Flowthgin Wrote:
Where is the best place to start with getting into King Crimson?
Let me second the material of the 73-74 band (King Crimson had already disbanded by 75.) Instead of the studio albums, however, I will make an argument for
any of the many live offerings from that period. The most easily, commercially available should be
The Nightwatch, which is the concert that yielded up some of the material that would end up on
Starless And Bible Black, sans the studio overdubs that would make it sound more finished. Also available in stores, on CD finally, is
USA, which is a more succinct look at this amazing set of musicians, once again live. Heading over to
Discipline Global Mobile you can find couple dozen official bootlegs in the "King Crimson Collectors Club," a few of which are of this band. KCCC #15, Live in Mainz, Germany, comes very highly recommended - great sound quality and a fantastic, tight performance.
The live bands of 1971 and 1972 are actually incredible - it's the studio output that isn't so spectacular (
Lizard and
Islands.) This band had a higher jazz pedigree and it showed in concert, and Fripp has been focusing a spotlight with his Club on this period to highlight an, until now, much-maligned period in Crimson history. Simply put, this band sizzles live - they might not burn as hotly as the 73-74 band, but they had a different energy level that seems to put them on a higher intellectual level. There's an excellent primer for this live band in the form of
Ladies of the Road which features one disc culled from the many Club releases of this band and a second disc that is essentially a jazz version of "21st Century Schizoid Man" - nearly an hour of solos from various live performances stitched together in such a way that it feels like a single, very long performance of that song. It sounds like it might drive you insane, but it's strangely intriguing and engaging.
As an alternative, if you have a little extra cash, you might want to invest in
The 21st Centurey Guide To King Crimson, Vol. 1 1969-1974" boxset. Two discs of the studio stuff (a pretty good starter for the band, actually) and two discs of previously released live material. For years the first two discs of the now out of print
Frame by Frame boxset suited me fine for this period, so this might do you very well. (This
21st Century Guide box and its follow-up will replace
Frame by Frame.)
Also highly recommended:
1.
Discipline - think of what the Talking Heads were doing with
Remain in Light and
Fear of Music and turn up the focus on the technical nature of that music. It can be a little geeky at times, but it's really interesting music nonetheless. The other two studio albums from the 80s are big steps down from this, but have some great stuff on them nonetheless. Wait for the
21st Century Guide, Vol. 2 for this period.
2.
Vrooom EP and
Thrak - King Crimson in the 90s, a lot noisier than they'd been in the 80s.
3.
The Power To Believe - the most recent incarnation of the band, back with a slightly ballsier sound that shows the influence Tool had on them when they joined them on tour a few years back. It's quite a good album.
And, again, I highly suggest picking up the associated live albums - they get a lot more attention from me than the studio work. King Crimson is a live band through-and-through, and Fripp's been working to prove that with a slew of commercial and internet-only releases. It's certainly not for everybody, but if you get into it you have many years of catching up to enjoy.