The Scotsman

Nothing too far out for musical exploratio­n

King Crimson Playhouse, Edinburgh

- FIONA SHEPHERD

JUST as The Who didn’t die before they got old, so progressiv­e rock was not vanquished by the punk hordes but prevailed to live side by side in the record collection­s of music fans of a certain age. Of the so-called prog dinosaurs, King Crimson remain a band apart – truly progressiv­e in their shape-shifting and musical retooling of their catalogue.

Professori­al bandleader Robert Fripp, ensconced in the far corner of the stage where he could keep an eye on proceeding­s, presided over his preferred current Crimson incarnatio­n which places three hefty drumkits with percussive appendages in the safe hands of the Drumsons – namely, Pat Mastelotto, Gavin Harrison and Jeremy Stacey, who also doubled on keyboards, alongside former drummer Bill Rieflin – got that?

The stagecraft was as spartan as the music was sophistica­ted – bright lights trained unblinking on the band throughout two sets, running to almost three hours, with the ever-mutating sound spilling out of two relatively modest speaker stacks.

Rock power comes in many forms though – in this case, initially from the drummers, beating out a meaty tom-fare on four sticks apiece, instigatin­g a spirit of playful competitio­n and conversati­on between the three, which was duly supplement­ed by Tony Levin’s rumbling bass runs and frantic, fidgety saxophone from woodwind wizard Mel Collins before the storm broke and Fripp’s prim and precise guitar figures ushered in order and Discipline. Followed by its counterpar­t number Indiscipli­ne, it highlighte­d Crimson’s creativity and eccentrici­ty in equal measure, where no musical exploratio­n is too far out.

Despite such heroic levels of indulgence, the slick sobriety of the band’s demeanour and the occasional tilt towards muso sterility, this was an unpredicta­ble livewire display as the band unleashed potent blasts of jazz rock, the more convention­ally proggy Epitaph and the contrast- ing MOR pop of Cadence and Cascade with soothing vocals from Jakko Jakszyk and pastoral flute trills from Collins, who showcased a further array of instrument­ation on the whimsical Islands.

Fripp was even pleased

to revisit a mini-suite from their divisive 1970 album Lizard, which he had previously declared “unlistenab­le”. Evidently not, as many audience members were sitting forward, intense and rapt, literally on the edge of their seats, receiving rarities as readily as the exultant sweep of The Court of the Crimson King or the encore choice Starless, a dynamic mix of precision and abandon delivered under infernal crimson lights.

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 ??  ?? The current Crimson incarnatio­n putonan unpredicta­ble livewire display
The current Crimson incarnatio­n putonan unpredicta­ble livewire display

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