About Damo Suzuki
Hometown
Kobe, Japan
Born
January 16, 1950
Genre
Rock
Best known for his work with Can, Damo Suzuki was a vocalist and improvisational musician whose creative wanderlust led to him performing with a dizzying variety of collaborators. Suzuki had little experience as a musical performer before joining Can in 1970, but his bold, theatrical style and abstract lyrical sensibility put its stamp on three of the group's most memorable albums (1971's Tago Mago, 1972's Ege Bamyasi, and 1973's Future Days) before he left the band in 1973. After a decade away from music, Suzuki returned in 1983 fosuced on improvised live performances, a number of which were recorded and released, among them 2000's Seattle, 2002's P.R.O.M.I.S.E., and 2007's The Fire of Heaven at the End of the Universe. Working with established groups as well as "sound carriers" he often never met before walking on-stage, Suzuki's music in the 21st century found him relentlessly exploring the boundaries of spontaneous creativity.
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