Member Since: 1/15/2007
Band Website: moonjune.com/MJR016.htm
Band Members: AVAILABLE NOW !!!
SOFT MACHINE LEGACY "Steam"
$14 USA/CAN • $17 ELSEWHERE (including shipping)
TO PURCHASE THE CD AND FOR AUDIO CLIPS AND MORE INFO
PLEASE CLICK ON THE CD COVER.
HUGH HOPPER electric bass
JOHN ETHERIDGE electric guitar
THEO TRAVIS tenor & soprano sax, flute
JOHN MARSHALL drums, percussion
Exclusively managed and booked worldwide by
MOONJUNE GLOBAL MEDIA, NEW YORK
http://moonjune.com
Influences: SOFT MACHINE, HUGH HOPPER, JOHN ETHERIDGE, THEO TRAVIS, JOHN MARSHALL
Sounds Like: NEW STUDIO ALBUM OUT NOW
USA - MOONJUNE RECORDS (AUGUST 23, 2007)
JAPAN - &FOREST MUSIC (AUGUST, 2007)
EUROPE - SOULFOOD RECORDS, GERMANY (SEPTEMBER, 2007)
Recorded on December 28/29/30 2006 at Temple Music Studios in Surrey, England by Jon Hiseman.
Produced by Leonardo Pavkovic & Soft Machine Legacy.
Executive producer Leonardo Pavkovic
Mixed by Soft Machine Legacy and Jon Hiseman in January and February 2007. Mastered by Jon Hiseman in February 2007.
Tracks:
1. Footloose (Hopper) 8:46
2. The Steamer (Travis) 4:38
3. The Big Man (Etheridge, Travis, Hopper, Marshall) 5:08
4. Chloe & The Pirates (Ratledge) 7:27
5. In The Back Room (Etheridge) 7:10
6. The Last Day (Travis) 5:20
7. Firefly (Hopper, Marshall) 6:41
8. So English (Etheridge, Travis, Hopper, Marshall) 8:29
9. Dave Acto (Etheridge, Travis, Hopper, Marshall) 6:25
10. Anything To Anywhere (Travis) 5:20
(Japanese release only) 11. Moreover (Etheridge) 5:12
The group’s new release, "Steam", combines collective freely improvised jams with new writing from Hopper, Etheridge and Travis. Gone are the keyboards that so defined 1970s Soft Machine. In their place are modernistic sampling/looping and sonic processing, creating expansive soundscapes not possible during Soft Machine’s heyday. Between Etheridge’s broad sonics, Hopper's legendary bass loops and "fuzztonics" and Travis’ system of ambitronics - allowing him to sample his saxophones and flutes in real time and naturally layer unpredictable harmonies - Soft Machine (Legacy) often sounds larger than a quartet.
Powerful rock rhythms, funky jazz-rock grooves and abstract interaction are interspersed with muscular soloing and dense textures. A modern look at “Chloe & The Pirates†from 1973’s "Six" is brought into the 21st Century, anchored by Etheridge’s loops and the light but insistent groove of Hopper and Marshall. The group is driven by a tradition of experimentation and unfettered improvisational abandon that remains purposeful, hard-edged and exciting.
The limitless possibilities of the band’s forward-reaching innovations will not only appeal to fans of 1970s Soft Machine, but to anyone who likes their fusion wide open, their jams loose and totally spontaneous, and their jazz combined with potent grooves and fiery energy.
BACK ON THE RIGHT TRACK
by Sid Smith
on POSTCARDS FROM THE YELLOW ROOM
(Sid Smith is contributor to Mojo Magazine, and author of the book "In The Court Of The King Crimson"
Soft Machine’s reputation as an innovative outfit grazing between the boundaries of jazz and rock often appeared to weigh heavily upon previous Soft Machine Legacy albums. Some smart soloing aside, they trod a too-familiar path between anodyne back-catalogue readings and run of the mill tunes lacking rigour or surprise.
In theory, the notion of Soft Machine Legacy was a bold idea that in practice, lacked vitality and certainty.
The recruitment of Theo Travis following the death of Elton Dean last year, has added some much needed spice to the recipe as well as broadening the audio ingredients available. His use of loops on “Anything To Anywhere†restores both an electronic dimension and compositional complexity that also helped define the Soft Machine of old.
Escaping the “heads plus jam†formula, it’s no coincidence that John Etheridge delivers his most incisive solo of the record on this very track.
Group efforts such as the thunderous scrape of “The Big Man†and the Hatfieldesque twists and turns of “So English†benefit from Travis’ beefy workouts, adding an edge absent on previous Legacy outings. Both as writer and player, Hugh Hopper’s sepulchral menace is undiminished on “Footloose.â€
Whilst no one could ever question their right to trade on the name, only now perhaps is there a head of steam capable of producing an album that can stand next to its illustrious forebears.
Record Label: MoonJune Records
Type of Label: Indie