1979 saw The Enid move to Pye records. Having been given the biggest advance in the label's history, Godfrey made the smart move to purchase the recording equipment they needed to make their next album, Touch Me. A smart move, as the label collapsed shortly after. Touch Me continued the band's trajectory away from mainstream 'rock' music. Eschewing much of the 'hippies play the proms' sound of the previous two albums, and favouring more complex, densely layered piano and synthesizer compositions to tracks such as Gallivant and Albion Fair, the band sounded less like a rock band and more like accomplished classical musicians pushing the boundaries of the new electronic technology. The opening to Albion Fair, for example, would not have sounded out of place on the soundtrack of Blade Runner, released two years after. Almost entitrely absent is the guitar interplay between Stewart and Lickerish (Stewart is only credited as writer once, on Cortege; a track which doffs it's tri-cornered hat to In the Region). Instead we are treated to the often jaw-dropping interplay between Godfrey and new recruit, William Gilmour, on keyboards. In live performances, standing side by side in front of their banks of keyboards, they resembled two Micheline-starred chefs sharing a chopping board.
1.Humouresque
2.Cortege
3. Elegy (Touch Me)
4. Gallavant
5. Albion Fair (Part 1)
6. Albion fair (Part 2)
7. Joined By The Heart
8. Albion Fair
9. Dambusters March/Land of Hope And Glory
10. The Skyeboat Song