1) Easy Money; 2) Lament; 3) Book Of Saturday; 4) Fracture; 5) The Night Watch; 6) Improv: Starless And Bible Black; 7) Improv: Trio; 8) Exiles; 9) Improv: The Fright Watch; 10) The Talking Drum; 11) Larksʼ Tongues In Aspic, Pt. 2; 12) 21st Century Schizoid Man.
General verdict: A historically important high quality recording — great if it serves as your default sample of live King Crimson in 1973, superfluous otherwise.
For those who find Great Deceiver to be overkill (not even mentioning all the
gargantuan recent boxsets), The Night Watch
instead might be a perfectly well-rounded dose of classic Larks-era live King Crimson. With a fantastically apt title — the
performance was recorded at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, a stoneʼs throw
from the actual Night Watch — the
album gives you a near-complete concert (for some reason, only the opening
number, ʽLarksʼ Tongues In Aspic, Pt. 1ʼ was lost and never found) with a nice
balance between fully polished compositions and raw improvisations and crystal
clear sound quality.
Other than that, though, it is hard to say
anything new about this release, since the majority of its improvisations had
originally served as the basis for Starless
And Bible Black: this here is the original source for ʽTrioʼ, ʽStarless And
Bible Blackʼ, and ʽFractureʼ, without the extra edits and overdubs, but the
latter were minimal anyway, and bothering about which of the two variants works
better is a job for an experienced Crimsonhead, not yours truly. The only other
improvised piece which did not make it anywhere, entitled ʽThe Fright Watchʼ, is
really a six-minute atonal introduction to ʽThe Talking Drumʼ, with a nice
mellotron buildup but hardly worth valuing as a standalone piece.
Let me, therefore, concentrate on one thing and
one thing only: unless you rummage through all the archives on those enormous
boxsets, out of all the 1973–74 live albums I
have heard, The Night Watch arguably
features the very, very best version of ʽ21st Century Schizoid Manʼ. Without any
sax players in the lineup, Fripp has to take care of almost the entire
instrumental section himself, leaving just a little space for Wetton to show
his bass prowess and then coming back in with a vengeance. This time around,
the guitar tone is thick and growly, and the licks that Robert delivers are all
over the place — one moment he is Hendrix, the next one he is Cream-era Clapton,
and then, for brief moments, he even forgets himself to the extent of
transforming into Woodstock-era Alvin Lee (but only for very brief moments). In comparison, the one version on Great Deceiver is shorter and somewhat «wimpier»,
whereas the older available version on USA
suffers in the sound quality department. (Ironically, I trashed Frippʼs guitar
solo in my original negative review of the album — where the heck were my ears
back then?).
Other than that, I am really not sure what else
to say that has not already been said in the Great Deceiver review. Allegedly, the show at the Concertgebouw was
one of the most heavily bootlegged KC recordings of all time, which is an
additional (if not primary) reason for the albumʼs official release — but it is
also true that the remastered sound is ultimately more colorful and juicy than
anything on Great Deceiver, and the
record screams to be played loud and proud; it is somehow even easier for me to
gain a good feel for ʽFractureʼ on here than in the strange context of all the
other songs on Starless And Bible Black.
All of this certainly justifies its existence.
"a stoneʼs throw"
ReplyDeleteOnly if you have a very strong arm, but yeah, it's within walking distance. Far more remarkable is that KC had a gig in a famous hall, where famous orchestras play (three and a half decade ago I saw and heard the Leningrad Philharmony) and with fantastic acoustics, especially for quiet passages. I wonder if you can hear that on this live record?
If yes it might be a d**n good reason to buy this one iso others.
I bought this album when I was about 14 around when it just came out and it left a very strong impression on me, both with "Absent Lovers" which I also bought around the same time, even though the two shows captured completely different eras of the band's history, I was already discovering KC thanks to a good friend in highschool but I only heard a couple of the studio albums: ITCOTCK and Red, the KC live experience is a different beast entirely, they are a band born to be on stage.
ReplyDeleteThey actually returned to this hall almost 45 years later on their 2018 "Uncertain Times" tour.
I was there and it was one of the best gigs I've been to by them, and I've been to several since they returned to touring in 2014, for all their previous incarnations I was either too young or didn't have the means to travel.
Even though Fripp later complained about the quality of the sound on stage in his diaries to me it sounded absolutely amazing.
Interestingly they didn't choose to play 'Fracture' even though amazingly this piece has been resurrected and performed live on numerous occasions and I even managed to hear it live in Berlin in 2016, but I think it was the only time so far they played both LTIA1 and LTIA2 one after the other.