It’s been 50 years since the Soft Machine released their sole
self-titled debut album. From their Canterbury Psychedelic sounds to Jazz
Fusion in the 1970s. The Soft Machine went through various line-up changes.
Daevid Allen, Allan Holdsworth, Robert Wyatt, Hugh Hopper, Elton Dean, Mike
Ratledge, Kevin Ayers, and Karl Jenkins to name a few, they were ahead of their
time.
Now for me with the Soft Machine, I’ve always prefer their first
three albums. But when I heard they were going to release a new album this
year, my first thought was, “Well, this should be interesting. Let’s see what
it’s like.” I have been familiar back in 2013 when it was known as Soft Machine
Legacy when they released one of my favorite albums Burden of Proof which was issued on MoonJune Records and Esoteric
Antenna. But let’s get straight to Hidden
Details which is released on the same label, and find out what kind of ingredients
they have cooked inside the kitchen.
I will admit, I’m not a gigantic Soft Machine fan, but I was
completely taken aback from what I was listening to from start to finish with Hidden Details. And it showed how much
in awe I have with this album. This is the first album they’ve released since
their last and final album Land of
Cockayne in 1981. And this is a big surprise they’ve unleashed this year.
From the opening composition of the title-track, John
Etheridge’s guitar delves into a Dance of
the Maya-sque intro as Theo’s sax and Babbington’s dooming bass sets up the
crime scene with a futuristic film-noir background. Travis lays down some of
the clues through his saxes and noticing a piece of the puzzle is missing
before switching gears towards a wah-wah fender Rhodes sound as Roy and
Etheridge go into some directory of being on the right track.
Broken Hill sees
Etheridge creating these cavernous sounds as Theo goes more into the mysterious
travels through his Rhodes while Marshall takes the cymbals on his drums into
various areas you do not want to go into when it gets dark. I can imagine this
piece as a film-score that Soft Machine do. And they set up these
bluesy-psychedelic vibrations to go through these corridors as if to find out
which parallel door they want to go into.
John Marshall’s drumming on Flight of the Jett goes through various crescendos capturing the
styles of Elvin Jones and Robert Wyatt. I felt a little tug to the Third-era as Marshall hammering those
drums like a true jazz musician as he’s going through the drum kit and knowing
he’s not going through a stop sign, but making sure the job is done right.
Etheridge channels the riffs between Gentle Giant’s Gary
Green during The Power and the Glory and
Kansas’ Kerry Livgren’s Leftoverture phase
before channeling the Grand Wazoo himself by laying down more of the Blues-like
improvisation through his guitar playing on One
Glove. But then we get to Ratledge’s composition of the first part of Out Bloody Rageous which originally
appeared on the Third album in 1970.
The introduction begins with Theo using his Fender Rhodes to
channel Terry Riley’s A Rainbow in Curved
Air as he makes the keyboard sounding like an experimental swirling rainbow
drop before the band members come into play honoring Ratledge’s arrangement.
They honor not only his work, but Travis channeling the late great Elton Dean
to keep his legacy alive and it is a great tipping the hat to him.
Fourteen Hour Dream has
this combination of a Jazz-Psych-Pop orientated piece. From Babbington’s intro
that he plays on his plays like a loop through walking circles, to unbelievable
mid-bright mornings near the end by going through a mystifying atmosphere.
The closing track, Breathe
features guest musician Nick Utteridge on wind chimes, sees Theo, Nick, and
Marshall taking you into these atmospheric landscapes to the land of the rising
sun. You can close your eyes and imagine this piece of music as a score to
cities of Japan and it fits perfectly to capture the essence of the journey
into the heart of Tokyo.
Hidden Details shows
that Soft Machine is more than just both a Progressive and Jazz rock band. But
going beyond those genres and making it something special with their sound. And
this album creates a strangely, beautiful, adventurous, and illustrated that is
brought to life.
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