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Patricia Fripp
527 Hugo
Street
San Francisco
California
94122
(800) 634-3035
nationwide
(415) 753-6556
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(415) 753-0914
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PFripp@Fripp.com
| | Tool,
King Crimson Remind Audiences How Rock Should Be
by Brad
Kava
Published on August 13, 2001, San Jose Mercury News
(CA)
Heaviosity. Maximum heaviosity. The heaviest heaviosity.
OK, so Woody Allen's rock 'n' roll critic coinage was supposed to be a
joke.
But somehow, it fit Friday's pleasing show at the Berkeley Community Theater
by "nuovo metal" rockers Tool and King Crimson -- three hours of throbbing
electric music at its darkest, thickest and yes, heaviest.
This was the kind of bill that shaped the great early years of rock, when
Bill Graham would team up a veteran, such as Muddy Waters with an upstart
like Jimi Hendrix.
Big rock promoters, now largely owned by multinational corporations, don't
take many chances like this, limiting everything to certain demographics
and fearing, sometimes correctly, that anyone over 30 doesn't spend much
time listening to young bands, and those under 30 don't care much for
music from the 1960s.
This sold-out show put on by a smaller promoter from Los Angeles, Goldenvoice
Concerts, proved otherwise.
In an audience that was dominated mostly by Tool fans, many hadn't heard
of King Crimson, yet they gave the 31-year-old band a standing ovation
after its hourlong set.
And Crimson fans, who may not have spent time with the aggressive but
very musical Southern California band, which started in 1990, couldn't
help but be pleased hearing influences from the old progressive rock masters.
"King Crimson is pretty much who we ripped off over the years," Tool's
singer, Maynard James Keenan, said toward the end of his two-hour set.
"Don't tell anyone, especially them."
There were those who had no patience for Crimson's well-crafted, edgy,
opening set, particularly with dispassionate band leader Robert Fripp
sitting in a chair facing his musicians (Trey Gunn on bass, Adrian Belew
on guitar and Pat Mastelotto on drums) for the entire performance. Some
yelled for Tool during Crimson's quieter moments.
And, surprisingly, there were quieter moments. This was more melodic than
some Crimson shows. Two new songs, "Level 5" and "Dangerous Curves," seemed
like throwbacks to early 1970s elegiac Crimson. They were like what Black
Sabbath might sound like if covered by Miles Davis -- dark, sensual, passionate,
soft.
Tool fans probably would have been more comfortable with 1995's throbbing,
anti-melody Crimson, songs like "Thrak." They did get some edge with "Red"
and "Lark's Tongue in Aspic."
"I appreciated their talent," said Patty Marks, 29, of Sacramento, who
had never heard of King Crimson before the show. "No, I wouldn't buy their
albums or see them again, but they were good."
In any case, there was never any doubt who was headlining. The audience
was on its feet throughout Tool's sci-fi tinged show.
Keenan proved himself as much an odd bird as Fripp. The singer had his
own little stage in front of a video screen, where he performed mostly
in darkness, like a character in the videos that accompanied the entire
set.
First, he wore a skeletonlike bodysuit, like a junior Michelin Man, which
fit in with the clone-like characters in the videos that brought to mind
Aldous Huxley's novel "Brave New World."
Later he played practically naked, wearing only a small pair of Lycra
shorts.
To a first time Tool listener, this music might sound like Black Sabbath
covered by a mix of Cirque de Soleil and Nine Inch Nails. It's dark and
brooding, but it pulses with angry life and mystical, literate imagery.
Adam Jones on guitar, Justin Chancellor on bass and Danny Carey on drums
built a wall of sound from which Keenan's screams leaped into the netherlands.
They mixed strong songs from the latest album, "Lateralus," including
opener "The Grudge," "Schism" and a brilliant trilogy: "Disposition,"
"Reflection" and "Triad." They also covered "Eulogy" and "Sober," the
kind of unlikely radio hits that restore some hope in radio.
Fripp joined Tool during a quiet part of the trilogy, and the elder master's
"soundscape" gave background to Jones's pulsing guitar notes. It was the
kind of cross-pollination you'd want to see more of. Maybe the two bands
could really break out: Tool could try "21st Century Schizoid Man" while
Crimson tackles "Schism."
Even without that, this tour is already showing fans that there is more
to music than the demographic boxes the industry tries to lock it in.
For an interesting take on the tour, check out diaries of King Crimson
members (www.disciplineglobal
mobile.com).
Contact Brad Kava at bkava@sjmercury.com or (408) 920-5040
For an archived version of this article visit:
http://www0.mercurycenter.com/resources/search/center/search_newslibrary.html
Robert Fripp Unplugged Audio Series
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"Tool,
King Crimson Remind Audiences How Rock Should Be" by Brad Kava
"Engage Brain Before
Eating" by Jon Carroll

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753-0914 Email: PFripp@Fripp.com
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