The accent here is on concise, jazzy arrangements, with Crowther's restrained guitar soloing recalling some of the best of Allan Holdsworth and Al Di Meola.
Occasionally the funky bass lines and piano breaks resemble Return to Forever, and Clarke's big drum sound vividly recalls Bill Bruford and Phil Collins-era Brand X.
Like Chad Wickerman's The View in the United States, Network's Corroded Path successfully continues the most attractive band dynamics of the jazz-rock fusion form."
Clarke wrote and produced the landmark album entitled LNC, which was recorded in 1996 with guitarist Keith More, and Steve Topping guest solos on one track notably joined by keyboard legend Jan Hammer.
As a result of playing in New York, the 1998 collaboration with guitarist Larry Coryell followed as a step forward to showcase Clarke's compositions.
The tracks featured Pete Jacobsen on keyboards and Wolfgang Schmid on guitar, plus Jack Bruce on bass and vocals on a cover of the Hendrix classic Manic Depression.
For several years, Clarke ran a multi-track audio and video recording complex and 2013 saw him write, play on and produce a new album featuring famous trumpeter Randy Brecker.
Atomgod led Clarke to become the house drummer at GWR Records, playing with Huw Lloyd Langton and notably Tank,[11] where he fulfilled live duties.