Robert Fripp saw King Crimson’s final album of the 80s, Three of a Perfect Pair, as representing the accessible and excessive aspects of the group’s personalities.Accordingly there are huge contrasts and shifts in tone encountered along the way;the dizzying MC Escher-like interlocking patterns of the title track;Nuages’ enigmatic electronic textures;stomp-along, air-punching choruses of Man With An Open Heart and the hard-edged sonic tone poems of Industry and No Warning. The fast-moving, feverish pace of Sleepless, driven by Bruford’s whip-crack timbales and Levin’s driving funk-finger bass posits strange, hybrid dance grooves. However, the intertwining themes and polyrhythms of Larks’ Tongues In Aspic Part III with its deftly executed daredevil turns steals the show. It would be another ten years before King Crimson would return to the studio.
Robert Fripp saw King Crimson’s final album of the 80s, Three of a Perfect Pair, as representing the accessible and excessive aspects of the group’s personalities.Accordingly there are huge contrasts and shifts in tone encountered along the way;the dizzying MC Escher-like interlocking patterns of the title track;Nuages’ enigmatic electronic texture...
10.38 The familiar meeping of tape test tones is meeping away: "Three Of A Perfect Pair" is being lined up for action. Now, the title track is werning.
Recording the TOAPP album was even more of an ordeal than recording "Beat", acknowledging that my view of this period is subjective. In a nutshell, the price for making "Discipline" was to make the next two albums, this the inevitable outcome of taking an idea into a world governed by the music industry. In that world of 1981, the contractual minimum was three albums.
"Discipline" had to be made, was waiting to made: there was a necessity about it. "Discipline" generated a new vocabulary for Crimson; forced the players to abandon clichés & adopt different ways of thinking; used new technology & instruments; and balanced front line & rhyth...