| A wild, freewheeling, and ultimately successful attempt to merge psychedelia 
        with jazz-rock, Soft Machine's debut ranges between lovingly performed 
        oblique pop songs and deranged ensemble playing from drummer/vocalist 
        Robert Wyatt and organist Mike Ratledge. With only one real break (at 
        the end of side one), the songs merge into each other -- not always smoothly, 
        but always with a sense of flair that rescues any potential miscues. Wyatt 
        takes most of the vocals, and proves himself a surprisingly evocative 
        singer despite his lack of range. Like Pink Floyd's The Piper at the Gates 
        of Dawn, Volume One was one of the few over-ambitious records of the psychedelic 
        era that actually delivered on all its incredible promise.  (by John Bush, All 
        Music Guide) |