SOFT MACHINE is starting today the North American tour 2024.
September 13 – Vienna, VA (Jammin’ Java)
September 14 – Baltimore, MD (Orion)
September 15 – Sellersville, MD (Sellersville Theater)
September 16 – New York, NY (The City Winery)
September 18 – Northampton, MA (The Iron Horse)
September 19 – Lowell, MA (Taffeta Music Hall)
September 20 – North Haven, CT (Small Batch Cellars)
September 21 – Rutherford, NJ (Spring Hall at the Wiliams Center)
September 23 – Palmer, MA (Legends Studio – private event)
September 24 – Piermont, NY (The Turning Point)
September 26 – Albany, NY (Linda WAMC Art Center)
September 27 – Syracuse, NY (Sharkey’s)
September 28 – Rochester, NY (Lovin’ Cup)
October 1 – Toronto, ON (The Garrison)
October 2 – Ottawa, ON (Rainbow Room)
October 4 – Quebec City, QC (Salle D’Youville)
October 5 – Quebec City, QC (Salle D’Youville)
Soft machine is not just a legendary British progressive jazz-rock band, it is a CONCEPT.
SOFT MACHINE – Live at Le Triton (Paris, France), April 12th, 2024
SOFT MACHINE
JOHN ETHERIDGE guitar
THEO TRAVIS flute, sax, electric piano
FRED BAKER bass guitar
ASAF SIRKIS drums
Since their arrival on the music scene in the first wave of 1960s psychedelia, the name Soft Machine has become synonymous with musical experimentation, instrumental virtuosity, and inspired creativity all animated by a truly adventurous, progressive spirit. Although the personnel may have changed over the years, the commitment of those playing in Soft Machine today has remained consistent.
Some of the very brightest stars in the British jazz firmament have served in the ranks of this revered musical institution. Robert Wyatt, Mike Ratledge, Elton Dean, Hugh Hopper, Karl Jenkins, John Marshall, Roy Babbington, Allan Holdsworth, John Etheridge, Theo Travis, Kevin Ayers, Daevid Allen, Andy Summers, Jack Bruce, Gary Husband, and many others, have all focussed their own unique musicality to help shape the band’s sound and personality.
Just like those earlier configurations, since they began recording and working live in 2004 as Soft Machine Legacy and the arrival of Theo Travis in 2006, the current lineup continues to defy easy categorization For Theo Travis, there’s a rich combination of elements that combine to form what he believes to be Soft Machine’s appeal. “I like the freedom, I like the variety of colors, the band improvisation. The fact that it has such a strong catalogue of music going back over 50 years from which we dip into and play. With a lot of jazz stuff, you do it and people come up and say ‘good gig’ or whatever, but it’s not like it means something in the same way as a band that has history and a cultural significance in the way that Soft Machine has. For me, it’s a suitable combination of rock, jazz, improv, melody, risk-taking, textures, and experimental looping. It’s pretty much all the things I like to play in.”
Their latest album, Other Doors, sees them move seamlessly between hardcore improvisation, pop-tinged ebullience, muscular rock, and visceral jazz along with shimmering electronica and ambient overtones. The album also signifies another change within the Softs’ roster, marking the first recording to feature new bassist Fred Baker, who had guested with the band on occasion dating back to 2008 but actually took over permanent live duties from Roy Babbington in 2021. Baker, a superb musician with connections to the whole of the extended Canterbury family tree that includes a long-established duo with Phil Miller and the band In Cahoots, has enjoyed touring with Soft Machine. “We recently played a large theatre in Istanbul and it was sold out. There were lots of young people and they were coming up after the gig wanting things signed which was fantastic.” Alongside the new compositions which Baker enjoys, is Soft Machine’s impressive back catalogue which is featured through their live shows. Giving people an opportunity to hear these compositions in a live setting is important, he believes. “My big thing with all this music is I see it like in a way that people used to look at, say classical music or early music. . . it’s keeping the music alive and in the present, enabling people to revisit music that they might only have heard on record. I’m so glad to be part of it.”
The release of Other Doors in 2023 is also the end of an era as the last studio session with the legendary John Marshall, who first joined the group in 1972 and at the age of 81 has decided to retire. Marshall’s place has been taken by another good friend of the band, drummer and composer Asaf Sirkis. Lauded by Robert Wyatt who says of Sirkis, “there’s nothing he can’t do when he puts his mind to it,” Asaf had previously played with Soft Machine when Marshall was unable to tour due to ill health. However, a fan of the group since he first heard Softs’ 1975 album, Bundles, featuring Allan Holdsworth, the music of the group has been incredibly influential on his whole outlook and career. “It’s very exciting for me especially because of my history. Obviously, I’m a relative latecomer compared to the others in Soft Machine but it’s the music I grew up listening to and not just Soft Machine, but the music of all the various people that have played in the band over the years. So, it’s really exciting, like the closing of a big, big circle for me.”
Marshall’s departure from recording and performing now leaves John Etheridge, who joined the group in 1975, as the last surviving member of the group with roots in Soft Machine’s 1970s heyday. A highly respected player, Etheridge has performed in a variety of settings across his long and distinguished career but, he says Soft Machine feels like his spiritual home. “I definitely feel when I pick up the guitar and play under the banner of Soft Machine, I feel different to any of my other gigs. It’s my favorite of all things I do by far. When I play with the Soft Machine, that is when I really feel like I’m contacting the player I want to be.”
Whilst the primary focus is on new work and improvisation their ability to call up almost any part of the back catalogue is something all members relish. The latest album, Other Doors, includes Joy Of A Toy, which was first heard on 1968’s debut, The Soft Machine. This much-loved number, written by Kevin Ayers, has been included in the band’s recent live set for a while now. Putting it on the album seemed very natural, says Etheridge. “Of course, it’s long before my time and it wasn’t something I knew but it’s a great piece. Fred Baker transcribed the original with Kevin Ayers’ charming bass playing. it’s got a sort of nice bounce about it. As a group, we are always, looking for variety, not for its own sake but to cover a broader territory. So, to be playing the second-ever Soft Machine single alongside brand-new compositions is something that’s a really good approach. There’s a degree of eccentricity about that’s very important to Soft Machine.”
This is Soft Machine – a living, breathing music that is as vital and relevant today as it ever was. Both long-time fans and new converts alike can take heart in the knowledge that the Soft Machine family tree — with its deep roots in the musical revolution of the ‘60s – continues to sprout healthy new limbs well into the new century, showing no signs of slowing. The legacy is in very good hands indeed. In 2018 Soft Machine released the album ‘Hidden Details’ which reached the Number 1 slot in the Amazon.co.uk Jazz Fusion chart. It also reached Number 1 for 8 weeks in the prestigious progressive radio chart from Philadelphia USA ‘Gagliarchives’ with Tom Gagliardi. Following the 50 date, 50th Anniversary World Tour, Soft Machine released a live album at the prestigious Los Angeles club the Baked Potato. – ‘Live at the Baked Potato’ was released in 2020 to great acclaim.
MoonJune Records · Ridgewood · Queens · New York City · New York · 11385
2023
Soft Machine World Tour 2023/2024. New studio album coming out in June 2023.
Confirmed dates (and many more to come):
February, 03 – London, UK (New Cross Inn)
February, 08 – Wimborne, UK (Tivoli Theatre)
February, 09 – Falmouth, UK (The Poly)
February, 15 – Manchester, UK (Band On The Wall)
February, 16 – Kinross, UK (Green Hotel)
February 17 – Ambleside, UK (Zefferellis)
April 28 – Rome, Italy (Sala Petrassi Auditorium Parco della Musica)
May, 26 – Leeds, UK (City Varieties)
June, 22 – York, UK (The Crescent)
October 06 – New York, NY, USA (The Iridium)
October 07 – New York, NY, USA (The Iridium)
October 14 – Quebec City, QC, Canada (Salle d’Youville)
October 15 – Quebec City, QC, Canada (Salle d’Youville)
October 26 – Indianapolis, IN (Irving Theater)
November 07 – Farsley, UK (Old Woollen)
November 10 – Tunbridge, UK (Wells Forum)
November 11 – Lewes, UK (Conservative Club)
November 12 – Harborough, UK (Market Harbrough Jazz Club)
The new studio album features on all tracks the legendary John Marshall, and on two tracks, another legend, Roy Babbington. Both of them have retired from performing life after their glorious 6 decades artistic career.
Soft Machine is the band that will never die. It regenerates all the time, with new faces contain using the amazing legacy. Roy Babbington has retired a few years ago, John Marshall’s retirement will be officially announced, and the amazing Fred Thelonious Baker on bass guitar and fabulous Asaf Sirkis on drums will be accompanying two post 2004 veterans of the band, the legendary guitar mega maestro John Etheridge and the wonderful Theo Travis on flute, sax and Fender Rhodes. The new album will be released later this year and will feature John Marshall as well Roxy Babbington guesting as the companion bass player on two tunes, the synergy between Uncle Rioy and Fred is truly great. There are some gigs this February and May in the UK and working on some European dates as well, and USA/Canada tour will be in October (multiple dates in New York are secured, in addition to Quebec City, Chicago, Indianapolis, Detroit, Philadelphia, and much more to come), and will see how to fit Japan and South America in the band’s schedule between this and early next year.
SOFT MACHINE HIDDEN DETAILS WORLD TOUR 2018-2019 (scroll down for dates)
JOHN ETHERIDGE guitar
ROY BABBINGTON bass
JOHN MARSHALL drums
THEO TRAVIS sax, flute, Rhodes
More news about the new studio album soon, stay tuned!
2018 SHOWS
July 7 – Montreal Jazz Festival – Monument National – Ludger Duvernay – Montreal, Quebec, Canada
July 8 – Salle Jean-Paul Tardif – Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
July 28 – Billboard Live Tokyo (2 shows) – Tokyo, Japan [special guest Gary Husband]
July 29 – Billboard Live Tokyo (2 shows) – Tokyo, Japan [special guest Gary Husband]
July 30 – Billboard Live Osaka (2 shows) – Osaka, Japan [special guest Gary Husband]
September 6 – Cosmopolite – Oslo, Norway
September 8 – De Boerderij – Zoetemeer, The Netherlands
September 9 – Musikbunker – Aachen, Germany
September 10 – Venue TBA – Wetzlar, Germany
September 12 – Muhle Hunziken – Rubigen, Switzerland
September 13 – La Casa Di Alex – Milano, Italy
September 14 – Club Il Giardino – Verona, Italy
September 16 – Porgy & Bess – Vienna, Austria
September 17 – Museum – Bratislava, Slovakia
September 18 – Akropolis – Prague, Czech Republic
September 19 – Kulturbanhof – Jena, Germany
October 7 – Theater Of Living Arts – Philadelphia, PA, USA (with Beledo solo)
October 10 – Darryl’s House – Pawling, NY, USA (with Beledo Trio)
October 12 – The Iridium (2 shows) – NYC, NY, USA
October 13 – The Iridium (2 shows) – NYC, NY, USA
October 14 – The Iridium – NYC, NY, USA (with Beledo Trio)
October 16 – Mod Club – Toronto, Ontario, Canada (with Beledo solo)
October 17 – The Tralf – Buffalo, NY, USA (with Beledo solo)
October 18 – Beachland Music Hall – Cleveland, OH, USA (with Beledo solo)
October 19 – The Irving Theater – Indianapolis, IN, USA (with Beledo solo)
October 21 – Progtober Festival – Reggies – Chicago, IL, USA
October 22 – Shank Hall – Milwaukee, WI, USA (with Beledo solo)
October 23 – The Turf – St. Paul, MN, USA (with Beledo solo)
November 3 – Marlow Theater – Canterbury, UK
November 6 – Sage – Gateshead, UK
November 8 – Green Hotel – Kinross, Scotland
November 9 – The Trade’s Club – Hebden Bridge, UK
November 10 – The Howden Shire Hall – Howden, UK
November 16 – The Borderline – London, UK
November 17 – West End Center – Aldershot, UK
November 18 – Lewes Con Club – Lewes, UK
November 20 – Epic Studios – Norwich, UK
November 22 – Talking Heads – Southampton, UK
(more dates to be announced soon)
2019 SHOWS
January 24 – Freight & Salvage – Berkeley, CA, USA (with Levin Brothers)
January 25 – Flynn’s – Santa Cruz, CA, USA (with Levin Brothers)
January 27 – Alberta Rose Theater – Portland, OR, USA (with Moraine)
January 28 – Triple Door – Seattle, WA, USA (with Moraine)
January 29 – Triple Door – Seattle, WA, USA (with Moraine)
January 31 – The Baked Potato (2 shows) – Los Angeles, CA, USA
February 1 – The Baked Potato (2 shows) – Los Angeles, CA, USA
February 2 – Scottsdale Performing Arts Center – Scottsdale, AZ, USA (with Levin Brothers)
February 4/5/6/7/8 – The Cruise To The Edge – Key West, FL, USA + Cozumel Mexico
(more dates to be announced soon)
Hello everybody, this is just a reminder that the promotional copy of the MoonJune’s production
SOFT MACHINE LEGACY « Burden Of Proof » is to be requested with the great people at Cherry Red records and their subsidiary Esoteric Antenna label:
While preparing my other promos to be sent to all 16 corners of the world, I have noticed that many of You still do not have this great cd.
« Burden of proof » was released in North America by MoonJune Records and licensed to the rest of the world to Esoteric Antenna.
ALL MUSICIANS AVAILABLE FOR INTERVIEW UPON REQUEST.
All the best, Yours in Music
LEONARDO PAVKOVIC
MoonJune Records
Soft Machine Legacy’s manager/re-inventor
And of course I very much appreciate Your correspondence and to let me know about reviess and airplayes of anything MoonJune.
SOFT MACHINE LEGACY
JOHN ETHERIDGE guitar;
THEO TRAVIS tenor sax, flute, Fender Rhodes electric piano:
ROY BABBINGTON bass
JOHN MARSHALL drums.
Recorded by Beppe Crovella, at Electromantic Synergy Studio, San Sabastiano da Pó, Italy; August, 2012.
Mixed and mastered by Andrew Tulloch, at The Blue Room, London; December, 2012 through January, 2013.
Soft Machine Legacy makes their most powerful statement to date, delivering an album of epic proportions and their first studio output since 2007’s Steam. Infectious grooves, undeniably hip vibes and sizzling performances dominate the outing, as the veteran progressive music masters continue to break new ground and offer listeners yet more previously-unseen facets of their dynamic musical persona. Featuring some intriguingly-inviting new writing, the album is a breath of fresh air for progressive music and a bold furtherance of the true adventurous essence that is the legacy of the great Soft Machine. It doesn’t just offer the suggestion of venturing through ground previously untread – by any of the Soft Machine incarnations – it levels everything in its path on the way! Broad in its scope and ambition, but sensitive, probing and playful in its delivery, Burden of Proof provides more than ample evidence that the legends remain at the top of their game, both individually and collectively. The group’s two lead voices – guitarist John Etheridge and saxophonist Theo Travis – are in exceptionally fine form, whether gracefully enunciating a melody line in the pocket or dancing madly on the fringe. Also evident is the rock-solid anchoring of drummer John Marshall and bassist Roy Babbington, who keep proceedings tight and flowing throughout. Whether tip-toeing or stampeding, Soft Machine Legacy are as unified, focused and finely-honed as they’ve ever been – delivering their crispest, most sparkling new material to date, in an undeniably inspired, unrelenting session. This is a fabulous, vital effort: a potent, impacting album encompassing the great spirit and aggressive pioneering approach championed by their namesake predecessors. For all fans of progressive music, the Canterbury scene, and the Softs, this superlative studio session is immediately ‘essential’ – and easily the Legacy’s finest, most high-reaching outing.
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