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Inner Space / Out Of Reach

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (32 ratings)
Inner Space / Out Of Reach album cover
01
All Gates Open
7:31 $0.99
02
Safe
8:28 $0.99
03
Sunday Jam
4:20 $0.99
04
Sodom
5:26 $0.99
05
Aspectacle
5:45 $0.99
06
Ping Pong
0:21 $0.99
07
EFS No. 99 Can-Can
3:10 $0.99
08
Can Be
2:54 $0.99
09
Serpentine
4:04 $0.99
10
Pauper's Daughter And I
5:57 $0.99
11
November
7:39 $0.99
12
Seven Days Awake
5:14 $0.99
13
Give Me No Roses
5:21 $0.99
14
Like Inobe God
5:50 $0.99
15
One More Day
1:38 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 73:38

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eMusic Review 1

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

Award-winning critic Barry Walters is a longtime contributor to Rolling Stone, Spin, the Village Voice, and many other publications. His interview with Prince a...more »

07.30.12
Capturing the German band at its least Can-ish
2007 | Label: Synergie OMP / The Orchard

Combining Can’s 1978 disc Out of Reach, with its 1979 album Can aka Inner Space, this twofer release captures the German band at its least Can-ish.

Out of Reach (tracks 9 through 15) isn’t even included in the band’s own official discography. Both latter-day ex-Traffic members, Saw Delight additions Rebop Kwaku Baah and Rosko Gee do all the singing here, and founding member Holger Czukay isn’t involved at all; he quit the band in ’77. Rebop is a dexterous player, but his percussion often overwhelms Jaki Liebezeit’s drums rather than augmenting them. Bassist Gee is similarly aggressive and technique-intensive, a sharp contrast to Czukay’s minimal yet empathetic previous basslines. Out of Reach is far more akin to the virtuoso flash of American jazz-rock groups like Mahavishnu Orchestra than to the intellectual, intrinsically Germanic Krautrock of yore.

The third and final album Can album recorded with Gee and Rebop, Inner Space (tracks 1 through 8) improves upon 1978′s Out of Reach by dropping much of that album’s frantic jazz-rock excess, restoring guitarist Michael Karoli as vocalist, and employing Holger Czukay’s editing skills. 1979′s Can (issued here as Inner Space) nevertheless comes cluttered with filler: A goofy fuzz-tone cover of the melody from Jacques… read more »

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Very patchy but not all worthless!

bagist

There are actually several interesting tracks on here, despite the band no longer firing on all cylinders - "Safe", "Aspectacle", "Serpentine", "November" and "Seven Days Awake" are all worth a listen if you like late-70s post-Damo Suzuki Can, and the "Can Can / Can Be" sequence is amusingly dumb. That said, newcomers should definitely not bother with these albums until everything from 68 - 77 has been experienced and inwardly digested. . .

user avatar

It is good

archimdx

Others have said it here... It is not the best Can... but still, this is good stuff: check out "Safe", for instance...

user avatar

Less interesting than a tin of beans

wattsup

The only album the band disown, and usually missed out from their own discography. This album is sadly truly awful. If you like Can, Faust, Amon Duul II and the like save your downloads for the A.R. and Machines album 'The Green Journey' that was recently added to eMusic, it's a classic slice of Krautrock from 1971!

user avatar

You wouldn't start here

Paul.H.uk.42

My own first exposure was with Tago Mago (in the early 70s) when live sets were very largely improvised and 'songs' shaped by that aesthetic. I may be biased but I think it's generally accepted that if you wanted to start listening to Can, the stuff available here would be the last place to start. In fact only a completist would even finish here. Uninspiring.

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They Say All Music Guide

In 1998, Thunderbolt released Inner Space/Out of Reach, which contained two complete albums — Inner Space (which is actually Can’s self-titled record from 1979 released on Laser and then re-released in 1985 as Inner Space on Thunderbolt) and Out of Reach (1978, originally released on Harvest) — by influential German group Can on one compact disc. – Tim Sendra