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King Crimson created a strange mix of Stravinsky, Jungle Grooves and abstract jazz here. The title suite builds from little nature noises to a wrecking ball Les Paul riff to an eccentric, thorny funk. Each part sounds like nothing else in popular music; yet it all fits together as organically as the verse, bridge and courus of a Brill Building song.
Book Of Saturday and Exiles are ballads--in theory. But the lyrics are so filled with wry twists, and the playing is so angular, any equation with pop proves absurd a few seconds into a first listen. The two songs seem to form a genre of their very own.
The second half of the album-"Easy Money," "Talking Drum," and the second part of the title track-further experiment with the hybrids layed out on the first half. Jazz solos are played over strange animal noises. The violin is given a Mozart-like line while gongs are banged with chains. It is incredibly wierd, incredibly fresh and incrediably brilliant.
If you are sick of the same old sounds, try this. "But its from 1973!" you say.
Yes, but rock has yet to catch up to Larks Tounges In Aspic.
Briefly, the instrumentation and crispness of sound is unparalleled even with more current production techniques and the supposed progress that is always occuring. We haven't seen anything like this since. It makes other forms of "progressive" rock look like a joke. Here is a music that goes by that guise but is neither progressive nor rock. Not progressive because no one could effectively progress beyond this pinnacle of the idiom, and its uniqueness. Not rock - although of course you can hear elements of it. The musical language and instrumentation are too diverse. Rock makes its name on repetition and relative simplicity. This is musical, spontaneous, exciting stuff, the way "rock" hasn't been in years.