PART ONE
HALLELUWAH
AN ANATOMY OF LISTENING
CAN WITHOUT THE MUSIC
‘LIKE CAN’S DRUMMER…’
THE TERRIFYING SEX PISTOLS
MR IAN DURY & THE BLOCKHEADS
SWEARING
A ‘RECORD COLLECTION’
VAN HALEN & BAGPIPES
PART TWO
A SPANNER IN THE SKY
MADE IN A CASTLE WITH BETTER EQUIPMENT
TAGO MAGO
CAN WORLD
NOT A DREAM
THE EDITS
A SINGLE SONG WHICH NEVER ENDS
NOSTALGIA DANGER
THE MYSTERY OF LA ISLA DE TAGOMAGO
An officially approved account of one of the most influential and powerful albums of the 1970s, this brilliant addition to the 33 1/3 series by Scottish novelist Alan Warner will explore in detail the conception, recording and release of the album Tago Mago by Can.
Alan Warner is a Scottish novelist. His 1995 novel Morvern Callar won the Somerset Maugham Award and was made into a feature film directed by Lynne Ramsay. In 2013, he was awarded the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for his novel The Deadman's Pedal.
Warner asserts that the musical criticism and musicology "ignore
the material and autobiographical details that have been built into
a web of deeply personal associations". This is true of a certain
classical model of music writing, and [this] book is a deeply
enjoyable and lyrical rebuttal to that
*The Wire*
In high school, I came upon the book Twilight of the Gods by
Wilfred Mellers, a 1973 study attempting to explain the importance
of the Fab Four’s music through a musicological analysis of their
works. This seemed extremely absurd. I recently realized, after
reading several books in the 33 1/3 series, that it’s not really
about the individual albums profiled—it’s about what it’s like to
be a fan. It’s about what it’s like to view a particular work as
the pinnacle of aesthetic accomplishment—to experience the unique
sensation of “This speaks to me!” There is also a fetishization of
the vinyl album as an art object. Each band and record in the
series is mythologized as much as the authors’ experience of
discovering them is; in the case of Can’s 1971 album Tago Mago,
Warner describes their “stoner athleticism.” The Scottish novelist
realizes the absurdity of this linguistic attempt to describe
music, as much as Mellers, but Warner’s volume about the German
psychedelic band is rich because he shows how “Tago Mago gave me
permission to dream.” Tago Mago, along with a number of other Can
masterpieces, will be reissued on vinyl alongside the release of
the 33 1/3 book.
*SLUG Magazine*
Scottish novelist Alan Warner (Morvern Callar, The Deadman’s Pedal)
has given us a unique and absorbing look at the great Krautrock
classic Tago Mago by Can […] Music fans will find themselves
nodding in solidarity with his admitted obsession with the record
[…]Can’s Tago Mago is a masterpiece that still enthralls and
informs listeners 40+years past it’s debut, and in a different way,
Alan Warner’s look at his relation to the record, and music in
general, is much the same. Our most deeply felt connections with
art are the pieces that cause us to grow over time with the work,
and Warner has given us a near-perfect description of such.
*Big Takeover*
I really can't recommend Warner's Tago Mago highly enough. I've
never read anything by Warner that isn't artful and considered, a
mix between the analytical and passionate, but that has never been
better demonstrated than in this short book. You may not want to go
out and get a copy of Can's album (personally, I prefer Ege
Bamyasi), but that's not what he is setting out to do. This is
[his] story, one which is both personal and universal, or at least
common to the sort of people whose relationships with music, and
other art forms, can be as important as their relationships to
people - basically, the sort of person who buys the 33? books.
*Scots Way Hae!*
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