CAN: FUTURE DAYS (1973)
1) Future Days; 2) Spray; 3)
Moonshake; 4) Bel Air.
There is a very important, but subtle dividing
line between Ege Bamyasi and Future Days, the band's last album with
Suzuki and, frankly speaking, also the band's first album where the very presence
of Suzuki feels a little... out of place. Prior to 1973, there were lots of
things you could call Can albums — psychedelic, mind-blowing, spooky, disturbing,
nightmarish, psychopathic — but «beauty» and «atmosphere» would hardly be at
the top of the list, unless you have your value system all mixed-up and highly
individualistic. Now, for the first time, Can set themselves the challenge of
creating a sonic world that seduces with its prettiness, not with its ability
to align itself with the darkest strains of your soul. A record that is, in a
way, a very direct predecessor of (and almost unquestionably an influence on)
Brian Eno's Another Green World —
without clearly being a successor of anything, because very few, if any, albums
up to that time were made with the overall purpose of creating an ambience.
Even in the progressive genre, most albums had a «plot» of sorts; Future Days is purely impressionistic,
from top to bottom.
Although the tracks are still long, with ʻBel
Airʼ occupying a whole side's worth of vinyl, it is pretty hard to call them
«jams» now — there is very little sense of improvisation, and the emphasis is
on droning group interplay rather than solos of any kind. The stripped-down
musical structures of the tunes have lots of fairly common elements — for
instance, the title track is pinned to a fairly generic Latin groove; at the
beginning of ʻSprayʼ you can notice a surprisingly retro boogie bass line; and the
album's only short piece, ʻMoonshakeʼ, structurally seems like a cross between
ʻOye Como Vaʼ and ʻShakin' All Overʼ. However, the rhythm section of Czukay and
Liebezeit still manages to remain one of the most inventive combos on Earth,
and any «generic» elements here only exist in unpredictable combinations.
Most importantly, it makes no sense to discuss
any single instrument outside of the overall context — it is only when the
rhythm section is properly integrated with the guitars and keyboards that the
record begins to make any sense at all. ʻFuture Daysʼ (the song) is made to
sound like a wobbly journey on a magical carpet, its hems flapping around you
as synthesized clouds chuck electric guitar raindrops on your head. With ʻSprayʼ,
you find yourself on the ground, somewhat frantically running through an
unfamiliar landscape as guitars and keyboards alike transform themselves into
alien mosquitoes, carnivorous frogs, and other ghastly creatures. And ʻBel
Airʼ's distorted guitar sound is clearly volcanic, so apparently by that time
you find yourself out of the swamps and jungles, but gradually descending into
the vortex of hellfire (despite the track's deceptively quiet and calm
beginnings).
Describing these musical paintings in detail is
rather futile, since not a lot of different things actually happen — while this
is not really «ambient» music, due to its lack of minimalism and highly dynamic
rhythm section, it is, now that I think of it, about as «post-rock» as they
come, largely achieving the goals of bands like Godspeed You! Black Emperor
decades before they'd even formed (and, might I add, without raising suspicions that this music is being made as compensation
for the fact that the people involved do not really know how to play their
instruments: even at their most «static», each of Liebezeit's drum patterns or
Czukay's bass lines here is precious). However, each of the band's members is
equally important for the overall effect, with the already mentioned possible
exception of Damo — his vocal parts are even more quiet than they were, and
although he sings at least one very pretty melody (the "spinning down
alone..." bit on ʻBel Airʼ), and generally shows himself capable of
subtlety and even a sort of crooning, his presence is never integral to these
songs. No wonder he left in between Future
Days and Babaluma: his mission
was almost officially ended.
I would not call Future Days as glaringly great as the 1970-71 recordings, though.
There are quite a few stretches here that can easily try your patience, and on
the whole, I would think that a bit of diversity wouldn't hurt: even if somebody
argues that a tight, gritty three-minute funk-pop tune like ʻMoonshakeʼ
disrupts the album's harmonic flow and feels out of place, it at least helps
you put the disjointed pieces of your brain back together before the big one
comes. The soundscapes are impressive and mildly evocative, but way too
kaleidoscopic to stick in memory — where a master manipulator like Eno would
always have a bunch of creepy riffs or emotional keyboard phrases to pick your
attention, Future Days places too
much trust in the whole and too little in the individual parts. In the end, its
historical importance probably matters more than its pure enjoyability; but
this is not to say that it is not
enjoyable, or that repeated listens do not bring out, clearer and clearer, all
sorts of tasty nuances in Karoli's guitar playing or Schmidt's ambient
keyboards. It is, and they do; it is simply that «Can genius» is a bit more
directly associated with the likes of ʻHalleluhwahʼ than ʻBel Airʼ.
On the other hand, Ege Bamyasi had already shown that if the band were to go on making
Tago Mago-lite clones for the rest
of its life, they would very quickly become a parody of themselves; and if they
do not deserve our admiration for such a radical change of direction while
still near the top of their game, what do
they deserve? Well, at least a pretty strong thumbs up, for one thing.
My favorite Can album. I prefer this over anything Eno.
ReplyDeleteJaki Liebezeit was disgruntled over the final result, calling Future Days oceanic. Maybe alluding to some notorious Topographic Oceans. ;-) And maybe because his presence is subdued here, although, boy, does he burst and bubble if you listen harder.
It's my favorite too, and "oceanic" is the best compliment that anyone can give it.
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