "Jupiter" movement, with lyrics added, entitled Joybringer (included on the 1973 album Solar Fire ). Another classical reference was Questions on the 1976 album The Roaring Silence that is based upon the main theme of Franz Schubert 's Impromptus (Schubert)#No. 3 in G-flat major|Impromptu in G flat Major .
The title song to 1973's '' Messin' , as well as most of the album The Good Earth (Manfred Mann's Earth Band album)|The Good Earth '' tapped into ecological concerns, a recurring theme in Mann's music in later years, with The Good Earth giving away a free gift of a piece of land in Wales with each album sold. Like other progrock acts, beside treating environmental issues the band also issued concept albums on space and sci-fi themes (particularly Solar Fire , a minor resurgence of which was seen in the songs Launching place off The Good Earth , and Starbird , based upon Igor Stravinski 's ballet The Firebird , on The Roaring Silence ) and a number of their songs featured religious or biblical imagery ( Prayer on the band's debut album, Buddah on Messin ', Dylan's Father of day, father of night and In the beginning, darkness on Solar Fire , The road to Babylon and This side of paradise on The Roaring Silence , Resurrection on Angel Station ).
Social criticism was tackled throughout the 1970s ( Black and blue on '' Messin' dealt particularly with slavery, and Chicago institute on Watch (Manfred Mann's Earth Band album)|Watch with mental institutions and science as a mean of social control), a trend which grew throughout the 1980s, with songs such as Lies (through the 80s) on technological progress vs. social setbacks on Chance (album)|Chance '', and with Mann's growing involvement with the anti-apartheid movement which spawned the 1982 album Somewhere in Afrika . Mann's intention for acknowledgement of oppressed ethnics also influenced the 1992 album Plains Music working with traditional North-American natives material.
Breakthrough
Guitarist/vocalist Mick Rogers (musician)|Mick Rogers left the group in 1976, being replaced by Chris Thompson (English musician)|Chris Thompson on vocals and Dave Flett on guitar. The US breakthrough for the band came in the third week of February, 1977 when they charted at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 with Bruce Springsteen 's Blinded by the Light from the 1976 album The Roaring Silence . While the Springsteen original from 1973's Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. album has a folky, acoustic sound, the Earth Band's version is driving rock, combining Mann's Moog synthesizer and organ work with Flett's guitar.
The counterpoint at the end of the song where Manfred can be heard opposite Thompson, was the feature that initially attracted him to the song. The band took advantage of the publicity and re-released another Springsteen song, " Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.#.22Spirit in the Night.22|Spirit in the Night ", which had been recorded the previous year on Nightingales and Bombers , originally with Rogers on vocals---although for some territories it was re-recorded with a vocal from Thompson.
The albums Nightingales and Bombers , The Roaring Silence (album)|The Roaring Silence , and '' Watch (Manfred Mann's Earth Band album)|Watch followed. Watch'' produced another hit single in "Davy's on the Road Again", and the albums were original despite the dependence on covers of other artists' songs. Nightingales and Bombers took its title from a World War II naturalist's recording of a nightingale singing in a garden as warplanes flew overhead; the recording appears in a track on the album. Roaring Silence featured a guest appearance by jazz saxophonist Barbara Thompson (musician)|Barbara Thompson , and Watch included two stand-out recordings from the band's live performances of "Davy's on the Road Again" and " Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)|Mighty Quinn ."
The 1980s
Flett left before 1979's Angel Station (album)|Angel Station to be replaced by Steve Waller, sharing the vocal duties with Thompson who was also intent on pursuing a solo career. Beginning in the late 1970s, the rhythm section also experienced turnover, with bassists and drummers varying from album to album.
1980's Chance (album)|Chance showed a move towards a more electronic approach, and produced several cuts that were hits in the UK and/or saw significant airplay in both the US and UK. The songs "Lies (All Through The 80's)," "Stranded," and "For You" (another Springsteen song) still receive significant airplay over 25 years since their release. Trevor Rabin (also born in South Africa and at the time a session musician in London) guested on the album.
By the late '70s and early '80s Mann had become active in the international anti- apartheid movement and was banned from entering South Africa , the country in which he had been born. Undeterred, members of the band made journeys to South Africa to record African musicians for the album Somewhere in Afrika (album)|Somewhere in Afrika , pre-figuring Paul Simon 's Graceland (album)|Graceland . The album included a cover of The Police 's "Demolition Man" and a version of Bob Marley 's " Redemption Song ," which remains in the band's set today.
In 1984, the band issued the non-LP single "Runner", a cover of song by Ian Thomas (Canadian musician)|Ian Thomas . It was a top 40 hit in both Canada and the US, their first since "Blinded By The Light" in early 1977. It was also the band's final chart single. Post-1984, the band has not charted with newly-recorded material in the UK or in North America, although their newer releases have occasionally appeared on the album charts in several countries in continental Europe.
In 1986, Thompson exited the group, and Mick Rogers returned after an absence of a decade. For 1987's Masque album, the band consisted solely of Mann, Rogers, and drummer John Lingwood. Shortly thereafter, the Earth Band name was retired for a number of years.
Recent years
Manfred Mann's Earth Band was revived in the early 1990s, and has continued recording, covering tracks by artists as varied as Paul Weller (singer)|Paul Weller , Robert Cray , Del Amitri , and The Lovin' Spoonful . Mann released a solo project, Plains Music (album)|Plains Music , based on Native American music , and his album 2006 (album)|2006 includes collaborations with the German rapper Thomas D and tracks featuring the music of, amongst others, the Super Furry Animals . The Earth Band has had a fluctuating line-up, with Mann the only constant, but they remain active in live performances in Europe, with a line up that currently includes both Manfred Mann and Mick Rogers.
Most of the band's albums have been re-released in recent years and a 4-CD set ( Odds & Sods - Mis-takes & Out-takes ) featuring many previously unissued versions of tracks was released in August 2005. This includes material from the unreleased (and thought to be lost) Manfred Mann Chapter III Volume 3 album and the first Earth Band album, Stepping Sideways . The fourth CD in the package includes both unreleased studio material and live performances.
December 2006 saw the release of the best-of DVD ''Unearthed 1973-2005 The Best of Manfred Mann's Earth Band''. This features twenty tracks ranging from three recorded in Sweden in 1973 ("Father of Day," "Captain Bobby Stout," and "Black & Blue"), to a 2005 performance of "Mighty Quinn." Also included are animations used during the band's live performances of the late 1970s and early 1980s and promo films including two tracks from the Plains Music album.
In 2007, two separate dance remixes of Bruce Springsteen songs as performed by Manfred Mann's Earth Band entered the Austrian Charts. The first was a remix of "Blinded by the Light", which was credited to '''Michael Mind featuring Manfred Mann's Earth Band . The second was a remix of "For You", credited to The Disco Boys featuring Manfred Mann's Earth Band'''. The 1983 Budapest concert, released at the time was made available in DVD format with footage from the show available for the first time - this includes tracks not previously available. 2008 saw the release of the 'Watch' DVD which includes as a bonus footage from a 1979 Austrian concert.
In 2009, vocalist Noel McCalla was replaced by Peter Cox (musician)|Peter Cox previously best known for his work with Go West (band)|Go West . Peter Cox left the band in 2011 due to his extensive commitments with his group Go West. He was replaced by Robert Hart (musician)|Robert Hart .
Use of classical music themes
Mann trained as a classical musician, and his love of classical music surfaces in references within songs. The most obvious is the use of "Jupiter" from Gustav Holst|Holst 's The Planets in '' Masque (Manfred Mann's Earth Band album)|Masque s "Joybringer". However there are other less well-known examples:
"Starbird" from The Roaring Silence uses a theme from Stravinsky 's ballet The Firebird .
"Questions" from The Roaring Silence uses the main theme of Schubert 's Impromptus (Schubert)#No. 3 in G-flat major|Impromptu in G flat major .
The riff in "Fat Nelly" from Nightingales and Bombers uses the opening phrase of the String Quartet No. 1 (Janácek)|String Quartet No. 1 by Leoš Janácek|Janácek .
Blinded by the Light paraphrases the motif from Chopsticks (music)|Chopsticks by Euphemia Allen
Personnel
;Current members
Manfred Mann (musician)|Manfred Mann – keyboards and vocals (1971-present; founding member)
John Trotter http://www.johntrotterdrums.com/ – drums (1996-2000)
Richard Marcangelo – drums (2000-2002)
Pete May – drums (2002)
Geoff Dunn – drums (2002-2008; on loan from Epic)
Peter Cox (musician)|Peter Cox – vocals (2009-2010)
Discography
:''For a detailed listing see Manfred Mann's Earth Band discography .
References
External links
http://www.manfredmann.co.uk/ Manfred Mann's Earth Band official website
http://www.bbc.co.uk/threecounties/content/articles/2006/09/26/manfred_mann_review_feature.shtml BBC Review of Manfred Mann's Earthband at The Stables, Wavendon, September 2006
Manfred Mann's Earth Band Category:Musical groups established in 1971 Category:British progressive rock groups Category:English rock music groups Category:Arista Records artists Category:Bronze Records artists Category:Polydor Records artists Category:Vertigo Records artists Category:Warner Bros. Records artists
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