Robert Wyatt: Classic or Dud?

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yes thinking about jara's end does make me despair for so many reasons. would that pinochet would end his life in a prison cell but what's done is done. bloody fucking awful.

jara's songs are lovely b/c they take the road not (often) taken w/r/t political songs, where a story about people living their daily lives, things like love and sex and children and school and so on, connect to politics in these suggestive but nonetheless clear ways. as wonderful as wyatt's reading of "te recuerdo amanda" is, jara's is heartbreaking. i shouldn't even bother to attempt to apply any superlatives to it.

amateurist (amateurist), Sunday, 6 July 2003 03:40 (twenty years ago) link

haha the "United States" = democracy.

I'm like, at a loss for words whenever discourse centers on the ridiculousness of this place.

Anyway, yes Amateurist you are your normal smart, sensible self. Still, frankly, I can't dismiss people who have politics opposite to my own. Gosh, I'd like to think we all do.

Darnit, this world is fucked, but for Christ's sake some of us pine for the alternatives...

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Sunday, 6 July 2003 04:35 (twenty years ago) link

actually, frankly, I'm drunk and not even sure what I'm talking about.

Wyatt rules.

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Sunday, 6 July 2003 04:37 (twenty years ago) link

sorry who is jara?

this is a nice thread. there was a doc on robert wyatt abt a couple of months back on BBC4 and he came across as a wonderful person. I've heard some soft machine and i sort of struggle with it for some reason but I like his voice so i should check solo stuff.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 6 July 2003 08:06 (twenty years ago) link

start with rock bottom julio. and yeah, ned, have you heard it yet?

gaz (gaz), Sunday, 6 July 2003 08:46 (twenty years ago) link

julio, you'd really appreciate his first solo record 'the end of an ear'. it's pre-accident and is pretty out. mixes free jazz and his voice. unlike anything he's ever made (actually, unlike anything anyone's ever made).

and soft machine doesn't even compare to his solo stuff. it's slow, moody, post-prog political love songs. and his keyboard tones are so warm and thick.

JasonD (JasonD), Sunday, 6 July 2003 08:50 (twenty years ago) link

diamond, how much did you get his ep box for? i picked it up sometime this year for 30$ off ebay. i already had most of the stuff - from either owning the singles and eps or from the mid eighties cd (which collects old rotten hat and a bunch of ep stuff). but the animal farm disc is killer. the shleep remixes do kinda blow.

i keep passing up this one single of his. it's him and a bunch of south african musicians. anyone know anything about it?

JasonD (JasonD), Sunday, 6 July 2003 08:53 (twenty years ago) link

Julio: Victor Jara was a Chilean singer and songwriter, who often wrote lyrics telling intimate stories with a political cast (he also wrote some athems), and was a major part of the pan-American movement called "Nueva Cancion" ("new song") which drew a lot of musical inspiration from Latin American folk music but also contemporaneous American politicized folk music à la Bob Dylan.

He was closely identified with the Popular Unity movement of Salvador Allende. After Pinochet's coup which toppled Allende, Jara was arrested, tortured, and later killed (along with 1000s of other Chileans).

His stuff probably shouldn't be too hard to find in any Hispanic music store (I'm not sure where you're at, but there's a million such places in Chicago), and on eBay you can sometimes find the remastered CDs from his catalog that came out in Chile last year.

Anyway we're talking about him because Wyatt recorded one of his most famous (and beautiful) songs, "Te Recuerdo Amanda" ("I remember Amanada").

amateurist (amateurist), Sunday, 6 July 2003 16:22 (twenty years ago) link

thanks for recommnedations and amt thanks for info on jara.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 6 July 2003 17:15 (twenty years ago) link

Egads, looks like I turned into a drunken ranting fule last night. I think I became possessed by the spirit of Jello Biafra or something. Oh well. One of my cats died yesterday so I needed to put a good raging drunk on.

Anyway, Jason - yeah I believe I paid something like $30 or $35 for EPs as well. Too much, but as I say I had to have it (maybe it isn't too much, i dunno; I don't know what it went for new, but it seemed like a lot to me). It's just a really beautiful package, a nice thing to have on the shelf, you know? Yeah that Animals soundtrack is unsettling, and I've never even seen the film.

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Monday, 7 July 2003 03:30 (twenty years ago) link

don't (see the film)--it's the most disturbing thing i've experienced. i had to avert my eyes much of the time.

amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 7 July 2003 03:32 (twenty years ago) link

Yeah, Amateurist, I sort of really don't want to see it.

I think it would give me nightmares.

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Monday, 7 July 2003 04:16 (twenty years ago) link

OH i love him, mostly classic (atleast the solostuff i´ve heard)
Rock Bottom and the At last i´m free / STRANGE FRUIT 7" is my favourite solo. And his best song is on the first Matching MOle record, it´s called O CAROLINE it´s on my top ten ever list.

Also he was on one of the best singles ever, Vivien Goldmans Launderette / private armies record

Jens (brighter), Monday, 7 July 2003 07:02 (twenty years ago) link

he's also on some raincoats records!

amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 7 July 2003 13:00 (twenty years ago) link

i believe robert wyatt is CLASSIC without any argument. he is like a patron saint to me in some way.
what single with south african musicians? that's probably people from chris mcgregor's brotherhood of breath, whom wyatt was tight with. mongezi feza plays trumpet on "ruth" and the first brotherhood of breath record kicks it in an amazing way.
has anyone seen the film about robert wyatt? recommended was selling an NTSC copy not too long ago - is it worth splurging for?
wyatt rules so much. and he turns up in the damndest places (like on michael mantler's "The hapless child," where he sings the edward gorey-penned lyrics.

j fail (cenotaph), Monday, 7 July 2003 18:25 (twenty years ago) link

The communism I don't mind. It was the Stalinism I could never figure out. Muslimgauze's political stance in comparison seemed calm and sweetly reasoned.

Since when was Robert Wyatt ever a "Stalinist"? What, because he sang "Stalin Wasn't Stallin'"? Do some research before accusing people of being Stalinists.

Dadaismus (Dada), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 13:57 (twenty years ago) link

Two years down the line and there's this! Okay, share the details then -- I have always understood that Wyatt had a belief in some interpretation of hardcore communism along Stalinist lines, so what's the real story?

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 14:08 (twenty years ago) link

hardcore communism along Stalinist lines

Errrrrrrrrrrrrrrr, what exactly does that mean? Wyatt was a member of the British Communist Party, he was a Marxist, he was not a Stalinist.

Dadaismus (Dada), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 14:12 (twenty years ago) link

I dunno. A number of people, including Ted Grant, split from the British CP in the fifties over Hungary and other issues. Not sure if the CP ever officially repudiated Stalin a la Krushchev.

amateurist (amateurist), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 14:17 (twenty years ago) link

there's an interview somewhere where green gartside says he and wyatt grew apart in the mid-80s because wyatt was "becoming more stalinist" (GG = grew up in the Young Communist League, so presumably knows what *he* means by the term — ie is using it technically and precisely, rather than just a vague or dismissive synonym for "marxist" or "communist")

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 14:30 (twenty years ago) link

There was also an NME interview I remember with Steven Wells in which Wells says something like "Well, although we argue, he being a Stalinist and I being a Trotskyite etc., he's basically a good sort". Don't know how accurately Swells was characterising his politics, but anyway.

N. (nickdastoor), Wednesday, 9 July 2003 14:40 (twenty years ago) link

The interview Mark S refers to -- from the context, "becoming more Stalinist" might merely mean becoming more acadmic and theoretical about his Communism:

"Robert Wyatt! I got on well with Robert. The greatest problem between us was a political one. I had been in the Young Communist League -- when I was a schoolboy, I'd established a branch or two. And I was the one that didn't get beaten up on the way to our first meeting. I'd worked with the Communist Party of Great Britain's headquarters. I kind of knew what the party was like. One of the things that appealed to me about Marxism was its anti-utopian foundation -- it was infinitely preferable to wishing that the world was a nicer place, or that Robin Hood was elected sheriff. But through reading a lot of theory and working for the party, I thought, 'This ain't for me,' whereas Robert was getting more into it. I really liked him, but that was the principal reason for drifting apart: he was getting more Stalinist and I wasn't."

Colin Meeder (Mert), Thursday, 10 July 2003 03:49 (twenty years ago) link

there was no mention of his 'stalinism' in the doc i mention above.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Thursday, 10 July 2003 06:52 (twenty years ago) link

a whitewash!

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 10 July 2003 07:03 (twenty years ago) link

What are Green Gartside's politics now I wonder, him and all those other bright young things in the Communist Party who ended up joining the New Labour and the Liberal Democrats? I remember reading an interview with Wyatt when he said he preferred the company of the older, more Stalinist members of the CP simply because he trusted them more and felt they were more sincere about their beliefs - and how right he was.

Anyway, why is it only Robert Wyatt who is hauled over the coals for having been a Marxist when other musicians like the various members of Henry Cow or AMM aren't? (I say having been a Marxist, but as far as I know, at least two-thirds of AMM still are Marxists.) I haven't heard anyone bring up Fred Frith's politics lately - least of all Fred himself. And let's face it, there's far worse things you could be than a Marxist: a Tory or a Republican or "New Labour" for instance.

Dadaismus (Dada), Thursday, 10 July 2003 11:18 (twenty years ago) link

this is a thread about robert wyatt, dadaismus

do some research before you accuse people of being new labour

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 10 July 2003 11:25 (twenty years ago) link

Yes, that was nasty of me - I'd rather be accused of being a Stalinist

Dadaismus (Dada), Thursday, 10 July 2003 11:28 (twenty years ago) link

zing!

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Thursday, 10 July 2003 11:29 (twenty years ago) link

dadaismus i'm sure if you started a green gartside thread we'd get around to his "politics" eventually (which on the basis of his early singles seemed a bit bedsit-flaky to me).

i have a deep respect coupled with a bit of bemused exasperation re. robert wyatt. he reminds me of a lot of people i knew growing up.

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 10 July 2003 13:48 (twenty years ago) link

ten months pass...
that song where he drops "hiroshima" and the deposed president of iran...on the new one.... i wish i didn't have this suspicion that his politics are less about humanity and more about berating the us.

amateur!st (amateurist), Saturday, 22 May 2004 06:17 (nineteen years ago) link

Brits -- so testy about their political affiliations. Here in America, we just pride ourselves on not being able to read.

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Saturday, 22 May 2004 17:11 (nineteen years ago) link

I don't think being a tory is automatically worse than being a marxist.

de, Saturday, 22 May 2004 17:34 (nineteen years ago) link

three months pass...
rock bottom is great makeout music for depressives

amateur!!!st (amateurist), Friday, 17 September 2004 05:20 (nineteen years ago) link

makes me smile he's on the new björk album

JaXoN (JasonD), Friday, 17 September 2004 05:54 (nineteen years ago) link

Anyone who thinks that Rock Bottom is music for depressives or about depression hasn't listened to it properly.

Donnie Smith The Quiz Kid, Friday, 17 September 2004 07:17 (nineteen years ago) link

that's rather condescending.

the album is very melancholic--it's the urgent combination of melancholy and whimsy (blended such that you often can't tell them apart) that is a big part of what makes this record so special to me. the wordless vocalizing at the end of the first track (??) is one of the most powerfully ... desolate stretches of music i know. such things are in the ear of the listener, of course. but considering the circumstances under which it was made it's not hard to imagine depression being one of many states that is being evoked in rock bottom.

amateur!!!st (amateurist), Friday, 17 September 2004 07:30 (nineteen years ago) link

anyway, i was only half-joking when i called it make out music for depressives. perhap's its the underwater metaphor, but this album has powerful erotic and melancholic aspects. what is "alafib" but an unusually passionate confession of need and devotion..? i don't know how to put this, but...wyatt's being suddenly totally dependent on alfie obviously intensified their bond and their physical and emotional intimacy...i daresay you can hear this on the record (though obv the lyrics are not particularly explicit at any point, but they aren't usually that abstruse either). anyway the erotics of this record are not the usual pop erotics. its an erotics that includes washing your hands, childbirth, sitting on a train alone, swimming.....

i have a long and intense history w/this record (incl. listening to it in venice where wyatt composed much of the music)...

amateur!!!st (amateurist), Friday, 17 September 2004 07:41 (nineteen years ago) link

something of the profusion and confusion of emotions emmitted by this record is captured by the recitation performed by ivor cutler at the end.

amateur!!!st (amateurist), Friday, 17 September 2004 07:44 (nineteen years ago) link

Rock Bottom is about someone finding their way back to the world and - vide closing Cutler recitative - learning to laugh again.

Donnie Smith The Quiz Kid, Friday, 17 September 2004 09:02 (nineteen years ago) link

That's a good analysis of it

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 17 September 2004 09:03 (nineteen years ago) link

"Alifib/Alife" - progression from displacement/uncertainty (am I floating? Am I paralysed? Am I dead? Has the anaesthetic worn off?) to recognition of unconditional love (and isn't it about time btw that Wyatt gave Mike Oldfield credit for his guitar on this track?) and finally to raw sex and climax (Gary Windo's dualist sexy beast of bass clt/tenor sex sounds very horny), and, via closing Benge voiceover, back to life. Meanwhile, world outside continues on its silly oblivious way ("Little Red Robin Hood Hit The Road") so author seeks solace in the blackly chucklesome life of the inner mind (Cutler's laugh backed by Frith's viola screeches - set me free? What would be the point?).

Donnie Smith The Quiz Kid, Friday, 17 September 2004 09:10 (nineteen years ago) link

That's actually Robert Wyatt playing guitar on that track - compare the playing to the playing on "Moon In June"

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 17 September 2004 09:12 (nineteen years ago) link

... I've always had the feeling it might be speeded up, Les Paul-style, however

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 17 September 2004 09:13 (nineteen years ago) link

I find it an easier record to admire than love - it is very beautiful, it IS as great as its admirers say it is but it takes me to a place, emotionally, that I don't want to spend very much time. Yes, the theme is look-we-have-come-through, and you never doubt Wyatt's sincerity for a second - he really is a lovely man - but I still find listening to it a mildly depressing experience. Humanity cannot bear very much reality and this is too much of a certain kind of reality for me.

x-posts

frankiemachine, Friday, 17 September 2004 09:21 (nineteen years ago) link

It's amazing but I have never found this album to be even remotely depressing - not for a nanosecond

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 17 September 2004 09:27 (nineteen years ago) link

no...i mean yes!

gaz (gaz), Friday, 17 September 2004 09:30 (nineteen years ago) link

You sure about that? I read an interview with Oldfield years ago where he was all pissed off about not getting a credit on that track.

*digs out dog-eared copy of End Of An Ear for comparison purposes*

Hmmm, I see your point. If it's Wyatt it's bloody good playing for someone who says he isn't that good at playing the guitar.

(either that or it's his funny Italian organ, or Hugh Hopper's bass speeded up?)

Donnie Smith The Quiz Kid, Friday, 17 September 2004 09:38 (nineteen years ago) link

CORREKSHIN: digs out "Moon In June" as opposed to End Of An Ear.

Interesting record, though, End Of An Ear; it's like an extended avant-scat variation on Gil Evans' "Las Vegas Tango."

Donnie Smith The Quiz Kid, Friday, 17 September 2004 09:40 (nineteen years ago) link

Funny, I wondered if it might not actually be a bass guitar speeded-up, so not so much Les Paul-style as Holger Czukay-style.

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 17 September 2004 09:45 (nineteen years ago) link

... also Wyatt claims he can't play keyboards very well either but we know differently (xpost)

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 17 September 2004 09:49 (nineteen years ago) link

This performance has always been one of my favorites, French TV from 1967. Wish there were more of it.

https://my.mail.ru/mail/elfn/video/3039/3185.html

Russian site but it seems OK. There's a shorter version on youtube (and this one was on yt but I can't find it now).

nickn, Wednesday, 7 February 2024 19:56 (two months ago) link

Blessings to him.

completely suited to the horny decadence (Capitaine Jay Vee), Thursday, 8 February 2024 01:18 (two months ago) link

huh, i thought there was more of that dim dam dom '67 video but i don't seem to have any

i did turn up this that seems to be from the same session.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nP8zmGLYbmI

gotta be more out there, the french tv archives kept everything

f'rinstance, here's one i haven't seen anywhere before (disregard the title, it's a bit of "esther's nose job"!)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k5SpwQOKd6M

(re: "Little Red Riding HOod Hit The Road" w/Henry Cow):

the last two minutes of that, chills every time.

― dan selzer

those whole concerts... there are tapes, they're fantastic. the 36 minute "beautiful as the moon-gloria gloom-ruins" medley, the entirety of "side richard" from "ruth is stranger than richard", "living in the heart of the beast"... i don't think there are full professional recordings, but there is a recording from radio of "living in the heart of the beast" from one of the paris gigs. wyatt and krause singing together on the rousing outro, so good!

one of the things i do a lot of, is i listen to and read about other people to understand myself better, and i've done this a lot with wyatt's stuff, for good or for ill.

it's interesting, because i used to read people talking about robert wyatt having a sad voice... "the saddest voice in the world", i think ryuichi sakamoto once described it... and it's one of those things that confused me a lot, i didn't understand why people described his voice as "sad". maybe it's not! i've grown to think of it that way. i think of him as being incredibly kind, incredibly compassionate, and also having this deep, kind of profound sadness about him.

i wrote a piece a year or so back about wyatt and his departure from soft machine, and i found this quote from him from "The Best of NME 1970-1974", published in 2018:

"I was very, very unhappy. I mean, it had to happen, but I had taken the Soft Machine for granted as a little family. It had formed from friendships that dated back to infancy, from 10 or 11 years old. You can fall out with your family, but you can't divorce them. So, when Soft Machine ejected me from that family, I had the most enormous collapse in self-confidence from which I've never really recovered, to be honest. And I always think they were right, looking back on it, to throw me out. I was too drunk, they were more grown up, more sophisticated, everything. But nevertheless, it felt like being exiled from a country, to somewhere where nobody spoke your language. I was very disorientated, and nervous, and anxious."

but like dow says it's something that always seems to have been in his voice, that sadness

and then of course the accident, and he hasn't been able to take care of himself for the past fifty years, and i guess, when one is disabled and one can't take care of oneself, it's easy to feel... to not have a lot of self-confidence.

i've heard so much of his stuff but the things of his that i relate most strongly to are "shleep", that whole album with songs like "was a friend", about the whole soft machine thing, half-smiling, willing hands, and then "september the ninth" with alfie's beautiful poem:

Woman wishing for wings,
(Too large a lump to pass for bird)

i've loved that song for decades and now that song hits me in ways that weren't intended when benge wrote the words. it sounded like... the record came out when i was 21, and it sounded to me "mature" but not _boring_, at an age where "mature" and "boring" mostly seemed like synonyms. the kind of maturity i hoped i would grow into. i don't know if i've grown into maturity, but that album is one that... my understanding of it has certainly deepened as i've grown older. there aren't a lot of records that, i guess, that can ever mean as much to me as that record, given the time i've spent with it.

the other thing of his that really hits me hard is his performance of john greaves' "the song". it has that old-style diction that uses "man" to mean "woman", but that bit:

"man is the union of divinity and dust (of inanity and lust)"

it's not his words, but his voice. the way "sometimes i feel very sad" aren't brian wilson's words, but they're his voice. it's the voice that gives those words meaning, to me.

Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 8 February 2024 03:06 (two months ago) link

Thanks, I relate to all of that, although your experience goes deeper--wish I'd been listening to him at 21!
As for live, yall keep an eye on Cunieform's Bandcamp posts, and maybe elsewhere on BC, as well as YouTube, and the skies.

dow, Thursday, 8 February 2024 03:46 (two months ago) link

That Dim Dam Dom clip you posted is the second half of the Russian one I posted. There are clearly edits in the clips, maybe they were so wild even the French didn't think they were worth keeping.

nickn, Thursday, 8 February 2024 07:27 (two months ago) link

The Daevid Allen clip upthread suggests that would not have been a concern of French TV in the 60s.

The British Boy of Film Classification (Tom D.), Thursday, 8 February 2024 07:36 (two months ago) link

i love schleep for the funny mental explorations and the love songs. i've been a little obsessed with 'i'm a believer.' i put on schleep once at a bookstore i worked at in an old west tourist town and the owner hated it.

ꙮ (map), Thursday, 8 February 2024 15:15 (two months ago) link

listening to Comicopera, now surely his last solo album...what a beautiful album to cap his career.

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 8 February 2024 15:56 (two months ago) link

Comicopera was my favorite album of 2007; it remains so.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 8 February 2024 16:05 (two months ago) link

The Daevid Allen clip upthread suggests that would not have been a concern of French TV in the 60s.

― The British Boy of Film Classification (Tom D.)

i'd honestly like to know more about french pop music television in the late 1960s... when i look at clips there are names of all these different shows, "Dim Dam Dom, "Tous En Scene", and then in the 70s you have "RockEnStock" and "Pop 2" and later "Melody" with Genesis and King Crimson... and then late in the decade the main show is "Chorus". all these shows and I can't keep track of them all. They showed a _lot_ of pop music, it seems like, on a _lot_ of different shows. I was looking up Soft Machine clips the other day and somebody mentioned that "Pop 2" was started by someone who'd run one of the earlier shows, but that show was cancelled for political reasons. And in the Anglosphere you just get to see the clips, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, nobody says anything about the shows themselves, their history, what they were _like_... anyway INA preserves them all and has put a lot of them online. Often paywalled but it doesn't stop it from getting out. And in fact the video stuff is far more widely accessible than the French radio stuff. There are lots of French radio broadcasts that are just unknown and unheard in good quality. And yeah, INA does seem to have kept everything, they seem to have a _very_ good archival policy. You can see not just the broadcast sections but unbroadcast rehearsal outtakes, in many cases. Just like in Germany, the Beat Club show would broadcast maybe four minutes of a Dead '72 show but the whole set is on audio, at least, and often the whole set is on video. The archival policy is very, very different to that in the UK, which barely showed anything and immediately wiped it all.

The other thing that I am aware of personally is June of 1968. Which seems to have been a significant event, and I don't know how that affected the music TV shows, but God, it must have, right?

Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 8 February 2024 16:14 (two months ago) link

this one will never not slay me

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Huwy0Vq5-Ak

wang mang band (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 8 February 2024 16:56 (two months ago) link

Thanks, I relate to all of that, although your experience goes deeper--wish I'd been listening to him at 21!

― dow

ahhh, well, there was a lot i missed out on by spending my late teens and early 20s focused entirely on "classic rock" and "prog rock", but it's good to know i didn't miss everything. wyatt wasn't really "prog rock" or "classic rock", but he was adjacent enough that i heard him relatively early on.

Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 8 February 2024 17:18 (two months ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEEX3uRJyo4

I don't think Cuckooland is one of his most loved albums, but I love it. Forest is a powerful Romani holocaust song and has really beautiful lyrics by Alfreda. It makes me well up every time.

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Thursday, 8 February 2024 17:27 (two months ago) link

The other thing that I am aware of personally is June of 1968. Which seems to have been a significant event, and I don't know how that affected the music TV shows, but God, it must have, right?

You mean May? Yes, the French are good at archiving stuff (cf. the BBC).

The British Boy of Film Classification (Tom D.), Thursday, 8 February 2024 17:47 (two months ago) link

Yes, Paris in May, Moon in June

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 8 February 2024 19:32 (two months ago) link

l

I don't think Cuckooland is one of his most loved albums, but I love it. Forest is a powerful Romani holocaust song and has really beautiful lyrics by Alfreda. It makes me well up every time.


It’s almost certainly my most listened to record of Wyatt’s. I first heard some of it when I picked up His Greayest Misses and realized the “cheap keyboards” weren’t a problem for me in the slightest.

And yes, Forest is one of his all time best. The sad pub singalong with Eno in tow is just perfect.

This news makes me very sad.

Naive Teen Idol, Friday, 9 February 2024 01:57 (two months ago) link

Thanks, I relate to all of that, although your experience goes deeper--wish I'd been listening to him at 21!
― dow
deeper for starting that early, and running from then to now--which, in my case, would be quite a distance.
He doesn't always sound sad, exactly, like the blues isn't always sad, it's just life, and in his case, contemplation, hovering or coming through, around other sounds*---like Miles Davis, and we were talking about "Desafinado" way upthread---what does that mean, wiki? "Out of tune"! Yeah, sure, like unison is out of tune, like the blues is out of tune, the man with the bent note in that chair over there, so be it.
*Not that he can't be assertive with it, like in "At Last I Am Free."

dow, Friday, 9 February 2024 03:36 (two months ago) link

two weeks pass...

It doesn't seem like this has been posted before, but I loved it. One hour doc from 1998, Italian made.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Z5zy6MaFtI

nickn, Monday, 26 February 2024 07:02 (one month ago) link

missed this. heartbreaking

Friend of mine managed to end up backstage at a Patti Smith concert (in the Southbank probably?) Verlaine might have been there and Gillespie almost certainly was and various other luminaries. He said everyone there were complete arseholes and then he noticed a guy sitting (he thought) in a corner, pint of beer in one hand and a cigarette in the other, covered in ash. He went over to talk to him and it was Robert Wyatt and he was like, "What do you make of all this?" and he was basically the only genuine person in the room.

^exactly as you would expect

A street taco cart named Des'ree (Deflatormouse), Monday, 26 February 2024 07:16 (one month ago) link

Robert Wyatt is the best <3
Wish him all the love

A street taco cart named Des'ree (Deflatormouse), Monday, 26 February 2024 07:16 (one month ago) link

this sux :(

A street taco cart named Des'ree (Deflatormouse), Monday, 26 February 2024 07:17 (one month ago) link


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