Malcolm Mooney
Malcolm Mooney | |
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Background information | |
Instruments | Vocals |
Associated acts | Can, Tenth Planet |
Malcolm Mooney (born 1940s) is an American singer, poet, and artist, best known as the original vocalist for German krautrock band Can.
Biography
Mooney began singing in high school, and was a member of an a cappella vocal group known as the Six Fifths.[1] He gained some fame as a sculptor in New York City, then moved to Germany where he became a friend of Irmin Schmidt and Holger Czukay, who were forming a band. Mooney joined as lead vocalist. The band was originally known as "Inner Space", but Mooney came up with "The Can", later shortened to Can.[1]
An album of material was recorded, initially entitled Prepared To Meet Thy Pnoom, although no record company was willing to release it; it was later released in 1981 as Delay 1968.[2] Can's second album became their debut, Monster Movie, released in 1969. It was successful in the German underground scene. Various other tracks that Mooney recorded with the band during this period appear on the compilation albums Soundtracks and Unlimited Edition. Mooney quit the band and returned to America soon after the recording of Monster Movie, having been told by a psychiatrist that getting away from the chaotic music of Can would be better for his mental health. The liner notes from the album claim that Mooney suffered a nervous breakdown, shouting "upstairs, downstairs" repeatedly.
He rejoined Can in 1986 to record a one-off reunion album, Rite Time. He also has released three albums with the San Francisco Bay Area band Tenth Planet, on the first of which, a new version of the song "Father Cannot Yell" from Monster Movie appears.[1] For the second Tenth Planet album, a different line-up was introduced, and the album saw a limited release in Japan on the P-Vine label. Prior to its issue, the Unfortunate Miracle label issued a limited 7" picture disc single containing two early mixes from the forthcoming album. In 2002, Mooney was invited to sing on Andy Votel's "All Ten Fingers" album - on the song "Salted Tangerines", a version of Mooney's poem of the same name. The Tenth Planet released an album on Milviason Records entitled, [(inCANtations)]. Mooney now focuses on his visual art.[3] In 2007, Matthew Higgs invited Mooney to exhibit a piece at New York's venerable White Columns.[4]
In 2013, Mooney began to collaborate with drummer, songwriter and producer Sean Noonan, along with Jamaaladeen Tacuma and Aram Bajakian, to record Pavees Dance: There's Always the Night. The group performed in February 2014 at the Sons D'Hiver festival in France in advance of the release of the June 2014 release of the CD and accompanying book featuring lyrics and Mooney's art work.
In April 2017, Mooney appeared at The Barbican Centre in London as the lead singer of The Can Project, a reunion concert with Irmin Schmidt joined by Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore and My Bloody Valentine's Debbie Googe. Jaki Liebezeit, Can's Drummer, had recently died. The concert received mixed reviews and suffered sound issues, especially with Mooney's vocals.[5]
Discography
Malcolm Mooney appears on the following original albums:
With Can:
- Monster Movie (1969)
- Soundtracks (1970)
- Unlimited Edition compilation, includes all the tracks on earlier Limited Edition (1976)
- Delay 1968 compilation (1981)
- Rite Time (1989)
- Anthology (1994)
- The Lost Tapes (2012) 3-CD (box set) and 5-LP (album box set)
With Tenth Planet:
- Malcolm Mooney and the Tenth Planet (1998)
- Hysterica (2006)
- inCANtations (2011)
White Columns: with Luis Tovar and Alex Marcelo
- Malcolm Mooney (2011)
With Andy Votel:
- All Ten Fingers (2002)
With Sean Noonan
- Pavees Dance: There's Always the Night (2014)
Notes
- 1 2 3 "Malcolm Mooney". AllMusic. 2015. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
- ↑ Czukay, Holger (2005). "Holger Czukay's Short History of the Can". furious.com. Archived from the original on 20 April 2008. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
- ↑ "Malcolm Mooney". Spoon Records. 2015. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
- ↑ "White Columns (Exhibitor) in New York, NY". Re-title.com. 2015. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
- ↑ https://www.theguardian.com/music/2017/apr/10/the-can-project-review-warm-tribute-to-avant-rock-innovators. Missing or empty
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