In August 1974 Sancious and Carter left the E Street Band and formed their own band Tone with bassist Gerald Carboy. At various times the band would feature
Gail Boggs, Brenda Madison,
Patti Scialfa,
Gayle Moran (from
Return To Forever and
The Mahavishnu Orchestra), former
Brian Auger, and future
Santana vocalist
Alex Ligertwood.
Bruce Springsteen encouraged Sancious in his solo career and made sure music executives heard his demos, leading to a contract with
Epic Records. Tone's 1975 debut album
Forest of Feelings was produced by
Billy Cobham. Sancious' work with Tone was a radical departure from the music he played with Springsteen; Tone explored progressive rock, gospel chorus (Fade Away, Sound of Love), and instrumental jazz fusion and had more in common with
Return to Forever than Sancious' former boss. Another album,
Transformation (The Speed of Love), followed in 1976, and a third album,
Dance of the Age of Enlightenment, was recorded. However a dispute between Epic and Sancious' new label,
Arista Records, over ownership rights meant it was shelved. It would not be released until 2004 (when it briefly appeared as a Japanese bootleg CD). One more Tone album,
True Stories, came out in 1978 but the band subsequently broke up. Sancious released two solo albums,
Just As I Thought (1979) and
The Bridge (1980), and then put his solo career on hold. On Sunday, December 14, 1980, during the ten minutes' silence organized in memory of the recently murdered
John Lennon, Sancious performed an extended improvisation based upon Lennon's
Across the Universe. Commissioned by New York radio station
WNEW-FM, the solo piano performance was broadcast live, with no audience present, from the empty stage of the
Capitol Theatre (Passaic). == Discography ==