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Soft Machine-Esther's Nose Job-Holland Pop Festival 6-28-70

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Uploaded by on Jan 15, 2007

Soft Machine - Esther's Nose Job

Holland Pop Festival-Kralingen Park Rotterdam, Holland

June 28,1970 Robert Wyatt - drums Mike Ratledge - organ Hugh Hopper - bass Elton Dean - sax

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Top Comments

  • Damn Robert's drumming is so tech. Such a jazzy drummer even though he came from a rock background. Better than keith moon.

  • As for lyrics, I'm sure Wyatt wrote them, rather than Ratledge.

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  • the evil sound

  • I was there!

  • Awesome. My most played band, then a huge empty space, and then all the others. Proto jazz-rock. They themselves once called it "music of the mind". And this video is excellent in proving the point.

  • The daddy's of jazz rock totally awesome

  • @MrFigueroa007 That's b/c he learned drums from an American jazz player (whose name I forget at the moment) and was a major jazz-head throughout his formative years, listening to Elvin Jones, Max Roach, etc. It's really more accurate to say that he came from a jazz background before getting hooked on rock and pop. Because of this he's one of my 2 favorite rock drummers, for sure!

  • @dantean I was listening the same music as you in the 70's. I have all the first RTF and mahavishnu records and my friends gave me the Yes and KC records to listen. I liked'em both in a different way. greetings.

  • @gianca60 All I meant was that those interested in music of weight in the post-60s rock era of the early 70s were listening to Prog and / Fusion--not that the two formed a "team" as you put it. I know that's what I was listening to. Today, I find a smattering of that music to rise above the level of self-cliche and "here's how many scales I've learned," while Soft Machine were not about that.Even when they gravitate closer to that in their later manifestations their compositions r memorable.

  • @dantean To put RTF and Yes in the seam "team" seems a little hazardous to me. Progressive had nothing to do with the "funk" that influenced so much Corea and friends.

  • @slayerized86 Hell yeah, always a pleasure to see more open minded music listeners like yourself. I've always been that way. Who wants to listen to the same stuff all day? Boring people. I need my variety.

  • Here's what progressive music should have been, not "Prog" (most of it, anyway) and Fusion. Early Yes and early King Crimson, early Mahavishnu and Return to Forever--but that's it! Most of the rest can no longer be listened to. Prog died an early death under the weight of its own pretentions, Fusion from a pointless and hopelessly soulless athleticism. Soft Machine tho had everything: compositions, experimentation, soul, and soloing. What a crime what we all got stuck with instead.

  • this band has no equal,

    thanks for this.

  • Mike Ratlegde = Hugo Carvana?!?

    Soft Machine, pura classe... one of the greatest bands ever...

  • nice! wish they could have played this during the day(it looks like it was played at night), 'cause its kinda dark on this video, so its somewhat hard to see at times. still, great video! Wyatt dominated that drum set on this one. Best band ever

  • The book in question is _V_.

  • Utterly brilliant. Thanks for posting such a stonking clip.

  • Very daring move for them in 70, but I never cared much for the horns/reeds. I want to hear Ratledge buzzing those bees! If I want jazz fusion I'll listen to Nucleus....

  • For those wondering about Esther, it's a clear cut Thomas Pynchon reference. Apparently he was Ratledge's favorite writer or something, and the title seems to derive from a chapter of one of the Pynchon's books. The section with lyrics on the studio version, called "Pig" seems to refer to Pig Bodine.

  • Virgins are boring/They should be grateful for the things they're ignoring...

    Great stuff--I love the studio version too, Wyatt's lispy tenor. And one of the great drummers of all time before the accident.

  • brilliant just brilliant !!!

  • The Allan Holdsworth period of Soft Machine is my personal favorite..this was a great band..experimental and tasteful at the same time..long live Soft Machine.

  • What great gig! Blew my mind! My fave SM record, although I love Kevin Ayers era...

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