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pianoman ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: February 28 2007 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 793 |
![]() Posted: July 01 2016 at 00:08 |
Hey everybody,
I'm looking for some decent quality Can live recordings. I am having a hard time finding anything out there that is a decent live recording (with video preferably) of the band playing music off of their Damo trilogy records, that stay true to the album versions of the songs. Specifically, I can't find any live versions of any tracks off of Future Days. Please point me in the right direction. Thanks! |
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hellogoodbye ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() VIP member Joined: August 29 2011 Location: Troy Status: Offline Points: 7251 |
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Tom Ozric ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: September 03 2005 Location: Olympus Mons Status: Offline Points: 15926 |
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I have a 2 LP set of Live Can - called 'Rohstoff - The Essential Lost Tapes' '68-'76
Features AMAZING stuff for over a hundred minutes worth. Great sound quality. And there's also the 'Can Box', which has different stuff on 2 CD, and a video-tape and book (which I received as a gift, many moons ago). I actually adore Can through all their different phases, including the later Rosko Gee period. He was such a funky bassist !! |
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uduwudu ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: July 17 2007 Status: Offline Points: 2601 |
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There's some nice soundboards around. There.s one called Radio Waves with lots of radio, TB and various studio sessions. Most are concert boards, Hanover (love this one), Grenoble and New Victoria Theatre, London; all 1976 recordings are fine..The Can O Bits (70 - 77) bootleg box is excellent, the above BBC set is great; features a great tune called Mighty Girl - could be a Steve Hackett piece. The official 2 DVD CD set has concert recordings and imvho is well worth it. Edinburgh '73 might be worth checking out. There's the Brighton 75 concert, an audience source. Tough gig this one, some in the audience do not like Can and make their feelings known.
A torrent site near you may be a good port of call. |
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Tom Ozric ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: September 03 2005 Location: Olympus Mons Status: Offline Points: 15926 |
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There's also a B13 purple vinyl recording of 'Future Days Live' in Koln, 1973. Average sound, just 2 sides of 'Doko E' - very rambling, Damo never lets up. Irmin is barely audible, save for some piano on side 2 (or my ears have fallen off). This is a draining listen, no matter how much I love this period Can. A disappointment. Almost like 37 minutes of Peking O (but nowhere near as captivating).
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moshkito ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 18164 |
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Hi,
I'm not sure that listening to these things now, are any better than enjoying "Tago Mago". I think that a lot of the live feeling and experimentation has been lost, and the most that we can say nowadays is that it is too long, because we do not have the patience to close the eyes, and enjoy the trip. It's like saying that "Dark Star" is too long, and I get tired of the 45 minutes in it. I'm not sure there is a lot of CAN with "Future Days" live at all, though I heard one piece only (the title song), and the rest I am not sure it was ever done in concert, up to and including the obvious two long pieces in "Soon Over Babbalooma" that would obviously also be perfect for a live show, but I have a feeling that the keyboard work was too intense to be duplicated on stage. You know what this feels like? The blog on the Krautrock space, for me ... people looking for long trips, but none of them are good enough or satisfactory. In some cases, for me, they have no soul behind them ... it feels like a DAW with some notes only! Damo was not like that, and neither were any of the bands that improvised in those days, a lot of that work, which was hidden and buried because of the LP and public controls. Specially in America!
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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Catcher10 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() VIP Member Joined: December 23 2009 Location: Emerald City Status: Offline Points: 17989 |
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The Can kicks a$$
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hellogoodbye ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() VIP member Joined: August 29 2011 Location: Troy Status: Offline Points: 7251 |
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Hi Tom, Rohstoff and the Lost Tapes seem to have few tracks in common, but the first one is cheaper on vinyl.
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moshkito ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 18164 |
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Hi,
A thought or two about CAN and improvisations. Thought about posting this on the other thread but maybe it would be better here. I have never been a Grateful Dead fan, mostly because it was too much ... just a song. But recently, I started wondering what their improvisations and extended pieces sounded like, and so I went on an excursion looking for the long pieces, so I could compare these to some of the material that is listed under the "__autrock" because, either of these, were far out and neat in their own way. So far, the thing that stands out the most, is that the GD was able to extend an instrument out, and JG was very good at adding a different note and off to the races they went. It was actually very smooth and beautifully done, and even if it only went "free" for a couple of minutes, it was pretty to listen to and very different altogether, although, it did not veer from the main piece to the point of "nothing" and blowing away the main piece ... let's say that the theme was still there in one way or another ... and they blended well in bringing it back. The European norm, in these areas, was never to come back to a "song", and continue on, and end when it ends regardless of how. It's really hard for you and I to justify and discuss the two very long pieces in "Tago Mago" (original full sides of the double LP) because as a "song", it had no real beginning, or middle or end, or bridge, or anything that we recognize as "music" ... it just was there, and seemed to work just fine, and we don't spend the time discussing its musical organization or how it was put together. We know from Holger's comments, that it was all cut and paste, from 20 hours or so of material and I imagine that some parts were selected because they were tighter together than others, but how in the end it all "matched up" well, that made a long piece, is what you and I will probably wonder. And later, CAN was able to do "Bel Air", also a long piece that was really smooth and had really nice transitions, and to my ear (NOW) this one is almost like a GD piece ... it starts out easily and it moves through its imagery and then comes back to the "beginning". This is not the case in "Soon Over Babbalooma" with the two long pieces that also go together really well (Chain Reaction and Quantuum Physics) and have an astounding drum touch between the two pieces ... which was a transitional style, that the GD was known for, btw, with 2 drummers after their moments in the light. The softness, yielded to the flowing synthesizers that took the piece to the end. This write up is in its early stages, as I am only now (can you believe it?) listening to GD, something I never really did, though I new some of the songs, and always enjoyed some of them, like Eep Hour (JG solo album), Unbroken Chain (magnificent with an outstanding middle section that tells you how the GD went to open improvisations in a song), and a couple of other things, but I have yet to hear things like "Dark Star" and other long pieces. I do not believe that the Europeans all copied some American music, but in the instinct to create, I would say that some folks were studious enough to KNOW, what someone else was doing, and the folks in a couple of music schools, mroe than likely knew what was being done, and compared notes. Thus, all of a sudden, Holger's suggestion that everything was cut and paste, was a way to be reactionary to what was already a sort of "formula" for some music in those days. And I have not yet, checked the Allman Brothers Band, whose couple of early albums should be in the collection of ALL progressive music fans for its improvisations.
Edited by moshkito - July 12 2016 at 00:16 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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ALotOfBottle ![]() Prog Reviewer ![]() ![]() Joined: February 17 2016 Location: Lublin, Poland Status: Offline Points: 1990 |
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I'm probably a bit late, but here is Can's live performance from 1973, so just the year that Future Days was released. As far as my memory reaches, I don't think they are playing any material from that album, but at least it's from around the period you are looking for.
Edited by ALotOfBottle - July 28 2016 at 03:02 |
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