King Crimson: Difference between revisions
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A second theme that has remained constant throughout the career of King Crimson is an instrumental piece, often embedded as a break in a song, in which the band plays a passage of a rhythmic complexity that would challenge a group of classically trained musicians working with a conductor. King Crimson's single best-known song, ''21st Century Schizoid Man'', is an early example of this. Their series of pieces collectively titled ''Larks' Tongues in Aspic'' (also including pieces of similar intent, ''Thrak'' and ''Level Five'') go deeper into rhythmic complexity, delving into rhythms that wander into and out of synchronisation with each other, to the point where the listener is frequently unable to even count beats, yet somehow all finishing together. (Occasionally these pieces fail onstage; Fripp refers to these failures as "train wrecks".) Perhaps the apex of rhythmic complexity in the King Crimson repertoire was the trilogy of early 1980s albums, which contained gamelan-like rhythmic layers, and continual staccato patterns overlaying each other (a case-in-point being ''Neal And Jack And Me'' from ''Beat''). |
A second theme that has remained constant throughout the career of King Crimson is an instrumental piece, often embedded as a break in a song, in which the band plays a passage of a rhythmic complexity that would challenge a group of classically trained musicians working with a conductor. King Crimson's single best-known song, ''21st Century Schizoid Man'', is an early example of this. Their series of pieces collectively titled ''Larks' Tongues in Aspic'' (also including pieces of similar intent, ''Thrak'' and ''Level Five'') go deeper into rhythmic complexity, delving into rhythms that wander into and out of synchronisation with each other, to the point where the listener is frequently unable to even count beats, yet somehow all finishing together. (Occasionally these pieces fail onstage; Fripp refers to these failures as "train wrecks".) Perhaps the apex of rhythmic complexity in the King Crimson repertoire was the trilogy of early 1980s albums, which contained gamelan-like rhythmic layers, and continual staccato patterns overlaying each other (a case-in-point being ''Neal And Jack And Me'' from ''Beat''). |
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Other themes harder to document clearly include the composition of insanely difficult passages for individual instruments (especially Fripp's guitar |
Other themes harder to document clearly include the composition of insanely difficult passages for individual instruments (especially Fripp's guitar —notably ''Fracture'' on ''Starless and Bible Black''); pieces with a loud, aggressive sound not unlike [[heavy metal music]]; and the jarring juxtaposition of pretty tunes and ballads with weird, often dissonant, noises. |
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===Improvisation=== |
===Improvisation=== |
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From the very first, King Crimson performances featured |
From the very first, King Crimson performances featured improvisations, in which the music can, and frequently does, go anywhere. These can be imbedded in composed pieces, like ''21st Century Schizoid Man'' or ''Thrak'', but most Crimson performances over the years have included at least one stand-alone improvisation, where the band simply started playing and took the music wherever it went, sometimes including passages of improvised silence (as Bill Bruford's contribution to the improvised ''Trio''). The earliest example of an unambiguously improvising King Crimson on record is the spacious, oft-criticised (as self indulgent) extended middle-section of ''Moonchild'' from the first album, in which the composed parts act as bookends to the improv. |
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Unlike most jazz and rock improvisation or jamming, these sessions are rarely in any sense blues-based. They vary so much in sound that King Crimson has been able to release several albums consisting entirely of improvised music. |
Unlike most jazz and rock improvisation or jamming, these sessions are rarely in any sense blues-based. They vary so much in sound that King Crimson has been able to release several albums consisting entirely of improvised music. |
Revision as of 12:00, 16 April 2005
King Crimson is a musical group founded by guitarist Robert Fripp and drummer Michael Giles in 1968. Though its membership has fluctuated considerably during its lifetime, the band continues to perform and record music. Their musical style has typically been categorized as rock and roll or progressive rock. The name King Crimson was coined by Peter Sinfield as a synonym for Beelzebub, prince of demons; according to Fripp, Beelzebub is an anglicized form of the Arabic phrase "B'il Sabab", meaning "the man with an aim".[1]
A considerable amount of King Crimson's history consists of the various personnel changes that have occurred within the group. Throughout its history, Robert Fripp has been the only consistent member, though he has stated that he does not consider himself the band's leader, necessarily. To him King Crimson "is a way of doing things" [2], and the musical consistency that has persisted throughout the band's history, despite continuous rotation of its members, reflects this point of view.
Band history
Origins
Robert Fripp and Michael Giles began discussing the formation of King Crimson in November of 1968, soon before the breakup of the short-lived and unsuccessful band Giles, Giles, and Fripp. The first musician to be added to the lineup was singer-guitarist Greg Lake, who was to play bass and sing. Lyricist Peter Sinfield and composer Ian McDonald were soon recruited, and thus the first incarnation of King Crimson was born.
Early in January 1969, the group rehearsed for the first time. Over the course of the year, the first King Crimson album, In the Court of the Crimson King, emerged from the chaos. King Crimson went on tour through England, and later the United States, performing alongside many contemporary popular musicians and musical groups, including Iron Butterfly, Janis Joplin, The Rolling Stones, and Fleetwood Mac. Tensions and musical differences within the band eventually reached a limit, however; Ian McDonald and Michael Giles left the band in December 1969 to pursue solo work. McDonald went on to be a founding member of Foreigner in 1976.
1970s
King Crimson's lineup fluctuated tremendously during the next few years. The remaining trio of Fripp, Sinfield, and Lake persevered for a short while, releasing the single Cat Food/Groon in March of 1970. During this time, material was being developed for King Crimson's second album, In the Wake of Poseidon. Woodwind player Mel Collins came on board, and bassist Peter Giles appeared on several tracks. Greg Lake departed in April to form Emerson, Lake & Palmer, leaving King Crimson without a vocalist until Gordon Haskell took over singing, in addition to playing bass, for the band's third album, Lizard. Andy McCulloch played drums for the album, with Jon Anderson of Yes appearing on one song. Haskell and McCulloch left just before the release of Lizard, leaving King Crimson as a rock band without a singer, bassist, or drummer.
Fripp began auditioning. Drummer Ian Wallace and vocalist Boz Burrell were selected, but after more than two dozen potential bassists had come and gone, Fripp decided simply to teach Boz to play bass. Burrell maintains that he was chosen because he preferred the more "twangy" Rotosound brand of strings. In the midst of the lengthy tour that followed, the band released Islands in 1971. At the end of that year, King Crimson parted ways with long-time member and lyricist Peter Sinfield. The remaining members undertook a tour the following year, with the intention of disbanding afterwards. Recordings from this tour were later edited by Fripp to become the Earthbound album.
Shortly after the Earthbound tour, Fripp once again began looking for new members. The first to join was improvising percussionist Jamie Muir, whom Fripp had been considering as a possible member for some time. Next came vocalist and bassist John Wetton, one of Fripp's college acquaintances. Wetton had been under consideration for the previous lineup of the band, but that proposition had fallen through. Now that King Crimson was starting over from scratch again, the opportunity was ripe.
Yes drummer Bill Bruford was next to sign up, a move that was deemed a poor career move by some. Bruford was choosing to leave Yes, a band with immense commercial potential, for King Crimson, a band with a history of instability and unpredictability. Bruford himself was more interested in artistic pursuits, and the framework of King Crimson appealed to that sensibility in him. Finally, violin, viola and keyboard player David Cross was selected to flesh out the sound of the new band. Rehearsals began in late 1972, and Larks' Tongues in Aspic was released early the next year, and the group spent the remainder of 1973 touring Britain, Europe, and America.
This era of King Crimson demonstrated a kinship with the nascent heavy metal music then developing mainly in the United States and the United Kingdom. Fripp's guitar playing was loud and aggressive, and Bruford's propulsive drumming meshed with Wetton's often powerful bass guitar.
Muir left the group early in 1973, and during the lengthy tour that followed, the remaining members began assembling material for their next album, Starless and Bible Black. By early 1974, the album was finished. Most of the album was recorded from live performances in 1973, with only two full tracks (The Great Deceiver and Lament) and part of another track (The Night Watch) being studio productions, a fact that emphasises King Crimson's essentially live nature. Fripp never felt that recordings of any sort were adequate to capture the atmosphere and energy of a live performance. Another recording of live gigs, USA, was recorded soon afterwards but not released for another year.
David Cross’s place in the group, meanwhile, was coming under pressure. His role as a violin-player had been more important in the earlier days of this version of Crimson, but as the music progressed — and got louder — he increasingly felt his contribution was unheard and sidelined: reduced, as he once said, to being just the electric piano player. He went, leaving the remaining trio to record Red.
Red included former member Mel Collins on soprano saxophone, Robin Miller on oboe and Marc Charig on cornet. Cross appeared on Providence, recorded in its namesake in Rhode Island. Ian McDonald also returned as a session musician on alto saxophone, with plans to rejoin as a full-time member. Fripp, increasingly distracted from Crimson by the writings of the mystic George Gurdjieff, even spoke of being replaced by McDonald. This was the second time in the band's history that Fripp considered leaving the group to continue without him.
The Red line-up never toured, however; two months before the album's release, Robert Fripp announced that King Crimson had ceased to exist. "King Crimson is completely over for ever and ever," he said. Red seemed to be the end of King Crimson. Instead, it was the end of an era.
1980s
Early in 1981, Fripp and Bruford began considering the formation of a new group, to be called Discipline. The two spent some time searching for a bassist, but had little success in recruiting one until Tony Levin stopped by. Levin was known for his session work with John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Peter Gabriel and others, and would have been one of Fripp's first choices had he known Levin was available. King Crimson had its bassist.
During this time, Fripp called up guitarist Adrian Belew, who was on tour with Talking Heads. Fripp had never worked with another guitarist in the same band, so the decision to seek a second guitarist was highly indicative of Fripp's desire to create a sound completely unlike King Crimson. Belew, for his part, was flattered. He would join immediately following his tour with the Talking Heads.
During rehearsals and initial recorded sessions in 1981, Fripp began suspecting that this new band really was King Crimson, despite his decision to call it Discipline. The other members concurred, and so King Crimson was reborn. The group released a trilogy of albums: Discipline, Beat, and Three of a Perfect Pair. Belew was responsible for the vocals, as well as almost all of the lyrics on the three albums, which broke the overall trend for King Crimson in that the songs with lyrics outnumbered instrumental pieces by two to one. Also, with Belew, King Crimson for the first time had a lyricist who was also a performing member of the band.
This version of King Crimson bore some resemblance to new wave music, possibly as a result of Belew's tenure with Talking Heads, often considered progenitors of the genre. Fripp intended to create the sound of a "rock gamelan", with an interlocking rhythmic quality to the paired guitars that he found similar to Indonesian gamelan ensembles.[3]
After Three of a Perfect Pair, King Crimson disbanded for several years. Fripp entered into a series of legal wranglings with his management, and this occupied much of his time, but resulted in the development of Discipline Global Mobile, a company through which King Crimson and various side projects and archives have emerged.
1990s
In 1994, King Crimson re-formed as a sextet, adding two new members to its 1981 lineup. Fripp and Belew continued on guitar, and Levin played bass and Chapman stick; Trey Gunn joined, and played an instrument known as the Warr guitar (similar to the Chapman stick), and drummer Bruford was joined by another percussionist, Pat Mastelotto. This "double trio" formation released a few CDs in the mid 1990s: VROOOM (1994), THRAK (1995), and THRaKaTTaK (1996). The new King Crimson sound was something of a mixture of Discipline-era complementary guitars with the heavy rock feel of 1974's Red. Staging and rehearsing the sextet was an expensive proposition, however; this, combined with the level of experimentation within the band soon contributed to its collapse.
In the late 1990s, Discipline Global Mobile operated as a distinctly artist-friendly label, and featured not only the works of King Crimson, but also of many Crimson side projects. ProjeKcts One, Two, Three, and Four, each a splinter group (a fraKctalisation, according to Fripp) of King Crimson, released various recordings, demonstrating the improvisational musical highwire act that the constituent musicians are able to produce.
DGM also released music by the Rosenbergs and other artists artistically related to King Crimson members. These artists were encouraged to engage in online diaries, now commonly known as blogs. In 1998, DGM created the King Crimson Collector's Club (KCCC), a subscription-based service that released a live recording (originating from soundboard or bootleg recordings) every two months.
2000s
After the ProjeKcts' task was completed, Bruford quit the band, and Levin let his active involvement in King Crimson rest until further notice; this left Belew, Fripp, Gunn, and Mastelotto as the next line-up. Their first studio effort was The ConstruKction of Light (2000), accompanied by another album, Heaven and Earth, which was released under the name ProjeKct X. Heaven and Earth was edited together by Mastelotto from material recorded during the rehearsal and recording period of the studio album.
After the economic reversals of 2000 and 2001, DGM ceased acting as a general label and artist's blog site and refocused its energy on King Crimson. A lengthy The ConstruKction of Light tour was followed by another tour opening for the band Tool and the Level Five tour that served to write, rehearse, and evolve new pieces for the next album. In 2003, the album The Power to Believe was released and toured.
In late November 2003, Trey Gunn announced his departure from the band. Both Robert Fripp and Tony Levin reported that Levin will become active bassist of King Crimson again, starting studio work in April 2004. The current line-up thus is Adrian Belew, Robert Fripp, Tony Levin and Pat Mastelotto.
Music
Fripp, as noted, has described King Crimson as "a way of doing things", and also as "an experiment in organising anarchy". Over a period of 35 years, and many changes in membership, configuration, and instrumentation, King Crimson has maintained a kind of constancy in its musical vision rare among long-lived bands.
Influences
The music of King Crimson was obviously grounded to some extent in the rock of the 1960s, and especially the acid rock and psychedelic music movements. The first King Crimson frequently played Donovan Leitch's Get Thy Bearings, and were known to play The Beatles's Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.
However, where bands like the Beatles and Rolling Stones played more sophisticated forms of American rock, Crimson attempted to "Europeanise" what had previously been an essentially American form of music. To a great extent, they stripped away the blues-based foundation of rock music and replaced it with a foundation based in the modern European symphonic tradition. Though they cast a wide net, two names in particular seem to have had a powerful influence on Crimson's music.
Gustav Holst is the more obvoius of the two on the surface. The first incarnation of King Crimson played the Mars section of Holst's suite The Planets as a regular part of their live set. The influence of Béla Bartók is subtler, but has been referred to many times by Fripp and other band members, and seems more pervasively present in the band's overall musical repertoire. As a result of this influence, their first album is frequently viewed as the nominal starting point of the symphonic rock or progressive rock movements.
Musical themes
Fans have two equal and opposite complaints about each new album or incarnation of the band: either they say that it's nothing like the King Crimson they know and love, or they say that it's exactly like what has gone before, and nothing new has been added. The apparent contradiction can be resolved by understanding that, while King Crimson constantly creates new sounds and new pieces, several themes remain constant from the earliest versions of the band to the present.
The most obvious of these themes is composition by the use of a gradually building rhythmic motif. The Holst Mars that the first King Crimson played is a clear example of this, a complex pulse in 5/8 time with strings and winds — or, as played by King Crimson, mellotron — playing a skirling melody above. This piece transformed into The Devil's Triangle on the In the Wake of Poseidon album, and was followed by many other forms, from The Talking Drum in 1973 all the way to Dangerous Curves in 2003.
A second theme that has remained constant throughout the career of King Crimson is an instrumental piece, often embedded as a break in a song, in which the band plays a passage of a rhythmic complexity that would challenge a group of classically trained musicians working with a conductor. King Crimson's single best-known song, 21st Century Schizoid Man, is an early example of this. Their series of pieces collectively titled Larks' Tongues in Aspic (also including pieces of similar intent, Thrak and Level Five) go deeper into rhythmic complexity, delving into rhythms that wander into and out of synchronisation with each other, to the point where the listener is frequently unable to even count beats, yet somehow all finishing together. (Occasionally these pieces fail onstage; Fripp refers to these failures as "train wrecks".) Perhaps the apex of rhythmic complexity in the King Crimson repertoire was the trilogy of early 1980s albums, which contained gamelan-like rhythmic layers, and continual staccato patterns overlaying each other (a case-in-point being Neal And Jack And Me from Beat).
Other themes harder to document clearly include the composition of insanely difficult passages for individual instruments (especially Fripp's guitar —notably Fracture on Starless and Bible Black); pieces with a loud, aggressive sound not unlike heavy metal music; and the jarring juxtaposition of pretty tunes and ballads with weird, often dissonant, noises.
Improvisation
From the very first, King Crimson performances featured improvisations, in which the music can, and frequently does, go anywhere. These can be imbedded in composed pieces, like 21st Century Schizoid Man or Thrak, but most Crimson performances over the years have included at least one stand-alone improvisation, where the band simply started playing and took the music wherever it went, sometimes including passages of improvised silence (as Bill Bruford's contribution to the improvised Trio). The earliest example of an unambiguously improvising King Crimson on record is the spacious, oft-criticised (as self indulgent) extended middle-section of Moonchild from the first album, in which the composed parts act as bookends to the improv.
Unlike most jazz and rock improvisation or jamming, these sessions are rarely in any sense blues-based. They vary so much in sound that King Crimson has been able to release several albums consisting entirely of improvised music.
Discography
Albums and mini-albums
(Mostly studio recordings, some incorporating live recordings)
- In the Court of the Crimson King (1969)
- In the Wake of Poseidon (1970)
- Lizard (1970)
- Islands (1971)
- Larks' Tongues in Aspic (1973)
- Starless and Bible Black (1974)
- Red (1974)
- Discipline (1981)
- Beat (1982)
- Three of a Perfect Pair (1984)
- VROOOM (1994)
- THRAK (1995)
- The ConstruKction of Light (2000)
- Happy With What You Have to Be Happy With (2002)
- The Power to Believe (2003)
Singles and EPs
(Mostly studio recordings, some incorporating live recordings)
- Cat Food/Groon (1970)
- Atlantic Sampler (1973)
- The Night Watch/The Great Deceiver (1974)
- Epitaph/21st Century Schizoid Man (1976)
- Matte Kudasai (1981)
- Elephant Talk (1981)
- Thela Hun Ginjeet (1981)
- Heartbeat (1982)
- Three of a Perfect Pair/Man With an Open Heart (1984)
- Sleepless (1984)
- Dinosaur (1995)
- People (1995)
- Sex Sleep Eat Drink Dream (1995)
Live albums
(Including compilations and box sets of live material)
- Earthbound (1972)
- USA (1975, recorded 1974)
- The Great Deceiver (4CD set) (1992, recorded 1973-1974)
- B'Boom: Live In Argentina (1995, recorded 1994)
- THRaKaTTaK (1996, recorded 1995)
- Epitaph (4CD set) (1997, recorded 1969)
- The Night Watch (2CD set) (1998, recorded 1973)
- Absent Lovers: Live in Montreal (2CD set) (1998, recorded 1984)
- Cirkus: The Young Persons' Guide to King Crimson Live (2CD set) (1999, recorded 1969-1998)
- Live in Mexico City (released only as a Windows Media Audio download) (1999, recorded 1996)
- The ProjeKcts (4CD set) (1999, recorded 1997-1999)
- The Deception of the Thrush: A Beginners' Guide to ProjeKcts (1999, recorded 1997-1999)
- The Beginners' Guide To The King Crimson Collectors' Club (2000, recorded 1969-1998)
- Heavy ConstruKction (3CD set) (2000)
- VROOOM VROOOM (2CD set) (2001, recorded 1995-1996)
- Level Five (2001)
- Ladies of the Road (2CD set) (2002, recorded 1971-1972)
- EleKtrik: Live in Japan (2003)
The King Crimson Collectors' Club
(Limited release live recordings of concert performances, studio sessions and radio sessions)
- Live at The Marquee (1998, recorded 1969)
- Live at Jacksonville (1998, recorded 1972)
- The Beat Club, Bremen (1999, recorded 1972)
- Live at Cap D'Agde (1999, recorded 1982)
- On Broadway (2CD set) (1999, recorded 1995)
- The VROOOM Sessions (1999, recorded 1994)
- Live at Summit Studios (2000, recorded 1972)
- Live in Central Park, NYC (2000, recorded 1974)
- Live at Moles Club, Bath (2000, recorded 1981)
- Nashville Rehearsals (2000, recorded 1997)
- Live at Plymouth Guildhall (2CD set) (2001, recorded 1971)
- Live in Mainz, Germany (2001, recorded 1974)
- Live in Berkeley, CA (2001, recorded 1982)
- Live in Detroit, MI (2CD set) (2001, recorded 1971)
- Live in Nashville, TN (2002, recorded 2001)
- Live at the Zoom Club (2CD set) (2002, recorded 1972)
- Live in Hyde Park, London (2002, recorded 1969 & 1997)
- The Champaign-Urbana Sessions (2003, recorded 1983)
- Live in Orlando, FL (2CD set) (2003, recorded 1972)
- Live in Guildford (2003, recorded 1972)
- Live at Fillmore East (2004, recorded 1969)
- Live in Philadelphia, PA (2004, recorded 1982)
- Live in Warsaw, Poland (2005, recorded 2001)
Other compilations and box sets
(Mostly studio recordings, some incorporating live recordings)
- A Young Person's Guide to King Crimson (2LP set) (1976)
- The Compact King Crimson (1986)
- Heartbeat: The Abbreviated King Crimson (1991)
- Frame by Frame: The Essential King Crimson (4CD set) (1991)
- Sleepless: The Concise King Crimson (1993)
- The 21st Century Guide To King Crimson - Volume One - 1969-1974 (2004)
Video (DVD and VHS)
- The Noise: Frejus (VHS) (1984, recorded 1982)
- Three of a Perfect Pair: Live in Japan (VHS) (1984, recorded 1984)
- Live in Japan (VHS) (1996, recorded 1995)
- déjà VROOOM (DVD) (1999, recorded 1995)
- Eyes Wide Open (DVD) (2003, recorded 2000 & 2003)
- Neal and Jack and Me (DVD) (2004, recorded 1982 & 1984)
ProjeKcts
For details of recordings by the King Crimson sub-groups known as the ProjeKcts, see the following:
Bibliography
- Robert Fripp: From King Crimson to Guitar Craft, Eric Tamm, Faber and Faber, 1990 (online version of book)
- In the Court of King Crimson, Sid Smith, Helter Skelter Publishing, 2001 (official website)
External links
- King Crimson official website
- Discipline Global Mobile, Robert Fripp's music label with controlling rights to the King Crimson catalog
- Robert Fripp's diary, an online diary of Robert Fripp, the sole musician to have been a member of every line-up of King Crimson
- Elephant Talk, a resource and discussion site
- Krimson News, a site for news, resources, and discussion on King Crimson
- ProjeKction, a resource and discussion site
- King Crimson Live, containing information about King Crimson and related live performances and recordings
- 21st Century Schizoid Band, a group made up principally of musicians who were members of King Crimson between 1969 and 1972