The departure of Hugo Banton's timeless organ and the diminished role of David Jackson's saxophone led to a profound shift in Van Der Graaf Generator's musical structures. This compelled their leader, Peter Hammill, to rework his original musical approach for the band's eighth album, "The Quiet Zone/The Pleasure Dome", released in 1977. This album would ultimately serve as VDGG's epilogue until their return 28 years later with "Present". Abandoning the dark, lengthy compositions and the vast, chaotic musical intricacies of their earlier work, the band here strived for shorter pieces, though nonetheless of immense complexity. Guy Evans' drums, along with Nic Potter's bass, are the driving force of an album that, together with Jackson's fleeting appearance and Graham Smith's feverish violin, strikes us as the least conventional and epic work in their entire discography released in the 1970s. Tracks like the uncertain "Lizard Play" or the resilient "The Habit of the Broken Heart" offer unchallenging developments, while the Floydian "The Siren Song" or the hypnotic "The Last Frame" stand out as the album's highlights. However, we still find glimpses of their past with the frenetic "Cat's Eye/Yellow Fever (Running)", the psychedelic "Chemical World", and the intense "The Sphinx in the Face" and its closing track, "The Sphinix Returns".

