British keyboardist and songwriter
Julian Jay Savarin was the guiding force behind
Julian's Treatment, who put out one of the better obscure early progressive rock albums, the science fiction concept-driven
A Time Before This. Even prog rock fans who are familiar with that album, however, are likely unaware that
Savarin put out a fairly similar subsequent record as a solo artist,
Waiters on the Dance. This too is motored by
Savarin's fine powerful, haunting organ, as well as strident yet appealing female vocals. The woman singer (Cathy Pruden) from
A Time Before This being unavailable this time around, those vocals are handled here by Jo Meek (no relation to the famous '60s British rock producer
Joe Meek!), who'd formerly been in the band
Catapilla. And also like
A Time Before This,
Waiters on the Dance seems to be a science fiction concept album of sorts, albeit one whose precise storyline isn't obvious, other than conveying a general mood of a dramatic epic. While some of the songs are on the long side (the two-part "Child of the Night" and "Dance of the Golden Flamingoes" both last nearly nine minutes), the whole album wraps up in a little more than half an hour.
Waiters on the Dance isn't as good as
A Time Before This, in part because it's rather more stern and bombastic. It's still on the less musically (if not lyrically) pretentious side of early-'70s British progressive rock, however, and recommended to those who like
A Time Before This, or indeed, art rock in general that features fairly melodic, tightly played songs with well-produced combinations of gothic organ, female vocals, tense guitar, and occasional orchestration. ~ Richie Unterberger