Robert Wyatt
Idioma disponível: inglêsAn enduring figure who came to prominence in the early days of the English art rock scene, Robert Wyatt has produced a significant body of work, both as the original drummer for art rockers Soft Machine and as a radical political singer/songwriter. Born in Bristol, England, Wyatt came to Soft Machine during the exciting, slightly post-psychedelic Canterbury Scene of the mid-'60s that produced bands like Gong and Pink Floyd. Unlike many of the art rock bands that would come later (Jethro Tull, Yes, King Crimson), Soft Machine eschewed bloated theatrical excess, preferring a standard rock format that interpolated jazz riffing, extended soloing, and some forays into experimental noise. Wyatt, then Soft Machine's drummer, left the band during its initial wave of popularity. His solo career was built less around his abilities as a percussionist and more around his frail tenor voice, capable of breaking hearts with its falsetto range. It was not long after his first solo release, End of an Ear, that Wyatt fell from an open window during a party, fracturing his back and permanently paralyzing him from the waist down. After months of painful recuperation, Wyatt reemerged with the harrowing Rock Bottom (1974) and the bizarre Ruth Is Stranger Than Richard (1975), the former dealing explicitly with his post-accident life, the latter a series of surreal fables. And while the music on these records is trance-like and experimental, Wyatt shockingly recorded a straight version of the Monkees' "I'm a Believer" in 1974 that became a big British hit. Controversy ensued when the BBC's long-running weekly pop music program Top of the Pops refused to allow Wyatt to perform the song in his wheelchair. After a significant protest played out in the music trade papers, Wyatt did perform. Despite his success, Wyatt remained quiet for much of the rest of the decade, breaking his silence during the punk era with a handful of singles recorded for the great English indie label Rough Trade. Again, going against audience expectations, he recorded a beautiful version of Chic's "At Last I Am Free." This signaled the start of a full-fledged career renaissance that included numerous albums and artists such as Elvis Costello writing songs for him. His albums were lush, at times almost meditative, and Wyatt's voice -- clear, emotionally charged, and always on the verge of breaking -- brought great depth and soul to songs that, if recorded by a lesser artist, would have sounded terse and tired. Always on the political left, Wyatt's radicalism increased exponentially during Margaret Thatcher's years as prime minister, as he maintained an unwavering support for Communism even as glasnost was nigh. Wyatt has comfortably worked in and out of the music business. He records when he feels like it, paints, writes, devotes time to political work, and continues to show no interest in the machinations of the music industry. He resumed recording with 1997's Shleep, for Thirsty Ear, and resumed his non-music-making activities such as painting, while supervising the remastering and reissue of his '80s catalog. In 2003, Wyatt returned to recording and released Cuckooland, a musically ambitious, loosely conceptual project that saw him collaborating with a large group of players including Annie Whitehead, Brian Eno, Gilad Atzmon, David Gilmour, Tomo Hayakawa, Karen Mantler, Phil Manzanera, and Paul Weller. In 2007, Wyatt signed with the independent Domino imprint and released Comicopera, again with a large group, but whose core group included Anja Garbarek, Orphy Robinson, Yaron Stavi, Mônica Vasconcelos, Atzmon, Chucho Merchán, Maurizio Camardi, and Alfonso Santimone, with Paul Weller once more guesting; songwriting contributions came from Wyatt's companion, poet Alfie Benge, Garbarek, and Eno. After a three-year hiatus from recording, he cut ...For the Ghosts Within, also for Domino -- with the Sigamos String Quartet led by Rod Stephens, and Atzmon. It was released in 2010. In 2013, Cuneiform Records issued '68, a four-song set of Wyatt tracks that included two demos that had never been heard before with two other pieces that were later appended to appear on official recordings. Wyatt's official biography, Different Every Time, written by Marcus O'Dair, was published by Serpent's Tail in October of 2014. As a companion, Domino issued a double compilation of the same name. The first was a handpicked selection by Wyatt of tracks with Soft Machine, Matching Mole, and from his solo albums, while the second featured his favorite collaborations. It was released in November.
© John Dougan & Thom Jurek /TiVo Ler mais
An enduring figure who came to prominence in the early days of the English art rock scene, Robert Wyatt has produced a significant body of work, both as the original drummer for art rockers Soft Machine and as a radical political singer/songwriter. Born in Bristol, England, Wyatt came to Soft Machine during the exciting, slightly post-psychedelic Canterbury Scene of the mid-'60s that produced bands like Gong and Pink Floyd. Unlike many of the art rock bands that would come later (Jethro Tull, Yes, King Crimson), Soft Machine eschewed bloated theatrical excess, preferring a standard rock format that interpolated jazz riffing, extended soloing, and some forays into experimental noise. Wyatt, then Soft Machine's drummer, left the band during its initial wave of popularity. His solo career was built less around his abilities as a percussionist and more around his frail tenor voice, capable of breaking hearts with its falsetto range.
It was not long after his first solo release, End of an Ear, that Wyatt fell from an open window during a party, fracturing his back and permanently paralyzing him from the waist down. After months of painful recuperation, Wyatt reemerged with the harrowing Rock Bottom (1974) and the bizarre Ruth Is Stranger Than Richard (1975), the former dealing explicitly with his post-accident life, the latter a series of surreal fables. And while the music on these records is trance-like and experimental, Wyatt shockingly recorded a straight version of the Monkees' "I'm a Believer" in 1974 that became a big British hit. Controversy ensued when the BBC's long-running weekly pop music program Top of the Pops refused to allow Wyatt to perform the song in his wheelchair. After a significant protest played out in the music trade papers, Wyatt did perform.
Despite his success, Wyatt remained quiet for much of the rest of the decade, breaking his silence during the punk era with a handful of singles recorded for the great English indie label Rough Trade. Again, going against audience expectations, he recorded a beautiful version of Chic's "At Last I Am Free." This signaled the start of a full-fledged career renaissance that included numerous albums and artists such as Elvis Costello writing songs for him. His albums were lush, at times almost meditative, and Wyatt's voice -- clear, emotionally charged, and always on the verge of breaking -- brought great depth and soul to songs that, if recorded by a lesser artist, would have sounded terse and tired.
Always on the political left, Wyatt's radicalism increased exponentially during Margaret Thatcher's years as prime minister, as he maintained an unwavering support for Communism even as glasnost was nigh. Wyatt has comfortably worked in and out of the music business. He records when he feels like it, paints, writes, devotes time to political work, and continues to show no interest in the machinations of the music industry. He resumed recording with 1997's Shleep, for Thirsty Ear, and resumed his non-music-making activities such as painting, while supervising the remastering and reissue of his '80s catalog. In 2003, Wyatt returned to recording and released Cuckooland, a musically ambitious, loosely conceptual project that saw him collaborating with a large group of players including Annie Whitehead, Brian Eno, Gilad Atzmon, David Gilmour, Tomo Hayakawa, Karen Mantler, Phil Manzanera, and Paul Weller.
In 2007, Wyatt signed with the independent Domino imprint and released Comicopera, again with a large group, but whose core group included Anja Garbarek, Orphy Robinson, Yaron Stavi, Mônica Vasconcelos, Atzmon, Chucho Merchán, Maurizio Camardi, and Alfonso Santimone, with Paul Weller once more guesting; songwriting contributions came from Wyatt's companion, poet Alfie Benge, Garbarek, and Eno. After a three-year hiatus from recording, he cut ...For the Ghosts Within, also for Domino -- with the Sigamos String Quartet led by Rod Stephens, and Atzmon. It was released in 2010.
In 2013, Cuneiform Records issued '68, a four-song set of Wyatt tracks that included two demos that had never been heard before with two other pieces that were later appended to appear on official recordings.
Wyatt's official biography, Different Every Time, written by Marcus O'Dair, was published by Serpent's Tail in October of 2014. As a companion, Domino issued a double compilation of the same name. The first was a handpicked selection by Wyatt of tracks with Soft Machine, Matching Mole, and from his solo albums, while the second featured his favorite collaborations. It was released in November.
© John Dougan & Thom Jurek /TiVo
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Rock Bottom (Robert Wyatt)
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 01/01/1974
A discografia ideal da QobuzRock Bottom, recorded with a star-studded cast of Canterbury musicians, has been deservedly acclaimed as one of the finest art rock albums. Several fo ...
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Dondestan (Revisited) (Robert Wyatt)
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 01/01/1998
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Different Every Time
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 08/12/2014
4F de TéléramaQualidade de CD de 16 bits 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Old Rottenhat (Robert Wyatt)
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 01/12/1985
Robert Wyatt has been quoted as declaring that this record was "a conscious attempt to make un-misusable music," i.e., music that couldn't be appropri ...
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EPs
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 01/01/1999
Only Robert Wyatt could put together a project like this and not have punters sneering it down as a rake for cash. Issued by Ryko/Hannibal in 1999 and ...
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Shleep (Robert Wyatt)
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 01/01/1997
Robert Wyatt continues to follow his singular musical path with the lovely Shleep, delivering another album of considerable quirky charm and understat ...
Qualidade de CD de 16 bits 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
His Greatest Misses (Robert Wyatt)
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 05/10/2004
The title of this 17-track Robert Wyatt compilation -- previously released only in Japan -- references his lack of commercial success while taking gre ...
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Comicopera
Progressive Rock - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 05/10/2007
More immediately accessible and warm than Cuckooland, more ambitious than Shleep, Comicopera, in three acts, is the end result of Robert Wyatt looking ...
Qualidade de CD de 16 bits 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Cuckooland (Robert Wyatt)
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 01/01/2003
Sélection du Mercury PrizeRobert Wyatt's first full-length of new material since 1997's Shleep is no less mischievous, witty, and poignant. As has become his custom, Wyatt offe ...
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Nothing Can Stop Us (Robert Wyatt)
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 01/01/1982
This compilation of early-'80s singles includes some of Wyatt's finest work. Aside from "Born Again Cretin" (whose vocals recall the Beach Boys at the ...
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Drury Lane
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 01/01/2005
Recorded on September 8, 1974, this set features Robert Wyatt (post-accident) with a slew of mates, including Ivor Cutler! Introduced by John Peel and ...
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The End Of An Ear
Pop/Rock - Lançado por Sony Music UK em 01/01/1970
Of all the projects Robert Wyatt created apart from his tenure with Soft Machine and Matching Mole, The End of an Ear has to be the strangest, and amo ...
Qualidade de CD de 16 bits 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Ruth Is Stranger Than Richard
Pop/Rock - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 01/01/1975
There was no way that Wyatt's follow-up to Rock Bottom could be as personal and searching, but this album that came barely a year later instead collec ...
Qualidade de CD de 16 bits 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The End Of An Ear
Pop - Lançado por Columbia em 01/01/1970
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Qualidade de CD de 16 bits 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Musik / Re-Arranging the 20th Century
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Jazz - Lançado por Tiptoe em 20/09/2004
Qualidade de CD de 16 bits 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Ruth Is Stranger Than Richard (Robert Wyatt)
Progressive Rock - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 01/01/1975
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This Summer Night (Hot Chip Remix)
Robert Wyatt, Bertrand Burgalat
Alternative & Indie - Lançado por Domino Recording Co em 20/10/2008
Qualidade de CD de 16 bits 44.1 kHz - Stereo