i agree 100%. can't miss up thru siren. and the eno rock albums are pretty essential too. i'm not a vinyl fetishist, but the recent remasters of the roxy catalog were almost like hearing some of that material again for the first time (FANTASTIC sound). and the eno box sets on virgin (out of print, unfortunately) sound WAY better than the relatively flat sounding cd versions available on e.g. sean For me interest in Roxy tapered off with "The Fifth Roxy Music Album" (Siren) and just kept going down after that. But I love those first four records. If you play vinyl, seek them out on British Island pressings, or slightly later British Polydors. Eno's role was most pronounced on the first album and was reduced on the second (except primarily, I think, on the long "Bogus Man" and his untrained soloing on "Editions of You"). Also, anybody who likes those early Roxy albums should hear Eno's first four: Here Come the Warm Jets, Taking Tiger Mountain by Strategy, Another Green World, and Before and After Science. Although Robert Fripp never appeared on a Roxy album, he is on all of these except for Tiger Mountain. The best vinyl is again the early British stuff, but these are all available in many pressings and CD releases. Peter