 |
June 25, 2000  |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
| |
Olympia Paris, France |
Crimson In Paris April 13, 2005
Written by John Bungey
OF THE once pioneering bands of English progressive rock, King Crimson are the great survivors. While Yes, Genesis and the Moody Blues long ago gave up musical adventures for the gentler pastures of Radio 2, nostalgia or the golf course, Crimson are still hacking their way down unfamiliar paths.
Not that Robert Fripp, the hugely gifted, notoriously prickly guitarist leading this umpteenth incarnation would thank you for lumping his efforts under the dread label "prog rock". Certainly in Paris we are a world away from the dopey concept albums and terrible trousers of the genre's heyday. Crimson 2000 are a lean and mean four-piece, whose agile manoeuvres - from heavy metal to ambient to avant-garde - at no point threaten a return to the Court of the Crimson King.
Fripp sits on his customary stool expressionless, refusing to acknowledge the audience, only his hands moving. As he clangs through Lark's Tongue in Aspic Part IV it's hard not to sympathise with those who wonder how a happily married, middle-aged man living in a Dorset mansion can produce music of such fury.
The rest of the team is American: Adrian Belew is the genial front man, Pat Mastelotto plays electronic drums which sometimes sound like the future, sometimes like dustbins being thwacked, and are probably a mistake. The bass parts and a lot else come from Trey Gunn playing a ten-string super-guitar.
The band's musical interests lie in intricate guitar interplay and dense, shifting rhythm patterns, with melody and harmony rather lower on the agenda. Fripp once grandly announced that Crimson was an experiment to see how Hendrix would have sounded playing Bartok, and as he skitters through the dissonant breakneck run of FraKctured (sic) from the new ConstruKction of Light album you understand what he's aiming for.
Of course, what this approach also means is that you don't get that traditional rock show staple, the hummable tune. Belew's voice has to negotiate determinedly obtuse melody lines in Into the Frying Pan and ProzaKc Blues, a brutish mutated 12-bar. Nor do the band play the old repertoire. Only during the three encores do Crimson perform anything from earlier than 1994, ending with a mighty rendition of David Bowie's Heroes, a tune on which Fripp played guitar back in 1977.
The current tour won't be coming to Britain - save for a lone date at the Shepherds Bush Empire, London, on July 3. Economics and Fripp's long-held distrust of the English music press and, indeed, the expectations of English audiences, have conspired to keep the band away. It's a shame because far from the gaze of the czars of popular taste, this wayward outfit is conjuring up utterly individual, occasionally astonishing music.
More Articles
Your search found 151 items (Viewing 11 to 20 of 151)
| Fan Review |
KC and Tool in Portland Wed., Jul 18, 2012
Posted by: sqeele
The staff at the Schnitzer concert hall were really frightened. They were not used to Toolfan, who is a little too close to Insane Clown Posse Fan for comfort. There was a long backup at the metal detectors, Read more
|
| Fan Review |
A Good Night Mon., Jun 25, 2012
Posted by: hamdemon
I had lost track of Crimson’s albums since 1984 and was unfamiliar with the newer material. I was completely taken aback as I heard some of the best music this band has ever Read more
|
| Fan Review |
Thank you! Fri., Jun 8, 2012
Posted by: TonyKoera
Thank you so much! I’ve been waiting years for this!
I would exchange all these songs to hear Red from this gig though :) Very unfortunate that it is not available.
BR,
Toni Read more
|
| Fan Review |
Returning to this night after >10 years Sat., Mar 3, 2012
Posted by: PyramidHead
I’m the Ryan who initially wrote that review. It doesn’t seem so long ago! Listening back to this event, I realize how much Adrian steals the show throughout. His "Frying Pan" performance is superb from start to finish, and he Read more
|
| Fan Review |
odd, that Sat., Feb 4, 2012
Posted by: dubhthaigh
There are 2 Crim shows I’ve attended that stood out as signal changers. Signalling what, not sure I can articulate, but even the long suffering wife dragged criminally against her will to decades of KC adventures observed after this one: Read more
|
| Fan Review |
if you can't buy 'em all... Thu., Feb 2, 2012
Posted by: jacethecrowl
I couldn’t spend a bundle on the bundle, so I went with this one based on the setlist (unimpeachable in my book, and the only one with "Oyster Read more
|
| Fan Review |
Welcom to prom night! Mon., Jan 30, 2012
Posted by: mnewstrom
The title was Adrian’s salute to the venue, very a propos for the seated audience who were in fine fettle that evening. For me, fresh from a distressed period of my life, this was a very necessary Read more
|
| Fan Review |
Los Angeles, California October 24, 2000
Posted by: mjallen
My favorite show of that era. This show is funny, especially creative, and the sound quality is pleasant to listen to and not as digitally in your face as some of the later Crim Read more
|
| Fan Review |
Heaven & Hell Unleashed Mon., Oct 17, 2011
Posted by: TheMarkedMan
I’m not ashamed to say that when Thrak hit the retailers in 1995 and I purchased my copy I didn’t buy in to what I was hearing. Sometimes what we are seeking internally, perhaps even spiritually is not aligned Read more
|
| Fan Review |
Amazing! Thu., Sep 1, 2011
Posted by: pinkmilk
Short but beautiful concert of this wonderful quartet that brings out all its sonic potential in this evening to be framed as one of the best performances of the tour. Songs are played masterfully with a focus on the rhythm Read more
|
<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Next >> |