Mighty Baby

[2] Mighty Baby recorded its eponymous debut at Morgan Studios in Willesden over two days in March 1969, produced by Guy Stevens.

[2] In 2022, Mojo's Jim Irvin regarded Mighty Baby as "one of the great lost albums of the period; a facet of the shape-shifting, dawn-of-prog dynamic shared by contemporaries Traffic and Family; music rooted in R&B but revelling in the opportunity to go anywhere it likes".

[2]) Between the recording of their two albums, the band supplemented their gigging income by playing a variety of recording sessions for others,[2] including Robin Scott (Woman From the Warm Grass), Andy Roberts, Keith Christmas (Stimulus and Fable of the Wings), Shelagh McDonald, Sandy Denny, and Gary Farr (Take Something with You, Strange Fruit).

Over the course of 1970 four of the five members of the band (Alan King being the exception) became Muslims, adherents of the Sufi order;[2] their second album, A Jug of Love, released in October 1971, reflected the spiritual journey they had embarked on, sounding little like its predecessor; contemporary reviews were poor.

In 2022, Mojo's Jim Irvin reviewed A Jug of Love thus: "a low-key masterpiece; six unhurried songs, a beautiful account of a band of musicians achieving long-searched-for musical concord; the closest, perhaps, that a British group has come to the transcendent togetherness of the Grateful Dead.