Hitomi Memorial Hall Tokyo Japan

AUDIO SOURCE: Hard Disc

DGM AUDIO QUALITY

AVERAGE CUSTOMER RATING

In his diary, Fripp comments that the “audience was generous, although some had difficulty with the Soundscapes. But, generous all the same.”[endtease] Their generosity on this last date supporting Porcupine Tree, was to be rewarded with a ‘scape opening up on an eerie, sombre landscape that both thrills and chills. Listening back to the Schizoid Fantasia, the guitarist was heard to yelp “Yowalamus est!” Those familiar with Oldgoatspeak will recognise this as the cry of someone not so much touched as jabbed by what they’re hearing. To these ears it seems darker the previous evenings exploration. It sounds like someone a long way from home and wondering how to get there. The antidote to this bleakness and despair can be discerned in the soulful playing during Time Stands Still and its shining coda. The hopeful tones that characterise these sections, suggests that although we all have a long way to go on our journey we will eventually get there. There’s comfort in that thought and there’s comfort in this music.
Hitomi Memorial Hall Tokyo Japan

AUDIO SOURCE: Hard Disc

DGM AUDIO QUALITY

AVERAGE CUSTOMER RATING

TRACK
TIME
01
Bell Threshold
01:30
02
Schizoid Fantasia
06:44
03
Queer Jazz Symmetrical
03:18
04
Time Stands Still
10:43
05
Time Stands Still Coda
06:33

RF20061129Tokyo

Written by Jeremy Keens
Last show? Miniature perfect
This is the last soundscape available, and for that reason (mainly) I bought it. It would make sense to have these three Japan shows available as a set: they are relatively short compared to some other ones that are here. That said, it is like a condensed distillation of the 2005+ soundscapes. Beautiful guitar work threading through the more non-guitarsounding sounds that Mr Fripp generates through his rig. A beautiful keening work, like a perfectly pulled espresso it takes you to the heart of a...
Written by Armand Gieling
Tokyo Soundscape.
The dark suspense continues in various ways. There are five pieces, but I hear it as one piece, without interlude. On the other hand, each piece is standing on its self, with its own unique power- and ingenuity. Two different ways of listening to this, and that is just the beginning of an endless line of approaches. To be short; a wonderful new equivalent of timelessness!     
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