Discipline
Best song: Indiscipline
Worst song: I like them all, but Frame By Frame?
Overall grade: 6
Ah, King Crimson. I’m going to miss reviewing them. A band
so inconsistent that they can’t even be consistent in their inconsistency… this
album is almost as good as the last one! Of course, it’s allowed, because this
came after a seven-year hiatus during which the band was broken up “for good”
and during which Robert Fripp was doing solo stuff (which incidentally, is also
pretty good) and, unsurprisingly, there’s been another lineup change. Tony
Levin has replaced John Wetton on bass and the wonderful Adrian Belew has
joined us to play guitar and sing (aren’t we lucky?!)
Seriously, two thirds of the ‘Red’ trio might still be
around, but 80s King Crimson is a mile away from that album. There’s still a
focus on instrumental work and experimenting, but it’s very much of its time,
taking influence from a bunch of other bands who were relatively new at the
time, most notably the Talking Heads but also
Songs. There are seven. (I’m not great with sentences today,
it seems.) The first one is called ‘Elephant Talk’, and I love it, which is
quite strange, because I find Belew’s vocal performance really disturbing – he sounds
like he’s out of his mind. The lyrics are great, and it’s not often you can say
that about this band. Some electronic backbeats keep you on your toes and it’s
all topped off with a guitar sound that’s never been recreated – it’s
uncategorisable.
‘Frame By Frame’ is when Levin comes to the fore with some
really interesting basswork, but I can’t always hear it so well because Belew
is mixed so high. It’s stylistically pretty similar to the opener but a bit
more soundscapey and a bit less mind-boggling. ‘Matte Kudasai’ is a bit more
slow-tempoed than the two preceding it. It’s got some great sound effects, like
the guitars that sound like angry bird cries that pop up occasionally, and it’s
surprisingly melodic and emotional, filling the place of the ballad that
Crimson like to throw in occasionally to shake things up. A better version can
be found in amongst the bonus tracks, that has an interesting guitar part from
Fripp worked into it.
Then comes ‘Indiscipline’, and it’s just flat-out crazy, it’s…
put it this way, you used to be able to look up the Wikipedia page for ‘Indiscipline’,
and there were at least twenty different genres listed for the song, including
psychedelic metal, which I’d never even heard of. And all twenty of those
genres seemed to fit the song. It’s such a freak-out, with amazingly chaotic
and out-of-control instrumental sections interspersed with robotic vocal parts
that are almost too… well, disciplined. ‘I repeat myself when under stress’,
Belew intones, several times in a row, and it’s pure genius. If you’ve got five
minutes to spare and you’re only going to listen to one song from this album,
this is definitely the one.
Course, nothing on side two could come close to that. They
try, though. Like ‘Thela Hun Ginjeet’ – this is a polyrhythmic song, meaning it
is played in two different time signatures simultaneously. (One of my friends
told me I didn’t use enough technical terms in my reviews, so that one’s for
her.) It’s such a cool effect. However, this is probably the furthest removed
from Crimson in their previous incarnations, focusing mostly on the beat and
the new short, clipped style. (Is this prog-techno?) In other news, this is the
last vocal track on the album, which is a bit of a disappointment. Belew’s my
second favourite Crimson vocalist after Lake, and for this material
specifically, he probably is the best guy for the job.
In contrast, ‘The Sheltering Sky’, the first of two
instrumentals that close the album, is closest to old Crimson – not even
1974-era, but going right back to their roots with ‘In the Court’. It’s
probably a bit more easy-listening than anything else here, although it does
have just as much substance if you pay attention – some real virtuoso playing
and a few world music influences here and there. And the title track lives up
to its name by displaying how well and how effortlessly the new band members
have fit together, and is a great example of them playing off each other really
well.
Overall, the best word I can find to describe this album is
paranoid. All these crazy rhythms, they don’t want to stay still for too long,
even the notes don’t, so they’re always jumping around and forever looking over
their shoulders to check nothing’s coming to get them. There’s so much life in
this record – like one day it’s going to jump out of your CD player and become
something more than a flat disc.
Whether intentional or not, this was the perfect album for
the band to make at the time – it was progressive and just plain weird enough
to keep their long-time fans excited and yet relevant and cutting-edge enough
to bring them to a whole new audience. On their next two albums, they tried to
achieve this balance again, but found themselves focusing more on current
trends than their own legacy, and this album remains as the only surviving
studio document of the fusion of the two styles.
(I should have done
The Who today but I’m doing this instead, in celebration of the fact that KING
CRIMSON ARE REFORMING! I could not be more excited about this and I’m just
really hoping I get the chance to see them. The Who tomorrow.)
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