It could be argued that the first officially released King Crimson mash-ups, wherein one era of Crimson is juxtaposed with another, appeared when the chorus of The Court Of The Court Of The Crimson suddenly rose up out of the chaos and turbulence of the closing moments of The Devil’s Triangle from In The Wake Of Poseidon.

Such proto-sampling aside, the first timeline crossings proper were to be found on the Frame By Frame box. Released in 1991, it saw Adrian Belew’s vocals replacing those on the 1970 recording of Cadence And Cascade, while Tony Levin renewed the bass of the original Bolero from Lizard.

Here, Alex Mundy’s audio alchemy has Mel Collins and Gordon Haskell from 1970’s Poseidon sessions, spinning forward just over a decade to meet with Belew, Levin, Bruford, and Fripp as they recorded 1981’s recording of Matte Kudasai. The result is a series of happy accidents in a beguiling mix that goes some way towards answering the oft-posed question of what 80s KC might have sounded like had a woodwind player been invited to join.
TRACK
TIME
01
Cadence Kudasai
03:49
Written by Rainer Robles
More Japanese than ever!
I would have placed the vocals (specifically the second and third lines of both verses) a bit differently, but that's a minor complaint, plus when the "Sad paper courtesan" jumps in, oh wow - what an amazing mash-up this is! And the flute makes it more "Japanese" to my ears.
Written by Chris Inguanta
Good ears, Mr. Stormy
It sounds as if it was meant to be, playing together. I enjoyed listening to this piece.
Written by Rob Pilkington
Brillant!
Brillant!!!
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