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Jade Warrior

Jade Warrior was a progressive rock/jazz rock band led by Jon Field and Tony Duhig, who met during the 1960s while working in a factory. The two did not immediately start a band, but spent several years improving their musical skills, Field on percussion, Duhig on guitar. They finally created a group named July, with Tom Newman, Chris Jackson, and Alan James. Newman would later engineer Mike Oldfield's landmark album Tubular Bells. July released one album of eccentric psychedelic pop in 1968, then folded. After the demise of July, Duhig traveled to ...read more

Jade Warrior was a progressive rock/jazz rock band led by Jon Field and Tony Duhig, who met during the 1960s while working in a factory. The two did not immediately start a band, but spent several years improving their musical skills, Field on percussion, Duhig on guitar. They finally created a group named July, with Tom Newman, Chris Jackson, and Alan James. Newman would later engineer Mike Oldfield's landmark album Tubular Bells. July released one album of eccentric psychedelic pop in 1968, then folded. After the demise of July, Duhig traveled to Iran, where he met guitarist and future bandmate Glyn Havard. Field remained in England, learned to play flute, and created the Jade Warrior identity while writing music for a friend's dance drama. Jade warriors were the samurai of ancient Japan, cultured killers well-schooled in arts ranging from poetry to murder. Duhig and Havard returned from the Middle East and contacted Field, and the trio adopted the Jade Warrior name. Duhig and Field created most of the music, with Havard playing bass and contributing lyrics and vocals. This initial formation, supplemented at times by guitarist David Duhig and drummer Allan Price, signed with Vertigo Records and released three albums in three years: Jade Warrior, Released, and Last Autumn's Dream. The band's sound combined a straightforward rock style with the sudden tempo changes and experimental instrumentation typical of early-'70s art rock bands. Jade Warrior developed a loyal but small following. Vertigo canceled their contract, although the band had recorded nearly two albums' worth of follow-up material. Most of this work was squelched for 25 years. The albums Eclipse and Fifth Element were recorded in 1973 but not released until 1998. Jade Warrior were on the verge of breaking up when Island Records offered them a three-album deal that eventually stretched to four records. However, the change in labels reflected a similar shift in the band's sound. Island wanted to emphasize instrumentals. This left little room for Havard, who left the band. Jade Warrior became a duo, as Duhig and Field played numerous instruments to realize their increasingly exotic musical vision. The music became increasingly dreamlike, pushing a lighter jazz sound to the forefront. During the Island period of 1974 through 1978, Jade Warrior albums featured myriad percussive sounds, but drum kits were rarely in evidence. The band liked to create a soothing, ethereal feel, then shatter it with gongs and unexpectedly raucous electric guitar, usually from guest David Duhig, Tony's brother. Their albums featured occasional celebrity guests such as Steve Winwood, but Jade Warrior had a style of their own. The band's foray into what would later be labeled world and ambient music parallels the excursions of Brian Eno, who described 1974's Floating World as an important album. During the '80s, Field and Tony Duhig released a pair of albums, Horizon (1984) and At Peace (1989), but they couldn't rise beyond cult status. Duhig was under a great deal of stress during much of this period. He opened a recording studio, mortgaging his house for funds. The studio flopped and Duhig's lender foreclosed on the house. Field became a session player, but after meeting bassist Dave Sturt, he took steps to revive Jade Warrior. He recruited guitarist Colin Henson. Tony Duhig was about to rejoin the fold when he died of a heart attack. Field and the others carried on, releasing two albums on Red Hot Records, Breathing the Storm and Distant Echoes, the latter featuring a guest appearance by former King Crimson violinist David Cross. « hide

Similar Bands: Greenslade, Rare Bird, Gryphon, Man, July

Now
2008

Fifth Element
1998

Distant Echoes
1993

Breathing The Storm
1992

At Peace
1989

Horizen
1984

Way of the Sun
1978

3.5
7 Votes
Kites
1976

3.3
3 Votes
Waves
1975

3.9
10 Votes
Floating World
1974

3.6
4 Votes
Eclipse
1973

2.5
1 Votes
Last Autumn's Dream
1972

3.7
22 Votes
Released
1971

3.4
9 Votes
Jade Warrior
1971

3.3
8 Votes

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