Ver Mensaje Individual
Antiguo 26-02-2024 , 14:17:40   #7219
brozas
Denunciante Bronce
No Tiene Avatar Configurado
Me Gusta
Estadisticas
Mensajes: 14.596
Me Gusta Recibidos: 128
Me Gustas Dados: 0
Ingreso: 09 feb 2016

Temas Nominados a TDM
Temas Nominados Temas Nominados 0
Nominated Temas Ganadores: 0
Reputacion Poder de Credibilidad: 27
Puntos: 19713
brozas Es un explendido maestrobrozas Es un explendido maestrobrozas Es un explendido maestrobrozas Es un explendido maestrobrozas Es un explendido maestrobrozas Es un explendido maestrobrozas Es un explendido maestrobrozas Es un explendido maestrobrozas Es un explendido maestrobrozas Es un explendido maestrobrozas Es un explendido maestro
  
Predeterminado Can - Live In Paris 1973 (2024) [96kHz/24bit]


Can - Live In Paris 1973 (2024) 96-24
Country: Germany
Genre: Krautrock, Progressive Rock
Format: FLAC (*tracks)
Quality: Lossless [96kHz/24 bit]
Time: 01:31:14
Full Size: 1.76 GB


Live in Paris 1973 is the first official release of one of Can's most legendary performances, a May 12, 1973 set at L'Olympia. At this point, Ege Bamyasi had been out for about half a year, following the German chart success of the single "Spoon," and Damo Suzuki was merely months away from leaving the band and quitting music for a decade, while he devoted time to religion. This release of the concert was pieced together from several recordings found in the Spoon Records vaults, as well as tapes supplied by fans. In this sense, it's comparable to the editing process of the band's studio albums, which were crafted from hours' worth of improvised sessions. This live set is a largely unfiltered display of the band's powers when they were at their prime, with a few deft editing touches (such as a brief echo spiral in the middle of the 36-minute "Paris 73 Eins") seemingly applied to cover up breaks in the tape recordings, or other inconsistencies. Like the other Can live releases, the tracks are numerically titled, and generally seem like improvisations, but the group often riff off tunes from their albums, using them as launching pads instead of giving them straightforward readings. "Zwei" is based on the funky, time-shifting rhythm of "One More Night," and it's the set's purest distillation of Can's mastery of killer grooves. "Drei," based on "Spoon," starts out with murky fidelity but opens up after a few minutes, in time for the band to accelerate and really blast off. "Vier" expands on this volatile energy, and there's unbelievable chemistry between the rhythm section, Suzuki's impassioned howls, and Irmin Schmidt's volcanic keyboard eruptions. Finally, the group run through "Vitamin C," transforming it into an extended freak-out that probably lasted long after the tape cut off. Live in Paris 1973 is Can at their on-stage best, and easily the band's most essential live release.

Mute and Spoon Records present the next instalment of the curated CAN live concert series, LIVE IN PARIS 1973-the first in the series to feature Damo Suzuki's vocals. The series was overseen by founding member Irmin Schmidt and producer/engineer René Tinner, who delicately worked on restoring the archival recordings to the best quality for current modern technology. This record captures the band's 1973 performance in Paris and features Irmin Schmidt on keyboard & synths, Jaki Liebezeit on drums, Michael Karoli on guitars, Holger Czukay on bass, and Damo Suzuki on vocals for one of his final shows with the band.


Cita:
01. Paris 73 Eins (36:27)
02. Paris 73 Zwei (09:20)
03. Paris 73 Drei (16:34)
04. Paris 73 Vier (15:0
05. Paris 73 Fünf (13:45)




Download from HotLink

https://www.keeplinks.org/p72/65dcae232ed8c

brozas no está en línea   Responder Citando
 
Page generated in 0,02116 seconds with 11 queries