Why do I like King Crimson much less? |
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progaardvark
Collaborator Crossover/Symphonic/RPI Teams Joined: June 14 2007 Location: Sea of Peas Status: Offline Points: 51060 |
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KC is one of those bands that will grow on you with time. Sometimes a break and reintroduction (and this may be needed several times) is all it takes. I would opine that after getting used to things like Genesis, Yes, and ELP, KC is kind of like hitting a brick wall full of raw energy. The darker tones and harsher sounds take a bit of getting used to. But in due time (and this could be years), suddenly it clicks and you'll realize how much of a genius Robert Fripp is.
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i'm shopping for a new oil-cured sinus bag that's a happy bag of lettuce this car smells like cartilage nothing beats a good video about fractions |
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tdfloyd
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Absolutely loved ITCOTCK. Same can be said for Red. Didn't like Beat and really didn't listen to them until Thrak was released, which I liked a lot. Hated ThrakAttak so again I put them away for over a decade. I have Frame by Frame so I know the stronger songs. But this year I heard Radical Action to Release the Hold of Monkey Mind and then got the CD/BluRay combo and I can't put it down. Listening to it now actually . Its been months. I have been listening to the various other live albums (Chicago, Meltdown) and its really some of the best music I have ever heard. I have to go back to the originals to see why I didn't care anywhere as much for say Lizard, In the Wake of the Poseidon as I do these live albums. New arrangements, Jakko singing instead of Belew, more drums from the 3 headed monster, more Mel Collins? I don't know but it will be fun going back to some albums I haven't listened to in decades.
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Spacegod87
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I have to disagree with you there. I used to hate 'Supper's ready' (and Genesis) but I listened to it again and again, and finally it clicked. I'm glad I did, because I love the song now and would be ashamed of myself if I didn't at least try to understand why everyone was going on about how great it was. Now I get it. I guess when people are really hammering in how brilliant a song/band is, I get curious and annoyed at myself for not hearing what everyone else is hearing. It may seem like lunacy to a lot of people, but hey, I've discovered a lot of great songs this way. Edited by Spacegod87 - December 28 2019 at 19:56 |
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kenethlevine
Special Collaborator Prog-Folk Team Joined: December 06 2006 Location: New England Status: Offline Points: 8951 |
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but you are naming the most accessible and perhaps warmest songs from those post ITCOCK albums. They stuck one or two of them on Lizard and Islands and then at best one each on LTIA,SABB and Red. so you are corroborating what the Dark Elf is saying by naming the exceptions which prove the rule ps I'd throw "The Night Watch" into that list as well, but that's about it
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
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Starless isn't really an exception as far as Red album goes. Fallen Angel is even more emotional. One More Red Nightmare isn't emotional in a straight up melancholic way but it's incredibly trippy. I don't even know how it would possibly come across as calculating compared to say Yes or Genesis playing strictly by the metronome with no surprises in placement or accent.
Edited by rogerthat - December 28 2019 at 21:49 |
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HackettFan
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A similar reaction from me. If you're wondering why there is so much consensus on something that you're not a part of, there actually really is no consensus. I do love Larks, SaBB, Discipline and the Crimson Projeckts. I like the unstructured improv they do, how they generally do stuff counter to usual expectation, and I really dig the overall Space Rock of Projeckts. However, I don't care much for Fripp's too often understated approach to lead and I am not nearly as much into mellotron as many others are, although I know some people like both of those things. So you stray from a consensus that does not exist. There is equally no consensus on the best/worst Genesis, Yes and Tull either. |
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A curse upon the heads of those who seek their fortunes in a lie. The truth is always waiting when there's nothing left to try. - Colin Henson, Jade Warrior (Now)
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kenethlevine
Special Collaborator Prog-Folk Team Joined: December 06 2006 Location: New England Status: Offline Points: 8951 |
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hmm I don't really agree on Fallen Angel. Sure the subject matter is emotionally wrenching but the song doesn't really make me care. It's only notable for being the last KC song with acoustic guitar...45 years ago
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ExittheLemming
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I think there's a danger of confusing two distinct compositional approaches here. Although the following are traditionally only used to describe classical 'art music', the demarcation is also applicable for popular music that strays well beyond the song structures, metric conventions and cadential harmonies of Tin Pan Alley tradition. Programme Music - designed to convey an extra-musical narrative to invoke a particular type of emotion or idea in the listener e.g. Symphonie Fantastique by Berlioz, Also Sprach Zarathustra by Richard Strauss, the Four Seasons by Vivaldi, In the Court of the Crimson King, One More Red Nightmare, Neurotica, People etc. Most of Crimson's song based output which presents some type of story (notwithstanding its complexity, sophistication or unconventionality) would fall broadly into this category Abstract/Absolute Music - i.e. 'just the notes themselves', not intended to elicit any particular emotional state or idea but simply a presentation of musical information that the composer/performer thinks aesthetically appealing e.g. Bartok's 6 String Quartets, the serialism of the 2nd Viennese School, Fracture, Providence, Requiem, Vrooom Vrooom, We'll Let You Know, most of the Projeckts output etc. None of us would probably agree what Crimson material is even a 'best fit' for either category but it seems pretty clear to me that a lot of Crimson's more esoteric instrumental output might qualify for a place in the second basket It strikes me as specious to conflate abstract/absolute music with sterility, lack of warmth or emotion. Some of the interlocking 'gamelan guitar' pieces from Discipline onward I do find rather dry, academic and cerebral yes, but even those elements of Crimson I don't care for are for reasons of my aesthetic taste rather than any lack of inferred feeling.
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Mortte
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tamijo_II
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I Don't like ELP much, You don't like KC - we are fine, is music, we are different - no two ears hear the same.
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rogerthat
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Thanks, exactly the difference I was trying to articulate too. Makes no sense to me that a One More Red Nightmare lacks warmth or is, of all things, too sterile. None of the other major prog rock bands had guitar textures even halfway as interesting (or indeed far reaching). Besides, by embracing this distinction and categorising only programme music as emotional, we would in effect be disqualifying a lot of prog as lacking emotion because a lot of it does not signify emotion in a very straightforward way. I am thinking of tracks like Supersister's Higher. It doesn't fit into simplistic happy/sad/romantic categories but not emotional at all? OK, I can accept that subjectively one does not find that music emotional but how much prog does such a person actually enjoy in that case would be my next question.
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ExittheLemming
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^ I agree but that said, if I experience a piece of music initially as being completely devoid of any emotional impact whatsoever it's highly unlikely I'm ever going to develop an appetite to give it repeated listens irrespective of its Programme or Abstract source. I think that's why I eventually admitted defeat with free jazz, ambient, and a lot of RIO/Avant/Noise music (Just to flip the reverse side of the Programme coin: I want to like it (Abstract) but can't, simply because I don't understand what it is that is being communicated and yes, this says more about my limitations as a listener than the stimulus to hand itself) Edited by ExittheLemming - December 29 2019 at 03:20 |
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Lewian
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ExittheLemming: Do you think (or is the general idea behind this distinction) that what is "aesthetically appealing" can be separated from emotionality? I'd be very surprised by that. If you try to get into what "aesthetically appealing" means, you hardly get around human emotions, be it on the side of the musician or on the side of the listener. Personally I'm mostly not much interested in lyrics (although I can well connect to much of KC's lyrics, more than many other bands), and what music speaks to me emotionally has zilch to do with "extra-musical narratives", as you define "Programme Music". Surely in "abstract" music emotion is involved, at the very least subconsciously.
Edited by Lewian - December 29 2019 at 04:38 |
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Lewian
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The early 80s trilogy of albums by the way is surely intellectual to some extent, but it also conveys a very special urban 80s emotionality, as I wrote before some mix of nervosity and angst and control/controlled aggression. There are warm moments (Matte Kudasai, Heartbeat,...) but they are understated and contrasted by the hustle of the urban jungle. The intellectuals have their brain power but they can't rely on it to survive, and surely it doesn't give them warmth. But showing raw emotions directly or demanding them is discredited. Which is what is expressed here, it's not devoid of emotionality, rather the opposite, an expression that something's missing, and the emotions coming from that. There is a connection to the aesthetic and controlled "cool" atmosphere/emotionality in other early 80s music (post punk etc.), which with its rejection of "pompous fuss-making" alienated a good number of prog fans.
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ExittheLemming
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No-one is trying to 'get around human emotions' or use a Programme/Abstract distinction to validate why some posters have opined that they find much of Crimson's output to be sterile, calculated and cold. It seems clear that what appeals aesthetically has to manifest itself by way of some sort of an emotional response. My argument was that perhaps those posters are looking for a lot of the ingredients that are habitually not present in Abstract/Absolute music and their appreciation of the art suffers as a result. (As I explained previously, this is my experience with free jazz, where as a popular music fan, I am routinely ingrained to looking for repeating patterns and harmonic tensions to be resolved and when these don't arrive, I get bored and just 'switch off' and yes, I accept that's my loss but this is not because the music lacks feeling) However, like yourself, I don't necessarily need to be steered by a narrative/story or lyrics to be able to enjoy say, Fracture (which I think is one of Crimson's finest ever pieces) I don't envisage anything other than four musicians interacting via their instruments to create magnificent art. Again, the absence of a plot outline or descriptive title does not mean the music lacks feeling. Even with something that has both lyrics and pictorial representations of what the music is purportedly attempting to depict e.g. Tarkus and Pictures at an Exhibition, I don't imagine armed metal armadillos doing battle with mythical beasts or witches who live in huts built on chicken legs. The music is not augmented (and maybe slightly diminished) for me by the extra-musical narrative offered in this regard.
Edited by ExittheLemming - December 29 2019 at 05:32 |
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rogerthat
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Agreed, my initial impression is purely subconscious without categorising it as programmatic or abstract. There is some RIO I like (albeit mostly the 80s developments in the genre when it simply began to resemble late 19th/early 20th century classical music rather than the pure experimentation of the 70s) but free jazz usually doesn't work for me either. And yes, it's just me; there are people who do like it after all (likewise in the case of Ambient).
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rogerthat
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Said another way, you could generalise that listeners PREDOMINANTLY attracted to melodic symph prog may not dig much KC beyond the first couple of albums, especially beyond ITCOTCK itself.
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ProgMetaller2112
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Who doesn't make sense??
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Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.” ― George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four "Ignorance and Prejudice and Fear walk Hand in Hand"- Neil Peart |
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Sean Trane
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I tend to agree with you, Svettie I prefer the Sinfield era, than the Wetton era (but I still love almost as much), then the 90's/00's/10's (sometimes patchy, especially the ProjeKcts) , than the 80's (too much Talking Heads - though I love the band)
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SteveG
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Edited by SteveG - December 30 2019 at 08:19 |
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