Starless and Bible Black cover

Starless and Bible Black

Released

The first line of the first song will make you wince, but that “of its time” lyrical miscalculation aside, this second album by the 1972-74 lineup of King Crimson is every bit the equal of its predecessor, Larks’ Tongues In Aspic. Percussionist Jamie Muir was already gone, so this is in some respects a more stripped-down, hard-rocking album — “The Great Deceiver,” “Lament,” and “The Night Watch” are among the group’s best-known songs. However, most of the album was recorded live in concert, with crowd noise removed afterward, so “We’ll Let You Know,” “Trio,” “Fracture” and the title piece are all abstract, exploratory instrumentals; at times, Robert Fripp’s guitar has the same hornet-like sting as Pete Cosey’s contemporaneous work with Miles Davis.

Phil Freeman

Suggestions
Brewster’s Rooster cover

Brewster’s Rooster

Jack DeJohnette, John Surman, John Abercrombie, Drew Gress
Stick Man cover

Stick Man

Tony Levin
Cosmic Hug cover

Cosmic Hug

Fareed Haque
Learning to Cope with Cowardice cover

Learning to Cope with Cowardice

Mark Stewart & The Maffia
Free Action cover

Free Action

Wolfgang Dauner
Setting Standards: The New York Sessions cover

Setting Standards: The New York Sessions

Jack DeJohnette, Gary Peacock, Keith Jarrett
Live in Tokyo cover

Live in Tokyo

Brad Mehldau
Jesup Wagon cover

Jesup Wagon

James Brandon Lewis, Red Lily Quintet
Optometry cover

Optometry

William Parker, DJ Spooky, Joe McPhee, Matthew Shipp