Can - Future Days -1973- Remaster -2005- Flac -... May 2026
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.
When you hear the opening wash of cymbals on the title track, and Damo Suzuki mutters “ Future days… future days… ” as if from the bottom of a well, you will understand. The 1973 recording, filtered through the 2005 remaster, preserved in FLAC, is not just a listening session. It is a time capsule. It is a ritual. CAN - Future Days -1973- Remaster -2005- FLAC -...
In the vast, shimmering ocean of Krautrock, few albums float as serenely—or sink as mysteriously—as CAN’s Future Days . Released in 1973, the band’s fourth studio album marked a seismic shift away from the barbed-wire funk of Tago Mago and the paranoid jazz of Ege Bamyasi . Instead, Future Days offered something radical: a humid, amniotic, and blissfully abstract vision of rock music dissolving into pure atmosphere. Why this particular iteration