9.11.18

SOFT MACHINE – 1968/1973 | 7 Albums | RM | WV (image+.cue), lossless

The Soft Machine ‎– The Soft Machine
A wild, freewheeling, and ultimately successful attempt to merge psychedelia with jazz-rock, Soft Machine's debut ranges between lovingly performed oblique pop songs and deranged ensemble playing from drummer/vocalist Robert Wyatt, bassist Kevin Ayers and organist Mike Ratledge. With only one real break (at the end of side one), the songs merge into each other -- not always smoothly, but always with a sense of flair that rescues any potential miscues. Wyatt takes most of the vocals, and proves himself a surprisingly evocative singer despite his lack of range. Like Pink Floyd's The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, Vol. 1 was one of the few over-ambitious records of the psychedelic era that actually delivered on all its incredible promise. John Bush
Tracklist :
1     Hope For Happiness    4:21
    Written-By – B. Hopper, K. Ayers, M. Ratledge
2     Joy Of A Toy    2:50
    Written-By – K. Ayers, M. Ratledge
3     Hope For Happiness (Reprise)    1:38
    Written-By – B. Hopper, K. Ayers, M. Ratledge
4     Why Am I So Short?    1:38
    Written-By – H. Hopper, K. Ayers, M. Ratledge
5     So Boot If At All    7:24
    Written-By – K. Ayers, M. Ratledge, R. Wyatt
6     A Certain Kind    4:11
    Written-By – H. Hopper
7     Save Yourself    2:25
    Written-By – R. Wyatt
8     Priscilla    1:03
    Written-By – K. Ayers, M. Ratledge, R. Wyatt
9     Lullabye Letter    4:43
    Written-By – K. Ayers
10     We Did It Again    3:46
    Written-By – K. Ayers
11     Plus Belle Qu'une Poubelle    1:01
    Written-By – K. Ayers
12     Why Are We Sleeping?    5:33
    Written-By – K. Ayers, M. Ratledge, R. Wyatt
13     Box 25/4 Lid    0:49
    Written-By – H. Hopper, M. Ratledge
Credits
Drums, Vocals – Robert Wyatt
Guitar – Kevin Ayres
Organ – Mike Ratledge

Soft Machine ‎– Volume Two
The first Soft Machine LP usually got the attention, with its movable parts sleeve, as well as the presence of ultra-talented songwriter Kevin Ayers. But musically, Volume Two better conveys the Dada-ist whimsy and powerful avant rock leanings of the band. Hugh Hopper took over for Ayers on bass, and his fuzz tones and experimental leanings supplanted Ayers' pop emphasis. The creative nucleus behind this most progressive of progressive rock albums, however, is Robert Wyatt. He provides the musical arrangements to Hopper's quirky ideas on the stream-of-consciousness collection of tunes ("Rivmic Melodies") on side one. Unlike the first record, which sounded choppy and often somnolent, this one blends together better, and it has a livelier sound. The addition of session horn players enhanced the Softs' non-guitar lineup, and keyboardist Mike Ratledge, whose musical erudition frequently clashed in the early days with the free-spirited Wyatt, Ayers, and Daevid Allen, lightened his touch here. He even contributes one of the album's highlights with "Pig" ("Virgins are boring/They should be grateful for the things they're ignoring"). But it's Wyatt who lifts this odd musical jewel to its artistic heights. He uses his tender voice like a jazz instrument, scatting (in Spanish!) on "Dada Was Here," and sounding entirely heartfelt in "Have You Ever Bean Green," a brief tribute to the Jimi Hendrix Experience, with whom the Softs toured ("Thank you Noel and Mitch, thank you Jim, for our exposure to the crowd"). Fans of the Canterbury scene will also relish "As Long as He Lies Perfectly Still," a loving tribute to ex-bandmate Ayers. This is the one record that effectively assimilates rock, absurdist humor, jazz, and the avant-garde, and it misses classic status only due to some dissonant instrumentation on side two. Peter Kurtz  
Tracklist :
1 Pataphysical Introduction Pt. 1 1:00
2 A Concise British Alphabet Pt. 1 0:10
3 Hibou, Anenome And Bear 5:58
4 A Concise British Alphabet Pt. 2 0:12
5 Hulloder 0:52
6 Dada Was Here 3:25
7 Thank You Pierrot Lunaire 0:47
8 Have You Ever Bean Grean? 1:23
9 Pataphysical Introduction Pt. 2 0:50
10 Out Of Tunes 2:30
11 As Long As He Lies Perfectly Still 2:30
12 Dedicated To You But You Weren't Listening 2:30
13 Fire Engine Passing With Bells Clanging 1:50
14 Pig 2:07
15 Orange Skin Food 1:52
16 A Door Opens And Closes 1:09
17 10:30 Returns To The Bedroom 4:14
Credits
Bass, Guitar – Hugh Hopper
Organ [Hamond], Flute, Piano, Harpsichord, Keyboards – Mike Ratledge
Percussion, Drums, Vocals – Robert Wyatt
Producer – Soft Machine
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Brian Hopper

Soft Machine ‎– Third
Soft Machine plunged deeper into jazz and contemporary electronic music on this pivotal release, which incited The Village Voice to call it a milestone achievement when it was released. It's a double album of stunning music, with each side devoted to one composition -- two by Mike Ratledge, and one each by Hopper and Wyatt, with substantial help from a number of backup musicians, including Canterbury mainstays Elton Dean and Jimmy Hastings. The Ratledge songs come closest to fusion jazz, although this is fusion laced with tape loop effects and hypnotic, repetitive keyboard patterns. Hugh Hopper's "Facelift" recalls "21st Century Schizoid Man" by King Crimson, although it's more complex, with several quite dissimilar sections. The pulsing rhythms, chaotic horn and keyboard sounds, and dark drones on "Facelift" predate some of what Hopper did as a solo artist later (this song was actually culled from two live performances in 1970). On his capricious composition "Moon in June," Robert Wyatt draws on musical ideas from early 1967 demos done with producer Giorgio Gomelsky. Lyrically, it's a satirical alternative to the pretension displayed by a lot of rock writing of the era, and combined with the Softs' exotic instrumentation, it makes for quite a listen (the compilation Triple Echo includes a BBC broadcast recording of "Moon in June" with different albeit equally fanciful lyrics, and the Robert Wyatt archival collection '68, released by Cuneiform in 2013, features a remastered version of Wyatt's original demo of the song, recorded in the U.S. following the Softs' tour opening for the Jimi Hendrix Experience). Not exactly rock, Third nonetheless pushed the boundaries of rock into areas previously unexplored, and it managed to do so without sounding self-indulgent. A better introduction to the group is either of the first two records, but once introduced, this is the place to go. Peter Kurtz  
Tracklist :
1 Facelift (18:45)
    Written-By – H. Hopper
2 Slightly All The Time (18:13)
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
Moon In June (19:08)
    Written-By – R. Wyatt
Out-Bloody-Rageous (19:15)
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Saxello – Elton Dean
Bass – Hugh Hopper
Drums, Vocals – Robert Wyatt
Flute, Bass Clarinet – Jimmy Hastings
Flute, Soprano Saxophone – Lyn Dobson
Organ, Piano – Mike Ratledge
Producer – Soft Machine
Trombone – Nick Evans
Violin – Rab Spall

Soft Machine ‎– Fourth
Soft Machine's collective skill is hyper-complex and refined, as they are extremely literate in all fields of musical study. Fourth is the band's free purging of all of that knowledge, woven into noisy, smoky structures of sound. Their arcane rhythms have a stop-and-go mentality of their own that sounds incredibly fresh even though it is sonically steeped in soft and warm tones. Obviously there is a lot of skillful playing going on, as the mix of free jazz, straight-ahead jazz, and Gong-like psychedelia coalesces into a skronky plateau. Robert Wyatt's drumming is impeccable -- so perfect that it at times becomes an unnoticeable map upon which the bandmembers take their instinctive direction. Mike Ratledge's keys are warm throughout, maintaining an earthy quality that keeps its eye on the space between the ground and the heavens that Soft Machine attempt to inhabit. Elton Dean's saxophone work screams out the most inventive cadence, and since it's hardly rhythmic, it takes front and center, spitting out a crazy language. Certainly the band is the preface to a good portion of Chicago's post-rock output, as the Softs undoubtedly give a nod to Miles Davis' Bitches Brew experiments, which were going on in the U.S. at the same time. Ken Taylor  
Tracklist :
1 Teeth 9:11
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
2 Kings And Queens 5:02
    Written-By – H. Hopper
3 Fletcher's Blemish 4:35
    Written-By – E. Dean
4 Virtually Part 1 5:14
    Written-By – H. Hopper
5 Virtually Part 2 7:04
    Written-By – H. Hopper
6 Virtually Part 3 4:36
    Written-By – H. Hopper
7 Virtually Part 4 3:19
    Written-By – H. Hopper
Credits
Alto Saxophone, Saxello – Elton Dean
Bass – Hugh Hopper
Cornet – Marc Charig
Double Bass – Roy Babbington
Drums – Robert Wyatt
Flute [Alto], Bass Clarinet – Jimmy Hastings
Organ, Piano – Mike Ratledge
Producer – Soft Machine
Tenor Saxophone – Alan Skidmore
Trombone – Nick Evans
Soft Machine ‎– Fith
As the Soft Machine moved further away from rock on Third and Fourth, drummer/vocalist Robert Wyatt's dissatisfaction with the band's direction grew and, by the time sessions started for Fifth in late 1971, he had left permanently to form Matching Mole. While the instrumental Fourth had forayed deep into jazz-rock territory, Fifth found the Soft Machine working almost completely in the jazz idiom. At the time of Wyatt's departure, keyboardist Mike Ratledge commented that the band's co-founder had "never enjoyed or accepted working in complex time signatures." However, Wyatt's replacement -- Phil Howard -- didn't prove to be the kind of timekeeper Ratledge and bassist Hugh Hopper had in mind and his free jazz orientation led to his dismissal during the recording of the album. Howard's propulsive rhythms nevertheless make a vital contribution to memorable Ratledge compositions like "All White" and "Drop" as they gather momentum and coalesce into driving grooves. "All White" is focused largely on Elton Dean's sax performance while "Drop" ultimately showcases the intense busy fuzz of Ratledge's organ. In places on Fifth, there does seem to be an element of tension between the more structured approach of Ratledge and Hopper and the free-form inclinations of Dean. The looser style of Dean's squalling sax playing is foregrounded particularly on "As If" -- another Ratledge piece. A certain constituency among Soft Machine fans tends to concentrate on the band's earlier releases and to consider everything from Fourth onward less compelling. That attitude has something to do with not being especially interested in jazz, so it's not entirely fair to dismiss this album without qualifying such a judgment. Anyone expecting to hear a rock album or a jazz-rock album will probably be disappointed with Fifth. This is essentially a jazz record, more concerned with texture and interplay than with song-based structures. Wilson Neate  
Tracklist :
1 All White 6:06
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
2 Drop 7:42
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
3 M. C. 4:57
    Written-By – H. Hopper
4 As If 8:02
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
5 L B O 1:54
    Written-By – J. Marshall
6 Pigling Bland 4:24
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
7 Bone 3:29
    Written-By – S. Dean
Credits :
Alto Saxophone [Alto Sax], Saxello, Electric Piano – Elton Dean
Bass Guitar – Hugh Hopper
Double Bass – Roy Babbington (tracks: 4 to 6)
Drums – John Marshall (tracks: 4 to 6), Phil Howard (tracks: 1 to 3)
Organ, Electric Piano – Mike Ratledge
Producer [Produced By] – Soft Machine
Soft Machine ‎– Six
The Soft Machine were many things to many people, but to most, the real Soft Machine ceased to exist when founder Robert Wyatt left to work on his conspicuously titled Matching Mole project. This departure is generally credited to the Soft Machine's creative advance away from prog rock and toward jazz fusion. Three years and three records after Wyatt's departure, this creative motion was in full sail, and the release of Six cemented the band in their distant station beyond the gravity of anything that resembled rock and its spacious, cutting-edge sonics and more symmetrical rhythms. The jazz era that began on Fourth and continued through the '70s mutates slightly on Six, from the free improvisational structures used frequently on prior releases into a somewhat more constrained fusion design. This is due largely to new member Karl Jenkins, who makes a mighty impact on the Soft Machine's sound with his sax playing and songwriting -- and who later took creative control over the group, bringing in several guitarists to solidify a fusion sound. Half live and half studio album, Six will never interest classic-era stalwarts, but Jenkins and drummer John Marshall lead old-timers Mike Ratledge and Hugh Hopper through some nifty fusion exercises that fans of the genre (and obscure '70s music of every kind) might find very enjoyable. Jason Anderson  
Tracklist :
1 Fanfare 0:42
2 All White 4:43
3 Between 2:24
4 Riff 4:31
5 37½ 6:53
6 Gesolreut 6:13
7 E.P.V. 2:47
8 Lefty 4:50
9 Stumble 1:50
10 5 From 13 (For Phil Seamen With Love & Thanks) 5:15
11 Riff II 0:26
12 The Soft Weed Factor 11:17
13 Stanley Stamps Gibbon Album (For B.O.) 5:57
14 Chloe And The Pirates 9:29
15 1983 7:11
Credits :
Bass – Hugh Hopper
Drums, Percussion – John Marshall
Oboe, Baritone Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Electric Piano, Grand Piano, Celesta – Karl Jenkins
Organ, Electric Piano, Grand Piano, Celesta – Mike Ratledge
Producer – Soft Machine
Soft Machine ‎– Seven
Soft Machine's revolving door of personnel changes continued with 1974's Seven, the last Softs album with a numbered title and also the last released by Columbia. Bassist Hugh Hopper was gone, replaced by Roy Babbington, a guest musician on 1971's Fourth who had played bass with Nucleus. Two other Nucleus alumni, keyboardist/reedman Karl Jenkins and drummer John Marshall, were on board as well, and since keyboardist/composer Mike Ratledge was now the band's only founding member (actually, Hopper wasn't an original member either, having replaced Kevin Ayers for Volume Two), the group's links to its early years seemed increasingly tenuous -- and would become more so. Yet when Jenkins had joined the group prior to Six, following the departure of saxophonist Elton Dean, he seemed to bring an intuitive grasp of how Soft Machine could continue moving forward in the band's jazz-rock years while retaining touchstones to the past. A less assertive saxophonist than Dean, Jenkins played multiple reeds but didn't really match Dean as an improviser; his main contributions in the future would be as keyboardist and composer in the ever-evolving Soft Machine style of jazz-rock. And on Seven, he penned seven of the album's 12 tracks, beginning to assume the band leadership role that Ratledge -- who composed four tracks -- shied away from. With Jenkins edging closer to the band's creative center, the Softs forged ahead with their riff- and ostinato-based music, keyboard and reed melodies intersecting at unexpected angles with streamlined yet often odd-metered bass and drums, all flowing forward with muted, spacy sonorities and sometimes hypnotic repetition (and, of course, bridges or codas of echoing keyboard loops).

Ratledge composed a trio of connected tracks for Seven, a mini-suite beginning with the modal 9/8 "Day's Eye," including a solo feature for him to cut loose with his patented fuzz organ tone, bridging through the brief burst of "Bone Fire" (which puts Jenkins through his paces on baritone sax) to the truly heavy "Tarabos," its bass/keyboard vamp pulling upward and resolving at skewed points along an 18-beat sequence while Jenkins solos wildly with a signal splitter on his horn. But Jenkins sets the album's pace, beginning with the upbeat fuzzy riffing of the opening "Nettle Bed" and the drifting, dreamy "Carol Ann" through his own suite of connected tracks during the second half, including the trance-inducing "Penny Hitch," the full-throttle "Block" (building to an abrupt staccato unison conclusion), and the comparatively relaxed 5/4 vamp of "Down the Road" (featuring a fine arco acoustic bass solo from Babbington). The album ends with three minutes of spacy looping keyboards, split in two with the first part, "The German Lesson," credited to Ratledge as composer and the second part, "The French Lesson," credited to Jenkins, but there is no discernable division or musical difference between them -- no doubt intended as a joke, but also an apt comment on the passing of the torch during Soft Machine's '70s jazz-rock years. Dave Lynch  
Tracklist :
1 Nettle Bed 4:47
    Written-By – K. Jenkins
2 Carol Ann 3:48
    Written-By – K. Jenkins
3 Day's Eye 5:05
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
4 Bone Fire 0:32
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
5 Tarabos 4:32
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
6 D.I.S. 3:02
    Written-By – J. Marshall
7 Snodland 1:50
    Written-By – K. Jenkins
8 Penny Hitch 6:40
    Written-By – K. Jenkins
9 Block 4:17
    Written-By – K. Jenkins
10 Down The Road 5:48
    Written-By – K. Jenkins
11 The German Lesson 1:53
    Written-By – M. Ratledge
12 The French Lesson 1:01
    Written-By – K. Jenkins
Credits :
Bass Guitar, Acoustic Bass – Roy Babbington
Drums, Percussion – John Marshall
Oboe, Baritone Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Recorder, Electric Piano – Karl Jenkins
Organ, Synthesizer, Electric Piano – Mike Ratledge
Producer [Produced By] – Soft Machine

18 comentários:

  1. Respostas
    1. caro Kratzersprung, novos links no post do soft, grato por tu visita e informar sobre os links caidos.
      enjoy!

      Excluir
  2. caro Piggons, novos links no post ...
    enjoy!

    ResponderExcluir
  3. https://www.4shared.com/rar/TPHoRtSgda/Soft_Machine_1.html
    https://www.4shared.com/rar/OLB0DSftda/Soft_Machine_2.html
    https://www.4shared.com/rar/Yb80PXfMfi/Soft_Machine_3.html
    https://www.4shared.com/rar/9IJFmEWUda/Soft_Machine_4.html
    https://www.4shared.com/rar/9jx3_zMRee/Soft_Machine_5.html
    https://www.4shared.com/rar/LrfQCdZcfi/Soft_Machine_6.html
    https://www.4shared.com/rar/DdQlmB7-da/Soft_Machine_7.html

    ResponderExcluir
  4. Piggons must learn some education and be kind towards somebody sharing music. Strange that such an asshole likes this music but that's the modern world I guess. Sounds like he lives in some island up North.
    Obrigado pelo suo trabalho no blog. Saludos de Patagonia.

    ResponderExcluir
  5. Thanks for these LPs. Do you know the password to unlock?

    ResponderExcluir
  6. Este comentário foi removido por um administrador do blog.

    ResponderExcluir
  7. This is much appreciated! I do not have to take those LPs out of the boxes and digitize them, or worst buy them again as CDs or mp3. And I can also see so many Artists I love to listen to: MUITO OBRIGADO my friend! ;)

    ResponderExcluir
  8. All the 4shared links expired. please, re-upload!

    ResponderExcluir
    Respostas
    1. caro CC51: novos links no post do soft. grato por tu visita.
      enjoy!

      Excluir
  9. https://nitroflare.com/view/A664C711A719501/1968_-_The_Soft_Machine__1990%2C_MCAD-22064__FLAC.rar
    https://nitroflare.com/view/AFE8CC8F7AF4467/1969_-_Volume_Two__1990%2C_MCAD-22065__FLAC.rar
    https://nitroflare.com/view/7AD356F05AC3863/1970_-_Third__1992%2C_ESCA_5535__FLAC.rar
    https://nitroflare.com/view/8EF5952D8057FC7/1971_-_Fourth__1991%2C_ESCA_5417__FLAC.rar
    https://nitroflare.com/view/FB41FEBF6E886D7/1972_-_Fifth__1991%2C_ESCA_5418__FLAC.rar
    https://nitroflare.com/view/5A25070F5782D4B/1973_-_Seven__1991%2C_ESCA_5419__FLAC.rar
    https://nitroflare.com/view/AEFB2AE3AA931CB/1973_-_Six__1992%2C_ESCA_5536_.rar

    ResponderExcluir
  10. Muchas gracias.
    Una pena que el link de Six esté caído.
    Saludos.

    ResponderExcluir
  11. Respostas
    1. new links
      https://nitroflare.com/view/A664C711A719501/1968_-_The_Soft_Machine__1990%2C_MCAD-22064__FLAC.rar
      https://nitroflare.com/view/AFE8CC8F7AF4467/1969_-_Volume_Two__1990%2C_MCAD-22065__FLAC.rar
      https://nitroflare.com/view/7AD356F05AC3863/1970_-_Third__1992%2C_ESCA_5535__FLAC.rar
      https://nitroflare.com/view/8EF5952D8057FC7/1971_-_Fourth__1991%2C_ESCA_5417__FLAC.rar
      https://nitroflare.com/view/FB41FEBF6E886D7/1972_-_Fifth__1991%2C_ESCA_5418__FLAC.rar
      https://nitroflare.com/view/5A25070F5782D4B/1973_-_Seven__1991%2C_ESCA_5419__FLAC.rar
      https://nitroflare.com/view/EAFA5D1DA83A804/1973_-_Six__1992%2C_ESCA_5536_.rar

      Excluir
    2. Many thanks for digging this out the pop past. It is still fascinating ... Nr. 6 is ok now,

      Excluir
  12. new links ...

    Link 1
    https://nitroflare.com/view/975F78561EB37FD/Soft_Machine_–_The_Soft_Machine_(1968-2009
    _Polydor_–_532_050-5)_WV.rar

    Link 2
    https://nitroflare.com/view/CA103F76B9D8915/Soft_Machine_–_Volume_Two_(1969-2009
    _Polydor_–_532_050-6)_WV.rar

    Link 3
    https://nitroflare.com/view/8266517E9783572/Soft_Machine_–_Third_-Disc_One_(1970-2007
    _Sony_BMG_–_82876872932)_WV.rar

    Link 4
    https://nitroflare.com/view/36D1003FE416A13/Soft_Machine_–_Third_-Disc_Two_(1970-2007
    _Sony_BMG_–_82876872932)_WV.rar

    Link 5
    https://nitroflare.com/view/A36F4702CD42282/Soft_Machine_–_Fourth_(1971-2007
    _Sony_BMG_–_82876872912)_WV.rar

    Link 6
    https://nitroflare.com/view/C9DDDE62FDB282A/Soft_Machine_–_Fifth_(1972-2007
    _Sony_BMG_–_82876872902)_WV.rar

    Link 7
    https://nitroflare.com/view/6365C17A072795C/Soft_Machine_–_Six_(1973-2007
    _Sony_BMG_–_82876875912)_WV.rar

    Link 8
    https://nitroflare.com/view/A8904F1D5699EDB/Soft_Machine_–_Seven_(1974-2007
    _Sony_BMG_–_82876872922)_WV.rar

    ResponderExcluir

e.s.t. — Retrospective 'The Very Best Of e.s.t. (2009) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

"Retrospective - The Very Best Of e.s.t." is a retrospective of the unique work of e.s.t. and a tribute to the late mastermind Esb...