King Crimson
Level Five

Discipline    DGM0106  (2001)
Recording Date   2001

Rock/Pop
CD, 5   Tracks, 45:43  Length
01 Dangerous Curves Adrian Belew; Robert Fripp; Trey Gunn; Pat Mastelotto 05:38
02 Level Five Adrian Belew; Robert Fripp; Trey Gunn; Pat Mastelotto 08:35
03 Virtuous Circle Adrian Belew; Robert Fripp; Trey Gunn; Pat Mastelotto 10:00
04 The ConstruKction of Light Adrian Belew; Robert Fripp; Trey Gunn; Pat Mastelotto 08:23
05 The Deception of The Thrush Adrian Belew; Robert Fripp; Trey Gunn 13:07
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Live Yes
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Extras Limited Edition
Numbered
Musicians  &  Credits
Guitar Adrian Belew
Guitar Robert Fripp
Bass Trey Gunn
Drums Pat Mastelotto
Musician King Crimson
Cover by P.J. Crook
Personal Details
Index # 1820
Owner Dave
Tags Art Rock, Prog Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Packaging Notes #664
Notes
This hand-numbered limited-edition five-song EP was available exclusively at the King Crimson merchandising booths during the six-week Level Five tour of North America in November and December 2001. The 45-minute mini-set captures the quartet -- Adrian Belew (guitar/vocals), Robert Fripp (guitar), Trey Gunn (Warr guitar), and Pat Mastelotto (percussion) -- thrashing out some of the most intense and rhythmically diverse sounds to ever bear the King Crimson moniker. Likewise, Level Five reveals a band reaching for and obtaining new levels of soul -- a quality sorely absent in the " alternative" rock of the early 21st century. A majority of the instrumental material makes its debut release on this disc. However, "The ConstruKction of Light" and "The Deception of the Thrush" date as far back as the ProjeKcts -- five unique incarnations of King Crimson circa the mid-'90s. These various ProjeKcts toured, recorded, and rehearsed, finally settling into the reformed quartet heard here. The instrumental works debuted on this disc -- including "Dangerous Curves" and "Virtuous Circle" -- explore the cohesive nature of King Crimson as a laser beam-focused eight-armed hydra-rhythmic machine. When operating on all four cylinders -- as heard on every moment of this release -- they are unrelenting in their absolute aural assault. The title track is so intense that it could easily be mistaken for the likes of Tool, Ministry, Nine Inch Nails, or KMFDM. As Adrian Belew explained from the stage at various stops on the Level Five tour, the material on this disc was chosen for several reasons. It represents works-in-progress to be continued on a subsequent King Crimson studio release (scheduled for spring of '02). Additionally, the most obvious reason -- to the curious as well as the seasoned enthusiast -- is that these recordings reverberate with the same undeniable energies that have been consistently front and center during all the best incarnations of King Crimson. Ultimately, they are best left describing themselves as they have since 1969 and continue to do so on this wondrous collection of noir noise.