Can - Future Days -1973- Remaster -2005- Flac -... Instant
For decades, audiophiles and CAN fanatics have chased the perfect digital transfer of this masterpiece. While numerous reissues exist, one specific version has achieved near-legendary status among collectors: .
Why this particular iteration? Why not the SACD, the vinyl reprint, or the standard CD from the 1990s? This article dissects the album’s importance, the technical brilliance of the 2005 remastering job, and why the FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) format is non-negotiable for experiencing CAN’s submerged utopia as the band (and producer Holger Czukay) intended. Before we discuss bits and sample rates, we must understand the music . By 1973, CAN was exhausted. The relentless touring and improvisational ferocity of the Damo Suzuki era had peaked. Instead of cracking, CAN melted. CAN - Future Days -1973- Remaster -2005- FLAC -...
Whether you are a longtime CAN convert or a curious listener who heard “Vitamin C” in a film and wants to go deeper, start here. Pour a glass of water. Turn off the lights. Load the FLAC files. Press play on “Future Days.” And let the tide take you. For decades, audiophiles and CAN fanatics have chased
Future Days is the sound of a band discovering . With Suzuki’s lyrics becoming sparse, cryptic mantras (in his invented “Gibberish” language), and the rhythm section of Jaki Liebezeit and Holger Czukay locking into a hypnotic, minimalist pulse, the album floats. Why not the SACD, the vinyl reprint, or