In January 1970,
Soft Machine worked as a quintet, retaining the services of sax/flute player
Lyn Dobson from the previous septet version of the band. Three months later he was gone and the group carried on as a quartet. The quintet recorded only one piece, "Facelift," which appeared on the seminal
Third.
Breda Reactor presents a near-complete concert performed in Breda, Netherlands, on January 31, 1970. The sound quality is better than on other
Soft Machine documents released by Voiceprint, but is still a far cry from the comparatively hi-fi CD
Noisette taken from a live performance on January 4, 1970, and released by Cuneiform five years earlier than this one. Tape hiss and distortion abound, some parts are very muddy, and the bass and organ rule the sonic spectrum, leaving very little room for
Wyatt's drums (which tend to disappear in the background) and the reeds. That being said,
Noisette presents a truncated set on a single CD, while
Breda Reactor contains a whole (well, almost) concert split across two discs. The set list is rigorously the same, except for the tracks omitted on the Cuneiform album. Among these is the 22-minute "Facelift," a classic if
Soft Machine ever had one, here given a thunderous reading.
Dobson's
Roland Kirk-esque flute solo at the end eases some of the audio shortcomings. By all means, acquire
Noisette first: beside the sound quality argument,
Elton Dean was in much better shape for that earlier show, and the fade-out two minutes into the encore of "We Did It Again" is frustrating.