Quiet Sun were an English progressive rock/jazz fusion band from the Canterbury scene consisting of Phil Manzanera (guitars), Bill MacCormick (bass), Dave Jarrett (keyboards) and Charles Hayward (drums).

Phil Manzanera (2006)

History edit

Having originated from a Dulwich College band by the name of Pooh and the Ostrich Feather,[1] Quiet Sun was formed in 1970 after MacCormick had made friends with Robert Wyatt,[2] the son of a friend of his mother's.[3] The band integrated jazz elements and sparkling keyboard sounds into their complex music, in many ways similar to contemporaries Soft Machine. However, energetic guitar by Manzanera was a distinguishing feature from Soft Machine, who tended to use saxophone as their main melodic element alongside keyboards, and who did not feature lead guitar before the 1975 release of Bundles.

Quiet Sun split up in 1972, Manzanera to Roxy Music, MacCormick to Matching Mole, Hayward to This Heat, and Jarrett began to teach mathematics.

In 1975, Manzanera booked a studio for 26 days to record his album Diamond Head and got Quiet Sun together again to record an album from their old composed material in the studio at the same time.[4] This first and only album of theirs, with participation of Brian Eno and the late Ian MacCormick, titled Mainstream, was critically acclaimed and became the New Musical Express' album of the month. Reworked versions of "Rongwrong" and "Mummy was an asteroid, Daddy was a small non-stick kitchen utensil" both appear on the album 801 Live (the latter is consolidated with a track from Diamond Head, "East of Echo", with the result titled "East of Asteroid").

Discography edit

Year Artist Title
1975 Quiet Sun Mainstream
2000 Phil Manzanera Manzanera Archives: Rare One (includes 4 previously-unreleased Quiet Sun demos)
2011 Quiet Sun Mainstream (deluxe book presentation with 3 of the above bonus tracks plus one more)

Filmography edit

References edit

  1. ^ Phil Manzanera biography at AllMusic
  2. ^ "Quiet Sun Interviews and Articles No. 2: Allan Jones, Melody Maker". Archived from the original on 13 March 2007. Retrieved 31 December 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) from manzanera.com
  3. ^ Bill MacCormick biography at AllMusic
  4. ^ "Quiet Sun Press Pack". Archived from the original on 21 May 2008. Retrieved 21 May 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) from manzanera.com

External links edit