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P2 At Albany Again
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Mon., Feb 20, 2012

My thanks to J Eric Smith for sending in this marvelous review of P2 playing Albany. You can hear the gig that Eric is writing about here.



Eric writes "I was a music critic (for better or worse) in Albany, New York for many years. My wife and I recently relocated to Des Moines, Iowa, and as part of launching a web presence in my new home community, I have been reviewing old archives of my work for items that might lend themselves to new purposes. I found a ProjeKCt Two live review (copied below) while digging through old floppy discs and files, and thought I would share it here, since I have not seen many other formal newsprint reviews from that era posted here. It was a lovely show, one that I still cite as one of my all-time favorite live performances.

****************************

ProjeKct Two
Valentine’s Music Hall, Albany, New York, May 8, 1998
Copyright 1998, J. Eric Smith (Originally appeared in Metroland, The Alternative Newsweekly of Northeastern New York)

"OK, now we’ve played everything we don’t know,so we can play something that we actually do know," announced electronic drummer Adrian Belew at the end of ProjeKct Two’s second all-instrumental, all-improvised set. Belew, 10-string Warr guitarist Trey Gunn and electric six-string guitarist Robert Fripp then encored with King Crimson’s "Vrooom," an angular number originally created by Fripp, Belew, Gunn and their Crimson bandmates Tony Levin, Bill Bruford and Pat Mastelotto.
 
As nice as it was to hear "Vrooom," the true value of the encore was to place the evening’s improvisational extravaganza in context by providing a single sample of how ProjeKct Two sounded when tackling a fully developed and structured instrumental piece. Frankly speaking, the encore paled in comparison to the 90 minutes of music preceding it, as its rehearsed complexities and nuances were nowhere near as impressive as the knotty, towering sound collages that ProjeKct Two created on the fly as the rapt audience watched and listened.
 
Fripp, Belew and Gunn were watching and listening to each other as well, and much of the thrill of this concert came from witnessing the interactions between these deeply talented musicians who have played together long enough to anticipate each other’s thoughts, sometimes before they eve realize that they’ve had them. Belew or Fripp typically opened each number with a drum or guitar pattern that the other musicians would would investigate, mount and ride, sometimes to loud and uplifting summits, sometimes to quiet, scary grottoes, sometimes back to the point at which they started. It was actually harrowing to experience in many cases, as the trio careened just on this side of control as they rode, the looks on their faces indicating that it was just as thrilling (and frightening) for them as it was their audience.
 
As important as technical prowess was to the concert’s success, mention must also be made of ProjeKct Two’s technological proficiancy. Belew was playing the latest generation of Roland virtual drums, allowing him to create a seemingly infinite number of sonic assaults as he clattered and rattled along with a look-Ma-I’ve-got drums grin on his face. (Understandable, given that he’s normally a guitarist.) Gunn matched Belew’s rhythmic and textural intensity as he tapped, stroked and and beat the touchboard of his Warr guitar.
 
Fripp spun out any number of his trademark spine-tingling sustained guitar lines but also used the treatment technology he has developed over the years via his Soundscape and Frippertronic performance experiments to create a wealth of tones and intonations. At times, the bands’ sounds were so far skewed from what your eyes were reporting to your brain that it was almost psychologically easier to look at the floor and imagine that Fripp was playing cluster chords on some beaten-up jazz-hall piano while Gunn blew on a baritone sax and Belew kept time by tapping on whisky bottles and ashtrays. Crazy, man, crazy.
 
All told, ProjeKct Two’s concert was a magnificent one, and I must confess to feeling great relief in being able to report that. Why? Because Robert Fripp’s written and recorded works have done more to shape both how I listen to and how I think about music than have any other artist’s over the last two decades, although I never actually stood in the same space with Fripp until last Friday. So imagine the potential for debilitating disappointment at this show, and then imagine the transcendent relief and joy when it didn’t come to pass. It literally moved me to tears. And how often can a wordless concert do that?"
 


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Wetton Performs KC Numbers
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Thu., Mar 7, 2013
John Wetton will be appearing as a special guest on four European dates by American outfit District 97 to sing a few Crimson numbers. The dates are happening in May and you check them out by taking a peek at D97s website.  


Tony Talks Stick Men & Bowie
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Wed., Mar 6, 2013
There's a brand new interview with Tony Levin which you can read here. 


Greg Talks Crim
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Tue., Mar 5, 2013
Greg Lake tells Rolling Stone in this interview that he'd be happy to have KC '69 to reform. 


Mister Stormy's Monday Selection
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Mon., Mar 4, 2013
Have you ever wanted to hear take one of The Night Watch? Well now you can! 


Steven Wilson's Chart Topper
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Mon., Mar 4, 2013
Congratulations to Steven Wilson whose new album, The Raven That Refused To Sing (And Other Stories) is currently residing in the number one slot of the UK’s rock album charts. The album features Theo Travis on flute, sax and clarinet, as well as backing vocals from Jakko Jakszyk amongst the line-up.


Jakszyk & Hackett
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Fri., Mar 1, 2013
Jakko Jakszyk is featured in a new video singing lead vocals on Entangled from Steve Hackett's recently released album, Genesis Revisited II.  


All About The Raven That Refused To Sing
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Fri., Mar 1, 2013
Steven Wilson's new album, The Raven That Refused To Sing (And Other Stories), featuring Theo Travis, has been reviewed by John Kelman at All About Jazz. 


More On Markus
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Thu., Feb 28, 2013
The Europa String Choir, whose debut album The Starving Moon was released by DGM in 1995, are featured in a clip from this Markus Reuter documentary. You can find out more about the Older Than God film here.

Meanwhile, attempts to raise money for a performance and recording of an orchestral version of Reuter's epic Todmorden 513 by the Colorado Chamber Orchestra are going well but still need support. Find out more here.


Google Streaming Welcomed By Universal
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Thu., Feb 28, 2013
Good news for the upper echelons in the music industry as the old boss pals around with the new boss. 


A Reading Device For Robert?
:: Posted by Sid Smith on Thu., Feb 28, 2013
My thanks to Squidgybumpkin for sending this. "I wonder if Robert would like this reading device for his numerous studies. Not sure how portable it is though." 


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