King Crimson In The Court Of The Crimson King (Vinyl - 2 copies, Island and Vertigo Records, 1969) ***** King Crimson Epitaph Volumes One & Two (2CD, Virgin Records, 1970) ***
King Crimson In The Wake Of Poseidon (CD, Virgin Records, 1970) ****
King Crimson Lizard (Vinyl, UMG Music, 1970) ****
King Crimson Lark's Tongue In Aspic (CD, Virgin Records, 1973) *****
King Crimson Red (CD, Island Records, 1974) ***
King Crimson Beat (Vinyl EG Records, 1982) ****
Genre: Prog rock
Places I remember: Real Groovy, Spellbound Wax Company (Lizard)
Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Epitaph (In The Court Of The Crimson King)
Gear costume: Exiles (Lark's Tongue In Aspic)
They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Part 4
Active compensatory factors: The band and their catalogue are not for the faint hearted. Line-ups, the complex music, the albums, reissues, archive material - all labyrinthine in the extreme.
I have quite a few King Crimson albums, but I am really just scratching the surface.
Formed in London in 1968 by leader Robert Fripp with Michael Giles (drums), Greg Lake (bass and vocals), Ian McDonald (various horns, flute and keyboards) and the lyricist - Peter Sinfield, it was a great start with In The Court Of The Crimson King (1969) - still their most commercially successful album.
It's a five star classic all the way. First song 21st Century Schizoid Man was the kind of noisy thing the band would expand upon later but for now it's that and some beautiful songs that never get old. I don't care how many times I hear Epitaph - it's gorgeous song.
The album called Epitaph Volumes One & Two is a collection of stuff from 1969 - BBC radio sessions and live at Fillmore East and Fillmore West. The set includes 3 different versions of 21st Century Schizoid Man, and 3 Epitaphs, plus other tracks.
In The Wake Of Poseidon was their second album and the last with Greg Lake before he formed Emerson Lake & Palmer. It starts out with a big noisy moment again and then settles into some quieter songs, including Cat Food (a single) before ending with a bolero style ambient piece. Weird, and very King Crimson.
The third studio album was Lizard, also in 1970. The guys were prolific, as was the turnover in musicians already. It gets pretty crazy and I'm not about to unravel it here.
I love a lot of Lizard - it's willfully experimental and truly progressive in its approach. The packaging is also superb. I bought a re-released version and the vinyl version is the only way to go!
Lark's Tongue In Aspic was released in 1973. It lulls you into a false calm before launching into brutal riffs that shake the foundations. Its tension amid the freeform experimentation is delicious! This is a key album in the band's catalogue as, roughly, the third incarnation of the band gets underway.
This is the formation responsible for the great Lark's Tongue In Aspic (is there a better title to an album ever?): Fripp; John Wetton (bass, vocals); Bill Bruford (drums); David Cross (keyboards, strings, flute); Jamie Muir (percussion). A five star classic!
Red breaks with tradition and actually has Fripp and two other Crims on the cover! Shock horror!! John Wetton and Robert Fripp are almost smiling for goodness sake! Bill Bruford remains cool and impassive as great drummers do.
This one is noisier and more hyper than previous albums so it's not one I reach for especially.
Beat, however, is cool in a Talking Heads kind of funky way. The title reflects the interest in the so-called Beat Poets from San Francisco, so there is a lyrical unity to the album and that helps!
Where do they all belong? Definitely a cornerstone of the progressive rock world. King Crimson stand apart from the other titans, inhabiting their own distinct world.
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