Delay 1968
Delay 1968 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
File:Can-Delay 1968 (album cover).jpg | ||||
Compilation album by Can | ||||
Released | 1981 | |||
Recorded | 1968 | |||
Genre | Krautrock | |||
Label | Spoon Records | |||
Producer | Can | |||
Can chronology | ||||
|
Professional ratings | |
---|---|
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Delay 1968, or just Delay (as the SACD version is titled), is a compilation album of early outtakes of Can's work with singer Malcolm Mooney, including some of the band's earliest material. It contains the song "The Thief", which had already been released officially as a slightly longer version on United Artists compilation album Electric Rock in 1970.[2] The track was later covered live by Radiohead.[3]
Holger Czukay has said that Delay 1968 was originally intended to be the band's first album and would have been titled Prepared to Meet Thy PNOOM ("Pnoom" being the name of the album's second track—a 27-second saxophone instrumental, recorded as part of their Ethnological Forgery Series). When no record company would release the record, Can set out to make a somewhat more accessible album, which became their 1969 debut Monster Movie.[4] Parts of Delay 1968 circulated in bootleg form for several years under the title Unopened, and included other tracks recorded during the same sessions that would later surface in various forms on other albums.[5]
Track listing
All tracks by Can
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Butterfly" | 8:20 |
2. | "Pnoom" | 0:26 |
3. | "Nineteen Century Man" | 4:26 |
4. | "The Thief" | 5:03 |
5. | "Man Named Joe" | 3:54 |
6. | "Uphill" | 6:41 |
7. | "Little Star of Bethlehem" | 7:09 |
Total length:
|
35:48 |
Personnel
- Holger Czukay – bass
- Michael Karoli – guitar
- Jaki Liebezeit – drums, percussion, saxophone
- Irmin Schmidt – keyboards
- Malcolm Mooney – vocals
Notes
- ↑ Delay 1968 at AllMusic
- ↑ http://www.discogs.com/Various-Electric-Rock/master/476969
- ↑ At Ease Radiohead
- ↑ Holger Czukay's Short History of the Can
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.