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Eyes Wide Open is a live 2-DVD set by the British progressive rock band King Crimson, released in 2003.It presents two concerts filmed in the early 2000s, the band lineup featuring Robert Fripp, Adrian Belew, Trey Gunn and Pat Mastelotto.
King Crimson toured in 2003 to support the album; recordings from it were used for the live album EleKtrik: Live in Japan. 2003 also saw the release of the DVD Eyes Wide Open, a compilation of the band's shows Live at the Shepherds Bush Empire (London, 3 July 2000) and Live in Japan (Tokyo, 16 April 2003).
(3.9/10) [2] Happy with What You Have to Be Happy With (stylized in lowercase) is the third EP by prog rock band King Crimson released in 2002, a companion to the subsequent album The Power to Believe (2003).
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 ...
The 21st Century Guide to King Crimson – Volume Two – 1981–2003 is a compilation album by the highly influential English progressive rock band King Crimson, [2] containing the best-known songs from the group's 1981–2003 phase.
EleKtrik: Live in Japan is a live album by the band King Crimson, released in 2003. It consists of most of the audio soundtrack from the first disc of the band's double DVD Eyes Wide Open . Track listing
Eyes Wide Open (Twice album), 2020 "Eyes Wide Open" (Gotye song), 2010 "Eyes Wide Open" (Sabrina Carpenter song), 2015 "Eyes Wide Open" (Staind song), 2012; Eyes Wide Open, a 1992 album by David Garza; Eyes Wide Open, a 2015 album by Klear "Eyes Wide Open", a 2012 song by Dirty South "Eyes Wide Open", a song by Jars of Clay from The Shelter, 2010
Ian McDonald and Michael Giles were members of the original King Crimson line-up, and were featured performers on the band's debut album, In the Court of the Crimson King (1969). Both left the group at the end of its first United States tour in early 1970, [4] although Giles agreed to play on the second King Crimson album, In the Wake of ...