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Guest Agent of Oblivion
Posted

What I've heard I'll leave at "ehhhhh..."

Posted
Adrian Belew is playing here in August. I've never listened to any of his solo work.

 

"Eh" pretty much covers it, but there are some high spots throughout. I like the title track on Young Lions (probably his strongest album), African chanting be damned. You might dig the Bowie collab from that album as well, "Pretty Pink Rose."

 

He also has (or had) a tendency to play some of his Crimson work on his solo tours - one of his albums had live cuts of "Three of a Perfect Pair" and "Dinosaur", IIRC.

Posted

Upon further inspection, I guess he's got a new run of albums out with Les Claypool and the drummer from Tool on board. That definitely sounds like an intriguing lineup - do you know if that's the group that's performing at your concert?

Posted

I'm listening to Side One right now. It sounds a lot like Discipline-era KC, though a little more "21st century," I guess. The lack of Fripp's guitar sets it apart, of course; Belew's voice is nowhere near as manic as it was a quarter century ago, but I'm sure age has something to do with that.

 

I'm digging it so far, but I dunno how it'll hold up. Plus, in a live setting, this sounds like it could easily turn into jam band nonsense.

 

edit: I should note that he'll be playing a venue that usually books jam bands. Hence, my concern.

Guest Agent of Oblivion
Posted

That's an odd one. "Heartbeat" and "Neurotica" are about as far from one another as two songs by the same band on the same album can get. Have you listened to Three of a Perfect Pair yet?

Posted

I haven't, though I'll get to it sooner than later. I'm currently listening to Beat for the second time today; I think I'll rank it higher than Discipline. I'm glad I followed my whim yesterday and bought this, sound unheard. It's paying off.

Guest Agent of Oblivion
Posted

Better than Discipline? Oh I can't help you at all with that one.

Posted

It is a tough call

 

"Elephant Talk", "Frame by Frame", "Matte Kudesai" and "Sheltering Sky" vs. "Neal and Jack and Me", "Sartori in Tangier", "Waiting Man" and "Neurotica"

 

One thing though is that (as with most KC) the live performances of songs from the 80's trilogy are far superior to the studio recordings (most notably on Absent Lovers)

Posted

Even though that is definitely true for the 80's era, you could almost make that argument for just about anything that King Crimson has ever put out, as the group has a ridiculous live repertoire.

 

As far as ranking the 80's albums goes, I'd still consider Discipline to be the strongest of the era by a large margin, with Three of a Perfect Pair and Beat hanging around on a second tier. Maybe I need to give Beat another spin - it's been awhile since I heard "Sartori in Tangier" anyway.

Guest Agent of Oblivion
Posted

It's really good, but Incandenza's still nuts for the >Discipline thing.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Having shuffled through both Beat and Three of a Perfect Pair on the way to work the last couple of weeks, I've come to the following conclusions:

 

1. "Three of a Perfect Pair" is still my favorite song from the 80's KC run and, the more that I listen to it, the more that I think it's probably one of my three favorite KC songs overall. In fact, it's one of the only studio recordings that comes close to trumping the live version, if only because of the super-glitchy guitar solo.

 

2. The beginning of "Sartori in Tangier" is used in the first episode of The Maxx cartoon that used to run on MTV Oddities. Hot damn.

 

3. Beat does happen to be better than I remember it, though I still can't go listen to the rest of the album after "Neurotica" without wincing. The second half of "Waiting Man" is a little bit of a drag as well, once they introduce the modern drums. "Heartbeat" and "Neal and Jack and Me" have aged much better than at first glance, though.

 

4. Outside of the title track, "Sleepless", and "Man With An Open Heart", you can probably safely file away the rest of Three of a Perfect Pair and forget about it. I may have had a soft spot for "Lark's Tongue in Aspic: Part III" a few years ago, but that affection is a long time gone.

 

5. Discipline still trumps them both, even though I like the production on it the least. The title track might be the weakest track on the album and it's miles ahead of "Dig Me" or "The Howler" or any of the other second-half garbage on the other two albums.

Guest Felonies!
Posted

I'm loving Larks' Tongues in Aspic so far.

Guest Agent of Oblivion
Posted

Really? I think that's a great album, but it's not very lovable. I think it's the weakest of that set of records, with way too many slowdowns during the improvs. Red tends to have this really consistent pace, minus "Providence" which serves as a nice break.

Guest Felonies!
Posted

I see what you're saying, but I really liked it nonetheless, especially the cool gamelan-style percussion in the beginning.

 

I'm going to check out Red next.

Guest Agent of Oblivion
Posted

Czech, as much of a jazz-friendly prog dork as you can be, I'm genuinely surprised you haven't already hit this band. Chrissakes, just start buying their records.

Posted

I don't mind John Wetton as much as I once did. He's still the weakest link (for his voice, not his bass) from that era of Crimson, but I find myself having little trouble getting through the stretch of vocal tracks on LTIA as I would have a few months ago.

Guest Agent of Oblivion
Posted

Have you sampled any of the Peter Sinfield led material yet?

Guest Felonies!
Posted

I have:

In the Court of the Crimson King

In the Wake of Poseidon

Larks' Tongues in Aspic

Discipline

Beat

Three of a Perfect Pair

Guest Agent of Oblivion
Posted

Nowhere near the levels of the debut or Poseidon, but yeah, it's there.

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