Another piece  of topical hard rock from Manfred  Mann's Earth Band and, as before, listenable even to those without a  serious bone in their bodies, by virtue of the playing. Moving between  hard rock and British blues influences (with a special debt to Cream  on the opening cut, "Give Me the Good Earth") and progressive rock, the  quartet cuts a mean swathe across the sonic landscape, between Mick  Rogers' soaring guitar solos and Manfred  Mann's inimitable synthesizer work. Some of the less ambitious  cuts, such as "I'll Be Gone," are relatively dispensable, but when these  guys start reaching, as on "Earth Hymn," that's when their best musical  instincts take hold, and the results are always worth hearing. There's  stuff here that King  Crimson or Be  Bop Deluxe wouldn't have been ashamed to have had on any of their  albums; indeed, the instrumental "Sky High" is worth the price of  admission by itself as a showcase for the talents of all four players as  both hard rock musicians and an art rock ensemble. They even manage to  work in elements of folk-rock, and its attendant lyricism, on the album,  by way of the Christopher  Logue-based "Be Not Too Hard" (which was also recorded, in a  different adaptation, by Joan  Baez about seven years earlier). And "Earth Hymn, Pt. 2" closes out  the album in grand style, once again pushing the band to the edge of  their unique brand of progressive/hard rock.AMG Review by  Bruce Eder
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