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June 29, 1984  |
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Mann Music Centre Philadelphia, PA |
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Notes
“So you like that weird stuff?” asks Ade after an exceptionally good rendition of Industry. “Well here’s some more” he quips before launching into Dig, arguably one of the most musically schizophrenic tracks King Crimson have ever recorded. In concert, those opposing factions – pop song colliding against atonal slabs of noise terror – seem even more stark and contradictory than they ever did in the studio.
Frame By Frame has an almost laid-back quality that belies the frenetic fretwork that constitutes much of the song. After the bleeps, bloops and vworp noises have emanated from Bruford’s Simmonds kit on Indiscipline, Fripp’s solo after the first verse is a real scorcher. Mind you, Belew steps up to the plate when it’s time for his outing on the same track, proving that a little bit of competition clearly never does anyone any harm.
Although Tony’s intro on Sartori In Tangier wanders into some unexpected territorie, he sets that trademark thump of a groove providing the foundation for a fearsome series of runs from Fripp. Mister Stormy calls this a stomping performance and so it is. Sadly the source tape is incomplete so buyer beware – Sleepless and LTIA2 are missing entirely, and we only have a fragment of what sounds like a promising rendition of Elephant Talk. Nevertheless, this good quality boot captures our canny Crims just nine days before their demise at The Spectrum in Montreal.
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| Tracks
* source recording is incomplete
All previews are MP3 192kbps
Personnel
Robert Fripp
Adrian Belew
Tony Levin
Bill Bruford
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Audio Source: Bootleg Cassette
DGM Audio Quality Rating:     
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Fan Reviews
      Ah, where are they now?, Mon., Dec 15, 2008
Written by PiperbonesJones
I had the bright idea of taking my wife and an about to be wedded couple to this show in order to find out how qualitatively different Crimson was live than on the vinyl I was still spinning in those days.
I think my wife said something along the lines: "never again!" And my friends just looked at me tolerantly since I was providing them a sfe lift homeward after the show.
True, it was earthshakingly loud but one of the finest live performances I’ve seen from the band in my years of (continued) fandom. It was notable for me for a number of reasons: first, it was neat seeing Jon Anderson open up live. Sad to say that, for me, something was missing from the performance though it’s great to hear his songs. But between his show and the arrival of the Crim there was some wonderful acoustic music that I found out later was the Kora Duets of Senegambia.
When the lights went down, I seem to recall "Waiting Man" as the opening number. Not sure if these live recordings have resequenced set lists or not. For me, the hightlights were the performances of "Sartori in Tangiers" and "Indiscipline" -- inspiring music that thunders awe. This will bein the library for sure.
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