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Soft Machine

 
Artist: Soft Machine
Soft Machine

Group Members:

Mike Ratledge, John Marshall, Kevin Ayers, Daevid Allen, Allan Holdsworth, Robert Wyatt, Karl Jenkins, Elton Dean, Larry Nowlin, Roy Babbington, Hugh Hopper, Ray Warleigh, Alan Wakeman, Phil Howard, Brian Hopper, Nick Evans, John Etheridge, Lyn Dobson, Alan Skidmore, Marc Charig, Andy Summers

Similar Artists:

Followers:

Arkham, Gorky's Zygotic Mynci, Tin Huey, Egg, CLAN, Icy Demons, Picchio dal Pozzo, Ain Soph, Delivery, Ultramarine, The Passage, Exmagma, The Balky Mule, Golden Silvers, Planeta Imaginario, Accordo dei Contrari, Aqua Nebula Oscillator, The Wrong Object, Bise de Buse, Mike Wexler, Machine & the Synergetic Nuts, Proto-Kaw, Delta Saxophone Quartet, Erkin Koray, East, Jakko, Jakko M. Jakszyk, Scianka, Eternity X, Cairo, FM, Etron Fou Leloublan, Magellan, Ant-Bee, Alan Gowen, Tortoise

Performed Songs By:

Formal Connection With:

Bone, Towering Inferno, The Wilde Flowers, Nucleus, The Police, Kevin Ayers, Soft Mountain, PolySoft, Aymeric Leroy, Soft Works, Jimmy Hastings, The Daevid Allen Trio, Soft Head, Elton Dean
  • Formed: 1966, Canterbury, Kent, England
  • Disbanded: 1976
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Vols. 1 & 2," "Third," "Volume Two"
  • Representative Songs: "Facelift," "Moon in June," "Hope for Happiness"

Biography

Soft Machine were never a commercial enterprise and indeed still remain unknown even to many listeners who came of age during the late '60s, when the group was at its peak. In their own way, however, they were one of the more influential bands of their era, and certainly one of the most influential underground ones. One of the original British psychedelic groups, they were also instrumental in the birth of both progressive rock and jazz-rock. They were also the central foundation of the family tree of the "Canterbury Scene" of British progressive rock acts, a movement that also included Caravan, Gong, Matching Mole, and National Health, not to mention the distinguished solo careers of founding members Robert Wyatt and Kevin Ayers.

Considering their well-known experimental and avant-garde leanings, the roots of Soft Machine were in some respects surprisingly conventional. In the mid-'60s, Wyatt sang and drummed with the Wilde Flowers, a Canterbury group that played more or less conventional pop and soul covers of the day. Future Soft Machine members Ayers and Hugh Hopper would also pass through the Wilde Flowers, whose original material began to reflect an odd sensibility, cultivated by their highly educated backgrounds and a passion for improvised jazz. In 1966, Wyatt teamed up with bassist/singer Ayers, keyboardist Mike Ratledge, and Australian guitarist Daevid Allen to form the first lineup of Soft Machine.

This incarnation of the group, along with Pink Floyd and Tomorrow, were the very first underground psychedelic bands in Britain, and quickly became well loved in the burgeoning London psychedelic underground. Their first recordings (many of which only surfaced years later on compilations of 1967 demos) were by far their most pop-oriented, which doesn't mean they weren't exciting or devoid of experimental elements. Surreal wordplay and unusually (for rock) complex instrumental interplay gave an innovative edge to their ebullient early psychedelic outings. They only managed to cut one (very good) single, though, which flopped. Allen, the weirdest of a colorful group of characters, had to leave the band when he was refused reentry into the U.K. after a stint in France, due to the expiration of his visa.

The remaining trio recorded its first proper album in 1968. The considerable melodic elements and vocal harmonies of their 1967 recordings were now giving way to more challenging, artier postures that sought -- sometimes successfully, sometimes not -- to meld the energy of psychedelic rock with the improvisational pulse of jazz. The Softs were taken on by Jimi Hendrix's management, leading to grueling stints supporting the Jimi Hendrix Experience on their 1968 American tours. Because of this, the group at this point was probably more well-known in the U.S. than their homeland. In fact, their debut LP was only issued, oddly, in the States. For a couple of months in 1968, strangely enough, Soft Machine became a quartet again with the addition of future Police guitarist Andy Summers, although that didn't work out, and they soon reverted to a trio. The punishing tours took their toll on the group, and Ayers had left by the end of 1968, to be replaced by Wyatt's old chum Hugh Hopper.

Their second album, Volume Two (1969), further submerged the band's pop elements in favor of extended jazzy compositions, with an increasingly lesser reliance on lyrics and vocals. Ratledge's fuzzy, buzzy organ and Wyatt's pummeling, imaginative drumming and scat vocals paced the band on material that became increasingly whimsical and surrealistic, if increasingly inaccessible to the pop/rock audience. For their third album, they went even further in these directions, expanding to a seven-piece by adding a horn section. This record virtually dispensed with vocals and conventional rock songs entirely, and is considered a landmark by both progressive rock and jazz-rock aficionados, though it was too oblique for many rock listeners.

Soft Machine couldn't afford to continue to support a seven-member lineup, and scaled back to a quartet for their fourth album, retaining Elton Dean on sax. Wyatt had left by the end of 1971, briefly leading the similar Matching Mole, and then establishing a long-running solo career. In doing so he was following the path of Kevin Ayers, who already had several solo albums to his credit by the early '70s; Daevid Allen, for his part, had become a principal of Gong, one of the most prominent and enigmatic '70s progressive rock bands.

For most intents and purposes, Wyatt's departure spelled the end of Soft Machine's reign as an important band. Although Soft Machine was always a collaborative effort, Wyatt's humor, humanism, and soulful raspy vocals could not be replaced. Ratledge and Hopper kept the group going with other musicians, though by now they were an instrumental fusion group with little vestiges of their former playfulness. Hopper left in 1973, and Ratledge, the last original member, was gone by 1976. Other lineups continued to play under the Soft Machine name, amazingly, until the 1990s, but these were Soft Machine in name only. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
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Discography: Soft Machine
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BBC in Concert 1972

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Kings of Canterbury

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Middle Earth Masters

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British Tour '75

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BBC Radio 1971-1974

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Spaced

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Live 1970

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Orange Skin Food

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Grides

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Alive in Paris 1970

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Six & Seven

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Backwards

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Live in Paris

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BBC Radio 1967-1971

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Man in a Deaf Corner: Anthology 1963-1970

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Man in a Deaf Corner: Anthology 1963-1970

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Floating World Live

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Story of Soft Machine

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Shooting at the Moon

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Breda Reactor

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Paris Concert [DVD]

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Abracadabra

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Abracadabra

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Somewhere in Soho

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BBC in Concert 1971

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Live at the New Morning: The Paris Concert

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Soft Machine [Universal Japan]

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Virtually

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Drop

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Noisette

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Jet-Propelled Photographs [Fuel 2000]

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Steam

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Out-Bloody-Rageous - An Anthology: 1967-1973

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Soft Machine Legacy

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Soft Machine Legacy

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Turns On, Vol. 2

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Turns On, Vol. 1

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Fourth [Japan Bonus CD]

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Soft Machine [Water]

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New Morning: The Paris Concert [DVD]

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Soft Machine Legacy: Live in Zaandam

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Facelift

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Fourth/Fifth

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Jet-Propelled Photographs [Charly]

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Live in France

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Live at the Paradiso 1969

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Best of Soft Machine: The Harvest Years

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BBC Radio 1 Live, Vol. 2

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Rubber Riff

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Rubber Riff

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BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert

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Peel Sessions [Dutch East India]

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Peel Sessions [Dutch East India]

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Vols. 1 & 2

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Land of Cockayne

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Alive & Well: Recorded in Paris

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At the Beginning

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Softs

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Bundles

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Bundles

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Seven

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Seven

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Seven

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Six

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Six

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Fifth [Remastered/Bonus Track]

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Fifth

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Fifth

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Fourth

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Fourth

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Third

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Third

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Third [Remastered/Bonus CD]

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Volume Two

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Volume Two

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Soft Machine [Volume One]

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Soft Machine [Volume One]

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Wikipedia: Soft Machine
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Soft Machine

Group photo circa 1970:
Elton Dean, Mike Ratledge, Robert Wyatt, Hugh Hopper
Background information
Also known as The Soft Machine
Origin Canterbury, England, United Kingdom
Genres Canterbury scene, jazz fusion, progressive rock, psychedelic rock
Years active 1966 - 1984
Labels ABC Probe, Columbia, Harvest, EMI
Associated acts Caravan, Syd Barrett, Pink Floyd, Matching Mole, Nucleus, Gong, Soft Works, Isotope, Gary Boyle, Adiemus, Soft Machine Legacy, Soft Heap, Soft Head, Soft Bounds, Karl Jenkins & Mike Ratledge, The Police
Former members
Daevid Allen
Kevin Ayers
Elton Dean
Hugh Hopper
Mike Ratledge
Robert Wyatt
Roy Babbington
John Etheridge
Karl Jenkins
John Marshall
Steve Cook
Mark Charig
Lyn Dobson
Nick Evans
Allan Holdsworth
Brian Hopper
Ric Sanders
Larry Nowlin
Andy Summers
Alan Wakeman

Soft Machine were an English rock band from Canterbury, named after the book The Soft Machine by William S. Burroughs. They were one of the central bands in the so-called "Canterbury scene," and helped pioneer the progressive rock genre.

Contents

History

Beginnings, Psychedelic, Jazz fusion

Soft Machine (billed as The Soft Machine up to 1969) were formed in the summer of 1966 by Robert Wyatt (drums, vocals), Kevin Ayers (bass, guitar, vocals), Daevid Allen (guitar) and Mike Ratledge (organ) plus, for the first few gigs only, American guitarist Larry Nowlin.[1] Allen, Wyatt and future bassist Hugh Hopper had first played together in the Daevid Allen Trio in 1963, occasionally accompanied by Ratledge. Wyatt, Ayers and Hopper had been founding members of the Wilde Flowers, later incarnations of which would include 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 subsequently other London clubs like the Speakeasy and Middle Earth, and recorded the group's first single ' Love Makes Sweet Music', as well as some demo sessions that were released several years later. They also played in the Netherlands, Germany and on the French Riviera. During July and August 1967, the promoter and manager Giorgio Gomelsky booked shows all along the Cote d'Azur with the band's most notorious early gig taking place in the village square of Saint-Tropez. This led to an invitation to perform at producer Eddie Barclay's trendy "Nuit Psychédélique", performing a forty minute rendition of "We Did It Again", singing the refrain over and over, achieving a Zen-like quality. This made them instant darlings of the Parisian "in" crowd, resulting in invitations to appear on leading television shows and at the Paris Biennale in October 1967. Meanwhile, upon their return from their summer sojourn in France, Allen (an Australian) was denied re-entry to the United Kingdom, so the group continued as a trio, while he returned to Paris to found Gong.

Sharing the same management team as Jimi Hendrix, the band were rewarded with a support slot on the Jimi Hendrix Experience's North America tour throughout 1968.[1] Soft Machine's first album - a psychedelic rock/proto-prog classic - was recorded in New York in April at the end of the first leg. Back in London, eventually guitarist Andy Summers, later of The Police, joined the group, fresh from his stint with Dantalian's Chariot (previously Zoot Money's Big Roll Band). After a few weeks of rehearsals, the new quartet began a tour of the USA with some solo shows before reuniting with Hendrix for a final string of dates in August-September 1968. Summers, however, had in the meantime been fired at the insistence of Ayers.[2] Ayers departed amicably after the final date at the Hollywood Bowl, and for the remainder of 1968 Soft Machine were no more. Wyatt stayed in the US to record solo demos, while Ratledge returned to London and began composing in earnest.

In January 1969, in order to fulfill contractual obligations, Soft Machine reformed with former road manager and composer Hugh Hopper on bass added to Wyatt and Ratledge, and set about recording their second album, Volume Two, which 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. In May 1969, this lineup acted as the uncredited backup band on two tracks of Syd Barrett's solo debut album, The Madcap Laughs. 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, Mark Charig, Jimmy Hastings, Roy Babbington, Rab Spall). Fourth was the first of their fully instrumental albums, and the last one featuring Wyatt.

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 avant-garde 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.[3]

This period saw them gaining unprecedented acclaim across Europe, and they made history by becoming the first 'rock band' invited to play at London's Proms in August 1970, a show which was broadcast live and later appeared as a live album.

Post-Wyatt era

After differences over the group's musical direction, Wyatt left (or was fired from[4]) 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, another former Nucleus member, who had already contributed with double bass on Fourth and Fifth and took up (6-string) 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 rarely featured guitars. On the last official studio album Softs (1976), he was replaced by John Etheridge. Ratledge, the last remaining original member of the band, had left during the early stages of recording. Other musicians in the band during the later period were bassists Percy Jones (of Brand X) and Steve Cook [5], saxophonists Alan Wakeman and Ray Warleigh, and violinist Ric Sanders. Their 1977 performances and record (titled Alive and Well, ironically) were among 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 Ray Warleigh and Dick Morrissey on saxes and John Taylor on electric piano), and for a final series of dates at London's Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in the summer of 1984, featuring Jenkins and Marshall leading an ad-hoc line-up of Etheridge, Warleigh, pianist Dave MacRae and bassist Paul Carmichael.

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[6] (initially called Soft Ware, debuting at the 2002 Progman Cometh Festival). From late 2004 onwards, with John Etheridge replacing Holdsworth, they toured and recorded as Soft Machine Legacy[7]. They released three albums: Live in Zaandam[8] (2005), the studio album Soft Machine Legacy[9] (2006) and Live at the New Morning[10] (2006). Although Elton Dean died in February 2006, the band has continued with Theo Travis (formerly of Gong and The Tangent) taking over. In December 2006, the new line-up recorded the album Steam[11][12][13] in Jon Hiseman's studio, released by Moonjune Records in August 2007 before a European tour in autumn.

Graham Bennett's Soft Machine biography, Soft Machine: Out-Bloody-Rageous[14], 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

Studio albums

Live albums and compilations

  • Rubber Riff (CD Recorded 1976) (Blueprint 2001)[15]
  • 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)
  • Rock Generation Vol. 7 (one side only, 1967 demo recordings) (BYG, 1972)
  • Rock Generation Vol. 8 (one side only, 1967 demo recordings) (BYG, 1972)
  • 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 by Cuneiform, 2004) (One Way, 1995)
  • Spaced (recorded 1969) (Cuneiform, 1996)
  • Virtually (recorded by Radio Bremen 1971) (Cuneiform, 1998)[16]
  • 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)
  • Drop (recorded 1971) (MoonJune Records, 2008)

Singles

  • "Love Makes Sweet Music" / "Feelin' Reelin' Squeelin'" (Polydor UK, 1968)
  • "Joy of a Toy" / "Why Are We Sleeping?" (ABC Probe USA, 1968)
  • "Soft Space (part 1)" / "Soft Space (part 2)" (Harvest UK, 1977)


Line-ups timeline

This timeline does not include the last Soft Machine studio album Land of Cockayne which had

Karl Jenkins – keyboards, synths, John Marshall – drums, percussion

with Jack Bruce – bass, Allan Holdsworth – lead guitar, John Taylor – electric piano, Ray Warleigh – alto saxophone, bass flute, Dick Morrissey – tenor saxophone, Alan Parker – rhythm guitar, Stu Calver – backing vocals, John Perry – backing vocals, Tony Rivers – backing vocals.

References

Further reading

External links


 
 

 

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