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WAY DARRYL - Cadenza – The Complete Recordings (3 CD)

(Code: 21710)
£ 24.99
PRE-ORDER
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WAY DARRYL - Cadenza – The Complete Recordings (3 CD)All three albums plus singles recorded by Darryl Way’s Wolf, remastered from original Deram tapes.
Format: CD / Cat No: ECLEC32922 / PRE-ORDER Release Date: 26/09/2025

Track Listing: CD 1 - Canis Lupus (Remastered): 1. The Void / 2. Isolation Waltz / 3. Go Down / 4. Wolf / 5. Cadenza / 6. Chanson Sans Paroles / 7. McDonald’s Lament / Bonus tracks: Live BBC In Concert 1973: 8. Wolf / 9. Cadenza / 10. McDonald’s Lament / 11. Isolation Waltz / 12. The Ache / 13. Spring Fever (B-side of single) / 14. Wolf (single version)

CD 2 - Saturation Point (Remastered): 1. The Ache / 2. Two Sisters / 3. Slow Rag / 4. Market Overture / 5. Game of X / 6. Saturation Point / 7. Toy Symphony / Bonus tracks:8. A Bunch of Fives / 9. Five in the Morning / 10. Two Sisters (single version)

CD 3 - Night Music (Remastered): 1. The Envoy / 2. Black September / 3. Flat 2-55 / 4. Anteros / 5. We’re Watching You / 6. Steal the World / 7. Comrade of the Nine

More information: Remastered from the original Deram master tapes, the set includes all three albums, all singles, and a previously unreleased performance for BBC Radio’s In Concert series recorded in June 1973.

Features Darryl Way with John Etheridge on guitar, Dek Messecar on bass and Ian Mosley on drums. Ian McDonald appears on and produced the band’s debut Canis Lupis.

Wolf was formed in late 1972 by former Curved Air member Darryl Way following his departure from that group. The band featured John Etheridge on guitar, Dek Messecar on bass and Ian Mosley on drums and began primarily as an instrumental band, showcasing the considerable electric violin, viola and keyboard playing talents of Darryl Way.

Signing to Decca’s Deram imprint in 1973, their debut album, ‘Canis Lupus’, featured former King Crimson saxophonist Ian McDonald in the role of both producer and guest musician. Wolf’s follow up album, ‘Saturation Point’, continued to explore the fusion of rock with classical and jazz overtones.

Becoming a popular attraction on the college rock scene, Way sought to expand the musical horizons of the group still further by recruiting vocalist John Hodgkinson, formerly with jazz- rock outfit If.

With this line-up the band took on a new lease of life as was evidenced both on stage and on the outstanding 1974 album ‘Night Music’, arguably Wolf’s finest achievement. Wolf finally disbanded in late 1974 when Darryl Way joined a reformed incarnation of Curved Air. Dek Messecar later joined Caravan in 1976 while John Etheridge joined Soft Machine and Ian Mosley became an in-demand session player and later joined Marillion.