For his 1973 debut album, the Far East's answer to
Ginger Baker teamed with his violinist wife
Hisako, ex-
Soft Machine bassist
Hugh Hopper, school friend keyboardist Brian Gasgoigne, and ex-
Brian Auger Trinity's/contemporary
Isotope guitarist
Gary Boyle. Their debut album,
Freedom Is Frightening is a panorama of extremes that gust across myriad genres. The title track is a master class in atmosphere and tension building, slowly expanding from the early long, sparse, foreboding electronica into progressive pyrotechnics. "Wind Words" is serenity itself, but both "Rolling Nuns" and "Pine on the Horizon" are free-form jazz fusions, rolling in and out of funk, with the latter featuring scorching, Stax-styled horns courtesy of Sammi Abu. The album's intricate arrangements, stellar musicianship (particularly
Boyle's lightening guitar on "Nuns,"
Hisako's emotive violin on "Wind," her husband's fireworks on "Freedom," and
Hopper and Gascoigne's contributions throughout), astounded progressive and fusion fans alike, and still sound sensational today.
–
Dave Thompson, Rovi