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Robert Wyatt – Shleep (Thirsty Ear, 1997)

September 1, 1997 by A.S. Van Dorston

Robert Wyatt was the drummer and founding member of the Canterbury, England based Soft Machine, who played arty, psychedelic, Pink Floyd-influenced jazz-rock fusion. Although his output has been spotty and sporadic, he has been revered for escaping the syrupy art-rock pretentiousness that his colleagues drowned in. Like Captain Beefheart, Wyatt has maintained a playfully unselfconscious experimentalism that may make for difficult listening, but is never boring. Shleep is a welcome comeback which, on first listen, reminded me of an old Brian Eno album. Sure enough, the booklet revealed that Eno did indeed arrange the first song, “Heaps of Sheeps.” He also plays on two other songs. Wyatt’s high, fragile voice is also similar to Eno’s. Like this album, Wyatt’s mid-70s solo albums, Rock Bottom (1974) and Ruth Is Stranger Than Richard (1975), mined the same cracks found between pop, art-rock and the avant-garde as Eno’s post-Roxy Music solo albums of the same era. The main difference on Shleep is that the music is a gentler, prettier version of the old Wyatt, who could at times be abrasive in both sound and his ruthless politics. His lyrics are not all flight and whimsy, however. “Free Will and Testament” and “Blues in Bob minor” show that his politics have only grown more subtle in his old age, making more timelessly powerful songs in the long run.

Posted in: Reviews
Tagged: Art RockRobert Wyatt

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