- EPs · 1982
- Nothing Can Stop Us · 1980
- Old Rottenhat · 1985
- Old Rottenhat · 1985
- Shleep · 1997
- Shleep · 1997
- Rock Bottom · 1974
- EPs · 1999
- Rock Bottom · 1974
- Songs from Before · 2006
- Rock Bottom · 1974
- Songs from Before · 2006
Essential Albums
- 1974
Artist Playlists
- A prog-rock icon turned political art-pop troubadour.
- Tapping into off-kilter jazz and sly political pop.
Singles & EPs
Live Albums
Compilations
Appears On
- Future Pilot A.K.A.
- Hugh Hopper & Mark Kramer
- Lol Coxhill, Charles Hayward, Hugh Hopper, Orphy Robinson with Guest Robert Wyatt, Charles Hayward, Hugh Hopper & Orphy Robinson
- News From Babel
About Robert Wyatt
Not only was Robert Wyatt among the key figures taking folk rock and psychedelia into bold new directions at the dawn of the ‘70s, he also persevered in the face of intense challenge to become one of music’s most cherished mavericks. Born in Bristol in 1945, Wyatt learned to drum as a teenager and played and sang in various acts before helping found Soft Machine in 1966. The band’s whimsical spirit and adventurous blend of folk, jazz and psychedelia made them forerunners of what became known as the Canterbury scene. After leaving Soft Machine in 1971, Wyatt made his solo debut with The End of an Ear and formed the band Matching Mole. His life took an unexpected turn when a fall from a window in 1973 left him paralysed from the waist down. Shifting to keyboards as chief accompaniment for his yearning voice and often politically pointed lyrics, Wyatt went on to create a spellbinding body of work that includes idiosyncratic original efforts such as 1974’s beautifully placid Rock Bottom, covers like his haunting 1982 version of Elvis Costello’s “Shipbuilding”, and collaborations with Björk, Max Richter and many other admirers.
- HOMETOWN
- Bristol, United Kingdom
- BORN
- 1945
- GENRE
- Rock