THE
SOFT BOYS
The Soft
Boys have turned out to be one of the most influential bands
in shaping contemporary alternative music, though few are
completely familiar with the quirky band's legacy. Formed
in Cambridge, England in 1976 on the heels of the punk revolution,
the Soft Boys eschewed the three-chord nihilism of punk and
opted for a crude version of psychedelic/folk-rock that was
well on its way out of fashion, but oddly, just on the cusp
of a resurgence.
Robyn Hitchcock recruited Cambridge musicians Morris Windsor
on drums, Andy Metcalfe on bass, and guitarist Alan Davies,
and recorded Give It to the Soft Boys in Hitchcock's living
room in 1976. Davies was soon replaced by guitarist Kimberley
Rew. The band released a single, "(I Want to Be An) Anglepoise
Lamp," followed by the Can of Bees album in 1979.
While recording the follow-up, Metcalfe left the band and
was replaced by Matthew Seligman. The new lineup started fresh
and recorded Underwater Moonlight, the album that found the
band trading psychedelic jams for a more straight-ahead jangle-guitar-rock
sound. The LP has become extremely influential in the guitar
rock canon — the Replacements, R.E.M., and the L.A.
Paisley Underground scene all claimed it as a prime influence.
The album launched a thousand bands, but it turned out to
be the Soft Boys' swan song. Two more recordings were released
posthumously: the Two Halves for the Price of One EP in 1981,
and some early sessions compiled on Invisible Hits in 1983.
The first EP was re-released in 1984 as Wading Through a Ventilator.
Windsor and Metcalfe began to collaborate with Hitchcock again
in 1984 as the Egyptians, while Seligman became an in-demand
session musician and Rew went on to form Katrina and the Waves.
Hitchcock has had a prolific post-Soft Boys recording career,
sticking to the unusual style he's forged and finessed since
1976, with 15 albums to his credit
.