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31.5.08

Irmin Schmidt




Irmin Schmidt - Impossible Holidays - 1991 - Fine Line

Great album from Irmin Schmidt, a founding member of the legendary Can. It's a sophisticated recording, similar to the sound that marked Can, with subdued aggression and a beautiful fascination between harmony and discord. Highly evolved rock music and a rewarding listen. Check out his 1987 "Musk At Dusk" album, and listen to the two great Can albums, "Tago Mago," and "Ege Bamyasi."

TRACKS

1 Dreambite Schmidt, Irmin/Fallowell, Duncan 1:43
2 Le Weekend Schmidt, Irmin/Fallowell, Duncan 4:46
3 Surprise Schmidt, Irmin/Fallowell, Duncan 9:25
4 Shudder of Love Schmidt, Irmin/Fallowell, Duncan 6:28
5 Lullaby Big Schmidt, Irmin/Fallowell, Duncan 4:27
6 Time the Dreamkiller Schmidt, Irmin/Fallowell, Duncan 6:12
7 Gormenghast Drift Schmidt, Irmin/Fallowell, Duncan 8:29

Produced by Gareth Jones & Irmin Schmidt. All tracks composed and arranged by Schmidt, Irmin/Fallowell, Duncan
All lyrics by Duncan Fallowell

MUSICIANS

Irmin Schmidt vocals, keyboards, synths
Michael Karoli guitars
Jaki Liebezeit drums
Steve Shehan percussion
Franck Ema Otu bass
Juan José Mosalini bandoneon on "Time the Dreamkiller"
Geoff Warren altosax on "Time the Dreamkiller
Gitte Haenning backing vocals on "Le Weekend"
Özay Fecht backing vocals on "Le Weekend"
Claudia Stülpner backing vocals on "Le Weekend"
Duncan Fallowell Voice on Dreambite

BIO

Irmin Schmidt born in May 1937 received a formal musical education and between 1957 and 1967 he studied under modern composers Karlheinz Stockhausen and Ligeti. Between 1962 and 1969 he conducted numerous orchestras including Wiener Sinfoniker, Bochumer Sinfoniker, Radio-Sinfonie-Orchester Norddeutscher Rundfunk Hannover and the Dortmunder Ensemble für Neue Musik, which he founded. Schmidt also worked as a musical director at the Stadttheater Aachen and taught Musicals and Chanson at the Bochum stage school. Schmidt also gave numerous new music recitals and was amongst the first German pianists to interpret the work of John Cage. His compositions "Hexapussy" and "Ilgom" were premiered by Radio Stuttgart in 1967 and 1968 respectively. During this period he also composed music for various film and theatre productions. His classical career was put on hold after a trip to New York in 1966 exposed him to emerging musical forms and ideas that led to him forming CAN in 1968. As the band's keyboard player, Schmidt's contribution to their groundbreaking career and the evolution of electronic music in general is formidable. When CAN was dissolved in 1978 Schmidt, relocated to the south of France where he established a studio and continued to compose and record over 100 film and television scores, a craft he had already become familiar with both before and during his work with CAN. This work is documented on CAN's "Soundtracks" LP (1970) and on his own solo soundtrack compilation, a 3 CD set entitled "Anthology:Soundtracks 1978 - 1993 "both of which are available on Spoon/Mute. His solo soundtrack features his fellow band mates Micael Karoli (guitar) and Jaki Liebezeit (drums). In 1981 he worked with Bruno Spoerri and released his first solo LP "Toy Planet" followed by "Musk at Dusk" in 1987. Schmidt rejoined his former colleagues for the reunion album, Rite Time (1989) and followed this with another solo album, "Impossible Holidays" (1991). In 1993, Schmidt was commissioned to write a fantasy opera based on Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast trilogy. The three act opera, with a libretto by Duncan Fallowell, was premiered at Wuppertal Opera House on November 15 1998 excerpts of which were released as a CD on Spoon/Mute in 2000 Thanks to Gormenghast, he met Kumo (UK musician Jono Podmore), sound engineer, producer and specialist in rhythm programming and immediately saw the potential for improvisational collaboration. They performed as Irmin Schmidt and Kumo for the Can solo projects tour. This project also toured events as diverse as the Montreux Jazz Festival, Sonar in Barcelona and the International Jazz festival in London and all to critical acclaim from their respective audiences. In 2001 Irmin Schmidt and Kumo released "Masters of Confusion" on Spoon/Mute. Like his fellow CAN bandmates, Irmin Schmidt has been taking a keen interest in the re-mastering of CAN material for both the 2003 CAN DVD release and overseeing the re-mastering of the entire CAN back catalogue for re-release on Spoon/Mute. June 2004 saw a new production of his Gormenghast opera staged at Völklinger Hütte in Saarbrücken, Germany, a colossal steelworks that is now a UNESCO world heritage site, together with performances at the Grand Theatre Luxembourg. In 2006 - 2007 he composed ballet music for full orchestra commissioned by the Deutschen Oper am Rhein, Düsseldorf. In 2008 the ballet was premiered in Düsseldorf and Duisburg. This year also saw the release of the new Irmin Schmidt & Kumo album "Axolotl Eyes" (released world wide by Spoon/Mute/Warner/P-Vine) and he wrote the soundtrack to the new Wim Wenders film "Palermo Shooting", which is part of the official selection of the Cannes Film Festival 2008. © Spoon Records, All rights reserved.

7 comments:

A.O.O.F.C said...

LINK

Anonymous said...

It's not Music at Dusk but MUSK AT DUSK

Thanks, Duncan Fallowell

A.O.O.F.C said...

Thanks for correction, drf.

Anonymous said...

this one had escaped me before - seems 3/4 of can are on it- pity holger couldnt make it too!

A.O.O.F.C said...

Hi! anonymous. Thanks for comment. I agree. Holger was the essence of Can's music up to the late 70's. It would have been very interesting to hear what he could have added to this album. What do you think of the album?

Anonymous said...

been lookin' for this for a long time.. schmidt is unique and love his accompaniment in CAN.. thanks for this, priceless... jx.

A.O.O.F.C said...

Hi,jx. I wish more people would listen to albums like this, and of course, the incomporable Can. Thanks, and keep in touch