Kevin Ayers (16 August 1944 – 18 February 2013) was an English singer-songwriter who was founder member of Soft Machine and a key figure in British psychedelic rock. He produced some outstanding progressive and experimental pop, especially in the 1970s.
Ayers was born in Herne Bay, Kent, the son of the journalist, poet and BBC producer Rowan Ayers, who later originated the BBC2 rock music programme The Old Grey Whistle Test. After his parents divorced and his mother married a civil servant, Ayers spent most of his childhood in Malaysia, where, he would later admit, he discovered a fondness for the slow and easy life. At 12, he returned to Britain and settled in Canterbury. There, he became a fledgling musician and founder of the "Canterbury sound", an often whimsical English take on American psychedelia that merged jazz, folk, pop and nascent progressive rock.
Soft Machine |
Ayers's first
band was the Wilde Flowers, whose line-up included various future members of
Caravan as well as Robert Wyatt and Hugh Hopper, with whom he would go on to
form Soft Machine in 1966. Alongside Pink Floyd, Soft Machine played regularly
at the UFO club in London, becoming one of the key underground groups of the
time.
In 1968, the group toured the US in support of the Jimi Hendrix Experience, a brush with rock stardom and relentless gigging that left the laid-back Ayers weary and disillusioned. He sold his Fender bass guitar to Hendrix's sideman Noel Redding, and fled to Ibiza with fellow Soft Machine maverick Daevid Allen.
Jimmy & Kevin |
Ayers recorded four critically well-received albums for the British progressive rock label Harvest, the third of which, Whatevershebringswesing (1972), featured musical contributions from Robert Wyatt and Mike Oldfield and the orchestral arrangements of David Bedford. It included the dramatically melancholy Song from the Bottom of a Well and the catchy, more-roll-than-rock swagger of Stranger in Blue Suede Shoes, which became, if not quite a hit, a signature song of sorts in his subsequent live shows.
Ayers signed to Chris Blackwell's Island label. The resulting album, The Confessions of Dr Dream and Other Stories (1974), was more focused by his standards, and marked the beginning of a creative partnership with guitarist Ollie Halsall. The following year, Ayers's appearance at the Rainbow Theatre in London alongside John Cale, Brian Eno and Nico was recorded for a subsequent live album entitled June 1, 1974.
In the late 1970s, as punk took hold in Britain, Ayers seemed to disappear from view, dogged by addiction and what often seemed like a general lack of interest in his own career. He made the lacklustre Diamond Jack and the Queen of Pain (1983) with a group of musicians he befriended in Spain, and the well-received Falling Up (1988) in Madrid.
In 1993, Ayers toured America twice, usually performing solo with occasional guests, including Daevid Allen, who was also touring America at the same time. Aside from a few New York shows in 1980 with Ollie Halsall, these tours were Ayers' first live performances in America since 1968. In 1998 and 2000 he returned for two California mini-tours, performing in Los Angeles and San Francisco and backed by local musicians. The 2000 concerts had Ayers double-billed with Gong. Longtime friend John Altman joined the Los Angeles band in 2000.
For a while, he lived a reclusive life in the south of France, before being tempted back to the studio for an album, The Unfairground (2007), featuring contributions from a new generation of musician-fans that included members of Teenage Fanclub, Neutral Milk Hotel and Gorky's Zygotic Mynci.
"I think you have to have a bit missing upstairs," he once said, "or just be hungry for fame and money, to play the industry game. I'm not very good at it." That, of course, was part of his charm. He was a true bohemian and a fitfully brilliant musical drifter. Ayers died in his sleep on 18 February 2013 in Montolieu, France, aged 68. A piece of paper was found by his bedside. On it was written a note, or perhaps an idea for a song: "You can't shine if you don't burn." He did both in his inimitable – and never less than charming – way.
(Edited from Sean
O’Hagan @ The Independent & Wikipedia)
Kevin Ayers – Songs For Insane Times - An Anthology 1969-1980 (reconstructed)
ReplyDeleteFor CD1 & 2 go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/gavfQ
For CD3 & 4 go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/mDTf3
1-1 Town Feeling 4:51
1-2 Song For Insane Times 4:01
1-3 Girl On A Swing 2:49
1-4 The Lady Rachel 5:17
1-5 Stop This Train (Again Doing It) 6:05
1-6 Eleanor's Cake (Which Ate Her) 2:53
1-7 Religious Experience (Singing A Song In The Morning) 4:44
1-8 Soon Soon Soon 3:20
1-9 Rheinhardt & Geraldine / Colores Para Delores 5:38
1-10 May I? 3:59
1-11 Clarence In Wonderland 2:06
1-12 The Oyster And The Flying Fish 2:37
1-13 Shooting At The Moon 5:47
1-14 Butterfly Dance 3:43
1-15 Gemini Child 3:14
1-16 Stars 3:30
1-17 There Is Loving / Among Us / There Is Loving 7:21
2-1 Stranger In Blue Suede Shoes 3:19
2-2 Song From The Bottom Of A Well 4:35
2-3 Oh My 2:57
2-4 Margaret 3:17
2-5 Whatevershebringswesing 8:10
2-6 Decadence 8:04
2-7 Oh! Wot A Dream 2:48
2-8 Don't Let It Get You Down 3:58
2-9 Interview 4:43
2-10 Caribbean Moon 3:01
2-11 The Up Song 3:15
2-12 The Confessions Of Doctor Dream: Irreversible Neural Damage 6:43
2-13 It Begins With A Blessing / Once I Awakened / But It Ends With A Curse 8:16
2-14 See You Later 4:38
2-15 Ballbearing Blues 0:55
3-1 After The Show 2:35
3-2 Thank You Very Much 3:00
3-3 Obervations 4:21
3-4 Toujours La Voyage 7:57
3-5 Diminished But Not Finished 1:55
3-6 Farewell Again (Another Dawn) 3:13
3-7 Yes I Do 3:12
3-8 Love's Gonna Turn You Round 4:51
3-9 Ballad Of Mr. Snake 2:06
3-10 Blue 6:26
3-11 Ballad Of A Salesman Who Sold Himself 4:31
3-12 A View From The Mountain 6:16
3-13 Beware Of The Dog II 5:58
3-14 Hat Song 1:14
3-15 Money, Money, Money 3:11
3-16 Super Salesman 5:03
3-17 Where Do The Stars End? 3:01
4-1 Banana Introduction 3:08
4-2 Stranger In Blue Suede Shoes 3:57
4-3 Interview 7:50
4-4 Whatevershebringswesing 7:23
4-5 Oh! Wot A Dream 3:47
4-6 Shouting In A Bucket Blues 5:16
4-7 Caribbean Moon 3:34
4-8 Don't Let It Get You Down 4:46
4-9 We Did It Again 11:23
4-10 Why Are We Sleeping? 16:05
4-11 After The Show 3:30
I could not find this set on the music blogs, but managed to obtain all the tracks listed from various sources. Below are the original sources given by Discogs. My sources may differ but are the same tracks used in this set. I’ve left the album titles in the mp3 tags.
ReplyDeleteTracks 101 to 106: Taken from the album Joy Of A Toy, released as Harvest SHVL 763 in December 1969.
Track 107: Recorded and mixed 18th December 1969, take 103, featuring Syd Barrett. Recorded at Abbey Road Studios on 28 November 1969
Track 108: Recorded at Abbey Road Studios in September 1969
Tracks 109 to 113: Taken from the album Shooting At The Moon, released as Harvest SHSP 4005 in October 1970
Track 114: A-side of Butterfly Dance / Puis-Je?, released as Harvest HAR 5027 in October 1970
Track 115: Recorded at Abbey Road Studios in June 1970
Track 116: B-side of demo single credited to Kevin Ayres And The Whole World, recorded July 1971 and released as Harvest HAR 5042 in August 1971
Track 117: Taken from the album Whatevershebringswesing, released as Harvest SHVL 800 in January 1972.
Track 201: Early mix, 9 July 1971
Tracks 202 to 205: Taken from the album Whatevershebringswesing, released as Harvest SHVL 800 in January 1972
Tracks 206 to 209: Taken from the album Bananamour, released as Harvest SHVL 807 May 1973
Track 210: A-side of Caribbean Moon, released as Harvest HAR 5071 in April 1973
Track 211: A-side of The Up Song, released as Island WIP 6194 in 1974
Tracks 212 to 215: Taken from the album The Confessions Of Dr. Dream And Other Stories, released as Island ILPS 9263 in 1974
Tracks 301, 302: A & B sides of After The Show, released as Island WIP 6201 in 1974
Tracks 303 to 306: Taken from the album Sweet Deceiver, released as Island ILPS 9322 in 1975
Tracks 307 to 310: Taken from the album Yes We Have No Mañanas, So Get Your Mañanas Today, released as Harvest SHSP 4057 in August 1976
Tracks 311 to 314: Taken from the album Rainbow Takeaway, released as Harvest SHSP 4085 in April 1978
Tracks 315 to 317: Taken from the album That's What You Get Babe, released as Harvest SHSP 4106 in March 1980.
Disc 4 subtitled "After The Show - Live At The Queen Elizabeth Hall 1973". All tracks recorded at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, London on 25 May 1973 and previously unreleased.
nice one, bob - ta!
ReplyDeleteKevin was the patron saint of underachievers, God love him. Thank you, Bob.
ReplyDeleteMy favorite drunken British pop singer. Well played Bob! Thanks for the discog info too. For some reason, I really like knowing the original releases from where the songs were pulled from.
ReplyDelete