Soon Over Babaluma is the fifth studio album by the rock music group Can. This is the band's first album following the departure of Damo Suzuki in 1973. The vocals are provided by guitarist Michael Karoli and keyboardist Irmin Schmidt. It is also their last album that was created using a two-track tape recorder.
It takes the ambient style of Future Days and pushes it even further at times, as on "Quantum Physics", although there are also some upbeat tracks, such as "Chain Reaction" and "Dizzy Dizzy".
^Keylock, Miles (2005). "Can - Future Days". In Dimery, Robert (ed.). 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. London: Cassell Illustrated. p. 293.
SoonOverBabaluma is the fifth studio album by the rock music group Can. This is the band's first album following the departure of Damo Suzuki in 1973...
"Babylonian Pearl", which is evocative of "Come Sta, La Luna" on SoonOverBabaluma. The song's vocals are handled by Irmin Schmidt, and speak about a...
Goodbyes" – w.m. Richard M. Sherman & Robert B. Sherman from the musical Over Here! "Pencil Thin Mustache" – w.m. Jimmy Buffett "Ring Ring" – w.m. Benny...
Literature 2015. List of avant-garde artists Psychedelic literature SoonOverBabaluma, an album by Can on which Fallowell wrote the lyrics to the opening...
subculturally presuming fragmentation; it's built on an often neurotic discomfort over massified culture, takes as its archetype bohemia far more than youth, and...