Love_Makes_Sweet_Music

Love Makes Sweet Music

Love Makes Sweet Music

1967 single by Soft Machine


"Love Makes Sweet Music" was the first single released by the psychedelic rock group Soft Machine. It is one of the first British psychedelic releases, predating Pink Floyd's "Arnold Layne" by a month.[1] The A-side is more pop-oriented, featuring Robert Wyatt on lead vocals. The other side, "Feelin’ Reelin Squeelin" is a disturbing tour de force with Kevin Ayers handling the lead vocal for the verses, while Wyatt sings the chorus; there is an elliptical series of strange noises and flute in the solo.

Quick Facts Single by Soft Machine, B-side ...

The single was a commercial flop.[2]

The tracks from the single have been reissued on the Soft Machine compilations Triple Echo and Out-Bloody-Rageous - An Anthology 1967 -1973 (Sony), on the 1972 Polydor compilation LP Rare Tracks, and on the 2009 CD edition of the album The Soft Machine. A cover of "Love Makes Sweet Music" was recorded by The Valentines, an early band of AC/DC frontman Bon Scott, as a B-side for their cover of "Peculiar Hole in the Sky".

Track listing

  1. "Love Makes Sweet Music" (Kevin Ayers)
  2. "Feelin’ Reelin' Squeelin’" (Robert Wyatt)

Personnel


References

  1. Stump, Paul (1997). The Music's All that Matters: A History of Progressive Rock. Quartet Books Limited. pp. 27–28. ISBN 0-7043-8036-6.

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