Volume Two | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | The Soft Machine |
Cover: | Soft Machine-Volume Two-Cover.jpg |
Released: | September 1969[1] |
Recorded: | February–March 1969 at Olympic Studios, London |
Genre: | Canterbury scene, Progressive rock, jazz rock[2] |
Length: | 33:20 |
Label: | Probe SPB 1002 (UK); CPLP-4505 (US) |
Producer: | The Soft Machine |
Prev Title: | The Soft Machine |
Prev Year: | 1968 |
Next Title: | Third |
Next Year: | 1970 |
Volume Two is the second LP by The Soft Machine (although it was their debut in home country of the UK), released in 1969. The album combined humour, dada, psychedelia and jazz. In 2000 it was voted number 715 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums.[3]
The Soft Machine had split up in September 1968 but reunited that December without bassist/singer Kevin Ayers in order to fulfill contractual obligations. Their road manager Hugh Hopper took Ayers' place on bass and a second album (the first released in their home country UK) was recorded in early 1969. The group's sound had been radically altered from the first album, pushing much further in a complex prog and jazz-fusion direction with Hugh's brother Brian Hopper guesting on soprano and tenor saxophones. Multi-sectional suites like "Rivmic Melodies" and "Esther's Nose Job" rely on complex time signatures, Dadaist humour, short spoken word interludes, and Wyatt's idiosyncratic vocals which were often put through heavy echo delay. By contrast, "Dedicated To You But You Weren't Listening" is a brief melodic tune performed with an acoustic guitar.
In the lyrics to "Have You Ever Bean Green?" Soft Machine thank the Jimi Hendrix Experience, with whom they had toured through the United States in the spring of 1968; as Hendrix's opening band they were exposed to large crowds for the first time. The title of the song is a play on the chorus lyric in the Hendrix song "Are You Experienced?", "Have you ever been experienced?". Wyatt thanks "Brian" (Brian Hopper) and "George" (engineer George Chkiantz) in the next section, Pataphysical Introduction – Pt. 2, which also includes a quote of "These Foolish Things". The title of the closing suite, "Esther's Nose Job", is derived from a chapter in Thomas Pynchon's novel V. After guesting on the album, Brian Hopper joined Soft Machine as a fourth member for a few months later in 1969.
The album sleeve featured an abstract collage of a girl with electronic wires and reels in place of a torso. The US version of the album featured a gatefold with expanded liner notes and a B&W photo of the group, whereas the UK version did not have a gatefold. A passage in the US liner notes (uncredited) states "There is music for the body and music for the mind...The Soft Machine plays music for the mind."
While the highly uncommercial album failed to chart anywhere, a contemporary review in Melody Maker noted it was "little short of brilliant for much of its length". Retrospective reviews have also praised it as an early, important work in the progressive rock and Canterbury scenes.