The Great Deceiver (Live 1973-1974)King Crimson
Release Date: 11/06/2007
Original Release:
1992
# of Discs:
2
J&R Item # 1005594_CD
UPC # 633367500526
Label: Inner Knot
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Disc: 1
1.
Walk On...No Pussyfooting (Pittsburgh, PA - Stanley Warner Theatre: April 29th. 1974)
2.
Great Deceiver, The (Pittsburgh, PA - Stanley Warner Theatre: April 29th. 1974)
3.
Improv - Bartley Butsford (Pittsburgh, PA - Stanley Warner Theatre: April 29th. 1974)
5.
Improv - Daniel Dust (Pittsburgh, PA - Stanley Warner Theatre: April 29th. 1974)
6.
Night Watch, The (Pittsburgh, PA - Stanley Warner Theatre: April 29th. 1974)
9.
Improv - Wilton Carpet (Pittsburgh, PA - Stanley Warner Theatre: April 29th. 1974)
10.
Talking Drum, The (Pittsburgh, PA - Stanley Warner Theatre: April 29th. 1974)
11.
Larks' Tongues in Aspic (Pittsburgh, PA - Stanley Warner Theatre: April 29th. 1974/Part Two (Abbreviated))
Disc: 2
4.
Improv - Clueless and Slightly Slack (Penn State University: June 29th. 1974)
8.
Improv - The Law of Maximum Distress (Zurich Volkshaus: November 15th. 1973/Part One)
9.
Improv - The Law of Maximum Distress (Zurich Volkshaus: November 15th. 1973/Part Two)
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Performer: King Crimson
Distributor: Ryko Distribution Notes: King Crimson: John Wetton (vocals, bass guitar); Robert Fripp (guitar, electric piano, Mellotron); David Cross (violin, electric piano, Mellotron); Bill Bruford (drums, percussion). THE GREAT DECEIVER is everything that box sets should be about. It's the ultimate Crimson fan's wet dream--four seminal discs documenting the orgiastic entity that spat torrents of primal, white-hot fire. Only the brave and converted need enter here. Take Disc One, for example. This disc captures the legendary Providence, Rhode Island gig from 1974, where "Providence" (from RED) was recorded. The inclusion by Fripp of the show in its entirety documents not only one of the band's last performances but one of its finest. Opening with "Larks Tongues, Part Two" and continuing into a lusty version of "Lament," the band then breaks through into the poignant strains of "Exiles," resting momentarily then revealing the magnificent 14-minute improv piece "A Voyage to the Centre of the Cosmos." Instantly, the staggered cadences and nocturnal growls of "Asbury Park" come to mind, but "Voyage" is a mini-epic of intergalactic ecstasy. Bruford pounds out a bulldozer beat, while Fripp spins off the edge of the world, Wetton jettisons excoriating basslines, and Cross' mellotron screams into the void. THE GREAT DECEIVER melts the grooves off the forgotten bootlegs, and we can bask in its stormy afterglow. There was no substitute for Crimson, '73-'74.
Entertainment Weekly (1/22/93, p.57) - "...sounds more substantial than most any rock you'll hear being played today..." - Rating: B
Q (12/92, p.149) - 3 Stars - Good - "...records one of King Crimson's most adventurous periods...celebrates a musical application that was always dedicated and--occasionally--close to miraculous..."
Uncut (p.98) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[I]t's the molten intensity of Robert Fripp's playing that lends KC their timelessness."
The Wire (p.55) - "[S]ome of the rawest and most exciting music ever committed to disc."
Down Beat (3/93, p.36) - 4 Stars - Very Good - "...This version of Crimson played with driven intensity and dark fury...The improvs can settle into crunching, ominous grooves or drift out to the final frontier. Unless you were in attendance, you haven't heard anything quite like it..."
Musician (3/93, p.95) - "...some of the heaviest, meanest and most muscular rock ever heard...Improvisations--sometimes searing, sometimes soaring, always memorable--are the centerpiece of this set...monstrously good..."
Led by innovative guitarist/conceptualist Robert Fripp, King Crimson went through countless changes in style and personnel. They moved from early symphonic/progressive rock to angular, experimental improv to a mixture of hard rock and fusion before breaking up in the mid-'70s. Revived in the '80s, the group modernized its approach by incorporating Gamelan-like polyrhythms and an almost danceable Talking Heads-influenced sound into their approach. Always the coolest of the art-rockers, Crimson was also one of the most influential of the early-'70s prog crowd.
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