Ege Bamyasi: Can

Ege Bamyasi: Can

Album #163 - November 1972

Episode date - December 15, 2021

The Alternative Top 40
    0:00
    0:00

    It’s not hard to understand why Can’s album catalog would remain obscure, despite near universal critical acclaim. Superficially, they are quite difficult to approach and even harder to appreciate.

    I had been vaguely familiar with the band for years, but never considered them to be much more than pompous art-noise. First of all, their approach to music was thoroughly unconventional, with a complete disregard for standard song form. Secondly, the lyrics/vocals are entirely impossible to discern – I didn’t even realize that they were sung in English – and the style is so unconventional that it is easy to dismiss as amateur ranting…which, as it turns out, is more or less exactly what it is (more on that later). Before once again dismissing them offhand, I decided to listen closely to their catalog – this time with headphones - while reading the back-story to the band’s existence.

    Here’s what I’ve learned. Irmin Schmit and Holger Czukay were students of the 20th Century European classical music scene, but it was hard to ignore the fact that the ‘new’ classical music was hardly representative of contemporary culture. Avant-garde minimalism and atonality provided the basis for the new classical world, but the public certainly did not embrace the new style. Artists like Stockhausen (who both had studied under) and Boulez functioned in rarefied air. Schmit traveled to Manhattan, and happened upon Andy Warhol’s art scene. In his own words, his notion of music was ‘corrupted’ by this trip, causing him to consider the possibilities presented by utilizing rock music as a new color in his musical palette. Thus was born the fundamental basis of what would come to be known as ‘Krautrock’.

    Schmit returned to Germany, where he and Czukay teamed up with free-jazz drummer Jaki Leibezeit. An American vocalist named Malcolm Mooney rounded out the group for their early releases, until the intensity of Can’s music caused him to quit, leaving the band without a singer. The band’s second vocalist, Damo Suzuki, was discovered while busking his way across Europe. Jaki Leibezeit and bassist/engineer Holger Czukay came upon him and spontaneously decided to recruit him. He performed that very night, improvising in loose English over the band’s improvised rhythms. The ‘classic’ lineup was now set. Together they released “Tago Mago”, an incomprehensibly sprawling double album full of dense sound collages that could be simultaneously intriguing and also vaguely annoying. Only by listening with a pair of good headphones did the real qualities of “Tago Mago” reveal themselves. 

    “Ege Bamyasi” was their follow-up, and as a single album, it streamlines the excesses of “Tago Mago”. By no means conventional, it nonetheless is easier to digest than its processor by placing emphasis the band’s strong points. The drumming of Jaki Leibezeit is relentlessly driving, especially for music that is essentially spontaneous. His playing provides form and power to the non-structure of each composition. Fans of Journey’s Steve Perry or Earth, Wind and Fire’s Philip Bailey will recoil in horror at Damo Suzuki’s version of what constitutes a “lead singer”, but once you wrap your head around it, it’s hard not be drawn in to his provocative ‘anti-style’. The most stunning quality, though, is the engineering skills of bassist and recording engineer Holger Czukay. Czukay is plainly a genius with a recording console, as my headphone listening experience plainly demonstrated. I’ve never heard such rich three-dimensional sound from a mid-20th century pop album. You feel as though you are literally sitting in the drum stool, while the mad genius throws sound in every direction like an aural pop-art painter.

    “Ege Bamyasi”” is definitely not an album that will work at parties. It’s anathema to casual listening. It’s outsider status provides a significant amount of its appeal, which would explain why Stephen Malkmus (Pavement), Thurston Moore (Sonic Youth) and Geoff Barrow (Portishead) all consider “Ege Bamyasi” to be one of the most influential albums on their own careers. The band Spoon even took their name from the album’s closing track. “Ege Bamyasi” is created as a one-on-one experience and it will never be an ‘easy’ listen, but patience is a virtue that may help to reveal the magic hiding within.

    Tracks Featured:

    Pinch

    Sing Swan Song

    One More Night

    Vitamin C

    Soup

    I'm So Green

    Spoon

    November 1972 – Billboard: Did Not Chart

    Related Shows

    A Christmas Gift to You from Phil Spector - Bob B. Soxx & the Blue Jeans, The Crystals, The Ronettes

    A Christmas Gift to You from Phillies Records: Various Artists

    Album #40 - November 1963

      0:00
      0:00
      Charles Mingus: The Black Saint and The Sinner Lady

      Charles Mingus: The Black Saint and The Sinner Lady

      Album #39 - July 1963

        0:00
        0:00
        Patsy Cline - Showcase

        Patsy Cline: Showcase

        Album #38 - November 1961

          0:00
          0:00
          Robert Johnson - King of the Delta Blues Singers

          Robert Johnson: King of the Delta Blues Singers

          Album #37 - June 1961

            0:00
            0:00
            Bobby Bland: Two Steps From The Blues

            Bobby Bland: Two Steps From The Blues

            Album #36 - January 1961

              0:00
              0:00
              Etta James - at last!

              Etta James: At Last

              Album #35 - November 1960

                0:00
                0:00
                : Blues and Roots - Charles Mingus

                Charles Mingus: Blues and Roots

                Album #34 - March 1960

                  0:00
                  0:00
                  John Coltrane: Giant Steps

                  John Coltrane: Giant Steps

                  Album #33 - February 1960

                    0:00
                    0:00
                    Ornette Coleman: The Shape of Jazz to Come

                    Ornette Coleman: The Shape of Jazz to Come

                    Album #32 - November 1959

                      0:00
                      0:00
                      Mingus Ah Um/Charles Mingus: Better Git It in Your Soul,  Goodbye Pork Pie Hat,  Boogie Stop Shuffle,  Self-Portrait in Three Colors,  Open Letter to Duke,  Bird Calls,  Fables of Faubus,  Pussy Cat Dues,  Jelly Roll

                      Charles Mingus: Mingus Ah Um

                      Album #31 - October 1959

                        0:00
                        0:00
                        Miles Davis - Kind of Blue

                        Miles Davis: Kind of Blue

                        Album #30 - August 1959

                          0:00
                          0:00
                          Chuck Berry Is On Top

                          Chuck Berry: Chuck Berry Is On Top

                          Album #29 - July 1959

                            0:00
                            0:00