The fifteenth gig in almost as many nights, even though it’s an incomplete concert we hear, Crimson certainly hit the ground running after arriving in Quebec City. Opening the show with Schizoid Man is certainly a way of grabbing the audience’s attention, and in this case, grabbing them by the lapels and slapping them about a bit. Fripp is on form and David Cross’s violin solo adds a fiery piquancy. Even John Wetton gets to take a short, rumbling breakout solo between the handover between the string players.
Lament benefits from an amped-up Fripp solo break in which he employs the devastating Sailor’s Tale-style chordal attack. Perhaps having blown themselves out a touch, the improv preceding Exiles, which had often been a spring board into a pastoral interlude, sounds rather non-committal and half-hearted on this occasion. Exiles itself wobbles slightly after the first verse but also contains some good violin commentary from Cross.
Swinging out of Easy Money on a searingly brutal sustained guitar note, Cross takes the band into a confident but reflective mood at the start of the second improvisation of the night. For the first minute or so Wetton and Cross drift in a lilting duet with Bruford confining himself initially to small points of percussion before opening out on dramatic washes of gong after three minutes. Holding his own against Fripp’s twisting laser beam tones, Cross emerges as the moving force of this particular episode.
The gig’s excellent sound quality is marred only by the incomplete versions of Schizoid Man, which cuts in on “Cat’s Foot, Iron claw”, and Starless cutting out during Fripp’s final solo thus being robbed of the dramatic restatement of the main theme at the climax.
The fifteenth gig in almost as many nights, even though it’s an incomplete concert we hear, Crimson certainly hit the ground running after arriving in Quebec City. Opening the show with Schizoid Man is certainly a way of grabbing the audience’s attention, and in this case, grabbing them by the lapels and slapping them about a bit. Fripp is on form...
I bought this one for a particular reason ! I was in the audience attending that show on june 25th 1974! I was 16 year old and it was my second show ever. I saw Genesis for my first show and it was on April 18 th 1974 in the same building, for the Selling England by the Pound Tour ! I was delightely surprised to have found that show on the Internet. It s a special show for me and I will never forget it ! Thanks for the person who recorded that jewel. The sound is very good and I appreciate it a ...
I bought this one for a particular reason ! I was in the audience attending that show on june 25th 1974! I was 16 year old and it was my second show ever. I saw Genesis for my first show and it was on April 18 th 1974 in the same building, for the Selling England by the Pound Tour ! I was delightely surprised to have found that show on the Internet. It s a special show for me and I will never forget it ! Thanks for the person who recorded that jewel. The sound is very good and I appreciate it a lot !
Written by Jack Floyd
'Twas Surprising!
Indeed, this has caught me offguard!Normally, reviews are enlightening here, with a somewhat fair number of clues as to what one could expect from a performance and its recording. This time, however, I suppose nothing could prepare me from a date which, I, in some ways, judged to be not much worthwhile...... It is good to be wrong! I found this to be very enjoyable and very muscular!I’m not a particular fan of "Schizoid Man", and though it is a confession which may/will make me a potential tar...
Indeed, this has caught me offguard!Normally, reviews are enlightening here, with a somewhat fair number of clues as to what one could expect from a performance and its recording. This time, however, I suppose nothing could prepare me from a date which, I, in some ways, judged to be not much worthwhile...... It is good to be wrong! I found this to be very enjoyable and very muscular!I’m not a particular fan of "Schizoid Man", and though it is a confession which may/will make me a potential target from flaming pebbles thrown by avid Crimso-heads as well as a state I judge comes from being desensitised from so many versions of it, it is true. And yet, I found not only it works as a heart-stopping show opener, but this version contains very good solo spots and a bass which growls in a Hopper-like fashion."Lament" is good even if the solo seems to me quite unfocused, the latter trait extending to the first blow into "Exiles" and its first half. BUT, things get better from then on and smoke ascends to heaven by the time "Easy Money" and the beautiful second improv arrive!Similarly, "Fracture" sounds like an elephant’s stampede during the heavier parts, however, the intensity remains unrelenting even during the fragile middle section. Not even Cross forgetting the turn the pianet’s fuzz box for a few seconds manages to attach the flight to the ground."Starless" is a jewel and would be another super moment for this period’s list if only the tape didn’t cut at the final moments... Oh well...This being a soundboard you can bet there are unexplainable "sound choices": the strange absence of heavy bass guitar during "Easy Money" gives it an ethereal, bottomless quality in which the mellotron seems to hover unleashed for as long as it lasts. And, being KC, you know some "liberties" abound, such as the way pieces refuse to fall into place for a few seconds at the end of "Fracture". But, who cares when things do work?Again, this one did surprise me and, even though it hardly touches the level of the giant performances which stand around it, it is very good and certain to cause adrenalin levels to rise.
Written by Kevin Shelton
The Greater Accumulator
I have often said that I would buy every show of this Crimson’s Summer 1974 U.S. tour if they were all made available, and I still mean it. DGM is trying to oblige, which I appreciate dearly.The band may have been exhausted and irritable in June/July 1974, but they never played better music. What sort of stellar inferno they tapped into to replace their ordinary human energies, I have no idea, but these performances are superhuman, and among the few where I can actually accept the notion of "c...
I have often said that I would buy every show of this Crimson’s Summer 1974 U.S. tour if they were all made available, and I still mean it. DGM is trying to oblige, which I appreciate dearly.The band may have been exhausted and irritable in June/July 1974, but they never played better music. What sort of stellar inferno they tapped into to replace their ordinary human energies, I have no idea, but these performances are superhuman, and among the few where I can actually accept the notion of "channeling" other forces. Minor technical details are irrelevant. If you love this version of band, and are open to the possibility that something unusual was in the air and following the boys around in the Summer of 1974, then you’ll want all of these performances, as well, including this one.Next, let’s have Cape Cod.