Can To Crack Open Live In Paris 1973

The fourth archival release from the German icons features vocalist Damo Suzuki.

THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE: “The acclaimed Can Live series continues this year with Can Live in Paris 1973 — set for release on vinyl, CD and digitally on Feb. 23 via Mute and Future Days.

Live in Paris 1973 finds Can in magical form for a performance recorded at L’Olympia in Paris on May 12, 1973, marking the first of the live series to feature Damo Suzuki on vocals. From ’70-’73, the core lineup of keyboardist Irmin Schmidt, drummer Jaki Liebezeit, guitarist Michael Karoli and bassist Holger Czukay were joined by Japanese improviser and vocalist Suzuki. They met after a chance encounter while Suzuki was busking in Munich and several months after the Paris 1973 performance, his wanderlust would take him back on the road.

This new album in the series allows us to witness the band at a particularly important stage of their career, shortly after the release of two of their most acclaimed albums, Tago Mago and Ege Bamyasi (the latter feeding into the Paris performance). The recording itself was uncovered and pieced together from recordings within the vaults and those sent in by helpful fans. It was brought into the 21st century by founding member Schmidt and producer/engineer René Tinner, who have compiled and edited all the albums in this series: Live In Stuttgart 1975, Live in Brighton 1975, and Live in Cuxhaven 1976.

Founded in the late ’60s and disbanded just over a decade later, Can’s unprecedented and bold marriage of hypnotic grooves and avant-garde instrumental textures has made them one of the most important and innovative bands of all time, and these albums reveal a totally different perspective to the group. You may hear familiar themes, riffs and motifs popping up and rippling through these jams, but they are often fleetingly recognized faces in a swirling crowd. At other points, you will hear music that didn’t make it onto the official album canon.

In these recordings Can go to even more extreme ranges than with their studio work, from mellow, ambient drift-rock to the white-dwarf sonic-meltdown moments they used to nickname ‘Godzillas’. Even as they adapt and chase the rhythm from minute to minute, you can hear the extraordinary musical telepathy its members shared.

Can Live in Paris 1973 Track List

1 | Paris 73 Eins (36:27)
2 | Paris 73 Zwei (09:20)
3 | Paris 73 Drei (16:35)
4 | Paris 73 Vier (15:09)
5 | Paris 73 Fünf (13:46)