Third

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (61 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
ALBUM ONLY

Total Tracks: 4   Total Length: 75:18

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Only $2.59? Really?

Tonefreak

Get it now. I would, but I have a mint vinyl copy which suits me fine. Great record at the birth of jazz/rock fusion.

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No Joke

Dude_E

This really is one of the records that significantly Changed the Way i Listen to Music![forlast40+years]this IS The REAL S_it!!!

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awesome stuff

WVMMRH

i still have it on vinyl-on the columbia lable.glad to find it on emusic.

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"Milestone" is No Overstatement

jackbugs

This was a groundbreaking album in its day, one of the first real examples of jazz-rock fusion, but from the rock side of the equation. (Miles Davis was laying tracks for Bitches Brew at about the same time.) The studio wizardry with tape loops ("Out-bloody-Rageous") is hypnotically captivating, and the interplay of reeds, keyboards and bass throughout these long compositions is accomplished. Then there's Robert Wyatt's "Moon in June", a stream-of-consciousness jazz ramble that slowly deconstructs into one of the most tripped-out tracks ever recorded (headphone alert!). The music still holds up quite well today. Soft Machine would soon lose Wyatt as vocalist and delve further into jazz, with diminishing results. This was their musical pinnacle.

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They Say All Media Guide

The Soft Machine plunged deeper into jazz and contemporary electronic music on this pivotal release, which incited the Village Voice to call it a milestone achievement when it was released. It’s a double album of stunning music, with each side devoted to one composition — two by Mike Ratledge, and one each by Hopper and Wyatt, with substantial help from a number of backup musicians, including Canterbury mainstays Elton Dean and Jimmy Hastings. The Ratledge songs come closest to fusion jazz, although this is fusion laced with tape loop effects and hypnotic, repetitive keyboard patterns. Hugh Hopper’s “Facelift” recalls “21st Century Schizoid Man” by King Crimson, although it’s more complex, with several quite dissimilar sections. The pulsing rhythms, chaotic horn and keyboard sounds, and dark drones on “Facelift” predate some of what Hopper did as a solo artist later (this song was actually culled from two live performances in 1970). Robert Wyatt draws on musical ideas from early 1967 demos done with producer Giorgio Gomelsky, on his capricious composition “Moon in June.” Lyrically, it’s a satirical alternative to the pretension displayed by a lot of rock writing of the era, and combined with the Softs’ exotic instrumentation, it makes for quite a listen (the collection Triple Echo includes a BBC broadcast recording of this song, with different albeit equally fanciful lyrics). Not exactly rock, Third nonetheless pushed the boundaries of rock into areas previously unexplored, and it managed to do so without sounding self-indulgent. A better introduction to the group is either of the first two records, but once introduced, this is the place to go. – Peter Kurtz

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