Once the tour following the album "The Power And The Passion" was over, the German band Eloy almost completely disbanded, leaving only their leader, guitarist Frank Bornemann, who soon set to work reorganizing a new lineup. To this end, he recruited keyboardist Detlev Schmidtchen, bassist Klaus-Peter Matziol, and drummer Jürgen Rosenthal, with whom he entered Tonstudio Nedeltschev in Cologne to record the group's next album. "Dawn" would be the title of this new album, the band's fifth chronologically, which creatively surpassed the excellent "The Power And The Passion", showcasing a new musical direction more focused on conventional progressive rock, abandoning the spacey hard rock of their previous releases. Here, the guitars and keyboards are more fused, the arrangements are carefully structured, and the long suites and improvisations of their earlier work almost completely disappear. However, all the album's compositions are quite complex, with preconceived ideas perfectly realized in impressive tracks. The poignant "The Sun Song", the majestic "The Dance in Doubt and Fear", and the progressive "The Midnight Fight/The Victory of Mental Force" are just a few examples of the masterful canvases of an admirable album, considered one of the masterpieces of European progressive rock of all time.

