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| Greg Tours The UK |
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| :: Posted by SId Smith on Sat., Mar 31, 2012 |
Greg Lake has announced he will be touring in the UK during November 2012. Check out Greg's website for the dates scheduled so far.
More news
Displaying 4164 items (Viewing 21 to 30 of 4164)
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Court's Counterbalance
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Sat., Jun 1, 2013
Here's an entertaining account of listening to In The Court Of The Crimson King from the pages of PopMatters.
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Let Your Fingers Do The Talking
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Sat., Jun 1, 2013
Tony Levin’s funk fingers are being made once again. Check out the manufacturer’s website here.
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NIN News
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Fri., May 31, 2013
Trent Reznor talks about his latest projects over in Pitchfork with news that Adrian Belew is guesting on the new album only and not touring with the band as first reported.
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The Power To Believe Covered
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Fri., May 31, 2013
PJ Crook's apocalyptic artwork for The Power To Believe comes under The Dork Report's spotlight.
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Fripp Steals The Show
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Fri., May 31, 2013
That's the verdict of Uncut's editor, Allan Jones in this piece from Uncut's website. The review from The Observer Jones mentioned in his piece can be found here.
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Staring At The Dark Energy Of Sound - OCG Reviewed
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Fri., May 31, 2013
The OCG VII's performance at Cambridge is reviewed here. My thanks also to foonon for sending in this take on the OCG in New York.
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Mister Stormy's Monday Selection
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Mon., May 27, 2013
Ever wanted to hear all those rolls and fills Michael Giles played on the coda to the title track of In The Wake Of Poseidon isolated from all the other instruments except the bass? Well now you can.
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RF & The OCG VII In NY
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Mon., May 27, 2013
My thanks to guestbook regular Emory for posting this impression of last night's performance by the OCG VII in New York.
"Well, that was quite a little event, there at St Mark’s Church. Actually,
most of the time I can tell if an event is going to work for me even
before the band shows up: The audience present has a lot to do with
whether I can fully participate given the feeling. But in that church
(quite historic in NYC, actually, as Peter Stuyvesant I believe is
buried there), there was a really cool crowd. Yes, the occasional warmed
over Crimhead, but I really didn’t get the feeling that anyone expected
anything other than the kinds of things we experienced. And, there were
women!
When the Orchestra came out they were lead by an
intense-looking Frida Khalo-eque lady, which spoke volumes about the
event and how it came to be.
Wait, to back up: Before the
guitarists came out there were 5 or 6 people who asked the audience not
to record or photograph the event, flash or no, in numerous languages
(French, Italian, Spanish, English, German). But when the Orchestra came
out, before we saw them we could hear them for several minutes in
advance and then they came out up on the balcony of the church. Oddly
and incomprehensibly, I found myself almost panicking: I need to take
out my phone to video this! This need to be captured on video! That
feeling lasted maybe 5 minutes, and in all my years of attending musical
performances I have never felt that way before.
The
’performance’ itself was fascinating, and arguably the logical
conclusion to all that Fripp has always hammered the universe about, in
terms of commerce, money, payment and so on. What we saw and experienced
wasn’t so much a series of tunes (ie, like the Crafty Guitarists), but
really just a public recital of the work Guitar circlists do on the
Courses. It was 75% improvised and, as such, fascinating and alive and
totally contrary to the usual transaction that is musical performance
these days. Far more chaos was tolerated than I would have thought, and I
found it all refreshing. What we "paid for", then, wasn’t so much to be
entertained but, instead, we audients collectively took on the cost of
this public recital, which I imagine would have been impossible
otherwise. If one understood this going in, one received exactly what
one paid for.
As for the circulation of the silence, I tried very
hard to hear it but found I could not (over and above the movement of
the bodies, of course), though for perhaps 2 or 3 seconds I heard it try
to lock in, but for me it didn’t.
Oh, and having the performance in the afternoon really made it special, for some reason. That made it very un-show-like."
meanwhile over on Facebook, Patrick Grant offers this account.
"This afternoon was one of the most beautiful concerts I've ever witnessed. The music of course, but the way it was played and presented. I heard drums, harps, pianos.
When you all first came in, in the balcony, I was convinced it was electronic, but that didn't make sense exactly. The presence of the performer was fascinating. Mr. Fripp's demeanor… The mini-concert in the midst of the mass movement, and all that movement: I would love to talk about the basis of the movement. People knew what they were doing; the directions were clear, and I'm sure there were created moments where the performer had the "freedom" to make a decision. Some of our Living actions are like that. I'm always looking for new forms, and saw a lot today. Tell whoever that I'm now a believer. Frippery?"
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Fripp On The Box
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Sat., May 25, 2013
Robert Fripp is one of the contributors to David Bowie - Five Years screening at 9.20 p.m. on BBC2 tonight.
Digital Spy lists Robert Fripp as one of the reasons as to why David Bowie - Five Years is a must-watch show. "Of all the guys and girls we hear from, The Elephant Man
director Jack Hofsiss and Carlos Alomar ("This was the whitest man I'd
ever seen!") certainly deserve special mention, but the complete
standout is King Crimson's Robert Fripp. There's nothing quite like a
guitar legend who looks (and sounds) like a retired bank manager, calmly
swearing as he recalls Bowie and Brian Eno asking him to play some
"hairy rock 'n' roll" on "Heroes". "What is the difference between pop and rock and roll?" Fripp says gently. "You might get f**ked." Blimey!" You can read the other reasons to watch the show here.
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