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Robert Fripp's official website - robertfripp.com (2024) Discipline Global Mobile (DGM) - DGM Live is a small, mobile, independent music company that aspires to Intelligence. Founded by Robert Fripp and David Singleton in 1992, its website is the home of all RF music, tour dates, diaries, news, as well as King Crimson’s, among other related ...
God Save the Queen/Under Heavy Manners is the second solo album by Robert Fripp, released on Polydor Records in 1980 (US catalogue no. PD-1-6266). The album largely consists of Frippertronics , with much of the work being performed by improvisation.
All songs above are credited as being by Robert Fripp except those marked † which are credited as being by 'The League of Gentlemen'. The primary performances on the album are credited to; Barry Andrews - organ; Robert Fripp - guitar; Sara Lee - bass guitar; Jonny Toobad (Johnny Elichaoff [7]) - drums (on HEPTAPARAPARSHINOKH and DISLOCATED)
The Robert Fripp Discography Summary, compiled by John Relph, also lists 120 compilations and 315 unauthorised releases (such as bootlegs). This means that more than 1100 releases (including both official and unofficial ones, as well as both studio and live recordings) can be found with Robert Fripp participating.
After some initial rehearsals starting in late November 1968, King Crimson were officially formed on 13 January 1969 with a lineup of Greg Lake on bass and vocals, Robert Fripp on guitar, Ian McDonald on woodwind and keyboards, Michael Giles on drums, and Peter Sinfield as the band's lyricist and operator of the band's light shows on stage (Sinfield later expanded his role to also playing ...
Peter Sinfield, the colorfully surreal British poet and lyricist who co-founded King Crimson with guitarist-composer Robert Fripp and went on to contribute lyrics to songs by Emerson, Lake ...
Gear Gods has featured in-depth interviews on the equipments of Between the Buried and Me, [4] John Petrucci, [5] Zakk Wylde, [6] Mike Portnoy, [7] Misha Mansoor, [8] among other artists. Its editor-in-chief is Trey Xavier, a guitar instructor who studied at Berklee College of Music and Sonoma State University .
Fripp referred to the 1980 band as "a second-division touring new wave instrumental dance band". [citation needed] The Trouser Press Record Guide described the League of Gentlemen's music as typically taking "a simple medium-to-fast backbeat over which Fripp and Andrews locked horns, with melodic development emerging slowly, surely, subtly."