Tender Machine founding member and keyboard participant Mike Ratledge died on Wednesday, February 5 after a quick sickness, in keeping with his former bandmate and guitarist John Etheridge. “Mike was the spine of Tender Machine within the early years and a person with a fully incisive thoughts – a marvellous composer and keyboardist,” Etheridge wrote on Fb. “An actual renaissance man – so gifted, cultured, charming – and an exquisite companion. We used to satisfy each few weeks for over 40 years – a deal with for me. What a loss to all of us and his sisters and fantastic girlfriend Elena, who had been with him on the finish.” Ratledge was 81.
Fashioned in 1966 in Canterbury, Kent, Tender Machine made a reputation for themselves on the London underground circuit taking part in a jazzy tackle psychedelic prog-rock that finally earned them slots opening for Pink Floyd and, within the U.S., Jimi Hendrix. The joys of their early discography, particularly on songs like “Hope for Happiness” or “Save Your self,” is essentially indebted to Ratledge’s wilding keyboard solos and improvisations. Along with being the longest remaining authentic member of Tender Machine—sticking round from their 1966 self-titled debut to 1976’s Softs—Ratledge was additionally arguably the band’s most recognizable determine, rocking a thick mustache, flowing mane, and darkened glasses.
Born on Could 6, 1943, Ratledge realized play and recognize classical music at a younger age, because it was the one music his father, a faculty headmaster, allowed to be performed at dwelling. Whereas attending Simon Langton Grammar College for Boys in Canterbury, he met drummer Robert Wyatt and bassist Hugh Hopper, and the trio change into quick mates. Just some years later, in 1961, the boys met Australian poet and musician Daevid Allen, who broadened their horizons by sharing his infectious love of jazz.
Following a brief stint of taking part in within the Daevid Allen Trio, Ratledge stepped again to deal with faculty whereas his mates began the Wilde Flowers with bassist Kevin Ayers and several other others. As soon as faculty wrapped up, Ratledge formally shaped Tender Machine with Ayers, Allen, Wyatt, and guitarist Larry Nowlin in 1966. Nowlin stop shortly afterwards, whittling the band all the way down to a quartet—the primary of many lineup changeups that might happen over Tender Machine’s long-running profession—and so they recorded demos, one among which turned their debut single, “Love Makes Candy Music.”
When the time got here to trace their debut album, The Tender Machine, Allen was busy launching psych-rock favorites Gong in France and was denied re-entry to the UK, so Tender Machine hit the studio as a trio and enlisted tour supervisor Hugh Hopper to fill in on bass. Whereas members got here and went over the following years, Ratledge saved his toes and imaginative and prescient firmly planted in Tender Machine, churning out Quantity Two in 1969 and the appropriately titled run of albums that adopted: Third, Fourth, Fifth, Six, and Seven. His closing album as a full-time member of the band was 1975’s Bundles, though Ratledge did contribute to 2 songs on 1976’s Softs, regardless of being changed by Alan Wakeman—the cousin of Sure’ cloaked keyboardist Rick Wakeman—upon his departure.
