Live in Detroit, MI
Live in Detroit, MI is a live album (2-CD set) by the band King Crimson, released by the Discipline Global Mobile through the King Crimson Collectors' Club[1] in October 2001. Recorded in Detroit, Michigan at the Eastown Theatre on 13 November 1971. The packaging erroneously credits the CD as being from 13 December 1971.
Live in Detroit, MI | |
---|---|
Live album by | |
Released | October 2001 |
Recorded | 13 November 1971 Eastown Theatre, Detroit, Michigan |
Genre | Progressive rock |
Label | Discipline Global Mobile |
Track listing
Disc 1
- "Pictures of a City" (Robert Fripp, Peter Sinfield) 9:02
- including:
- "42nd at Treadmill"
- including:
- "Formentera Lady" (Fripp, Sinfield) 9:08
- "Sailor's Tale" (Fripp) 5:59
- "Cirkus" (Fripp, Sinfield) 9:14
- including:
- "Entry of the Chameleons"
- including:
- "Ladies of the Road" (Fripp, Sinfield) 7:54
- "Groon (Part I)" (Fripp) 17:49
Disc 2
- "21st Century Schizoid Man" (Fripp, Michael Giles, Greg Lake, Ian McDonald, Sinfield) 13:21
- including:
- "Mirrors"
- including:
- "Mars: The Bringer of War" (Gustav Holst, arr. by Boz Burrell, Mel Collins, Fripp, Ian Wallace) 13:22
- "The Court of the Crimson King" (McDonald, Sinfield) 3:31
- "Lady of the Dancing Water" (Fripp, Sinfield) 2:25
Personnel
- Robert Fripp - guitar, mellotron
- Boz Burrell - bass guitar, lead vocals
- Mel Collins - saxophone, flute, mellotron
- Ian Wallace - drums, vocals, sleeve notes
- Peter Sinfield - lyrics, sounds & visions
- Robert Ellis - photography
- Hugh O'Donnell - design
- Alex R Mundy - producer, digital editing
Notes
The audience link after "Pictures of a City" has been repaired. A few obvious faults remain. The introduction to "Ladies of the Road" is missing, and there is a break in the middle of "Groon", where the original tapes were changed. "Lady Of The Dancing Water" remains an incomplete fragment.[2]
gollark: No it's not.
gollark: It could do *something* like that if it has sufficient memory during its runtime.
gollark: It cannot actually alter itself even though it can think about doing so.
gollark: Now imagine that it doesn't have any way to write to its own weights/source code but just gets given some inputs and outputs a probability distribution.
gollark: Imagine some hypothetical AI (actually not that hypothetical, they basically all work this way outside of training) which can think about and model itself.
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