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Can - Unlimited Edition (Remastered) (2011)

Can - Unlimited Edition (Remastered) (2011)

BAND/ARTIST: Can

  • Title: Unlimited Edition
  • Year Of Release: 1976 (2011)
  • Label: Mute
  • Genre: Krautrock, Progressive Rock
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
  • Total Time: 01:17:22
  • Total Size: 503 / 198 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Gomorrha (Dec. 73) 05:45
2. Doko E (Aug. 73) 02:28
3. LH 7o2 (Nairobi/München) (March 72) 02:13
4. I'm Too Leise (March 72) 05:10
5. Musette (Jan. 70) 02:14
6. Blue Bag (Inside Paper) (Oct. 70) 01:18
7. E.F.S. No. 27 (Dec. 70) 01:48
8. TV Spot (Apr. 71) 03:03
9. E.F.S. No. 7 (Sept. 68) 01:06
10. The Empress And The Ukraine King 04:41
11. E.F.S. No. 10 (Jan. 69) 02:02
12. Mother Upduff (May 69) 04:29
13. E.F.S. No. 36 (May 74) 01:58
14. Cutaway (March 69) 17:10
15. Connection (March 69) 02:59
16. Fall Of Another Year (Aug. 69) 03:23
17. E.F.S. No. 8 (Nov. 68) 01:37
18. Transcendental Express (July 75) 04:39
19. Ibis (Sept. 74) 09:19

Line-up:
Holger Czukay / bass, tape effects
Michael Karoli / guitar, violin, shehnai (3)
Jaki Liebezeit / drums, percussion, winds (4,9,11,16)
Irmin Schmidt / keyboards, synthesizer, schizophone (10)
Damo Suzuki / vocals (2,4,6,7,8)
Malcolm Mooney / vocals (10,12,15,16)

Expanding the original Limited Edition release to a full double-LP/single-CD set, Unlimited is very much a dog's breakfast -- albeit a highly entertaining one -- of previously unreleased performances. Suzuki and Mooney take the spotlight on some songs, while on others the key foursome go at it in their usual way. A number of songs are mere snippets, like the vaguely tribal-sounding "Blue Bag," while one tune, the 20-minute "Cutaway," from 1969, is a sprawling pastiche of oddities. (Keep an ear out for the very formal request to keep modulations in frequency with other bandmembers!) Five cuts are listed as part of the band's continuing Ethnological Forgery Series, on which they recreate or interpret a variety of world musics through their own vision. The majority of songs come from 1968-1971 -- manna from heaven for those interested in the band's roots. Many cuts show off the varying abilities of the players. Leibezeit plays wind instruments on five separate cuts, while Schmidt is credited with "schizophone" on the Mooney-sung funk-soul of "The Empress and the Ukraine King." Though a few tracks are seemingly here to fill space, a lot of what's present easily stands up on its own, and with the band's legend as well. The opening cut, "Gomorrha," recorded after Suzuki's departure, is quite fine, an understated but still epic piece with lovely keyboards from Schmidt and intoxicating Karoli guitar. On the Suzuki-era cut "I'm Too Leise," Leibezeit's medieval flutes and light percussion add to a half-folk/half-something-else vibe. Mooney gets an interesting moment of glory with "Mother Upduff," a spoken-word tale of tourists in Europe that turns increasingly strange after the encounter with the octopus.




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