soft machine Tale of Taliesin
Vložit
- čas přidán 2. 10. 2006
- Tale of Taliesin
Lineup (because it has been discussed below):
Roy Babbington (bass), John Etheridge (guitar),John Marshall (drums), Karl Jenkins (keys). allan holdsworth and mike ratledge were both gone from the group by this tour. - Hudba
I’m always looking for new old music. Soft Machine rock!
Check out Dr. Hook
Or Clutch
Soft Machime was the second concerti saw live,first was Genesis in 75,and two years later Soft Machine,what great memories from those times.
John Etheridge KILLING it on guitar. wow.
Yes, he is really good
If you like notes per second, he's unbeatable.......
@@mrsp3992Oh shut up
It so looks like the guys from the factory just came down jamming on a sunday, loving it
Except that the Canterbury sound musicians were unlikely to have been anywhere near a factory - neither the musicians nor any of their families.
"I was in many shapes, ". . . I was rain-drops in the air, I was stars' beam; I was a word in letters, I was a book in origin; I was lanterns of light for a year and a half; I was a bridge that stretched over six estuaries; I was a path, I was an eagle, I was a coracle in seas; I was a bubble in beer, I was a drop in a shower; I was a sword in hand, I was a shield in battle; I was a string in a harp enchanted nine years. . . ." The Battle of the Trees by Taliesin (translated by Patrick Ford)
John Marshall is a freaking genius, man.
So true. He adds fire to anything he plays on. His work with Eberhard Weber is stunning too.
Ghhhfruutf
a overclocked drummer genius
When I saw them in 2018 he did a 5 minute solo, I would buy a whole album of him just doing that. The crowd was spellbound.
@@TheGordem Hidden Details tour? Probably the most epic concert I've ever been to.
Saw John Etheridge at Hastings Sea Fishing club bar, playing with a few local lads, was a great evening and only £8, beer was good as well.
some people just dont like the cleaner, more technical later stuff. it is quite different than the earlier stuff. but i like both
Soft Machine always had good taste in their material throughout their different phases.
Just think as a teenager I was able to experience them in concert way back in the day. In Houston, Texas, they opened up for Jimi Hendrix around 1968 or 69 at The Houston Music Hall.
Damned, i wish i was there. I remember climbing through the window of some place NE Houston that played blues and rock bands ex Taj Mahal, as a 14 year old. But to see Hendrix and Soft machine in Houston - Wow. Never even knew he played there. Wow. It was great that Hendrix always believed in and promoted Soft Machine - they often had such bad reviews as an experimental post rock, improvisational pre fusion band.
@@0holland41 Yes. Hendrix and Soft Machine were good friends. I got to experience Hendrix 5 times and Soft Machine 3 times back in the day. Man. I will cherish those moments.
That was the REAL SM!
"Softs" is a beautiful L.P to Trip to...and Etheridge takes care of Holdsworth's "Bundles" input admirably.
what a great album "softs" was.
Un de mes morceaux préférés de ce groupe flamboyant et plein de génie. De nos jours ce genre de musique n'existe pratiquement plus et cela est bien triste. On ne nous sert que de la mauvaise soupe.
Heureusement que ce genre de musique n’existe plus. J’ai vu ce groupe à l’époque, il y avait encore Mike Ratledge. On avait juste envie de demander au guitariste de dégager.. insupportable, 3000 notes à la seconde… inutile.
The sg one of the most diverse guitars around you can play anything on them and they look so cool
You are right. I have three SGs. 1968 has P90s, 1973 has mini humbuckers and 1976 has standard humbuckers. All unique and perfect!
@@ristokolttonen9208 give me one ill take the one you play the least
This one is actually a Les Paul. Weird enough but Gibson quit making Les Pauls in 1960/61 and used SG's with Les Paul Headstocks until 69/70ish then start making Les Pauls with Les Paul bodies again. All the while the SG was still being produced during this time period. This one seems to be a Les Paul custom with the fancy binding and headstock bling.
So its a sg/les paul so to speak why did gibson quit making les pauls then?
@@davidbrothers3788 Gibson still made Les Pauls during this brief period of about 7-8 years but had SG bodies? Very confusing I know. Google 1962 Les Paul it will be an SG bodied guitar. I don't know the reason. I think around 69/70 they went back to the traditional Les Paul bodies of the 1950's. Good day
Listening to this makes me feel like a balloon that’s burst. I’m all stretchy like a condom.
Was looking for the jojo reference
This is just absolutely immense. Saw John Marshall on tour, I honestly wonder why he did not get the recognition
he fully deserved. For me those haunting tones from the superb guitar work of John Etheridge are almost
spellbinding.
It took me a long time to get into the post-Wyatt stuff...but it has become an enduring favorite! Especially “Bundles” and “Softs”! Holdsworth and Etheridge, both brilliant players. This lineup is stellar!
Same here. But I ended up with all their albums one through seven, and they were all very good, even when they reached the point of no original members.. Soft Machine 7 is really good.
Marvelous guitar playing. Underrated band in general.
By who? Only those opinion whose opinion is ill informed...
They kind of were the british answer to Mahavichnu Orchestra, Return to Forever, and such. So yeah, they were a little underrated in a sense
@@dr.juerdotitsgo5119 They were around before both of those 2 bands you mentioned So...Yeah...
@@RA-VEN8 Granted but they were more like a experimental "jam band" back then. They only embraced that instrumental american jazz rock format in the seventies.
@@dr.juerdotitsgo5119 My notifications are just full of everyone needing my attention. Take what I say with a grain of salt. I'm not hating on anything I enjoy all.
何ですかこのかっこいいバンド!!!かっこよすぎるじゃないですか!今まで知らなかった自分が恥ずかしいです!
I'm Japanese juniorhighschool student
What's this cool band !!! It's too cool!
I'm embarrassed that I didn't know before!
Many of the Canterbury Sound musicians, who included original and subsequent members of Soft Machine, also worked with the Japanese percussionist, Stomu Yamash'ta. Perhaps you know his LP Freedom is Frightening
Man John Etheridge doesn’t get mentioned nearly enough in the jazz rock fusion world! Soft Machine’s Alive and Well has some of my favorite jazz rock guitar ever recorded. Bill Connors is another monster player who doesn’t get brought up enough either, the first and only album he did with Return to Forever also contains some very inspiring guitar playing.
Quite true!
Yeah, strange that John Etheridge isn't more famous, it's a bit of a mystery.
Agreed. Bill Connors’ contribution to RTF and fusion guitar playing in general was incalculable. So little, but so much.
Bill Connors play with Return To Forever's Hymn To The Seventh Galaxy, released when Billy Cobham's Spectrum was heard often on radio.
I liked Connors more than I liked John McLaughlin. Connors has a good sense of melody rather than a frenzied modal effusion.
Bill Connors absolutely smashes on that album as well as the live performances they did for it. Al is a very inspiring technical player but is creatively a league down from Bill in my opinion
Very haunting melody I love it.
you could argue that soft machine spent more time as a smooth fusion band than as the original psychedelic jazzrock band. personally i prefer their early stuff by far, but they were constantly evolving as a band.
Smooth?!
@@zachjohnson637 Land of Cokayne and Karl Jenkis solo stuff.
Never a dull moment, also had great titles for their pieces, once Wyatt left they were an entirely different thing, jazz fusion gets a bad rap. There is a lot of energy here and imagination. Six is a remarkable double album despite the terrible cover.
The new lineup live is fantastic by the way
Agree 100%
Etheridge, Marshall and Babbington are STILL playing NOW in 2019, with the wonderful Theo Travis on sax/flute/keys. Not resting on their laurels but still coming out with terrific new material. I have seen them twice in the past two years and have tickets to see them again later this year. If they are going to play in your town don't miss them.
TheGordem Saw them at Backstage, Kinross, on Friday evening. Did not disappoint. Theo has written some new material for them. New album 2020?
Going to see them Oct 17/23 in Toronto!
You're in for a real treat! Saw them this last February in Falmouth UK with line-up of John Etheridge, Theo Travis, the awesome Fred Thelonius Baker on bass (first saw him decades ago playing a solo electric bass set supporting Allan Holdsworth in Portsmouth UK) and the amazing Assad Sirkus on drums. Very loud and incredibly fat ( especially the bass) - pure joy!! Also saw John playing more or less acoustically with the exquisite violinist Christian Garrick (who also plays with Budapest Cafe Orchestra) only 3 miles away from where I live in a tiny village called Constantine, Britain's southernmost venue. Equally enjoyable even though just the two of them. John is a musician's musician, very approachable and friendly, who never let fame go to his head and who likes to play to a small audience as much as a large one. If you didn't already know, John also played with Darryl Way (after he'd left Curved Air) in Darryl Way's Wolf, who made 3 or 4 albums (that I know of), all heavily featuring his incredibly fluent and exciting guitar-playing - apparently still available and well worth checking out!! 👍 ENJOY!!!
Who is here in 2021 and just had a mind blowing experience?
Ah great!
A vid of John Etheridge. What a treat.
One of the greats of fusion guitar.
Soft Machine of powerfully talented musicians!
the tale of taliesin is featured in the album called Softs, issued in 1976 after Bundles.
この半年の間に出会った一番のアルバム Softs
ライブバージョンもいいなあ〜 ジョンエサリッジはなんて愛嬌のある人物なのだろう
class act musicianship~! immense sonic cheers~! ~ SOFT MACHINE~!
Marvelous hypnotizing piece. I love the haircut of the keyboard player, like a playmobile !
This is Sir Karl Jenkins, a welsh man that composes now solely for the upper classes, like Mike Oldfield, you know...😉
A true bowl cut!
One of the most underrated groups Soft Machine in all it's many forms never got the accolades it deserved
Este tema es del álbum Softs (1976), que es uno de los mejores y marca un cambio radical entre el viejo estilo muy improvisado y este nuevo más estudiado, profesional y potente. Destaca Karl Jenkins como líder compositor y John Etheridge como ejecutante.
had the album ! one and only soft album great !
Great tune and the ever present, ever victorious Moog Mini!!
well oiled shiny machine.
I saw them do this on a Granada TV show called So It Goes in August 1976. Changed my idea of what great guitar playing was in under 4 minutes!
30 ans que je l'écoute avec la même émotion ! La grâce !
This tune is stuck in my head, heard it a long long time ago and every now and then it just pops back into my mind, but its always good it returns :)
Absolutely magical
this is one of my favorite songs ever. roy is such a cool guy i got to meet him and john marshall in portland 2019. an amazing show and these dudes are really cool. i’m glad i got to talk to roy about jazz and other amazing music. he showed me some sheet music and explained it to me. it was really cool it’s brilliant music. wont ever forget that. left me w great advice and told me he was glad to see young people into his music still, amazing show.
Thank you so much, what a great band and great quality.
Wow. A Fender Bass-VI! Didn't know Babbington used one of those before. Great vid. Thanks!
This is amazing!
I love this music! 😊
Roy and the two Johns are touring again - saw them recently. Amazing.
this is amazing
Great stuff!!!!!!!!!!
Fantastic stuff!
Pure magic. Total mastery. An emotional journey.
Etheridge at the top of his game... Soo fast with a lot of chromatics in there but there are skips and its phrased together real smooth... Somehow it's still musical. Wish this was better known so some modern shredder could do an in-depth analysis on his playing here. It certainly deserves it!
AHHHHH I LOVE THIS SONG!!
Thanks Ralphy,great band!!!!!!!!!!!
Dreamy..spacey, melodic..love this song
Que bárbaro!!!Por Dios!!!!Que sonidos!!! Qué música!!!Belleza de música!
Blimey! John Etheridge was super cool even then!
Thanks to the person who posted this!
I was at a jazz seminar many years ago where John Etheridge taught guitar. Great player & a lovely bloke.
i love it ! cheers from germany.
this is fucking EPIC. imagine hearing those haunting guitar licks high on lsd back in the day when shredding wasn't even around to be over rated. fuck
So very true!
Alvin Lee was shredding back in 1968 mate.
Absolutely. Shredding in 1976. Ahead of its time.
Fantastic
Oh, and notice how, at least for MOST bands, the more dressed-down/less theatrically attired its musicians are, often the higher the quality of the music. These guys just show up in casual street attire, but they are serious professionals - letting the music speak for ITSELF! Look ma, no capes and no glitter!
Exactly!
While you harp on about boomer music your daughters and granddaughters are twerking to rap.
❤❤❤фри джаз психоделия...
@@PointOfNoReturn2112Rap is perfectly valid. Nothing wrong with what you said
thanks for the sweet upload
still love it!!
this is absolutely fantastic - what a great band
That's the music which give feelings about mystic and secred parts of life ... great song ...
Fantastic especially if you have heard it live.
In Italy we had a Italian versione of this great band called "Goblins" wich worte a great number of songs for Dario Argento the movie producer great band too
Karl Jenkins is nowadays one of the most important composer of classical music!
Also worth listening. Wellknown from "Palladio" played by "Escala"!
Love that opera gong hanger.
LOVE IT
SUPER GRUPO SOFT MACHINE LOS ESCUCHO DESDE 1970 SIEMPRE GRANDE, SALUDOS FROM MEXICO CITY
Complete badass drummer
Thanks for the info!
Great band. Saw them 1976 or 1977 in Lyon/France
Phenomenal.
The keyboard player's hat and top lip covering are epic😂
Great stuff, one of my favorite versions of the band.
The pairing of John Marshall and John Etheridge was brilliant.
Immensamente straordinari...semplicemente Soft Machine!!!
I saw the SM ages ago! Like 1970 as an opening act. They played mostly in the darkened theatre. Very odd!
Tambien en la música hay puntos fundamentales de inflexión, el de este grupo es sin duda uno de ellos.
Geniales y creativos adelantados a su tiempo, como debe ser.
from Wiki:
Roy Babbington used a Fender Bass VI exclusively during his tenure with Soft Machine (1973-1976)
but it looks like a baritone guitar with a jazzmaster tremolo on it
Vincent Van gogh it’s definitely a regular Bass VI. Late 60s model I suppose.
I like Etheridge´s guitar sound.
Wow, great guitar solo! I just noticed that I have the same setup in my drums than SMs drummer. When I built my drums, I think that no one even thinks to have that kind of setup.
"Softs" is a masterpiece
UNO DE MIS GRUPOS FAORITOS CON TODA LA MAESTRIA DE ESTA GRAN BANDA INMORTAL EN ESOS AÑOS YA LOS TELONEAVA PINK FLOYD
very very well.......................................................
I like that SG Custom that John Etheridge is playing here. The pickguard arrangement is unusual, with a black lower pickguard, and the top pickguard being white. I wonder if it was stock that way, or if he took the pickguard off an SG Standard to replace the stock lower pickguard.
Unutterably cool.
I refuse to argue about musical passions !
No members from the group's classic lineup, combined with not one but two guitarists, make some fine music. For those of us who were exposed to the first four numbers albums as they came off the press, it's just not the same. Robert Wyatt leaving to found Matching Mole was a blow that removed a cornerstone of the group's psyche. Mike Ratledge, the cornerstone for much of the group's sound, hung around until Allan Holdsworth (and previous others) joined for "Bundles," Mike's final work with SM except for a backup role on "Softs." Their last studio album of the 20th century, a failed effort titled "Land of Cockayne," saw Karl Jenkins in the Ratledge role, which somehow ended the group for good. The release of "Hidden Details" in 2018 by the core of the final Soft Machine phase, is something I'll be listening for the first time after this is posted. Will that come with any regrets?
This clip was from a Granada TV music programme called So It Goes. It was shown in 1976.
Twat. it was the Sooty show.
thanks gfunkusarelius for posting this. I never heard later soft machine after mike ratledge left before. Even though I prefer the Kevin Ayers and Robert Wyatt era soft machine slightly more (their vocals adds a warmth to the band's atonal experimentalism), this piece is excellent, and reminds me somewhat of early Mahavishnu Orchestra at the end,
really makes you wanna hide a boat on top of another boat
Yeah, love listening to this when I'm feeling deflated
i've seen this line-up of SOFT MACHINE in a concert at the ALEXANDRA PALACE in london, in the late seventies. a few months later, the place was once more destroyed by fire, i remember...
John Etheridge is hidden gem. Very badass guitarist
Soft Machine without original members.....Still an amazing top class act!
ehy maaan thank you!!! i'm flattered!! keep on rocking bro!
wonderful.
@stereom Thank you. The chronology on the Calyx website says for this month that Wakeman left and was temporarily replaced by Ray Warleigh (apparently not yet, though.)
Thanks again.
Danke..für.das..Konzert..in..Nordhausen...Danke
i appreciate your sentiment, and i personally like the wyatt-era softs better, but i don't see any evidence that they are less cognizant of the overall music they are performing. i just think it is a different sound.