CAN: SOON OVER BABALUMA (1974)
1) Dizzy Dizzy; 2) Come Sta La
Luna; 3) Splash; 4) Chain Reaction; 5) Quantum Physics.
I think that I might actually prefer Can's
first post-Suzuki album to Future Days,
even if this means going against the average consensus. Essentially, they are
continuing to develop in the same direction, once again abandoning pure jam
power in favor of otherworldly ambience with occasional touches of beauty —
but, while the sound of this album is a little more conventional, perhaps, it
is also sharper, and there's just basically more
going on than there used to be.
The album title is a spooneristic distortion of
Moon Over Alabama, but, for some
reason, to me it always suggested an association not so much with Kurt Weill's
ʻAlabama Songʼ, but with ʻStars Fell On Alabamaʼ — there's a distinct shadow of
midnight jazz lying over much of the record, and it does have a nightly,
ghostly, slightly mystical aura to it, especially the first half which could be
thought about as the logical nighttime state of the same world that we'd
explored on Future Days during the
daytime. ʻDizzy Dizzyʼ, the first song in the band's catalog to be dominated
by Michael Karoli's violin rather than guitar (which he plays Stephane
Grappelli-style), is particularly impressive in that respect — it's all about ghostly
apparitions, as personified by the wobbly, echoey, ephemeral character of all
the instruments: drums, bass, violin, keyboards, vocals, they all sound like
they're there and they're not there.
ʻCome Sta La Lunaʼ and ʻSplashʼ complete the
first side of the album with perky Latin rhythms, the former one more of a
cha-cha-cha and the latter more of a samba, but aside from the rhythm tracks,
nothing about the tunes is specifically Latin American — ʻLunaʼ is
distinguished by oddly processed vocals (note: many of the technical effects on
vocals are probably best explained as the result of Karoli's and Schmidt's shyness,
as they had to manage without a separate vocalist), dissonant violin runs and
avantgarde piano rolls that all converge in a ball of weirdness, like a naked midnight
dance on the beach supposed to help the dancers find their inner self. On
ʻSplashʼ, the tempo is accelerated, the violin and guitar solos become crazier
(including violin tones so distorted that I almost mistook them for saxes),
and the moonlight madness becomes more pronounced: the only thing that's
lacking is a bombastic climax, instead of which we get a rather unsatisfactory
fadeout just as things are beginning to really heat up.
The second side of the record takes us in a
different direction — with titles like ʻChain Reactionʼ and ʻQuantum Physicsʼ,
you know you're moving away from psychedelic nocturnal scenery and into the
realm of the micro-cosmic. ʻChain Reactionʼ itself is probably the closest they
came to recapturing the nightmarish atmospheres of Tago Mago, with acid guitar solos, chicken-scratch funk guitar
borrowed to symbolize the unstoppable onslaught of particle movement — and,
most curiously, the track's several crescendos always inevitably descend into sections
that I'd call «ʻDead Man's Tangoʼ Variations», such morbidity and coldness
emanating from those passages. As for ʻQuantum Physicsʼ, the lengthy and nearly
rhythmless piece of keyboard ambience, it sounds almost frustratingly modern —
draggy, minimalistic, bleary-eyed, pretty much the blueprint for the vast majority
of Boards of Canada albums.
As you can see, the album is somewhat
journey-like — with a more «naturalistic» first side like a three-movement
suite on exciting, but dangerous nighttime life in an alternate universe, and
the second side a two-movement exploration of the «dynamic» and «static» states
of the little bits and pieces that form the alternate universe in question. In
other words, I find it even easier to conceptualize than Future Days, and I certainly find it more evocative: darker,
creepier, more prone to transporting my mind to distant places than its
predecessor. (For some reason, many people tend to really put down ʻChain
Reactionʼ, but I think the abrupt signature changes alone justify its presence,
and the only real complaint I have about the aggressive jam parts is that the
soloing instruments are kept way too low in the mix).
In any case, it is important to clear away the perpetrated
misconception that «this is the beginning of the end for Can» which is still being
retranslated all over the place. It is, at the very least, a worthier spiritual
companion to Future Days than Ege Bamyasi was to Tago Mago, capitalizing on its ambient/impressionist achievements
rather than sounding like a pale copy of them. Yes, it may be argued that 1973
was the last year for Can to introduce «revolutionary» ideas in the world of
music, but even revolutionary ideas may be improved upon with non-revolutionary
nuances, and for a few additional years, the band still wrote and released
worthy music that was in no way boring, let alone «commercially oriented».
Thus, thumbs up
all the way.
The Trouser Press Record Guide from the 1980s, perhaps reflecting an aesthetic refracted through a New Wave/Punk ideology, actually preferred the mid-70s Can to the early-70s classic period.
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