Robert Fripp

Robert Fripp's Diary

Thursday 07 March 2013

Super Audio Mastering Mnks Withecombe

11.55

Super Audio Mastering, Mnks Withecombe, Chagford, Devon.

7mar1v.jpg

Rising 07.15 to a misty, damp Dartmoor morning. Exceptionally tasty breakfast of the Monk’s Withecombe variety served by Mrs. Heyworth.

Over to the Studio c. 09.35. The Team I…

7mar2v.jpg

II...

7mar3v.jpg

III...

7mar4v.jpg

Today’s work: mastering the stereo mix of Red. Appropriately, the inbox has an e-mail from Johnny the W, Bass Beast of Terror, enquiring as to the date of our next coffee afternoon.

Finetuning Red, the title track. Oh! the responsibilities of dealing with classic releases. What to do? Simply, abandon concern and embrace the music as if for the first time.

Fallen Angel. Now, One More Red Nightmare.

13.04 Providence: on this day, 39 years later, I find very exciting. The boys are rocking out, going places that would probably have sounded rather strange to most of the audients present in Rhode Island.

13.07 Starless… the guitar theme of Starless.  So, what is Starless? No doubt, many views available in response. My own, today: a meditation on dying. Not death, but the process of dying. During the sessions, the guitarist was himself in process of dying - to his professional life - and planning for Sherborne House. Everything was different after that.

Die that ye might be born!

Whatever the witterings of the same guitarist 39 years later, the guitar theme is as short a presentation of the subject as I can easily imagine and, hearing it, my state immediately changes; the timbre as much as the notes. A door swings open…

This is the first song where John became a singer, rather than a bass player who took on singing, IMO.

Young people can be more direct than the post-mature.

Of the three line-ups usually viewed as classic Crim (1969, 1972-74, 1981-84) it seems that the 1972-74 band tends to be the favourite of other players. It occupies a particular space, and holds it: the space remains open today. I am not nostalgic about it, but it has a – something.

14.22 An excellent tasty lunch.

14.32    The Death Of Prog! Steven Wilson’s term: the relentlessly dismal single-note anti-guitar solo (Simon’s term) at the beginning of the Starless instrumental section is underway. When it moves to overdrive, continuing with single notes, there is nothing dismal about it al all.

14.59 The best version of the instrumental section I have heard. Stomped, squerned and wernoed flat.

16.59    A through-listen. Red strode forward as if it were recorded by a young band yesterday, but I don’t hear young bands that sound like this. And then it kept going. Quite an achievement IMO.

Now glued together

17.41    Onto Three Of A Perfect Pair.

19.07    TOAPP: one of my favourite late-period songs.

Model Man.

Industrial Zones I & II werned. Onto IZ III. These are improvs from the studio sessions off Queensway in the Autumn of 1983, now prepared as bonus tracks.

19.25    Industrial Zone III is pretty much a furious Billy B drum solo.

20.03 Back in my apartment and wi-fi is not.

20.16    And wi-fi is.

7mar5v.jpg

23.04    Also a little practicing. The First Secondary Exercise seems to be limitless in its extrapolations.

DISCOVER THE DGM HISTORY
.

1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
.