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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Landed. I like it!, July 23, 2005
By 
Stephen B. Sumemrlin (Austin, Texas United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Landed (Audio CD)
Well here is one of the most underrated Can albums in there discography. Landed is a very different album for Can but a very good one. When I first bought the cd and put it in the player I was shocked with what I heard and was wondering if this was the wrong cd put in a can package with a can label on the cd. Yes it's that different for them. But as it played I was really digging it. The opening song Full Moon On The Highway is a big rocking number that makes you want to bob your head and Micahel Karoli covers the lead vocals on this song as well for the other songs on the album. I love his german accent. Then it gets into Half Past One which is a very latin sounding song. A good drum beat with interesting keyboard effects and a good guitar line. Hunters And Collectors is a slow type basic song which is another winner on the album. Then we get to Vernal Equinox. The reason I bought this cd in the first place, well that and to keep adding to my Can colelction. The studio version here is very different then the live version I heard from the old grey whistle test on the Can DVD. Here they use tape manipulations and mix them into the song. Still really good. Red Hot Indians starts out with a drum beat that sounds like it came from an indian tribe. You'll be hooked on this song from start to finish. And for the last song on the album, the one reason I can't give this a full Five stars is Unfinished. All this is is a 13 minute noise collage piece that goes nowhere. I found it boring and usualy skip that track when it comes on. Fans might find it intersting to listen to but probably not everytime as I didn't. Well there is my review for Landed. I definetly think this is an essential album for your cd colelction but I wouldn't start with this one. Start with Tago Mago, Ege Bamyasi or Future Days instead then after you get those three work your way to this one. You'll be glad you did. Excellent album.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Underrated album from excellent group, February 18, 2008
This review is from: Landed (Audio CD)
Starting off less then brilliant, Landed nonetheless proceeds to tear into Kraut-rock psychedelia with a warped precision that would remain a high mark for the genre throughout modern recording. Sure it may lack the tightness found in previous masterworks, but Landed soars all it's own. In a fantastic mid-stretch, Can continues to improve the sonic jam via their core of profound guitar and drumming based wizardry amongst much exotic instrumentation and playing styles. With their combined interests in bossanova and experimental rock amongst others, the pioneering band really justify their undersung influence when listening to such (still) fresh work.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Denser, but as eccentric and brilliant as ever, October 6, 2008
This review is from: Landed (Audio CD)
Around the time of Soon Over Babaluma, Can were gaining so much attention that they were given a contract by Virgin Records for their seventh album. With it came a departure from the primitive "lo-fidelity" recording techniques that have made their previous six albums so acclaimed since the group disbanded.

For this reason, "Landed" has often been seen as the beginning of a downfall for the band or as merely "a great collection of off-kilter pop songs". In reality, as one astute observer whose name I cannot recall said, "Landed" marks the high-water mark of the group's experiment with unique dance rhythms, well beyond even what "Dizzy, Dizzy" did on Babaluma.

The atmospheric, funky rhythms of their previous two masterpieces receive a harsher edge owing to the more complicated recording techniques on one of the album's two epic pieces, "Vernal Equinox". Initially much harder than anything they had done since Ege Bamyasi, "Vernal Equinox" moves into a typically ambient middle section before finishing with a lengthy solo from Michael Karoli that is so intense and melodic it could almost be Richard Lloyd. To be fair, Can never sounded so harsh, yet so eccentric and haunting, on any other movement. "Unfinished", on the other hand, is very much in the vein of "Quantum Physics" before it and possesses all the same qualities that made that piece haunting and alluring.

Turning to the shorter pieces, the opener "Full Moon on the Highway" is a revelation. With the more sophisticated recording techniques, Can actually become less accessible than they were beforehand, yet Jaki Liebzeit's skill at producing the right rhythm and no more than that has never been so good. Even the synthesised vocals have a truly otherworldly quality that makes this song into one of the very best Can ever did. "Half Past One", the sole song from "Landed" included on Can's 1993 two-disc anthology, is slower and less startling, but after many listens one realises it does have a delicate beauty. "Hunters and Collectors" (from which a locally-famous Australian band took its name - one wonders how this record arrived in stores here) stands intermediate between the approach of the two songs preceding it. The whisperish vocals have an endearing quality to them, and the trademark Can qualities are refined to produce a tight, light yet lively piece that nobody has been able to emulate. "Red Hot Indians", with a surprising saxophone in the intro, showed that Can had by this point refined their funky grooves to a truly entrancing level.

Indeed, entrancing funk is the main musical element throughout the whole of "Landed", and whilst the density of the rhythms can be fearsome to the first-up listener, it is ultimately at least as satisfying as the more abstract elements of Can's earlier work.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Weird But Good, December 1, 2006
By 
Fred Rayworth (Las Vegas, NV United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Landed (Audio CD)
This is my first exposure to early Krautrock, as it is sometimes called. I've heard of Can for years but have never heard any of their music until I got this CD. I've read that their old singer, some Japanese guy, had a really unique voice that sort of defined them as a band. This is their first effort without him. That being said, I wouldn't know the difference. Taking this as my first exposure to Can, I like it. It seems to be a mix of electronica, rock, maybe jazz, and a German sensibility that I find intriguing. The most outstanding track to me is Hunters and Collectors as I can't get that phrase out of my head! The thick German accents in the vocals also add a unique touch to the music. Some great jams on this CD. Not a bad introduction to their music! Recommended.
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4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Musica con otro sabor ritmico y melodico, September 14, 2005
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This review is from: Landed (Audio CD)
Un trabajo no muy conocido de CAN pero que contiene unas buenas piezas, especialmente las 3 ultimas. Se expresa una evolucion y diversidad de ideas. Una musica hecha con libertad absoluta y sin fijarse esquemas ya dados.

Dificil de encontrar analogias musicales, pero una joya distinta y con otros matices.
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4 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ¡LA PRIMERA IMPRESIÓN!, February 10, 2006
This review is from: Landed (Audio CD)
LANDED llego a mis manos por un amigo músico, y enseguida mi primera impresión fue: ¡me he perdido de muchas cosas en mi vida!, ¿porqué hablar de un disco como este?, me parece absurdo, la sensación de tener este disco en mis manos, sin ser mio, no me deja insatisfecho en lo absoluto, recientemente mi novia y yo decidimos colocar un cartel en la sala de su casa, de normas que deben cumplirse al entrar, por ejemplo: 1.NO HABLAR DE GRUPOS MUSICALES, o 2. NO HABLAR DE ESCRITORES O NOVELAS REBUSCADAS ¡creo que saben a que me refiero!...OK, todo esto porque he recibido en casa de mi novia, a muchos "PSEUDOINTELECTUALES", que hablan mucho y sobre todo de este tipo de música. Pero lo que me ha pasado a mi con este disco es otra cosa, porque no consigo ningun comentario satisfactorio, además es absurdo para mi, solo escucharlo ya es un placer, ¡LANDED es increible!
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Landed
Landed by Can (Audio CD - 2005)
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