|
ROBERT FRIPP,
Sunday Times, November 30, 1997 King Crimson began recording and touring
again in 1994, to the delight of a hard core of fans big enough
to fill the Albert Hall, but can they ever escape the stigma of
progressive rock, with its Mellotron-toting, Tory-voting, tax-evading
practitioners and their Page Three wives? Remember now and wince
at Yes's Tales From Topographic Oceans, at Emerson, Lake and Palmer,
and at Rick Wakeman's King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table...on
Ice. To But the cultural embargo on all things
progressive increasingly smacks of hypocrisy. The post-punk history
of the world ignores John Lydon's love of Van Der Graaf Generator,
accommodates prog's more experimental German counterparts Can and
Faust as "crazy dadaist Europeans", and tolerates arrogant
follies of U2 that are every bit as embarrassing as Yes at their
most vain and absurd. The current critical favourites Spiritualised,
playing alongside the English Chamber Orchestra at the Barbican
last month, conjured up memories of This week four current core members of King Crimson assemble incognito to offer four nights of live improvisations at Camden's Jazz Cafe, under the moniker of Projekct One. A press release cites "expectations from audiences of established King Crimson repertoire" as a restric-tive factor in the band's deve-lopment. Fripp has responded by forming Crimson "Projekcts" on both sides of the Atlantic, which he describes as "research and development fractals of King Crimson", after a recent Polish tour, where he realised that not playing the 1970s hits to an audience for whom the ticket price would be a monumental expenditure, was simply unfair. Such perversity has always been part of the Crimson working method. Asked how he plucked the drummer Bill Bruford from Yes in 1972, where his talents perhaps weren't being exploited fully, Fripp diplomatically answers: "The muse descends on a group briefly, and takes them into its confidence and moves on, but time allows them to digest and apply the confidence that has been given. What usually happens is that the group tend to move towards obsolescence following success, and then droll repetition, whereas Crimson would take the information, deal with it, and then split up, as a response to the industry and the demands of its public. We break up, shake off all expectations and move on." In its three decades King Crimson
has shed more expectations than a reasonably healthy snake might
shed skins. Formed in 1969, their first four albums offered a baroque
jazz rock, alternately hobbled by a pre-ELP Greg Lake singing Pete
Sinfield's sword-and-sorcery fantasy and sleazy groupie-sex lyrics
and elevated by Fripp's distinctive, restless guitar playing. The
live quadruple CD Epitaph, issued earlier this year, "shows
the 1969 Crimson was not this monolith of received wisdom",
says Fripp, "but actually a cracking little outfit for whom
improvisation was a major part of what we did". Appropriately,
a 1970 edition of Top of the Pops saw the future 1970s superstar
Greg Lake playing alongside the then unknown jazz ianist In 1972 a new Crimson, including the
free jazz percussionist Jamie Muir, fresh from Derek Bailey and
Evan Parker's Music Improvisation Company, recorded a definitive
triumvirate of albums culminating in Red, whose angular, uncompromising
and occasionally quite terrifying In 1981, Fripp re-formed Crimson again after a lengthy US sabbatical, with American vocalist Adrian Belew on board to free-associate about urban living over Bruford's increasingly complex polyrhythms, the band abandon-ing their off-beat jazzy playing for a tight, machine precision derived from the New York No Wave symphonics of Glenn Branca and the minimalism of Steve Reich. "The vocabulary of rock music had changed," Fripp offers, "and if you were a musician who was at all involved in speaking with the accent and dialect of the time to people listening at that time, you had to know that. The 1981-to-1984 Crimson had absorbed and noted some of these lessons and did not refer very much to the vocabulary of 1972 to 1974." So why reassemble Crimson in 1994? What has the band to offer now? How does Fripp know when the time is right? "How could you not know?" he splutters, breaking for the first time out of the considered calm that has hitherto characterised his answers. "You just know! When I met my wife I was a happy bachelor, and I proposed within a week. Why? Because she was my wife! I didn't know this was Toyah Wilcox the star, because I'd been in America, but I instantly knew her as my wife. Likewise, when music appears that only King Crimson can play, King Crimson appears to play the music." Finally, Fripp breaks off - "to give my beautiful wife a kiss and a cuddle before she goes off to London" - and retires. "I'm looking forward to listening to Radiohead," he says, genuinely curious. "I've just got back from the States and there's a copy upstairs waiting for me." Projekct One play at London's Jazz Cafe from tomorrow to Thursday. |
|













