| |
 |
July 31, 1982  |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
| |
The Convention Hall Asbury Park, New Jersey |
| |
Notes
Fresh from the success of the previous evening in Philadelphia (captured for posterity on KCCC26), Crimson headed to the Convention Hall in Asbury Park. An awful lot about the band had changed since Fripp and Bruford were last in the neighbourhood back in 1974: songs about the Beat generation, electronic percussives, twin-guitar synth-noise terror, the whole rock-gamelan groove thang and a dazzling New Wave chutzpah that confounded some critics and old-school fans alike.
This is a confident Crimson retaining its reputation for experimentation by pushing the song format to the limit with fiery versions of Indiscipline and Neurotica. For all its interlocking angularity, Neal And Jack And Me is played to perfection on this gig, knocking several spots off the version that had only recently been released on Beat. Sartori has Fripp coming in low and lean but quickly running out of fretboard as the Turkish trumpet dervish gets a-twirling. Despite the newness of the sounds, Larks’ Tongues In Aspic sounds very much at home here in Asbury Park. The only note of caution here is that what sounds like a world-class rendition of Frame By Frame is cruelly cut short when the 8-track conked out.
Nevertheless this is a vital reinterpretation of what a rock group could achieve by mixing contrasting cultural influences and the pushing the timbral palette. Nobody sounded like this band at the time.
|
| Tracks
* source recording is incomplete
All previews are MP3 192kbps
Personnel
Adrian Belew - Guitars, Drums, and Lead Vocal
Bill Bruford - Acoustic and Electric Drums & Percussion
Robert Fripp - Guitar
Tony Levin - Bass, Chapman Stick, Synth, and Backing Vocal
|
|
Audio Source: 8 Track Reel To Reel
DGM Audio Quality Rating:       
Average Customer Rating:
      
Submit a Review
|
Fan Reviews
      Asbury Park, Wed., Sep 23, 2009
Written by keeves
This is the finest performance I think I have from the 80’s four piece. The band seemed to change between Beat and TOAPP yet here, there are breathtaking versions of all of my favourites from the time, Howler, Sheltering Sky, Sartori, and the Chordal blasts of Red and LTIA are ROUSING! Never before have I heard so many tracks that are superior to the studio version on one concert. The drum intro to Indiscipline sounds like Duran’s Wild Boys - not to appear for another three years... ooer! This is the definitive gig for that band - all that is missing (obviously) is Sleepless and TOAPP. Buy it and tell me I’m wrong.
MORE FAN REVIEWS
|