Man Jumping released its first album, Jump Cut, on Bill Nelson's Cocteau Records label in 1984, and began making live appearances the following year, performing at festivals and with dance companies, including the London Contemporary Dance Theatre. In 1987 the group released World Service on Editions EG, the label best known for issuing avant yet pop-oriented efforts by the likes of Brian Eno and Robert Fripp (both separately and as a duo). Both Jump Cut and World Service featured extended groove-based instrumental pieces that combined worldbeat, ethnic fusion, funk, and jazz-pop with sometimes hypnotic minimalist polyrhythms and counterpoint -- imagine merging elements of Byrne and Eno's My Life in the Bush of Ghosts (including the sampled vocals) or Talking Heads' Remain in Light with Reich's Music for a Large Ensemble, supplemented by instrumentation like bazouki and koto and given a dance club-friendly production sheen. If any element of this mix has dated Man Jumping poorly, it's the slick production values and occasional pounding disco-flavored electronic drums, which in retrospect arguably rob the music of the authenticity of its sources (although the same might be said of '80s Byrne, Eno, and/or Talking Heads). World Service was released by Editions EG on vinyl and CD; the previously vinyl-only Jump Cut was reissued on CD by the Shaping the Invisible label in 1999, and is also available (with bonus tracks) on Carbon 7. ~ Dave Lynch, Rovi