King Crimson – In The Court Of The Crimson King (DVD to DTS 5.1)
Album Notes
It’s astonishing to think that when this record was released in 1969 King Crimson had been together for less than nine months.
Aside from the impeccable musicianship, the record’s impact was helped enormously by Barry Godber’s cover painting. Commissioned by Crimson lyricist, Pete Sinfield, rarely has an album sleeve so accurately conveyed the shock-and-awe reaction which this extraordinary music produced in its listeners. Even the jewel-case format has done little to dilute its iconic power.
Going into the album charts upon its release on both sides of the Atlantic, the first incarnation of Crimson imploded whilst on tour in America in December 1969. Though short-lived, the music produced by this line-up continues to resonate 40 years later.
In light of this, Pete Townshend’s declaration that the album was “an uncanny masterpiece” seems something of an understatement.
Aside from the impeccable musicianship, the record’s impact was helped enormously by Barry Godber’s cover painting. Commissioned by Crimson lyricist, Pete Sinfield, rarely has an album sleeve so accurately conveyed the shock-and-awe reaction which this extraordinary music produced in its listeners. Even the jewel-case format has done little to dilute its iconic power.
Going into the album charts upon its release on both sides of the Atlantic, the first incarnation of Crimson imploded whilst on tour in America in December 1969. Though short-lived, the music produced by this line-up continues to resonate 40 years later.
In light of this, Pete Townshend’s declaration that the album was “an uncanny masterpiece” seems something of an understatement.
“brooding Wagnerian angst and
whizz-bang virtuosity…daringly executed, lovingly updated in high-res,
lossless sound” John Bungey, The Times
“music rich in ambition and atmosphere…the frenzied jazz-rock of 21st Century Schizoid Man…wouldn’t sound wildly out of place on a Queens of The Stone Age album” Paul McGee, The Word.
“King Crimson’s debut is still eclectic and original enough to lay claim to being the first major statment of the progressive rock epoch.” Mike Barnes, Mojo.
“music rich in ambition and atmosphere…the frenzied jazz-rock of 21st Century Schizoid Man…wouldn’t sound wildly out of place on a Queens of The Stone Age album” Paul McGee, The Word.
“King Crimson’s debut is still eclectic and original enough to lay claim to being the first major statment of the progressive rock epoch.” Mike Barnes, Mojo.
“The new version of In The Court of the
Crimson King (is) restored from the best available studio master
tapes…These DGM DC/DVDA editions are essential for longterm fans and
newbies alike” Tommy Udo, Classic Rock presents Prog.
The 2009 Remix
This, the Wilson-Fripp 2009 Definitive Edition Remix, was an unexpected yet inevitable outcome of Steven’s interest & initiative in moving the Crimson catalogue into 5.1.
The original Wessex recording was on 8-track. This necessitated several sub-mixes; such as drums, bass guitar, piano & acoustic guitar on one stereo pair and all the mellotrons on another. These stereo sub-mixes were then mixed down to the original stereo master; the final master took another generation, to allow for cross-fades; and production masters went another generation. The original stereo master was lost for decades, found by Simon Heyworth in a pile of KC tapes from the Virgin tape store, and until recently was the best master available.
On this release, Steven was able to transfer all the original analogue multi-tracks to digital, enabling us to work from the first generation tracks prior to sub-mixing.
This, the Wilson-Fripp 2009 Definitive Edition Remix, was an unexpected yet inevitable outcome of Steven’s interest & initiative in moving the Crimson catalogue into 5.1.
The original Wessex recording was on 8-track. This necessitated several sub-mixes; such as drums, bass guitar, piano & acoustic guitar on one stereo pair and all the mellotrons on another. These stereo sub-mixes were then mixed down to the original stereo master; the final master took another generation, to allow for cross-fades; and production masters went another generation. The original stereo master was lost for decades, found by Simon Heyworth in a pile of KC tapes from the Virgin tape store, and until recently was the best master available.
On this release, Steven was able to transfer all the original analogue multi-tracks to digital, enabling us to work from the first generation tracks prior to sub-mixing.
We have taken the original mix as our template. The only
significant change to the original release is our edit of the improv
following Moonchild. This was discussed at the time, has been discussed
since, and is now done.
Robert Fripp
June 27th. 2009;
Worcestershire, England.
June 27th. 2009;
Worcestershire, England.
A life-long King Crimson fan, 40th
Anniversary Editions producer, Porcupine Tree’s Steven Wilson offers his
thoughts on the debut album.
“For me this is the birth of progressive rock. Yes there were other albums before that. You could say Sgt. Peppers or Moody Blues Days Of Future Passed have a claim to laying down a blueprint of progressive rock but ITCOTCK really is the first time you have such technical prowess allied to musical experiments, great songwriting, and a conceptual feeling all tied together in one record.
I think musicianship is the key here. Bands like The Beatles and the Moody Blues attempted very ambitious psuedo-progressive albums before, but Crimson was the first time you had a band that were able to go that one step further in terms of their musicianship. They were young guys full of ideas and ambition and I really think you have to say that this is the true point at which progressive rock is born, and some would say never bettered.
Some people snigger at the idea of progressive rock but for me when progressive rock was at its peak in the 69 – 74 period it was the most experimental, most credible, most ambitious music that has ever been made. The guys were reaching for the stars and very often got there.”
“For me this is the birth of progressive rock. Yes there were other albums before that. You could say Sgt. Peppers or Moody Blues Days Of Future Passed have a claim to laying down a blueprint of progressive rock but ITCOTCK really is the first time you have such technical prowess allied to musical experiments, great songwriting, and a conceptual feeling all tied together in one record.
I think musicianship is the key here. Bands like The Beatles and the Moody Blues attempted very ambitious psuedo-progressive albums before, but Crimson was the first time you had a band that were able to go that one step further in terms of their musicianship. They were young guys full of ideas and ambition and I really think you have to say that this is the true point at which progressive rock is born, and some would say never bettered.
Some people snigger at the idea of progressive rock but for me when progressive rock was at its peak in the 69 – 74 period it was the most experimental, most credible, most ambitious music that has ever been made. The guys were reaching for the stars and very often got there.”
EC0981 | King Crimson – In The Court Of The Crimson King |
Label: | Panegyric Recordings |
Catalog#: | KCCBXI |
Format: | CD [DTS 5.1 – Samplerate: 44100] |
Encoder: | DTS HD Encoder Suite |
Released: | Oct 10, 1969 / Oct 2009 |
Source: | DVD-Audio 40th Anniversary Edition |
Style: | Classic Rock, Progressive Rock |
============================================================================ 1. 21st Century Schizoid Man
2. I Talk To The Wind
3. Epitaph
4. Moonchild
5. The Court Of The Crimson King Personnel:
Robert Fripp:- Guitar
Ian McDonald: Saxophone, Flute, Clarinet, Vibes, Keyboards, Mellotron, Backing Vocals
Greg Lake: Bass Guitar, Lead Vocals
Michael Giles: Drums, Percussion, Backing Vocals
Peter Sinfield: Lyrics, Illumination
WARNING!!!
Audio Format: Digital Surround DTS 5.1
To play DTS CDs you need to have equipment that supports DTS and a surround sound system that is capable of decoding the DTS signal. Don’t play this on equipment that isn’t compatible because you’ll only hear static!
Audio Format: Digital Surround DTS 5.1
To play DTS CDs you need to have equipment that supports DTS and a surround sound system that is capable of decoding the DTS signal. Don’t play this on equipment that isn’t compatible because you’ll only hear static!
No comments:
Post a Comment