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Soft Machine: Out-bloody-rageous

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From their cult status as the serious hippy’s favorite psychedelic band to their final days as the champions of fusion, Soft Machine never played the game by the rules. The book traces the lives of Soft Machine’s members, pieces together the band’s serendipitous formation and colorful career, and unravels the truth, mystique, and legends. It recounts the incidents and internal tensions that led to an astonishing 24 different lineups, and places Soft Machine’s development in the musical and social context of the time. Lavishly illustrated with over 80 color photographs, posters, and clippings, Soft Machine includes a full Soft Machine family tree, concert file, discography, and sessionography. It is essential reading for any serious fan of rock or jazz.

415 pages, Hardcover

First published October 1, 2005

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Graham Bennett

13 books1 follower

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5 stars
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29 (60%)
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Lukasz Pruski.
921 reviews121 followers
April 8, 2015
This is the third book about music that I have recently read: after the ground-breaking biography of Frank Zappa , and the collection of essays about Beethoven's string quartets , I have just finished reading Graham Bennett's book "Soft Machine: Out-Bloody-Rageous" about one of the most important bands that emerged from the rock revolution of the 1960s. To me, Soft Machine's music was absolutely the best in the crucial period between mid-1960s and mid-1970s.

It would be misleading to call Soft Machine a rock band. Their music always defied categorizations. They pioneered psychedelic pop (not rock). For a little while, during the late 1960s, one could count them as a progressive rock band, where the "progressive" qualifier meant "influenced by jazz, classical music, and avant-garde". Soft Machine then ventured into jazz-rock category and so-called "fusion", and from there they went deeper and deeper into jazz and avant-garde contemporary music, including misguided excursions into the horrid "ambient music".

Obviously, Soft Machine's creative trajectory that went from dadaist and psychedelic pop to pure jazz was related to extremely frequent changes in band's personnel. No other important music band had 24 different line-ups (performing units). The musician who belonged to the most line-ups (from #1 to #17, continually) was Mike Ratledge. The next most "permanent" member, Karl Jenkins, was in 12 line-ups, from #13 to #24. Interestingly, the best known member of the band, drummer and singer Robert Wyatt, was only in line-ups from #1 to #10. The author shows that the personnel-genre relationship worked both ways: not only did changes in personnel cause changes in music, but also the turns in musical focus of the band's compositions resulted in members quitting the band or being fired.

The Soft Machine story began in mid-1960s in the Simon Langston Grammar School for Boys in Canterbury, UK. Mike Ratledge, Robert Wyatt, and the Hopper brothers, Hugh and Brian, all attended the school and knew each other. Kevin Ayers of Wilde Flowers and Daevid Aellen, an Australian poet, guitarist and performance artist, joined Ratledge and Wyatt to form one of the first line-ups of Soft Machine in the fall of 1966. These four, plus the Hopper brothers, plus 19 other musicians belonged to the band at different times between 1966 and 1984.

The absolute majority of artists who at one point or another played for Soft Machine were influenced by jazz or were jazz musicians. Some, like Mike Ratledge, were classically trained. Mr. Bennett writes that "Daevid, Robert and Mike had all been profoundly inspired in their formative years by bebop - which emphasized rhythmic and harmonic complexity and chordal rather than melodic improvisation - and also free jazz, with its philosophy of impulsive musical experience." Most of them were not interested in playing rock music at all. (Funny how the same thing applied to one of the rock music icons, Frank Zappa.)

Soft Machine never played to the crowd, and were never really interested in stardom. Soft Machine and Pink Floyd had very similar beginnings, often played on the same bill, yet they went in very different directions. Mr. Bennett quotes Nick Mason, Pink Floyd's drummer: "Pink Floyd were far more geared to wanting to be a commercial band than Soft Machine, who had far more musical ability than we ever did. So inevitably we went different ways."

Mr. Bennett's meticulously researched book is well written and very readable. By all means it deserves the distinction of being considered the "definitive biography" of Soft Machine. A very solid and impressive work about one of the most important bands of the rock era, who never were a rock band.

Four and a half stars.
September 4, 2020
I saw Soft Machine in the nid 1970's, they were to me an amazing jazz/fusion band that I had listened to over the years on John Peel's various shows.
It was sad to read that the band was never that happy together, that there was a sense of obligation to do rather than commitment to the amazing sounds they produced.
That, like so many of the 1960's and 70's, that they were systematically cheated by promoters and managers alike, that there was no living to be made for them - how sad!
I was introduced to the book by the John Etheridge and the 21st century Soft Machine that he is the voice of - he was right in his description of the book as being a sad tale!
Profile Image for Chas.
5 reviews1 follower
February 20, 2013
Kevin Ayers has just died in his sleep, he was the one who wrote a song called 'Why are we sleeping?' Hugh Hopper has gone too, a great player and SO fuzzy! Robert Wyatt may not play the drums again but he does other extraordinary music. Soft Machine will not reform this side of the grave but there is always You Tube, French television and their recorded legacy. Everyone who has ever heard Tubular Bells, Lol Coxhill busking on the Underground or appreciated Nucleus, the Amazing Band, Mal Dean....This book is essential reading.
Profile Image for Richard Hakes.
412 reviews3 followers
March 14, 2016
A little mechanical in its account but then again many of the events of the book were a long time ago and recollections fade, it was a hazy time and maybe it's not easy sometimes to actually say what happened in all its glorious detail especially when many of the actors are still around. Taking that aside as a recent convert to Soft Machine a working account of the progress of some talented people.
39 reviews13 followers
September 25, 2007
Again, I've overrated a book because it's the only one around. The facts are nicely arranged, the prose style stumbling, and if you're not already interested don't bothr.
4 reviews9 followers
November 29, 2014
An invaluable document to any fan of Soft Machine. I got the ebook version, which I didn't even know was available until I found it, purely by chance, a couple of weeks ago.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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