Archive for the 'King Crimson' Category

Belew with Zappa

Thursday, October 18th, 2007

Keeping in sync with my current obsession with everything King Crimson, I found this memory posted by Adrian Belew on his blog about one of his last meetings with Frank Zappa. Adrian Belew, who joined King Crimson in the early eighties, was in Zappa’s band in the seventies.

Adrian Belew is also featured in this short documentary about Zappa’s music (probably filmed in the late seventies). In the interview, Zappa is caustic, angry, irreverent, pretentious, petulant, and wonderfully Zappa – just what you would expect.

Fashion

Thursday, October 18th, 2007

Aside from his work with King Crimson, Robert Fripp also has a solo career that has spawned some interesting collaborations with an eclectic host of characters, including pop legend David Bowie. Bowie’s ultra-hip single “Fashion,” with accompanying oh-so-eighties video, features wild Fripp interjections (the slick guitar lines are not Fripp, the wild noise and dissonance are).

21st Century Schizoid Man

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

Like I said in an earlier post, King Crimson has been around since the sixties and has been through a billion changes in the lineup. The incarnation in this video (for the classic and awesome “21st Century Schizoid Man”) features Greg Lake on vocals and bass. Greg Lake went on to super-stardom in the seventies as the “L” in ELP (Emerson, Lake and Palmer) and then as a part of Asia in the eighties (remember them – “Heat of the Moment” – with the dude from Yes on guitar). The vocals are run through a fuzz box, hence the cool sound.

Also dig the hippies.

Elephant Talk

Tuesday, October 16th, 2007

There is nothing cooler then King Crimson. Always the special project of founding member and guitar legend Robert Fripp, King Crimson bridged the gap between the insane, supreme musicianship, and pop (how they ever found a mainstream audience is just proof that masses of cool people do exists – you just have to know where to find them).

King Crimson went through a number of different incarnations over the years – the one I was introduced to was the 80’s version featuring Fripp, experimental guitar wizard Adrian Belew, Tony Levin (on Stick and bass), and Bill Bruford (drums).

Check them out – Adrian Belew did a lot of work with the Talking Heads, and the influence on his vocals is obvious. But that is where the comparison ends (aside from his pink suit), the odd sounds, complex time signatures and dissonance are classic Crimson.