Label: Cuneiform Records (US), Rune 395/396
Style: Jazz Rock, Progressive Rock, Canterbury Scene
Country: Canterbury, England
Time: 59:49
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 366 Mb
You
have to be an extremely confident unit-and one mother of a band-to turn
up at a prestigious mega-gig like the Montreux Jazz Festival and drop a
set of new material on the audience like the newly rejiggered Soft
Machine did in July 1974. Turns out that material would go on to
comprise 1975’s Bundles, a fusion juggernaut, but hey, props where props
are due. And there should be no shortage of them with this set, as
newly acquired guitarist Allan Holdsworth works himself in the Machine
fold with the most well stocked of sonic quivers.
His riffs come from
all directions, and opener “Hazard Profile” is a veritable Encyclopedia
Britannica of fusion technique. Hammer-ons marry up with staccato fuzz,
which eddies out into needle-like lines of extreme dexterity and
delicacy. Enviable stuff in and of itself, but integrated into the
band’s churning rhythmic approach-like they’re trying to outpace Bitches
Brew-we have one mighty, thudding beast to contend with. A lot of that
beast’s ferocity, as it were, comes courtesy of John Marshall’s kit
work, as on the clattering “Land of the Bag Snake,” the titular creature
being made to sound like it is thumping its way down electric stairs.
“The
Man Who Waved at Trains” shows just how well the group could turn
ferocity into finesse, with Mike Ratledge’s keyboard work trading in
funky blues and Chick Corea-type shimmerings, and Holdsworth’s guitar
taking on the aspect of a plucked violin. “Riff II” is the great growler
here, some chunky bombast that explodes into a climatic rave-up
punctuated by an impossibly long drum roll. There’s a touch of Floyd,
too, in “The Floating World,” which has the same kind of cosmic whimsy,
and the reprise of “The Man Who Waved at Trains” even features implied
sound effects: a guitar mimicking springs snapping and hammers hitting
on the gears of clocks.
This is wild, oft-loud, preternatural Pied
Piper-type music, with Karl Jenkins’ soprano sax on the concluding
“Penny Hitch” all but taking your hand and pulling you down into the
record. Holdsworth’s solo is pure gossamer atop the groove, with the
clean inflections of Smokin’ at the Half Note-era Wes Montgomery. The
crowd clearly gets that something beyond even standard top-gig fare has
gone down, and everyone, at the end, loses it. Quite the banner
achievement for this group-cum-collective Piper, and for this resulting
beckoner of a live package.
(jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/soft-machine-switzerland-1974)
01. Hazard Profile (16:46)
02. Floating World (05:15)
03. Ealing Comedy (04:14)
04. Bundles (03:09)
05. Land of the Bag Snake (04:27)
06. Joint (02:20)
07. The Man Who Waved At Trains (03:01)
08. Peff (04:28)
09. The Man Who Waved At Trains (reprise) (00:21)
10. Lbo (04:45)
11. Riff II (03:08)
12. Lefty (collective improvisation) (02:07)
13. Penny Hitch (coda) (05:42)

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