Sold Date:
March 10, 2019
Start Date:
March 5, 2019
Final Price:
$154.01
(USD)
Bid Count:
25
Seller Feedback:
19466
Buyer Feedback:
975
1968 BRITISH PSYCH-EDELIC PROG-ADELIC COLLECTIBLE
FAMOUS CUSTOM "WHEEL COVER"
..|/\|...............................................|/\|..THE SOFT MACHINE
Vol. 1
..|/\|.........................................|/\|..
USA - PROBE - CP LP 4500
BEAUTIFUL CLEAN 50 YEARS AGO FINAL COLLECTION COPY!
MINTY CLEAN VINYL!
SHARP M- CUSTOM WHEEL COVER with NO WEAR!!!!
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ORIGINAL '68 "WHEEL COVER"
... MINTY CLEAN ! So hard to find THIS clean!!
Collectible 50 year old original 1968 first pressing in thick gatefold with the famous trippy gimmix designed "WHEEL COVER" by the psychedelic laced pioneering progressives, laced with plenty of acid-sixties reverberations...
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The SOFT MACHINE > VOLUME ONE
Without a lead guitar, the first Soft Machine, fondly remembered as Volume 1, sought to meld psychedelia and progressive-rock through Wyatt’s imaginative, liberally panned drumming, Ayers’ jazz & pop bass grooves, and Ratledge’s horror movie Doors organ. With those pieces in motion, they achieved a wondrous time capsule of experimental pop under the constant surreal lyricism of Wyatt and Ayers. Like Syd Barrett was to Pink Floyd, Ayers brought an infatuation with unhinged, uncouth pop to the group aesthetic, which would make Vol. 1 the most conventional Soft Machine album in terms of structure. Ayers wasn’t long for this band, though. He left on good terms after the US tour in order to focus on his solo career, which would find modest success over a few decades and a dozen odd releases, many of which returned to the themes first explored on Vol. 1. There’s no rest for the wicked, as they say and the bass-hole was quickly filled by one Hugh Hopper just in time to record their second album in 1969. Hopper had previously played with Wyatt in the Daevid Allen Trio, so it was an easy fit that reflected in the work they produced together. The band's debut is certainly a very creative album, and with all the organ fireworks going on during the instrumental jams, one may not notice on the first couple listens that the "lead guitar" Kevin Ayres is credited with is actually a bass. There are no boring or weak moments. The sound production suits the music just fine. Fuzzy organ and bass are spread all over the place, from short odd-time-signature experiments "Box 25/4 Lid" to downtempo almost-ballad-like type songs ( "A Certain Kind"), to three-minute repetitive trance in "We Did It Again".
"Why Are We Sleeping" is a highlight, with simple structured organ chords, excellent lyrics and frenetic solo...but they're all really good. Nice humour, experiments with vocals, overall warmth...
Side one
"Hope for Happiness" (Brian Hopper, arr. Robert Wyatt / Mike Ratledge / Kevin Ayers) – 4:21 "Joy of a Toy" (Ayers / Ratledge) – 2:49 "Hope for Happiness (reprise)" (B. Hopper, arr. Wyatt / Ratledge / Ayers) – 1:38 "Why Am I So Short?" (Hugh Hopper / Wyatt) – 1:39 "So Boot If At All" (Ratlege / Ayers / Wyatt) – 7:25 "A Certain Kind" (H. Hopper) – 4:11Side two
"Save Yourself" (Wyatt) – 2:26 "Priscilla" (Ayers / Ratledge / Wyatt) – 1:03 "Lullabye Letter" (Ayers) – 4:32 "We Did It Again" (Ayers) – 3:46 "Plus Belle qu'une Poubelle" (Ayers) – 1:03 "Why Are We Sleeping?" (Ayers / Ratledge / Wyatt) – 5:30 "Box 25/4 Lid" (Ratledge / H. Hopper) – 0:49
CONDITION: The cover: rated: M- The "wheel" cover is a thick gatefold ~ overall collection keeper... the wheel spins fine ... really small delete drill, the smallest kind = overall looks like a solid final keeper copy ...no split seams, no bends and no writing ... 4 sharp corners, bright and brilliant... 50 years old archive level!
The vinyl: is glossy on both sides, M- TOP COPY is brightly shiny = Expect play grade to be strong, enjoyable, in excellent CLEAN audio zones = hard to find this Lp this clean
A cool addition to anyone's music library!