Sunday, March 22, 2020

Robert Fripp: The Gates Of Paradise

ROBERT FRIPP: THE GATES OF PARADISE (1998)

1) The Outer Darkness I – X; 2) The Gates Of Paradise I – II; 3) The Outer Darkness XI; 4) The Gates Of Paradise III – IV.

General verdict: A farily convincing, but not terribly entertaining, personal look at what the two different sides of the afterlife could be like for all of us. Might work better with mushrooms.


As of now, this is officially the very last solo Robert Fripp album recorded in the studio, and it is very easy to miss it completely in the ocean of late period King Crimson albums, archival King Crimson releases, and ProjeKcts. However, it is a fairly unique project for Fripp — a lengthy, conceptual, and quite ambitious ambient recording whose artistic subject is not that far removed from the interests of King Crimson, yet whose actual execution is quite different from both any type of KC album or even any of Frippʼs previous side projects. The closest analogy would most likely be some of his past Frippertronics exercises from No Pussyfooting and onwards, but The Gates Of Paradise have very little, if any, of those trademark drawn-out howling guitar lines that usually characterize Frippʼs work.

The actual concept, a musical interpretation of the base differences between Heaven and Hell, or, if you wish, Robertʼs musical tribute to the Divine Comedy, is not altogether new. That Fripp is quite capable of creating Bosch-level sonic nightmares (such as he did with Larksʼ Tongues) and Rafael-level sonic idylls (ʽSheltering Skyʼ, etc.), is well known. But here, this is the core focus of the album, and he achieves his goals with fairly unconventional means. I am not sure whether all the sounds we hear are processed guitars or if there is actual synthesizer work involved, but regardless of technicalities, the overall sonic approach here is that of a church organ, with a bit of pianoforte mixed in on the last track. It really feels like we have been temporarily locked in Robertʼs private little church building and he is giving us a tour of the religious possibilities of his brand new organ (if that sounded a bit dirty, Iʼm not holding myself responsible).

Like any ambient album with emphasis on overall atmosphere rather than overall dynamics, The Gates Of Paradise will probably not command your attention through all of its 59 minutes, but, as in many similar cases, the length here is mainly just an auxiliary mechanism to get across the point. Four tracks are interspersed — two dealing with "outer darkness" and the other two with the "gates of Paradise" themselves, with the music naturally being more ominous and aggressive and thunderstormy on the latter and more serene and solemnly resplendent on the latter. The ʽOuter Darknessʼ bits would have ideally fit onto a Kubrick soundtrack, be it Space Odyssey or The Shining: alternating between quietly ominous background hum and all-out sustained ruckus, they may be quite psychologically unstable if listened to in the proper headphones. ʽThe Gates Of Paradiseʼ, on the contrary, is J. S. Bach meets New Age (first track) and John Cage meets New Age (second track), with pseudo-prepared-piano a-plenty introducing a slight touch of actual melody, then melting away to make way for even more peaceful organ textures.

Overall, it is not so much a great album as simply a surprising gesture from Fripp. Severely limited in ideas, The Gates Of Paradise will never stand a chance against classic Tangerine Dream or Klaus Schulze when it comes to electronic or electronically enhanced soundscapes of Heaven and Hell — but in a way, it works as a special sort of meta-artistic self-commentary on Frippʼs own classic legacy. Like, you were wondering if you were really right when your brain came up with all those religious / mythological images triggered by ʽThe Talking Drumʼ or ʽStarlessʼ? Well, this album proves that you certainly were. You were interested in whether the music of King Crimson could ever be directly interpreted in terms of good old Christianity? This album shows that such an interpretation is not impossible.

As to whether Iʼd ever want to listen to the album again... well, maybe on some particularly long and uneventful nighttime air flight, where the listening experience could result in an epiphany or two. As it is, I think that maybe the results would have turned out more interesting if Fripp had brought Eno along one more time — on his own, he is just not as efficient in weaving a fully convincing and addictive atmosphere. But at the very least, a Soundscape is a Soundscape, and the record delivers more or less what it advertises. Nobody ever said, after all, that the afterlife would be particularly full of dynamic events.

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