Can – Future Days
Label: |
Spoon Records – SPOON 009 |
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Format: |
Vinyl
, LP, Album, Reissue
|
Country: |
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Released: |
|
Genre: |
Rock |
Style: |
Prog Rock |
Tracklist
A1 | Future Days | 9:34 | |
A2 | Spray | 8:28 | |
A3 | Moonshake | 3:02 | |
B | Bel Air | 20:00 |
Credits
- Bass – Holger Czukay
- Drums – Jaki Liebezeit
- Guitar – Michael Karoli
- Keyboards, Synthesizer [Alpha 77] – Irmin Schmidt
- Producer, Written-By – Can
- Vocals – Damo Suzuki
Notes
Originally released in 1973 on United Artists Records.
The first SPOON 009 edition was released in 1981.
The first SPOON 009 edition was released in 1981.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Matrix / Runout (side 1): 7 66,22 236-01-1/1 SPOON-9-A
- Matrix / Runout (side 2): 7 66,22 236-01-2/1 SPOON-9-B
Other Versions (5 of 89)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
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Recently Edited
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Future Days (LP, Album) | United Artists Records | UAS 29505 | UK | 1973 | ||
Future Days (Cassette, Album) | United Artists Records | TCK 0510 | 1973 | ||||
Future Days (LP, Album) | United Artists Records | UAS 29 505 I | 1973 | ||||
Future Days (LP, Album, Stereo) | United Artists Records | UAS 29505, UAS 29.505 | 1973 | ||||
Future Days (LP, Album, Embossed Cover) | United Artists Records | UAS 29505 | Italy | 1973 |
Recommendations
Reviews
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Edited 11 years agoThis is an incredible album and one of the best by CAN. Do beware that later versions are often bootlegs. I ordered one from a seller from Italy stating it was a 2000 Spoon version. What I received was cheap a United Artists (out of business years ago) version that is just another known bootleg (most likely made from a cd). If you want good quality (analogue) records go for older versions and check the sales histories on this site for multiple mint sales of rare albums. I believe Can never reissued their albums on Lp after the 80's. Can anybody whether the 2000 versions are legit?
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Edited 19 years agoIf previous LPs "Tago Mago" and "Ege Bam Yasi" showed Can at their most rhythmic and expressive, then "Future Days", the last LP that they would record with the quixotic vocalist Damo Suzuki shows them encapsulating a whole new soundscape. Gone is the thundering drumming of Leibezeit, replaced by a more harmonic approach that, especially with the release of the remastered CD in August 2005, shows the band at the height of their powers.
It's deliciously slow at times, revelling in a summer-drenched sound that is intensely psychedelic at times. "Moonshake" is one of their greatest tracks, a tight minimal funk jam that contains an irresistible backbeat, and "Bel-Air" is Balearic before it was even invented. A masterful LP from a glorious band.
Release
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