Although legions of enthusiasts worldwide will undoubtedly guarantee the legacy of German rockers
Can, it is archival releases such as this two-disc collection that will stand as the most compelling evidence of the combo's uncompromising live shows. Unlike many of the other so-called progressive European bands of the era,
Can could easily depend on their improvisational skills in addition to razor-sharp technical chops, with equally edgy avant-garde and classically tinged musique concrète sensibilities. While this mirrored the ethos of
Frank Zappa's
Mothers of Invention, the point of departure for
Can was a far cry from the '40s and '50s R&B that drove much of
the Mothers' early music. The nine thoroughly extended performances included in this set are derived from decidedly lo-fi audience recordings, perfectly complementing their often brash and wonderfully erratic sonic experiments. Rather than presenting the works in a chronological fashion, there is an alternate underlying and subtle continuity. As well as the key catalog entries "Dizzy Dizzy," "Vernal Equinox," and the nearly quarter-hour rave-up "Yoo Doo Right," there are also unique improv pieces such as the searing funk of the opening jam "Jynx" or the 37-minute "Colchester Finale," which, as the title implies, is the culmination of a concert at the University of Essex in (where else?) Colchester. Longtime listeners will undoubtedly become immediately enamored with this rendering of "Spoon." The side originated as a mini-masterpiece that only clocked in at three minutes and change on the Ege Bamyasi (1972) album. However, here the track is not only more than quadrupled in total spin time, but the driving intensity and perpetually throbbing rhythms boil and churn behind the rock-solid
Holger Czukay (bass) with some breathtaking interaction between
Irmin Schmidt (keyboards) and
Jaki Liebezeit (drums).
Can's influence on groups such as
Ozric Tentacles or
Ominous Seapods can likewise be directly traced back to unabashed and driving readings such as those captured here. While
Can may only have a small cult-like following, the band's ideas and full-frontal approach have become bedrocks of the entire neo-progressive scene. ~ Lindsay Planer