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Can: Michael Karoli (vocals, guitar, electric violin); Irmin Scmidt (vocals, keyboards); Holger Czukay (vocals, synthesizer); Rosko Gee (vocals, bass); Jaki Liebezeit (vocals, drums); Reebop Kwaku Baah (vocals, percussion). Recorded at Inner Space Studio, Weilerswist, Germany in 1977. This is a Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio CD players. Bearing bar none the worst title pun of any Can album -- and with titles like Cannibalism, that's saying something -- 1977's Saw Delight was the German progressive group's farewell. Clearly, the core quartet had found themselves in a rut by the recording of this album, bringing in percussionist Reebop Kwaku Baah and bassist Rosko Gee from a late-era lineup of Traffic to add a sort of Afro-Cuban jazz feel to their sound. What's frustrating is that this idea could have worked brilliantly, but the execution is all wrong. Instead of the polyrhythmic fireworks expected from a drum duel between Baah and the African-influenced Jaki Liebezeit, Can's senior drummer basically rolls over, keeping time with simple beats while the percussionist takes on the hard work. Similarly, Rosko Gee's handling of the bass duties (which he performs superbly throughout, adding an almost Mingus-like rhythmic intensity to even the loosest songs) frees Holger Czukay to add electronics and sound effects to the proceedings, an opportunity he doesn't make much of. On the up side, the opening "Don't Say No" recalls the controlled fury of earlier tunes like "Moonshake," and side two, consisting of Gee's lengthy, jazz-based composition "Animal Waves" and the lovely instrumental "Fly by Night," is largely excellent, but the two lengthy tracks that close side one are melodically and rhythmically pale in comparison, and there's a tired, somewhat dispirited vibe to the whole album that makes it an unsatisfying send-off to Can's career. ~ Stewart Mason This effort is a nice mix of trance/groove instrumentals, ethnic sampling, and silly vocals in English. ~ Myles Boisen Can's final album to feature Holger Czukay; the remaining members would make two more, OUT OF REACH and CAN, before splitting in 1979. 1977's SAW DELIGHT is also the album which introduces bassist Rosko Gee and percussionist Reebop Kwaku Baah, two ex-members of Traffic whose backgrounds in jazz and African music fundamentally changed Can's sound. While the group was always attuned to the nuances of rhythm, the entrance of Gee and Kwaku Baah took this interest to new and intoxicating heights. These songs, especially the cut-up electronics of "Animal Waves," benefit greatly from the heightened fluidity and rhythmic tension of the new, more powerful rhythm section. It's hard to say what's truly the greatest Can record, but SAW DELIGHT--bad title pun and all--is clearly a strong contender.The Wire (p.53) - "The album was certainly funky, with 'Sunshine Day And Night' displaying highlife influences..." **Super Audio CD (SACD) Hybrid** This CD will play in standard CD players. A Super Audio CD player is required to take advantage of the SACD sound technology. Saw Delight Music | List Price | $16.98 (You save $3.09) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Rock CDs, Pop, Alternative, Art Rock, Kraut Rock, Enhanced CD, Super Audio | | Label | Mute | | Orig Year | 1977 | | All Time Sales Rank | 44520  | | CD Universe Part number | 7062253 | | Catalog number | 9318 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | May 30, 2006 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Can; Rebop Kwaku Baah | | Engineer | Rene Tinner | | Personnel | Holger Czukay - vocals, synthesizer Jaki Liebezeit - vocals, drums Irmin Schmidt - vocals, keyboards Michael Karoli - vocals, guitar, electric violin Rosko Gee - vocals, bass Reebop Kwaku Baah - vocals, percussion
| | Additional Info | SACD Hybrid; Remastered |
Saw Delight Review
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Purchase Saw Delight CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Can Unlimited Edition CD (1976) Remastered
Saw Delight
$14.55 Can: Damo Suzuki, Malcolm Mooney (vocals); Michael Karoli (guitar, shenai); Jaki Liebezeit (winds, drums, percussion); Irmin Schmidt (keyboards, synthesizer); Holger Czukay (bass). Recorded at Can Studio, Weilerswist, Germany between September 1968 and July 1975. This is a hybrid Super Audio CD playable on both regular and Super Audio CD players. Expanding the original Limited Edition release to a full double-LP/single-CD set, Unlimited is very much a dog's breakfast -- albeit a highly entertaining one -- of previously unreleased performances. Suzuki and Mooney take the spotlight on some songs, while on others the key foursome go at it in their usual way. A number of songs are mere snippets, like the vaguely tribal-sounding "Blue Bag," while one tune, the 20-minute "Cutaway," from 1969, is a sprawling pastiche ...
| | Can Landed CD (1975) Remastered
Saw Delight
$14.55 Can: Michael Karoli (vocals, guitar, violin); Irmin Schmidt (vocals, keyboards); Holger Czukay (vocals, bass); Jaki Liebezeit (woodwinds, drums, percussion). Additional personnel: Olaf Kubler (tenor saxophone). Recorded at Inner Space Studio, Weilerswist, Germany in 1975. This is a hybrid Super Audio CD playable on both regular and Super Audio CD players. Another erratic waxing features some great guitar and Babaluma-style grooves, but is ...
| | Can Delay CD (1981) SACD Hybrid; Remastered
Saw Delight
$14.95 Can: Malcolm Mooney (vocals); Michael Karoli (guitar); Irmin Schmidt (keyboards); Holger Czukay (bass); Jaki Leibzeit (drums). Recorded at Schloss Norvenich, Germany in 1968 & 1969. Although recorded in the late '60s, the material included on Can's Delay...1968 did not appear commercially until 1981. A collection of cuts featuring early vocalist Malcolm Mooney, these seven songs are among the very first Can tunes ever recorded; while nowhere near as intricate or assured as the group's later work, the visceral energy of tracks like the deranged "Uphill" and "Butterfly" is undeniable. ~ Jason Ankeny A ragged-but-right ...
| | Can Flow Motion CD (1976) SACD Hybrid; Remastered
Saw Delight
$14.59 Can: Michael Karoli (vocals, slide guitar, electric violin, baglama); Irmin Scmidt (vocals, keyboards); Holger Czukay (bass, djun, background vocals); Jaki Liebezeit (drums, percussion, background vocals). Recorded at Inner Space, Weilerswist, Germany in 1976. The second of Can's three Virgin albums, 1976's Flow Motion, is a divisive record in the group's canon. It was their most commercially successful album (the opening track, "I Want More," was released as a single in the U.K. and actually charted, thanks to its smoothly percolating near-disco groove, which makes it resemble a late-period Roxy Music hit), but many fans dismiss it as the group's feint toward commercial success. That fluke hit aside, the charge doesn't really hold water. There's a newfound smoothness ...
| | Can Rite Time CD (1989) SACD Hybrid; Remastered
Saw Delight
$14.49 Can: Malcolm Mooney (vocals); Michael Karoli (guitar, pocket organ, bass, background vocals); Holger Czukay (French horn, synthesizer, bass); Irmin Schmidt (keyboards, kimbele); Jaki Leibezeit (drums, percussion). Recorded at Outer Space Studio, Nice, France in December 1986. An unexpected reunion from Can (made even more unexpected by the presence of original singer Malcolm Mooney, who left the band in 1969), 1989's Rite Time is in large part a return to form for the group, especially when one considers how weak Can's last few '70s albums were. Wisely, the quintet doesn't try to replicate the sound they created over two decades before on albums like Monster Movie. Instead, Mooney and company make Rite Time a document of where they're at musically at the time. In short, ...
| | Can CD (1979) SACD Hybrid; Remastered
Saw Delight
$14.55 Can: Michael Karoli (vocals, guitar, bass); Irmin Schmidt (keyboards, synthesizer); Rosko Gee (bass); Jaki Liebezeit (drums); Reebop Kwaku Baah (percussion). Recorded at Inner Space Studios, Weilerswist, Germany in 1978. 1979's Can release (later entitled Inner Space) signified an end to the band's bewildering experimental efforts and atmospheric free-for-alls. By this time, Can had worn out their avant-garde style and electronic psychedelia, and with Holger Czukay's credits reading as editor rather than musician, the decline was somewhat incontrovertible. The hiring of percussionist Reebop Kwaku Baah and bass player Rosko Gee two years prior, both of Traffic fame, made the situation a little better, but not enough to rekindle Can's uniquely flavored ...
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Saw Delight
$5.95 Personnel: Moe Bandy (vocals); Brent Rowan (acoustic & electric guitars); Don Potter, Kenny Bell, Mark Casstevens, Jerry Kennedy, Chip Young (acoustic guitar); Fred Newall, Reggie Young, Randy Scruggs (electric guitar); Sonny Garrish, Weldon Myrick (steel guitar); "Hoot" Hester (fiddle, mandolin); Nashville String Machine (strings); David Briggs, John Jarvis, Mike Lawler, Hargus "Pig" Robbins (keyboards); Gary Lunn, Jack Williams (bass); Jerry Kroon, Kenny Malone (drums); Carol Chase, Wendy Suits Johnson, Lisa Silver, Bergen White, Curtis Young, Kathie Baillie, Michael Bonagura, Alan LeBoeuf (background vocals). The Nashville String Machine: George Binkley, John Borg, Roy Christensen, Carl Gorodetsky, Lee Larrison, Theodore Madsen, Dennis Molchan, Pamela Sixfin, Gary Vanosdale, Stephanie Wolf, Dave Davidson, Bob Mason, Laura Molyneaux. Recorded at Eleven-Eleven Sound, Nashville, Tennessee. Carousing, drinking, and dodging wives are the order of the day here. "Holding the Bag" and "Tell Ole I Ain't Here, He Better Get on Home" are particularly amusing, but the biggest laughs come with the transvestite storyline of "Honky Tonk Queen." ~ Tom Roland Moe Bandy's late-'80s hits for Curb Records are collected on this brief album. By this time, he had tamed a lot of the rowdier aspects of his music, settling ...
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