by
King
Crimson is back from exile.
Bandleader Robert Fripp says the famed prog
band will “return to active service” in summer 2014, fronted by a trio
of drummers.
Fripp made the announcement, of sorts, via his online diary:
“So, King Crimson is in motion. This is a very different reformation
to what has gone before: seven players, four English and three American,
with three drummers,” the British guitarist wrote in his
not-surprisingly esoteric blog style.
The concept appears to be the trio of drummers working as frontmen.
Not making the lineup is guitarist Adrian Belew, who posted on Facebook
Sept. 27 that “after 32 years I am no longer in King Crimson.” He said
Fripp “informed me in an email that he was starting a seven-piece
version of the band. He said I would not be right for what the band is
doing.”
The new King Crimson are Fripp (pictured), Gavin Harrison (drums), Tony Levin (bass), Pat Mastelotto (drums), Mel Collins (saxophone), Bill Rieflin (drums) and Jakko Jakszyk
(guitar, vocals).
The first five are band veterans, but all seven
previously worked with guitarist Fripp.
Collins last played with the
band in the mid-1970s.
Something like 18 musicians have been members of
King Crimson since its debut in 1968.
Fripp
cited several reasons for the 2014 return of King Crimson, including a
“likely” settlement of his long-running legal battle with Universal
Music Group, completion of a Guitar Craft book and the encouragement of his wife.
The revival is for touring and performing existing King Crimson material, with no plans for studio recordings, Fripp said.
“Right now the primary geographical focus is the United States,” Fripp told Uncut magazine, adding that the United Kingdom likely will be part of the band’s tour plans. Fripp dubbed the band King Crimson VIII.
In 2012, Fripp told the Financial Times
his career as a musician was over because it was “a joyless exercise in
futility.”
His primary beef was the treatment of his catalog by UMG,
which had swallowed up several labels associated with King Crimson and
released its music without Fripp’s approval.
Fripp’s other complaints
about the music industry include Virgin’s longtime misplacement of the
King Crimson master recordings.
Fripp has his own label, Discipline Global Mobile, which has been reissuing the band’s music in multiple audiophile formats.
More King Crimson content:
No comments:
Post a Comment