Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 08/09/2005
Finally, someone put together a high-quality, well-thought-out, and
official Soft Machine anthology. Fans have had to wait a long time for this, and
Sony International obviously felt the weight of that responsibility. Culled from their
ABC/
Probe releases through their
CBS/
Columbia material, these selections are given the grand treatment of faithful (and illuminating) 24-bit remastering by
Sony International, as well as a comprehensive and heavily illustrated 16-page booklet detailing
the Soft's colorful musical history. There is nothing in the way of long-lost live material here, nor are there any rare, basement tracks -- save the inclusion of the band's first single, whose A and B sides appear here, probably for the first time officially -- but there are already several widely available compilations that focus on
Soft Machine obscura exclusively, and
Sony leaves it to them to enlighten the fanatics who are hungry for the rarest of the rare. As a starting point for new fans, though, this collection is the alpha and omega -- the ultimate overview. Not since
Harvest's
Triple Echo compilation (released nearly 25 years prior) has there been such a propulsive launching point into the weird and wonderful world of
the Softs. Not even the stodgiest of
Canterbury mavens could argue the pedigree of the tracks selected here -- each one, the cream of the cream, from some very creamy albums indeed. From
Volume One's
"Joy of a Toy" to
Seven's
"Down the Road," Out-Bloody-Rageous covers the bases on this two-disc set better than any anthology has done before, you can bet
Robert Wyatt's beard on it.
~J. Scott McClintock, All Music Guide