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
ReleasedOctober 2001
Recorded13 November 1971
Eastown Theatre, Detroit, Michigan
GenreProgressive rock
LabelDiscipline Global Mobile

Track listing

Disc 1

  1. "Pictures of a City" (Robert Fripp, Peter Sinfield) 9:02
    including:
    • "42nd at Treadmill"
  2. "Formentera Lady" (Fripp, Sinfield) 9:08
  3. "Sailor's Tale" (Fripp) 5:59
  4. "Cirkus" (Fripp, Sinfield) 9:14
    including:
    • "Entry of the Chameleons"
  5. "Ladies of the Road" (Fripp, Sinfield) 7:54
  6. "Groon (Part I)" (Fripp) 17:49

Disc 2

  1. "21st Century Schizoid Man" (Fripp, Michael Giles, Greg Lake, Ian McDonald, Sinfield) 13:21
    including:
    • "Mirrors"
  2. "Mars: The Bringer of War" (Gustav Holst, arr. by Boz Burrell, Mel Collins, Fripp, Ian Wallace) 13:22
  3. "The Court of the Crimson King" (McDonald, Sinfield) 3:31
  4. "Lady of the Dancing Water" (Fripp, Sinfield) 2:25

Personnel

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: Isn't that 4, not 2?
gollark: You can buy 128GB ones now, they're very cheap (and probably fail after you write a few terabytes but OH WELL).
gollark: Can you not use a μSD card?
gollark: This is not* going to be an issue later, I'm sure.
gollark: 230GB of my laptop's 512GB disk is in use, because I have many `node_modules`es, Rust projects, large games, giant toolchains (CUDA), big pretrained neural networks, a full backup of my old laptop, and several thousand memes.

References

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