Old Rottenhat cover

Old Rottenhat

Released

While many say that Robert Wyatt’s 1974 album, Rock Bottom, is his masterpiece – and it is, by any measure, an extraordinary record – it strikes me, now, that Old Rottenhat is Wyatt’s finest hour, in that it’s the strongest distillation of both his musical and political tendencies. Wyatt recorded the album genuinely solo (as in alone, no other musicians) and it’s full of the rustling, clattering keyboards that were his stock in trade during the eighties, which seem particularly appropriate for this kind of agitprop. Wyatt’s deep love of jazz marks the album, too – see the reference to Coltrane’s “A Love Supreme” that grounds “Gharbzadegi” – but he brings that genre’s flexibility into his songs into a particularly idiosyncratic way; slippery phrases, improvised cadences, all marked by Wyatt’s plaintive, plain-speaking voice.

Jon Dale

Suggestions
Shooting at the Moon cover

Shooting at the Moon

Kevin Ayers and the Whole World
Post Card cover

Post Card

Mary Hopkin
Summer into Winter cover

Summer into Winter

Ben Watt, Robert Wyatt
Of Queues and Cures cover

Of Queues and Cures

National Health
Warm Chris cover

Warm Chris

Aldous Harding
Espers cover

Espers

Espers
Oar cover

Oar

Alexander Spence