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June 25, 2000  |
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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.
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I still remember that show Wed., Oct 7, 2009
Posted by: Zongadude
Thank you for finally releasing the one and only KC show I’ve ever attended. I’ve been waiting for this for 9 years. :)
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One of the best.. Mon., Sep 7, 2009
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Thx Mon., Sep 7, 2009
Posted by: fhc339835
Thank you for making another show I was attending available for download (after Montreux a couple of weeks ago). The show was really excellent, even the venue is neither comfortable, nor has a good reputation for acoustics in the Frankfurt Read more
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For an off night.... Mon., Jun 29, 2009
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... this is a pretty remarkable presentation of material I used to be familiar with. In so doing, Robert and Team Crim continue to make good on their promise deliver the efforts, warts and Read more
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Great mix for the download verison Mon., Apr 20, 2009
Posted by: gasmrv
Great care has been taken to do the mixing of this download version. Here you don’t get the volume drop you do get on the DVD version after the 2 track Read more
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