CAN: DELAY 1968 (1968; 1981)
1) Butterfly; 2) Pnoom; 3)
Nineteen Century Man; 4) Thief; 5) Man Named Joe; 6) Uphill; 7) Little Star Of
Bethlehem.
It would have been more fun if they'd dared to
release this under its original title — Prepared
To Meet Thy Pnoom, but I guess they thought it might be bad luck to put it
out under the same name under which it was originally rejected by every label
they tried to peddle it to back in 1968. Curious, really: just two more years
and they got no less than United Artists to distribute Monster Movie, a record that was no more accessible (and in terms
of track length, even more extreme) than Delay
1968. By all means, though, this here is an essential album that honestly
deserves to be proudly placed at the beginning of Can's official discography —
a complete experience in its own rights, with a fully-formed sound by a band
that already knows very well what it is doing and a frontman who never really
knew what he was doing at any place or time.
The skeletal structure of these early tracks is
not that much different from Monster
Movie: for the most part, they are blues-rock and funky jams with plenty of
droning, but not a huge lot of psychedelic effects or guitar tones — together
with Mooney's rants and raves, this makes the whole thing very similar to what
Captain Beefheart was doing at the time with the Mirror Man sessions across the Atlantic. There is, however, already
an atmosphere of grim determination, a ferocity, passion, and precision to the
playing that suggest meticulously orchestrated ritualistic frenzy rather than
Beefheart's diligently rehearsed insanity.
The very first track, ʽButterflyʼ, is, in fact,
more strung up and tense than anything on Monster
Movie — an eight-minute jam on one chord that can nevertheless take your
breath away as it ploughs on and on and on, while keyboards, lead guitars, and
occasionally pirouetting bass lines slowly build up tension; all over this a
clearly exalted Mooney, half-madman, half-little kid, vocally follows the
proverbial "dying butterfly" who nevertheless "begins to
fly" because what's a good Can track without a little koan to help pass
the time? In any case, that good old Can magic is already here, right from the
very start, even if technically, the individual members had not yet fully hit
their respective strides.
They did have a knack for finding great
grooves, though: I don't think there's really a single dud among these tracks.
ʽNineteen Century Manʼ (sic!) is a nice early showcase for Karoli as a funk
player, taking a good lesson from James Brown, but also effortlessly sliding
from funk into a flurry of blues-rock slide guitar soloing. ʽMan Named Joeʼ is
a fast-moving R&B groove that shows how much of an influence the
African-American scene exercised over them at the time, and ʽUphillʼ already
presages the likes of ʽMother Skyʼ, moving at a fast tempo and featuring the
most sonically insane bits of soloing on the record.
The real two highlights, besides ʽButterflyʼ,
though, are ʽThiefʼ, a bitter-melancholic elegy that brings some sentimentality
and vulnerability to the sessions — so much of them, in fact, that even Thom
Yorke would later go on to cover the track, although I think that he must have
been more impressed by Mooney here, singing "oh Lord please won't you tell
me why must I be the thief?.." in the most miserable (yet totally
non-whiney) voice that a human being might be capable of. If you want to laugh
Mooney off as a silly annoying lunatic, just listen to ʽThiefʼ and get ready to
drown in the man's misery — I honestly want to give him a hug each time I hear
that "far too late, far too late, far too late..." (and it's kind of
amazing that as of 2016, the man is still alive, but I guess that the switch back
to painting and sculpting eventually helped a lot).
Then there's ʽLittle Star Of Bethlehemʼ, which has
little to do with Nativity, but a lot to do with the absurdist story of Froggie
and Toadie... actually, it begins
like an absurdist story, but then turns into vocal improvisation because,
apparently, Mooney just didn't have enough original lyrics to last him through
the entire jam. Where ʽButterflyʼ is aggressively intense and ʽThiefʼ wallows
in misery, ʽLittle Starʼ is more like an ironic mockery of the blues jam
paradigm, with Karoli engaging in small-scale guitar pyrotechnics (switching
between jagged, broken-up Neil Young-like rhythm playing and psychedelic
howling) and Mooney checking how many different variations on the same
"verse" he can produce without completely repeating himself. There's
something so delightfully silly, and yet at the same time disturbing about this
experience that I'm kind of sad they decided to fade it out after seven minutes
— I could have stood at least twice as much, because this thing deserves real
EPIC treatment, like a ʽSister Rayʼ or something.
In the end, the whole thing is quite short, but
holds together well, and when it was finally released from the vaults (two
years after the complete demise of Can), it must have indeed played the part of
the Great Lost Can Album for true believers, as well as somewhat reinforced Malcolm's
role in the band's history — not to suggest that its release had anything to do
with the somewhat later reunion attempt, but he did tend to get lost against
the titanic reputation of the Suzuki-era albums, which is somewhat unjust. Like
Suzuki, he largely played his own game and wrestled with his personal demons in
the studio rather than paid much attention to the actual music, but that was the whole point of «vocal Can» — we
play our stuff, you vocalize your stuff, we put 'em together and say that's how
it was always meant to be. Thumbs up.
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