When Robert Fripp declared in 1974 that King Crimson had ‘ceased to
exist’ nobody could have foreseen that they would break their silence seven
years later with an
album that perhaps had more in common with the then current post-punk new wave
than the band’s progressive rock past.
Released in 1981, “Discipline” was a startling reinvention with a new
line-up performing radically different material that managed to delight fans,
confound critics &
pick up a substantial new audience along the way. 37 years later
“Discipline” remains one of the key albums of the early 1980s & one of
King Crimson’s most popular.
As different from the 1970s King Crimson, as the 1970s line-ups had been from
the 1960s band, the new quartet of Robert Fripp, Bill Bruford, Adrian Belew
(exZappa, Bowie, Talking Heads) and Tony Levin (Peter Gabriel, John Lennon &
hundreds of others), rapidly established itself as a force on the live
circuit.
The longer songs of the 1960s & early 1970s & the extended
improvisations of the live performances from the earlier touring bands were
replaced with a series of mostly short taut songs imbued with a minimalist
aesthetic that featured complex interwoven guitar lines, (coined ‘rock
gamelan’) Belew’s distinctive vocals, Bruford’s new armoury of
electronic percussion & Levin’s fluid bass & Chapman stick lines.
Songs written for the album became firm fixtures in the band’s repertoire and
the stature and influence of the material has grown over the years. Indiscipline
is regularly performed in a much rearranged version by the current King Crimson
line-up & the title track also made set-list appearances in last
year’s US tour.
The album charted on release in many countries – including the UK &
USA – while the touring schedule took the band through Europe, the US &
Japan in its first year of activity. By the end of 1981 Crimson was, once
again, viewed as one of rock music’s premier outfits.
King Crimson had also achieved a rare feat for a rock group – becoming one of
the very few acts to release a classic album in three separate decades. From
“In the Court of the Crimson King” in 1969, via “Red” in 1974 to
“Discipline” in 1981, with differing line-ups & radically different
sounds the band’s reputation for innovation & progression (in the best
sense of the word) was unassailable. “Discipline” is also, apparently,
credited as the cornerstone of ‘Math Rock’ – for what that’s worth.
In a change from other King Crimson vinyl releases, the track-listing for the
new vinyl reflects the 30th anniversary edition CD with Matte Kudasai featuring
Adrian Belew’s lead guitar as track 3 side A & with the Robert Fripp
lead guitar version as a bonus track at the end of side B –uncredited as per
the CD.
The album was cut at Loud Mastering by Jason Mitchell from audio approved by
Robert Fripp.