Cover of Can Future Days
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For fans of can, lovers of krautrock and experimental rock, enthusiasts of psychedelic and ambient music, listeners interested in philosophical and consciousness-themed albums
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LA RECENSIONE

Time is not a concept, it is a machine that creates reality, from which it is impossible to descend.

Aristotle said that there is no time without change.

But as long as we are alive and conscious, even in a dark and silent room, in a sensory deprivation tank, something moves, if only within us.

We will never be vegetables as long as we are conscious.

There is a middle ground, however...

Psi, the wave function of the Universe.

The mechanical touch of a battery precise and regular like the laws of nature, they say created by God, but which would not exist if man had not invented them.

Even those trees that have grown a heart in their chest and a brain in their head sometimes just need to drink in the rays of the sun and the rain in the ground, and the song of the birds, the wind, the sound of nature, so, without thinking.

And it is extraordinarily beautiful when it happens, even if closed in a room with a pair of headphones on your ears..

Heartbreaking and wonderful beauty of creation.

I do not want and cannot say, and think, anything else.

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Summary by Bot

The review reflects on Can's Future Days as a profound and beautiful album that explores the nature of time, consciousness, and existence. It highlights the immersive power of music to connect listeners with cosmic and natural rhythms. The reviewer expresses deep appreciation for the album's ability to evoke emotion and timeless beauty, even in solitude.

Tracklist Videos

01   Future Days (09:32)

02   Spray (08:29)

03   Moonshake (03:04)

04   Bel Air (19:53)

Can

Can were a German experimental rock group central to krautrock, known for hypnotic repetition, improvisation, and studio tape experimentation. Key members included Holger Czukay, Irmin Schmidt, Michael Karoli, and Jaki Liebezeit; early vocals featured Malcolm Mooney, later replaced by Damo Suzuki.
24 Reviews

Other reviews

By ZiOn

 Future Days is a pure concentration of genius and experimentation, resulting in something simply unthinkable for any record by any band.

 The final and endless 'Bel Air' is a wild twenty-minute suite where Can's cosmic rock reaches perfection.


By Defender1

 Try listening to this album with your eyes closed in a dark room and you will see the light!

 A medley of sounds and hypnotic atmospheres, refrains repeated to exhaustion by the 'androgynous' voice of the quintessential non-singer Damo Suzuki.