Roy Babbington (born July 8, 1940 in Kempston, Bedford, Bedfordshire,
England)
is a rock
and jazz bassist. He
became well known for being a member of the Canterbury
scene progressive rock/jazz
fusion band Soft Machine.
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Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 With
Soft Machine
- 1.2 After
1976
- 2 Offspring
- 3 External
links
|
Biography
Babbington started his musical career in 1958, playing double
bass in local jazz bands. After moving to London in 1969, he joined the
band Delivery, one of the side roots of
the Canterbury scene with Phil
Miller, Pip
Pyle and Lol Coxhill. Also, he began to work as a
session musician with jazz/fusion musicians like Michael Gibbs and The Keith
Tippett Group (including Elton Dean), appearing on their albums You
Are Here... I Am There (1969) and Dedicated To You
But You Weren't Listening (1970) as well as in Tippett's big
band project Centipede (1971) and on
Dean's album Just Us. When Delivery disbanded in
1971 after an album with Carol Grimes titled Fools
Meeting, Babbington joined Nucleus.
He contributed to albums by Alexis
Korner, folk singer Harvey Andrews, Mike
d'Abo, Chris Spedding and was a
part time member of the bands "Schunge", Solid Gold Cadillac (with
Mike
Westbrook and Spedding among others) and Ovary Lodge.
Having already contributed additional double bass parts to
electric bassist Hugh Hopper's work on the Soft
Machine albums Fourth
(1971) and Five
(1972), he finally replaced Hopper fully in the band with the release
of their album Seven.
He used a six-string Fender VI throughout his tenure with the
band. In addition to Seven, he can be heard on BBC Radio
1971-1974, Bundles,
Softs
and Rubber Riff.
Babbington's funk- and rock-oriented electric bass playing went along
well with Karl Jenkins' and John Marshall's fusion
concept of Soft Machine at the time.
After 1976
In 1979, Babbington appeared on the album Welcome
to the Cruise by Judie
Tzuke. In the 1980s and 90s, he returned to his roots, double
bass and pure jazz. He also worked with Barbara
Thompson, Elvis Costello, Carol
Grimes, Mose
Allison and the BBC Big Band.
Offspring
Has a son by the name of Nick Babbington
External links
| v • d • e Soft
Machine |
| Daevid Allen | Kevin
Ayers | Elton Dean | Hugh
Hopper | Mike Ratledge | Robert
Wyatt |
| Roy Babbington
| John
Etheridge | Karl Jenkins | John Marshall |
| Steve Cook | Marc
Charig | Lyn Dobson | Nick Evans | Jimmy
Hastings | Allan Holdsworth | Brian
Hopper | Ric Sanders | Alan
Skidmore | Rab Spall | Andy
Summers | Alan Wakeman |
| Discography |
| Regular albums: |
| The Soft Machine
(1968) | Volume Two (1969)
| Third (1970) |
Fourth
(1971) |
| Five
(1972) | Six
(1973) | Seven
(1973) | Bundles
(1975) | Softs
(1976) | Alive &
Well: Recorded in Paris (1978) | Land
of Cockayne (1981) |
| Related articles |
| Canterbury sound - Jazz
fusion - Wilde Flowers |