| Soft Machine |

The
"classic quartet" circa 1970:
Elton Dean (†), Mike Ratledge, Robert Wyatt, Hugh Hopper
|
| Background information |
| Also known as |
The Soft
Machine |
| Origin |
Canterbury, England, United
Kingdom |
| Genre(s) |
Psychedelic
rock, progressive rock, jazz
fusion |
| Years active |
1966 - 1984 |
| Label(s) |
ABC Probe, Columbia,
Harvest, EMI |
Associated
acts |
Caravan,
Syd
Barrett, Matching Mole, Nucleus,
Gong,
Soft
Works, Isotope, Gary Boyle, Adiemus, Soft
Machine Legacy, Soft Heap, Soft Head, Soft Bounds, Karl Jenkins &
Mike Ratledge |
| Former members |
Daevid
Allen
Kevin
Ayers
Elton
Dean (deceased)
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 |
For the book by William S.
Burroughs, see The Soft Machine.
For the album by the band
Teddybears, see Soft Machine (album).
The Soft Machine was a pioneering English psychedelic,
progressive
rock and jazz
fusion band from Canterbury, named after the book The
Soft Machine by William
S. Burroughs. They were one of the central bands in the Canterbury
scene. .
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Beginnings:
from psychedelic pioneers to post-Ayers jazz fusioneers
- 1.2 The
post-Wyatt era
- 1.3 The
Soft Machine legacy
- 1.4 Soft
Machine biography
- 1.5 Awards
- 2 Discography
- 3 References
- 4 External
links
|
Biography
Beginnings: from psychedelic
pioneers to post-Ayers jazz fusioneers
The Soft Machine was formed in 1966 by Robert
Wyatt (drums, vocals), Kevin Ayers (bass, guitar,
vocals), Daevid Allen (guitar) and Mike
Ratledge (keyboards). Allen, Wyatt and future bassist Hugh
Hopper had played in the Daevid Allen Trio, occasionally
accompanied by Ratledge. Wyatt, Ayers and Hopper had played in a band
called the Wilde Flowers, which included future
members of another Canterbury band, Caravan.
This first Soft Machine line-up became involved in the early UK
underground, featuring prominently at the UFO Club, and
recorded the group's first single, as well as some demo sessions that
were released several years later. They also played in Holland, Germany
and on the French Riviera. In 1967, upon their
return from a performance in France, Allen (an Australian)
was denied re-entry to the United Kingdom, so the group
continued as a trio.
In early 1968, eventual The Police guitarist Andy
Summers joined the group for some live shows, but left shortly after.
Later in 1968 they toured the USA, opening for the Jimi Hendrix Experience.
During this tour, they recorded their first album, The Soft Machine,
in New
York. Disbanded after Ayers's amicable departure at the end of this
tour, Soft Machine reformed with former road
manager and composer Hugh Hopper on bass added to
Wyatt and Ratledge, to record their second album in 1969.
From the unusual psychedelic rock style of the Ayers
led period, featuring Ayers and/or Wyatt singing on most of their
pieces, Volume Two, with Brian
Hopper playing saxophones, launched a transition towards a purely
instrumental sound resembling what would be later called jazz
fusion. Notwithstanding the disconcerting personnel changes that came
about during this period, this is a fascinating period of creative
tension. The base trio was late in 1969 expanded to a septet with the
addition of four horn players, though only saxophonist Elton Dean
(†) remained beyond a few months, the resulting Soft Machine quartet
(Wyatt, Hopper, Ratledge and Dean) running through Third
(1970) and Fourth
(1971), with various guests, mostly jazz players (Lyn Dobson, Nick Evans, Marc
Charig, Jimmy Hastings, Rab Spall, Roy
Babbington). Fourth was the first of
their fully instrumental albums.
All members were highly literate in various musical
backgrounds, but foremost was the eclectic genius of Ratledge, who
through composition, arrangements and improvisational skills propelled
a collective output of the highest standard, in which the vocal charm
and extraordinarily original drumming of Wyatt, the lyricism of some of
Dean's solos and the unusual avantgarde pop angle of Hopper's pieces
all had a major role. Their propensity for building extended suites
from regular sized compositions, both live and in the studio (already
in the Ayers suite in their first album), reaches its maximum in the
1970 album Third, unusual for its time in each of
the four sides featuring one suite. Third was also
unusual for remaining in print for more than ten years in the United
States, and is the best-selling Soft Machine recording.
The post-Wyatt era
After differences over the group's musical direction, Wyatt
left (or was fired from)
the band in 1971 and formed Matching Mole (a pun on machine
molle, the French for soft machine). He
was briefly replaced by Australian drummer Phil Howard, but further musical
disagreements led to Howard's dismissal after the 1971 recording of the
first LP side of Fifth
(1972) and, some months later, to Dean's departure. They were replaced
respectively by John Marshall
(drums) and, for the recording of Six
(1973), Karl Jenkins (reeds,
keyboards), both former members of Ian Carr's Nucleus,
and The Softs' sound developed even more towards jazz
fusion.
In 1973, after Six, Hopper left and was
replaced by Roy Babbington, who had
already contributed with double bass on Fourth
and Fifth and took up electric
bass successfully. This new quartet of Babbington, Jenkins, Marshall
and Ratledge recorded the next (and last) three official Soft Machine
studio releases. After they released Seven
(1973) without additional musicians, the band switched record
labels from Columbia to Harvest.
On their 1975 album Bundles, a
significant musical change occurred with fusion
guitarist Allan Holdsworth adding guitar as a
very prominent melody instrument to the band's sound, sometimes
reminiscent of John McLaughlin's Mahavishnu
Orchestra, setting the album apart from previous Soft Machine releases,
which had not featured guitars. On the last official studio album Softs
(1976), he was replaced by John Etheridge. After Softs,
Ratledge, the last remaining original member of the band, was also
gone. Other musicians in the band during the later period were bassist Steve Cook
, saxophonist Alan Wakeman, and violinist Ric
Sanders. Their 1978 performances and record (titled Alive
and Well, ironically) were the last for Soft Machine as a
working band. The Soft Machine name was used for the 1981 record Land
of Cockayne (with Jack Bruce and, again, Allan
Holdsworth, plus Dick Morrissey on tenor
sax), and for a few live shows in 1984, but these featured Jenkins and
Marshall with groups assembled just for those performances.
The Soft Machine legacy
Since 1988, a wealth of live recordings of Soft Machine have
been issued on CD, with recording quality ranging from poor to
excellent.
In 2002, four former Soft Machine members - Hugh Hopper, Elton
Dean, John Marshall and Allan Holdsworth - toured and recorded under
the name Soft Works (initially called Soft
Ware). In 2005, with John Etheridge replacing Holdsworth,
they toured and recorded as Soft Machine Legacy,
three albums of theirs have been released: Live in Zaandam
(2005), the studio album Soft Machine Legacy (2006)
and Live at the New Morning (2006). On their tour
in summer 2006, Theo Travis (formerly of Gong and
The
Tangent) replaced Elton Dean, who died in February 2006. Both of these
groups performed some pieces from the original Soft Machine repertoire
as well as newer material.
Soft Machine biography
Graham Bennett's Soft Machine biography, Soft
Machine: Out-Bloody-Rageous, was published in September 2005.
In 2006 the book won an Award for Excellence in Historical Recorded
Sound Research from the Association for Recorded Sound Collections.
Awards
- The album on which Jenkins first played with Soft Machine, Six,
won first place in the Melody Maker British Jazz Album of the
Year award in 1973.
- Soft Machine was voted best small group in the Melody Maker
jazz poll of 1974.
Discography
Albums
- The Soft Machine
(ABC/Probe, 1968)
- Volume Two
(ABC/Probe, 1969)
- Third
(Columbia, 1970)
- Fourth
(Columbia, 1971)
- Rock Generation Vol. 7 (one side only,
1967 demo
recordings) (BYG, 1972)
- Rock Generation Vol. 8 (one side only,
1967 demo recordings) (BYG, 1972)
- Fifth
(Columbia, 1972)
- Six
(Columbia, 1973)
- Seven
(Columbia, 1973)
- Bundles
(Harvest, 1975)
- Softs
(Harvest, 1976)
- Rubber Riff (CD Recorded 1976)
(Blueprint 2001)
- At the Beginning (1967 demo recordings
previously on Rock Generation records; also issued
as Jet-Propelled Photographs) (Charly, 1976)
- Triple Echo (3 record compilation,
1967-1976) (Harvest, 1977)
- Alive &
Well: Recorded in Paris (Harvest, 1978)
- Land of Cockayne
(EMI, 1981)
- Live at the Proms 1970 (Reckless, 1988)
- The Peel Sessions (recorded 1969-1971)
(Strange Fruit, 1991)
- BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert 1971
(Windsong, 1993; also issued as Soft Machine & Heavy
Friends by Hux, 2005)
- BBC Radio 1 Live In Concert 1972
(Windsong, 1994; also issued as Softstage by Hux,
2005)
- Live at the Paradiso 1969 (Voiceprint,
1995)
- Live In France (recorded 1972; also
issued as Live in Paris) (One Way, 1995)
- Spaced (recorded 1969) (Cuneiform, 1996)
- Virtually (recorded 1971) (Cuneiform,
1998)
- Noisette (recorded 1970) (Cuneiform,
2000)
- Backwards (recorded 1968-1970)
(Cuneiform, 2002)
- Facelift (recorded 1970) (Voiceprint,
2002)
- BBC Radio 1967-1971 (Hux, 2003)
- BBC Radio 1971-1974 (Hux, 2003)
- Somewhere In Soho (recorded 1970)
(Voiceprint, 2004)
- Breda Reactor (recorded 1970)
(Voiceprint, 2005)
- Out-Bloody-Rageous (compilation,
1967-1973) (Sony, 2005)
- Floating World Live (recorded 1975)
(MoonJune Records, 2006)
- Grides (CD/DVD Recorded 1970) (Cuneiform
Records, 2006)
- Middle Earth Masters (CD Recorded 1967)
(Cuneiform Records, 2006)
Singles
- Love Makes Sweet Music/Feelin', Reelin', Squeelin'
mono (Polydor UK, 1968)
- Joy Of A Toy/Why Are We Sleeping mono
(ABC Probe USA, 1968)
- Soft Space Parts 1 & 2 (Harvest
UK, 1978)
References
- Bennett, Graham: Soft Machine: Out-Bloody-Rageous.
London: SAF Publishing, 2005. ISBN
0-946719-84-5 Biography
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 |