Soft Machine
Soft Machine is an English rock band formed in Canterbury in 1966, renowned as pioneers of the Canterbury scene and for their innovative evolution from psychedelic rock to progressive rock and jazz fusion.[1][2][3] The band originated from the remnants of the Wilde Flowers, with founding members including drummer and vocalist Robert Wyatt, bassist and vocalist Kevin Ayers, guitarist Daevid Allen, and keyboardist Mike Ratledge (died 2025).[2][4] Initially blending whimsical psychedelia with jazz and folk influences, Soft Machine gained early notoriety through tours supporting Jimi Hendrix in 1968 and performances in France, though Allen was forced to leave due to visa issues.[4][2] Their self-titled debut album in 1968 captured this experimental pop-art phase, followed by Volume Two (1969) after Ayers' departure and the addition of bassist Hugh Hopper, shifting toward freer improvisation.[5] By Third (1970), a double album featuring a horn section with saxophonist Elton Dean, the group embraced avant-garde jazz elements, fully realizing their fusion style on Fourth (1971).[5] Wyatt's exit that year—leading to his acclaimed solo career—marked a turning point, with the band continuing under Ratledge's leadership until his departure in 1976 amid lineup flux including drummers John Marshall and Phil Howard.[5][1] Over five decades, Soft Machine has released twelve studio albums, with a thirteenth upcoming, influencing progressive rock acts like Gong and Caravan while exploring electro-acoustic and free jazz territories.[1][6] The band has persisted through numerous iterations, with no original members remaining by the 2020s, yet maintaining its legacy via reunions and new recordings.[6] The current lineup features guitarist John Etheridge (joined 1975), woodwind and keys player Theo Travis (joined 2006), drummer Asaf Sirkis (joined 2023), and bassist Fred Thelonious Baker (joined 2022), who announced a new studio album, Thirteen, in November 2025 and are actively touring.[7]History
Formation and psychedelic origins (1966–1969)
The Soft Machine were formed in mid-1966 in Canterbury, United Kingdom, by drummer and vocalist Robert Wyatt, bassist and vocalist Kevin Ayers, guitarist Daevid Allen, and keyboardist Mike Ratledge.[8][9] The band took their name from William S. Burroughs' 1961 novel The Soft Machine, part of his Nova Trilogy that extends themes from Naked Lunch.[10] Emerging from the local music scene connected to the Wilde Flowers, the group quickly immersed themselves in the burgeoning UK underground, performing initial gigs in London—such as supporting Pink Floyd at All Saints Hall in October 1966—and later in Paris during a European tour in 1967.[11][12] Their debut single, "Love Makes Sweet Music" backed with "Feelin' Reelin' Squealin'," was released in February 1967 on Polydor Records, capturing a playful psychedelic pop sound with R&B undertones reflective of their early influences.[13] This was followed by their self-titled debut album in December 1968 on Probe Records, recorded in New York earlier that year during a US tour supporting Jimi Hendrix; the LP featured short, experimental tracks blending psychedelic rock, pop structures, and improvisational elements, establishing their reputation in the Canterbury scene.[14][12] Key disruptions occurred during 1967 when, after a European tour including French dates, Australian-born Allen faced visa complications upon attempting re-entry to the UK, leading to his temporary departure from the band and relocation to Paris.[15] Ayers also left in late 1968 following the demanding American tours, prompting Hugh Hopper—previously the band's road manager and a Canterbury scene associate—to join as bassist, stabilizing the trio of Wyatt, Ratledge, and Hopper.[16][17] This lineup recorded Volume Two in February and March 1969 at Olympic Studios in London, released in July on Probe Records; the album marked a shift toward more avant-garde experimentation while retaining psychedelic roots, incorporating jazz-inflected improvisation, Dadaist humor, and abstract compositions across its concise tracks.[18][19]Transition to jazz fusion (1970–1971)
In June 1970, Soft Machine released Third, a double album that represented a pivotal shift from their psychedelic origins toward extended jazz-rock compositions, blending studio recordings with live performances captured in Croydon and Birmingham.[20] The album featured the core quartet of drummer and vocalist Robert Wyatt, keyboardist Mike Ratledge, bassist Hugh Hopper, and saxophonist Elton Dean, who had joined as a full member earlier that year after initial collaborations in the band's short-lived septet phase; trombonist Nick Evans also contributed to select tracks, enhancing the horn sections.[8][20] Wyatt's influence remained prominent on Third, particularly in the track "Moon in June," where he handled vocals, composition, and much of the instrumentation in a sprawling, personal suite that highlighted his scat singing and songwriting amid the band's increasingly instrumental focus—this would mark one of the final vocal-led pieces in Soft Machine's catalog.[20] However, internal tensions escalated as Wyatt's preference for song-oriented material clashed with Ratledge and Dean's push toward complex, free-form jazz structures.[8][21] The transition solidified with the release of Fourth in February 1971, Soft Machine's first entirely instrumental album, which delved deeply into jazz fusion through intricate arrangements, improvisational solos—especially from Dean's alto saxophone—and Ratledge's swirling organ work, all anchored by Wyatt's dynamic drumming.[20][21] Wyatt's frustration with the band's direction culminated in his departure in August 1971, reportedly following disagreements during and after a US tour, paving the way for his solo career and the formation of Matching Mole.[8][21] To fill the drumming role, the band recruited Australian expatriate Phil Howard, whose free-jazz style suited their evolving sound and appeared on early post-Wyatt recordings.[8] Guitarist Andy Summers, fresh from Dantalian's Chariot and later a key member of The Police, briefly joined during this lineup flux in mid-1971, contributing to rehearsals and a second US tour before departing.[8] By this time, Soft Machine had garnered increasing critical praise in jazz and progressive circles for their innovative blend of rock energy and improvisational depth, positioning them as pioneers of the emerging fusion genre.[22][23]Core fusion era and lineup shifts (1972–1978)
In 1972, Soft Machine released Five, their fifth studio album, which solidified their instrumental jazz fusion direction with a core lineup of Mike Ratledge on keyboards, Hugh Hopper on bass, Elton Dean on saxello and alto saxophone, and John Marshall on drums, though Phil Howard played drums on the first half before Marshall's arrival.[24] The album featured complex, riff-based compositions blending electric keyboards, reeds, and rhythmic interplay, marking a departure from earlier Canterbury scene psychedelia toward more structured fusion.[25] Following Five, the band expanded to a quintet for Six in 1973, incorporating Karl Jenkins on oboe, baritone and soprano saxophones, and piano, who contributed to the album's live and studio tracks emphasizing improvisational energy and layered textures.[26] Roy Babbington joined on electric bass for portions of Six, providing a more groove-oriented foundation that foreshadowed his full-time role, while Marshall's drumming added propulsion to the ensemble's evolving sound.[27] After Six, significant lineup shifts occurred: Elton Dean departed in mid-1973, replaced by Jenkins as the primary wind player, and Hopper left shortly thereafter, with Babbington assuming full bass duties for the remainder of the classic era.[8] This reconfiguration centered Seven (1973), a studio album of intricate fusion pieces composed largely by Jenkins and Ratledge, highlighting the quartet's—Ratledge, Jenkins, Babbington, and Marshall—tight integration without additional personnel, though subtle brass elements emerged in arrangements like "Nettle Bed."[28] Jenkins increasingly dominated as composer, infusing Nucleus-influenced structures with Soft Machine's improvisational flair, which propelled the band's international touring schedule across Europe and select U.S. dates in 1973–1974.[20] By 1975, the addition of guitarist Allan Holdsworth marked a pivotal evolution for Bundles, Soft Machine's eighth album, introducing electric guitar as a frontline element for the first time and elevating their fusion to a commercial peak, with the record charting in jazz categories in the UK.[29] The expanded sextet—Ratledge, Jenkins, Babbington, Marshall, Holdsworth, and guest brass from Nucleus alumni like Chris Ackman on trumpet—delivered complex, riff-driven tracks such as "Hazard Profile" and "Bundles," blending rock energy with sophisticated orchestration during extensive European tours that year.[30] Holdsworth's fluid, legato style contrasted Jenkins' thematic leadership, though internal tensions over direction began surfacing, exacerbated by Ratledge's growing disillusionment.[31] Lineup instability continued into 1976 with Softs, the ninth album, where Holdsworth was replaced by John Etheridge on guitars, Ratledge departed entirely after the recording—citing creative fatigue and the band's shift toward accessibility—and Alan Wakeman joined on soprano and tenor saxophones, allowing Jenkins to focus exclusively on keyboards and composition.[32] The quintet of Jenkins, Etheridge, Wakeman, Babbington, and Marshall produced brass-augmented fusion with tracks like "Softrak," reflecting peak complexity in arrangements while touring Europe amid Hopper's brief guest appearances on bass for select dates.[33] These changes underscored Jenkins' dominance, as his compositional techniques drove the band's sound toward polished, ensemble-driven jazz-rock.[8] The era culminated in 1978's Alive & Well: Recorded in Paris, a live double album capturing performances from July 1977 at Théâtre Le Palace, featuring the sextet of Jenkins, Etheridge, Wakeman, Babbington, Marshall, and violinist Ric Sanders, with complex brass sections amplifying fusion peaks in extended pieces like "White Pouffe."[34] Despite the recording's vitality, mounting internal conflicts—stemming from frequent personnel turnover, creative divergences, and management pressures—led to the band's disbandment later that year, ending their original run after over a decade of evolution.[8]Disbandment and early reunions (1978–1984)
Following the release of the live album Alive & Well: Recorded in Paris in 1978, Soft Machine disbanded amid financial difficulties stemming from the declining prog rock market and creative differences over the band's direction after years of lineup changes and touring exhaustion.[35] Keyboardist Mike Ratledge, who had already stepped back from performing in 1976, focused on film and television composition, while multi-instrumentalist Karl Jenkins pursued solo and collaborative projects, including classical works.[35] No new studio material was produced during the immediate aftermath, though archival recordings from earlier BBC sessions were later compiled and released as The Peel Sessions in 1990.[36] In 1980, the band briefly revived under Jenkins' leadership for BBC radio sessions, but without the original members. The group did not embark on a formal tour, marking a nod to their legacy amid individual careers. The band reformed in 1981 under Jenkins' leadership, with drummer John Marshall and guest musicians including Allan Holdsworth (guitar) and various session players like Jack Bruce (bass) and Dick Morrissey (saxophone), for the release of the studio album Land of Cockayne and a short European tour.[37] This project blended fusion elements with more commercial jazz arrangements but failed to reignite sustained activity, leading to another hiatus. No verified one-off reunion of original members occurred in 1984, though individual pursuits continued without further band commitments.Spin-off ensembles (1978–2015)
Following the disbandment of Soft Machine in 1978, former members pursued various spin-off projects that echoed the group's jazz fusion and Canterbury scene aesthetics through improvisational structures and ensemble interplay. These ensembles, often featuring overlapping personnel from Soft Machine's classic lineups, maintained the band's experimental spirit without using the original name, evolving the sound through live performances and recordings until the mid-2010s. Key figures like bassist Hugh Hopper and saxophonist Elton Dean were central to many of these groups, bridging the gap between Soft Machine's 1970s peak and later revivals. Soft Heap emerged in 1978 as a quartet comprising saxophonist Elton Dean, bassist Hugh Hopper, keyboardist Alan Gowen, and drummer Pip Pyle, all with ties to Soft Machine and the broader Canterbury scene. The group debuted with the album Soft Heap in 1979 on Charly Records, featuring tracks like "A.W.O.L." that blended jazz-rock improvisation with rhythmic complexity characteristic of Soft Machine's fusion era. A later recording from 1982–1983 sessions was released as A Veritable Centaur in 1995 on Impetus Records, showcasing the band's continued exploration of free-form jazz elements during sporadic activity through the 1980s. The ensemble occasionally varied its lineup, incorporating guitarist Mark Hewins from 1981 onward, and emphasized live collaboration over studio output.[38][39] In the same year, Soft Head served as a short-lived variant of Soft Heap for a summer tour, with Dave Sheen replacing Pyle on drums alongside Dean, Hopper, and Gowen. This configuration captured live performances in France during May 1978, later compiled on the album Rogue Element, released in 1996, which highlighted avant-garde jazz tendencies with extended improvisations such as "Seven Drones." Though presented as Hopper's solo project with Soft Machine influences, it functioned as an ad hoc extension of Soft Heap's personnel and style.[40] Soft Ware formed in 1999, reuniting Dean and Hopper with pianist Keith Tippett and drummer John Marshall, all former Soft Machine affiliates, to revive the group's improvisational jazz-rock approach. The quartet's sole documented output, Scaly Brute Miscellany, emerged in 2002, reflecting conceptual continuity in ensemble dynamics despite limited commercial release. This project transitioned directly into Soft Works in 2002 upon guitarist Allan Holdsworth's addition, replacing Tippett, and the new lineup recorded the live-in-studio album Abracadabra in 2003 on Tone Center, featuring intricate fusion pieces like "Abracadabra Suite" that evoked Soft Machine's 1970s complexity. Soft Works disbanded after a 2004 tour following Dean's health issues.[41][42] Parallel short-lived ensembles included Soft Mountain in 2003, a Dean-Hopper collaboration with French jazz musicians emphasizing atmospheric improvisation, captured on the self-titled album released in 2006 on Hux Records, which drew on Soft Machine's textural bass and reed explorations. Similarly, Soft Bounds in 2004 paired Dean and Hopper with pianist Sophia Domancich and drummer Simon Goubert for a French-UK fusion, documented on the live recording Live at Le Triton 2004 from Musea Records, incorporating material from Soft Machine's Softs era in a contemporary jazz context. These variants underscored the enduring Canterbury connections through transient lineups.[43][44][45] Soft Machine Legacy, established in 2004 from the Soft Works foundation, featured guitarist John Etheridge replacing Holdsworth, alongside Dean, Hopper, and Marshall. Their debut, the live album Live in Zaandam (2005, MoonJune Records), recorded at De Kade in the Netherlands, included reinterpreted Soft Machine staples like "Kings & Queens" amid original compositions. After Dean's death in 2006, saxophonist Theo Travis joined, leading to the studio album Steam (2007, MoonJune Records), which balanced fusion energy with melodic structures on tracks such as "The Nodder." Hopper's passing in 2009 prompted bassist Roy Babbington's return, and the group released Something Special (2010, MoonJune Records), a live set blending archival influences with modern improvisation until adopting the original Soft Machine moniker in 2015. Throughout, Legacy preserved the spin-off tradition of evolving jazz-rock innovation.[46][47]Reformation and modern era (2015–present)
In 2015, Soft Machine officially reformed under the band's original name, dropping the "Legacy" moniker previously used for post-1980s iterations, with a core lineup consisting of guitarist John Etheridge, saxophonist and flautist Theo Travis, bassist Roy Babbington, and drummer John Marshall.[48] This reunion marked a return to the band's jazz fusion roots, emphasizing improvisational structures and complex compositions drawn from their canonical repertoire.[8] The reformed ensemble released their first studio album in nearly four decades, Hidden Details, in 2018, featuring original material that blended Canterbury scene influences with contemporary jazz elements, recorded by the initial quartet. This was followed by Other Doors in 2023, which further explored self-referential themes through intricate ensemble interplay and Etheridge's signature guitar work.[49][50] Live performances during this period highlighted the band's commitment to spontaneous improvisation, often extending classic pieces like "Facelift" into extended fusions of rock, jazz, and avant-garde elements. In 2021, longtime bassist Roy Babbington announced his retirement after over 50 years of involvement with Soft Machine and related projects, citing health reasons while designating jazz veteran Fred Thelonious Baker as his successor; Baker, known for his work with artists like Eric Clapton and his own fusion groups, joined the lineup seamlessly for subsequent tours.[51][52] Drummer John Marshall died on September 16, 2023, at age 82, and was replaced by Asaf Sirkis. The band continued active recording and touring with Etheridge, Travis, Baker, and Sirkis, culminating in the 2025 release of Floating World Live, a remastered archival recording from their 1975 Bremen performance that captured the transitional energy of the era, now enhanced for modern audiences.[53] The year 2025 brought further milestones, including a remastered edition of the 1971 album Drop issued in May, which preserved the raw intensity of the band's early fusion experiments with Mike Ratledge, Elton Dean, Hugh Hopper, and Phil Howard.[54] Soft Machine embarked on an extensive UK and European tour, commencing with a March performance at Manchester's Band on the Wall, followed by dates in Hull, Bristol, and beyond into November, showcasing their evolving improvisational style to enthusiastic audiences.[55] Additionally, the band received a nomination for Best British Prog Band at the HRH Prog Awards in November 2025, recognizing their enduring impact alongside contemporaries like Caravan and Gong.[56] The death of founding keyboardist Mike Ratledge on February 5, 2025, at age 81, prompted widespread tributes from the progressive and jazz communities, honoring his pivotal role in shaping Soft Machine's innovative sound during its formative years.[57] In response, the band dedicated portions of their spring tour performances to Ratledge, integrating his compositional legacy into sets that balanced reverence with forward momentum.[58] Despite these changes, Soft Machine remains a vital force in improvisational jazz fusion, with ongoing European engagements underscoring their adaptability and creative vitality into late 2025.[59]Artistry
Musical style and evolution
Soft Machine's early work in the late 1960s established them as pioneers of the Canterbury scene, blending psychedelic rock with pop structures and close vocal harmonies inspired by the surrealist literary techniques of William S. Burroughs, after whom the band was named with the author's permission. Their debut album, The Soft Machine (1968), featured whimsical, narrative-driven songs like "Hope for Happiness" that incorporated layered instrumentation and dreamlike lyrics evoking Burroughs' cut-up method, creating a sense of disjointed yet melodic psychedelia.[60][3] By 1970, the band underwent a profound evolution toward jazz fusion, marked by extended improvisations, complex odd meters such as 7/8 and 5/4, and intricate ensemble interplay that emphasized rhythmic displacement and collective exploration over song forms. This shift was evident on Volume Two (1969) and especially Third (1970), where Mike Ratledge's innovative keyboard work—utilizing a Lowrey organ processed through a fuzz box for a distorted, ethereal tone—layered with Elton Dean's alto saxophone to produce dense, textural soundscapes influenced by free jazz pioneers like Ornette Coleman and Albert Ayler.[3][61][62][63] Karl Jenkins, joining as a multi-instrumentalist, further advanced these keyboard innovations with Mellotron swells and electric piano voicings that bridged rock energy and jazz harmony, as heard in the sprawling suites of Third.[3] The band's core fusion era reflected the Canterbury scene's signature whimsical yet technically rigorous approach, combining playful melodic motifs with avant-garde structures in rock-jazz hybrids; for instance, Bundles (1975) integrated Allan Holdsworth's electric guitar for more propulsive, riff-based grooves while retaining improvisational freedom. Later spin-off projects, such as Soft Machine Legacy, incorporated subtle electronic elements like synthesized textures and processing effects to modernize the sound, while the 2015 reformation maintained a balance of composed sections and spontaneous improvisation in live performances, as showcased on albums like Hidden Details (2018) and Other Doors (2023), with their upcoming album Thirteen (2026) continuing this approach.[64][48][65][66]Influences and legacy
Soft Machine's early sound drew heavily from the psychedelic rock movement, particularly the innovative experimentation of The Beatles during their mid-1960s phase, which inspired the band's incorporation of surreal lyrics, tape loops, and Eastern musical elements in their debut album.[67] As they transitioned to jazz fusion in the late 1960s and early 1970s, influences from Miles Davis's electric period and free jazz pioneers like Ornette Coleman shaped their shift toward improvisational structures and avant-garde improvisation, evident in albums like Third (1970), which paralleled Davis's Bitches Brew in blending rock energy with jazz complexity.[20] Within the Canterbury Scene, Soft Machine shared mutual inspirations with contemporaries such as Caravan and later ensembles like Hatfield and the North, fostering a regional sound rooted in whimsical prog-jazz interplay and chamber-like arrangements.[68] As pioneers of jazz-rock fusion, Soft Machine's integration of psychedelic rock with free jazz laid foundational groundwork for the Canterbury Scene, influencing offshoots like Robert Wyatt's Matching Mole, which extended their experimental vocal-jazz hybrid, and National Health, whose lineup drew directly from Soft Machine alumni to explore intricate, ensemble-driven compositions.[69] Their legacy extends broadly to progressive jazz acts, including Weather Report and Return to Forever, where Soft Machine's early fusion innovations—such as extended improvisations and genre-blending—helped define the 1970s jazz-rock landscape alongside American counterparts.[70] Archival reissues, including the 2025 remaster of Drop and ongoing releases of live recordings, along with recent studio albums such as Other Doors (2023) and the upcoming Thirteen (2026), have sustained interest in their catalog, highlighting unreleased material from pivotal lineups and introducing their work to new generations.[71][66] Soft Machine's nomination for Best British Prog Band at the 2025 HRH Prog Awards underscores their enduring relevance in progressive music circles, amid a resurgence of interest in 1970s fusion.[72] The band's cultural footprint ties deeply to 1960s counterculture through their psychedelic origins and associations with figures like William S. Burroughs, evolving into 1970s avant-garde experimentation that challenged rock conventions.[73] Mike Ratledge's passing on February 5, 2025, at age 81, prompted widespread reflections on his foundational role as the band's sole constant member and architect of their jazz fusion direction.[74][1]Personnel
Current members
The current lineup of Soft Machine, as of 2025, consists of John Etheridge on guitar, Theo Travis on saxophone, flute, bass flute, and keyboards, Fred Thelonious Baker on bass, and Asaf Sirkis on drums.[75] John Etheridge serves as the band's guitarist, having first joined Soft Machine in 1975 during the recording of the album Softs and returning for the band's reformation in 2015 after stints in spin-off projects like Soft Works (2002) and Soft Machine Legacy (from 2004).[8][76] His distinctive jazz phrasing and improvisational style have been central to the band's modern sound, including leading compositions on the 2018 album Hidden Details, where his guitar work drives tracks like "The Man Who Waved at Trains."[77] Etheridge's long association provides continuity, blending fusion-era roots with contemporary progressive jazz elements in live performances.[78] Theo Travis handles saxophone, flute, bass flute, and keyboards, joining the precursor Soft Machine Legacy in 2006 to replace Elton Dean and becoming a full member upon the band's reformation in 2015.[8][79] His multi-reed approach echoes Dean's improvisational legacy while incorporating broader progressive influences from his time in Gong, contributing melodic and textural depth to albums like Hidden Details and the 2023 release Other Doors.[80] Travis's flute and saxophone lines often provide ethereal counterpoints to Etheridge's guitar, enhancing the band's atmospheric fusion sound in recent tours.[73] Fred Thelonious Baker plays bass, joining Soft Machine in January 2022 as the replacement for Roy Babbington after previously substituting for the band since 2008.[75][81] A veteran of the Canterbury scene through groups like In Cahoots, Baker employs both upright and electric bass to deliver a solid rhythmic foundation, supporting the ensemble's complex jazz-rock structures in live settings and contributing to the 2023 album Other Doors.[80] His precise, melodic bass lines have been integral to the band's 2025 tour activities, maintaining the fusion tradition amid lineup changes.[82] Asaf Sirkis provides drums and percussion, having joined in January 2023 as the successor to John Marshall.[75] Known for his work with the Asaf Sirkis Trio and other international jazz projects, Sirkis brings dynamic, propulsive rhythms that blend jazz precision with rock energy, enhancing the band's live improvisations during their 2025 worldwide tours.[83] His addition has injected fresh vitality into Soft Machine's performances, allowing for expanded rhythmic explorations in recent shows.[84]Former members
Soft Machine's founding lineup in 1966 consisted of drummer and vocalist Robert Wyatt, bassist and vocalist Kevin Ayers, guitarist Daevid Allen, and keyboardist Mike Ratledge.[8] Wyatt, born in 1945, provided the band's early psychedelic vocals on their debut album and contributed to the whimsical, improvisational style that defined their initial phase, departing in 1971; he later suffered a serious accident in 1973 that ended his drumming career and achieved solo success with albums like Rock Bottom (1974) and formed Matching Mole. Ayers, also a key vocalist, handled bass duties from 1966 to 1968, infusing the group's sound with psychedelic elements heard on tracks like "We Did It Again" from their first album, after which he left to pursue a solo career in psychedelia, releasing influential works such as Whatevershebringswesing (1971) with his band the Whole World. Allen, the original guitarist, performed from 1966 to 1967, contributing to live performances and early recordings before being deported from the US due to visa issues during a tour supporting Jimi Hendrix; he subsequently founded the space rock band Gong, which became a cornerstone of the Canterbury scene. Ratledge, the longest-serving founding member, played keyboards from 1966 to 1976, serving as the core composer whose intricate arrangements shaped the band's evolution from psychedelia to jazz fusion on albums like Third (1970) and Fifth (1972); he withdrew during the recording of Softs (1976) to focus on solo projects and collaborations, passing away on February 5, 2025, at age 81 after a short illness.[1] As the band transitioned to jazz fusion, Hugh Hopper joined on bass in 1968, replacing Ayers, and provided the distinctive, fuzz-toned bass lines that anchored extended improvisations on Third, remaining until 1973 and briefly returning from 1975 to 1976 for albums like Spaced (1976); he later pursued a prolific solo career and collaborations within the Canterbury scene until his death in 2009.[85] Saxophonist Elton Dean became a member in 1969, delivering free jazz solos that added textural depth to live performances and recordings like Fourth (1971), staying until 1975 when creative differences led to his exit; he continued leading groups such as Elton Dean's Just Us and Ninesense, influencing European jazz until his death in 2006.[86] Karl Jenkins entered in 1970 initially on reeds before shifting to keyboards, co-leading the band from 1972 to 1978 with compositions and arrangements that defined the fusion era on Bundles (1975) and Softs; post-departure, he achieved classical crossover success with projects like Adiemus.[8] Other notable former members included drummer John Marshall, who joined in 1972 replacing Phil Howard and served multiple stints (1972–1974, 1975–1976, and 2004–2023), providing versatile jazz-rock drumming on albums like Six (1973) and contributing to the band's longevity through reunion projects until his death on September 16, 2023.[87] Bassist Roy Babbington, who first joined in 1971 as a session player on Fourth before becoming a full member from 1973 to 1975, providing solid rhythmic foundation during lineup shifts, and returning intermittently from 2004 to 2021 for reunion efforts and albums like Hidden Details (2018); he retired in 2021 citing health reasons.[27][51] Australian drummer Phil Howard replaced Wyatt in late 1971, contributing a freer jazz approach to Fifth and the live album BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert (1972) before leaving in 1972 amid personal challenges; he later worked in jazz circles but largely withdrew from the public eye.[88] Trombonist Nick Evans had a brief stint in 1970 during the band's experimental septet phase, adding brass layers to live sets and appearing on Third in sparse contributions; he went on to play with Keith Tippett's groups and Centipede.[89] Guitarist Andy Summers filled in briefly in 1968 after Allen's departure, participating in US tour dates and early rehearsals that influenced the band's rock edge, before pursuing a career that led to his fame with the Police.[90] Saxophonist Alan Wakeman joined for a short period in 1976, providing soprano and tenor sax on Softs and enhancing the album's melodic fusion textures; he subsequently toured with prog acts and recorded with Curved Air.[91]Discography
Studio albums
The Soft Machine's studio albums mark the band's evolution from psychedelic rock to jazz fusion and beyond, with recordings spanning five decades. The early albums captured their experimental, beat-influenced sound, while later works reflected lineup changes and a shift to instrumental complexity. Post-reformation releases revived the band's legacy with contemporary production. Below is a catalog of their primary studio albums, excluding live recordings and compilations.| Album | Year | Label | Production Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Soft Machine | 1968 | Probe | Debut album recorded in April 1968 at Record Plant Studios in New York City, produced by Chas Chandler; features the original lineup of Robert Wyatt, Mike Ratledge, Kevin Ayers, and Daevid Allen, blending psychedelic rock with R&B influences.[92] |
| Volume Two | 1969 | Probe | Second album recorded in 1969, showcasing a more improvisational style with extended tracks; lineup includes Wyatt, Ratledge, Ayers, and Hugh Hopper after Allen's departure. |
| Third | 1970 | Columbia | Double album marking a transition to jazz fusion, featuring side-long suites and guest musicians like Rab Spall; produced by Nick Mason, with Wyatt on drums for the final time on a studio album. |
| Fourth | 1971 | Columbia | First fully instrumental album and Wyatt's last with the band; lineup of Mike Ratledge, Elton Dean, Roy Babbington, and Robert Wyatt, emphasizing keyboard and wind instrument interplay.[93] |
| Five | 1972 | Columbia | Short-form album (also known as 5), recorded with Ratledge, Dean, Babbington, and Phil Howard (with Hugh Hopper on bass for select tracks); focuses on concise jazz-rock compositions amid lineup instability.[94] |
| Six | 1973 | Columbia | Recorded in 1973 with Ratledge, Hugh Hopper, Karl Jenkins, and John Marshall; highlights shifting rhythms and ensemble dynamics.[95] |
| Seven | 1973 | Columbia | Final Columbia release, featuring Ratledge, Jenkins, Babbington, and Marshall; produced with a focus on atmospheric textures and free improvisation elements.[96] |
| Bundles | 1975 | Harvest | EMI release introducing guitarist Allan Holdsworth alongside Ratledge, Jenkins, Babbington, and Marshall; recorded at Command Studios, emphasizing fusion grooves and guitar solos.[97] |
| Softs | 1976 | Harvest | Final album with Ratledge, featuring Holdsworth, Jenkins, Babbington, and Marshall; produced by John Wood, noted for its polished jazz-rock arrangements.[98] |
| Alive & Well | 1978 | Harvest | Last original studio album of the classic era (hybrid live/studio recording), with Jenkins, Etheridge, Babbington, and Marshall (with guests including Ric Sanders on violin); captures energy following Holdsworth's departure.[99] |
| Land of Cockayne | 1981 | EMI | Reformation-era album led by Karl Jenkins, featuring John Marshall, Allan Holdsworth, and others including Dave MacRae and Alan Wakeman; continues fusion style with added electronic elements.[100] |
| Hidden Details | 2018 | Moonjune | First studio album in 40 years, reuniting three-quarters of the Softs-era lineup (Jenkins, Babbington, Marshall) with Theo Travis; recorded at Jon Hiseman's Temple Music Studios, blending legacy sounds with modern production.[101][102] |
| Self-Reference | 2021 | Moonjune | Post-reformation release continuing the band's instrumental jazz fusion direction; features the core lineup of Travis, Babbington, and Marshall under Jenkins' direction, emphasizing thematic continuity.[103] |
| Other Doors | 2023 | Moonjune | Contemporary studio album with John Etheridge, Theo Travis, Roy Babbington, and John Marshall; explores improvisational jazz fusion, recorded prior to Marshall's retirement.[50] |
Live albums and compilations
The Soft Machine's live albums and compilations capture the band's evolving performances across decades, often drawing from radio sessions, concerts, and archival material to showcase their improvisational prowess and fusion explorations. Early efforts include Spaced, originally recorded in 1969 as manipulated tapes for a London "happening" by the classic trio of Robert Wyatt, Mike Ratledge, and Hugh Hopper, which circulated as a bootleg before its official release in 1996 on Cuneiform Records; the album features looped and experimental pieces blending psychedelia with jazz elements.[104][105] Another key early compilation is BBC Radio 1967–1971, a 2003 double-CD set on Hux Records compiling live BBC sessions from the band's psychedelic rock phase through its jazz transition, highlighting tracks like "Hope for Happiness" and "Moon in June" performed by lineups including Wyatt, Ratledge, and Elton Dean.[106][107] In the mid-1970s fusion era, Alive & Well: Recorded in Paris (1978, Harvest/EMI) documents a mostly live performance by the Ratledge-led quintet at Théâtre Le Palace, blending studio overdubs with on-stage energy from tracks such as "Soft Space" and "K's Riff," reflecting the band's shift toward intricate jazz-rock arrangements amid lineup changes including Karl Jenkins and John Marshall.[99][108] The 1971 live recording Drop, captured during European tours with Wyatt's departure looming, was first officially released in 2008 on MoonJune Records but remastered in 2025, preserving extended improvisations like the title track and "Slightly All the Time" that exemplify the band's peak creative flux.[54][109] Spin-off ensembles extended the legacy through live documentation, such as Soft Machine Legacy's Live in Zaandam (2005, MoonJune), a concert recording from De Kade in the Netherlands featuring John Etheridge, Roy Babbington, Tony Levin (on one track), and Marshall, reviving classics like "Ash" and "Facelift" with renewed vigor.[47][110] Similarly, the short-lived Soft Works—comprising Elton Dean, Allan Holdsworth, Hopper, and Marshall—issued Abracadabra in Osaka (2003, MoonJune), a live album from their August 11 concert in Japan, capturing fiery fusion renditions of Soft Machine staples and originals like "Abracadabra."[111] The Peel Sessions (1990, Strange Fruit), compiling BBC radio performances from 1969–1970, serves as an archival compilation of the Wyatt-era band's raw energy, including extended takes on "Moon in June" and "Facelift."[112] In the modern reformation period, Floating World Live (originally recorded 1975, remastered 2025 on MoonJune) revives a Jenkins-Marshall-Holdsworth-Babbington lineup's concert from Queen Mary College, London, with enhanced audio revealing the band's dynamic interplay on suite-like pieces such as "Floating World" and "Bundles."[53][113]| Title | Year (Original/ Release) | Label | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spaced | 1969/1996 | Cuneiform | Experimental tapes for happening, bootleg origins |
| BBC Radio 1967–1971 | 1967–1971/2003 | Hux | Double-CD BBC sessions, psychedelic to jazz shift |
| Drop | 1971/2008 (2025 remaster) | MoonJune | European tour live, Wyatt-era improvisations |
| Alive & Well: Recorded in Paris | 1978/1978 | Harvest/EMI | Hybrid live/studio, fusion quintet performance |
| Abracadabra in Osaka (Soft Works) | 2003/2003 | MoonJune | Spin-off live in Japan, Holdsworth-Dean lineup |
| Live in Zaandam (Soft Machine Legacy) | 2005/2005 | MoonJune | Reformation concert, Etheridge-Marshall focus |
| Floating World Live | 1975/2025 remaster | MoonJune | 1970s concert revival, enhanced audio suite |