I really wish there was significantly more music in the general sphere of this and Remain In Light With how well received these albums were, it's surprising there aren't a bunch of decent ripoffs from a year later
@@mixolydian2010 often people will associate him with guitar tricks but the fans know how much of a well rounded all in one type of musician he really is . there is practically nothing the man does not do and when he does its done REALLY well . inspiring is the word i choose to use for him .
He was hand picked by the greats. Could you imagine being poached by Talking Heads, David Bowie, Frank Zappa, and King Crimson? That resume speaks volumes about the kind of musician he is, I wish he was more widely celebrated in the pantheon of guitar greats. Rolling Stone didn't even put him in the top 100 guitarists, which boggles my mind to no end.
I don't know exactly when was this recorded in relation to this incarnation's second album: beat. However, before beat came to be, Mr Fripp has explained that he was very excited and happy with the idea of having a band as techically skilled as the one he had assembled, and also he liked how this new band seemed willing to follow his ideas on the gamelan-rock ideals, or something like that. So, I imagine this is one of those periods in krim history where Fripp was really happy with the band, something that wouldn't last for long, as the beat album nearly separated the group.
@@MarceloKatayama This was from their first album Discipline and this performance was before they recorded Beat. And yes, Beat just about killed the band. Very stressful time. Most of the other band members thought Beat was a really good album, probably better than Discipline. Mr. Fripp disagreed. He later said at least one of the three albums they recorded was good. I still love all three of their albums from the 80s, but have to agree with Robert that Discipline was the best of the three.
He was taken to ER after the performance to have his face put back in place. Kidding aside - he's probably smiling because he realizes that he has the most ass kicking band in the history of rock music.
@@luannabbate2624 Adrian was one of the only non-sight-reading musicians that Zappa ever accepted into his bands, post-early Mothers '68-'69. That alone puts Adrian into rarified company.
But, those of us with taste appreciate the bands these guys inspired like Between the Buried and Me. They did a cover of Three of a Perfect Pair that's just fucking incredible.
@@satyrosphilbrucato9140 Being born in 1973, I got into "Larks In Aspects Tongue" first. So I was shocked, in a way, to like the 1980s incarnation of King Crimson better already. That being said, I still love me some 1970s King Crimson!
Robert Fripp + Adrian Belew + Tony Levin + Bill Bruford = the best King Crimson lineup of the 80s 1:57 - 2:06 a rare moment of Robert Fripp actually smiling and enjoying himself
I wonder whether he was enjoying himself, or feeling incredibly self-conscious being on camera. Might have been what turned him off being photographed while playing!
@@bomagosh That's a super hammy smile, so probably related to that. I assume a reaction to the "camera's live" light since he's drawn to it and smiles the moment the booth selects that camera. I relate to that, I've NEVER liked being in photos and withdraw the moment a camera is even angled in my direction lol
Robert Fripp trying his best to control himself from losing control over Adrien's antics.... but Adrien gets the better of him and Fripp ends up smiling and gives in.
In 1981 I was a middle school rock-n-roll kid without a clue of earlier 70's pro-rock. I saw this show on TV and without ever having heard of KC before I was instantly a dedicated follower. It took me until the 90's to fully comprehend their music, and then had to take it all in again in '95, but this very broadcast is what started it all for me.
@@andyharman3022 You have to fight against the Strat to make sound... Once you're tired of fighting as, anyway, it won't sound the way you want, you go and buy a good guitar
Not sure if anyone mentioned it yet, but huge kudos to the person whose idea it was to have Crimson perform on Network TV. They probably gained some new fans due to this performance.
This Blew. Me. Away. when I saw it on TV. I thought I was watching the future, and I suppose I was. Bought the album as soon as I could find it. Still love every incarnation of KC 41 years later.
Wow, Belew is something else; a really good singer, a terrific and innovative guitar player and an incredible front man. Zappa really knew how to spot talent! Oh, and the rest of King Crimson aren't too shabby either! Great band and great tune.
I LOVE Bill Bruford's drums so damn much here. Every snare drum stroke is so accurate and has this intense punch that he doesn't force. He has great forearm strength and doesn't have to use brute force.
Actually he said he had a weak left arm and had to use rim shots to be heard. Regardless, he’s my favorite drummer and as a bassist he’s the drummer I’d want to play with the most. Stewart Copland too. The Tama brothers. If you include Neil Peart, they’d be the Tama triplets.
@@sthomasond He always gets included in my conversations about rock drummers. In prog, him and Carl Palmer tower over everyone else IMO. Such originality, precision and mastery.
My head freaking exploded when this came on broadcast TV. I was well aware of King Crimson’s first incarnation, yet this was something I had not yet beheld. Along with Devo’s satisfaction on SNL, among the most eye-opening and revelatory TV appearances by any band ever, and yes, I include the Beatles on Sullivan
agree 100%. i tell friends all the time that it's the greatest single-song live performance by any band...ever. and re-watchings only add additional proof. astounding
I saw this live on television too. It was pretty mind blowing. I was a King Crimson fan from then on. I was exposed to Frank Zappa before, and also a big fan, there aren't many bands of this caliber.
I was a Crimson fan from the 70's, still aching from their breakup in 1975. I kept up with Robert Fripp's activities since, and had his albums Exposure and League of Gentleman. Then I heard he had formed a new band called Discipline and was waiting for an album. When I saw Discipline in a record store in 1981, and it had actually morphed into a new incarnation of King Crimson, my heart skipped a beat, and I snapped it up immediately. I probably didn't listen to any other album for a couple of months after that. I somehow missed their appearance on Fridays when it happened, and I am still regretting it 40 years later.
I just saw Adrian Belew w/ Jerry Harrison & the crew a month ago on the "Remain In Light" tour, in SF, awesome performance! X opened the show, so there was never a doubt that I had to be there. I got standing room about 3 rows back from Adrian's edge of the stage; Julie Slick on bass behind him (she was bored & unchallenged until they tore into Thela Hu Ginjeet). I'd seen Adrian a few times before, including when I was a teen in 1977 (78?) with Frank Zappa in Milwaukee... Adrian is a legend in my book!
The first half-dozen times I watched it, I assumed it had to be lip-synched because of how impossibly tight & balanced the sound is, and how plain-old impossible the song is.
This is so very good… I saw them at the Hullabaloo in Rensselaer NY on this tour. I was 17 or 18yrs old. Blew me away. I’m 60yrs old now and hands down still my all time #1 show. Thank you King Crimson and Mr. Bruford! ❤🎶🥁
I was at that show and just happened to end up directly against the stage, dead center. The four of them were 10 feet away from my unobstructed view. It absolutely changed my life instantly in the new potential for what was possible in music
I saw them right around this time, touring for Discipline and they were amazing live. Just to hear these complex polyrhythms wash over you with the clever wordplay of the lyrics was a transformative experience. Fripp was and still is one of the most unique guitar players and Belew always made these performances fun with his positive energy and very creative guitar bashing style. Hearing Tony play the Chapman Stick live was also a highlight and of course, Bruford was a monster and very creative drummer. A moment in time that will live forever, musically they were breaking new ground with this, there's never been anything else quite like it.
@@Emlizardorelax, mate. One man's trash is another's treasure. Robert Fripp himself doesn't agree with your take on those bands, so slag off to him too?
Adrian and Robert are 180 degrees opposite one another. I like how at the end they shake hands. I can only imagine what was said. "Good show. See you Monday? Yep. Have a good weekend!!".
The close-ups at the end are hilarious. Just some shy, well mannered young men who've just melted thousands of brains via network TV and turned loads of kids onto African music, minimalism, experimental guitar music, electronics, jazz, funk and whatever comes their way. Job well fucking done.
I remember watching this LIVE. Fridays was a cool little show. I loved it cause they had some of the COOLEST bands of the time LIKE King Crimson, Devo and The Pretenders. Saturday Night Live was cool, but Fridays had the better bands of the 80's. It was where I FINALLY got to see Adrian, Bill, Tony And Fripp play "live". SO cool. I just remembered how Fripp always had a smile on his face like he was loving what he was doing. Elephant Talk was a favorite song too so it was a bonus watch all around. Fond memory. Thank you, Bill.
@@chanthing both bands performed live for Fridays back in 1981, Devo being a highlight, performing 3/4 songs from their "New Traditionalists" album with treadmills which was unseen at that time
You forgot the Clash played also! They played 4 songs, holy balls I was in 11th grade at girls house, parents were gone and there were about 7 of us partying.
As Bob F. said to me at the time, "This is the best touring band in the world right now." Chicago Park West Theater, November 10, 1981. p.s. Happy Birthday Bob! 76 big ones!
It's so mind-boggling to think of a TV audience of normies tuning in and seeing THIS wacky shit. When was the last time late-night had off-the-beaten-path musicians like this on? I know Mars Volta did some late-night spots in support of _The Bedlam in Goliath_ but that was over a decade ago.
I remember seeing this broadcast; this was also the time when I started making music, inspired by Brian Eno's Another Green World, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts with David Byrne, and of course, King Crimson's Discipline, etc! Even if I couldn't play like them, there was a sense of experimentation back then! I feel as if that was the perfect time to start a music career, because there was so much music that eschewed genres, even a network like ABC would air performances like these! Fridays even has The Residents once, but that is another story!
I remember watching this live when I was probably 14 years old. COMPLETELY blew my mind then as it does now. Ending up buying a lot of King Crimson and Bruford side projects over the next decade-plus. Thanks so much for posting this!
To be honest it took me awhile to warm up to this. I was exited that King Crimson was reforming and with Bill. Then I saw this on Fridays and was not sure what to make of this more post punk direction. Over time I grew to love it.
@@cycologist7069 So back in the 80's I was taking courses at the local Community College. I was sitting and doing Algebra problems one Saturday while listening to some music. I was tuned into WMNF in Tampa (USF's Station) and they had an 'alternative' music show that aired Saturday afternoons... I always tried to catch the show since I do enjoy some alternative stuff. Anyway, they played King Crimson Indiscipline and i was instantly hooked... Been a fan ever since... For some reason, when ever I hear Les Claypool and Primus it reminds me a lot of King Crimson... Seems to me they have similar styles, but I'm no expert on musical styles.... I just enjoy music.
@@witchdoctor7398 I was very much into punk rock and its various offshoots, and also into prog (a rare thing in those days to like both). At was just interesting to see KC go in that direction. In retrospect it shouldn’t be because music always changes and genres come and go and morph into other things. And yes, Les Claypool was very influenced by that specific period of King Crimson.
Lucky you: Adrian Belew, Tony Levin, Danny Carey & Steve Vai have put together a nation-wide tour of this music, starting Summer 2024! They are calling it "Beat" (Robert Fripp reserves the name King Crimson")
The mind still boggles. What a performance. I love how Robert smiles at the camera, the dapper gentleman. Discipline is an all time favourite album. Side note, any Crimson fans here who haven’t listened before to XTC’s ‘Apple Venus Volume 1’ get into it. I don’t want to say it’s their best, just infer it ;P Thank you for uploading this, Bill.
I bought the album the day it was released. A friend of mine had a VCR and taped this show so we were able to re-watch it over and over. I still my copy of the tape packed away somewhere.
I consider King Crimson to be the band that put out the most intense music of that decade. Discipline is one of my favorite studio prog albums. Loaded with great tunes. My two favorites from this incredible album are Elephant Talk and Thela Hun Ginjeet. They also put out a bunch of great live concerts during the 1980s. Crimson was King in the 1980s.
I 'member being like 20 and watching this 'live' when it aired. IT BLEW MY EFFING MIND. 🤯Literally went to the mall the next day (Saturday) to buy _Discipline_ ...
Saw KC at my small college (UC San Diego) gym during the Discipline tour. Fripp stopped the show for a few when someone took a photo. Levin inventing things on The Stick. Bruford looking like he was going to barf the entire night. Thought is was magnificent noise - bought and wore out the album and the T-shirt. It took a few spins before coming to really appreciate what I'd seen - one of the most amazing live acts ever. Elephant Talk was a highlight. Thx, Bill!
Sounds like the "THRAK" tour (1994-1995) with the "double trio" lineup! Saw that lineup at the Tower Theater in Upper Darby, PA (outskirts of Philadelphia) in April 1995. They were like a well-oiled machine. Marvelous show!
I remember seeing KC on the Discipline tour in NYC. I was a long-time fan of The Crim, but didn't know what to expect that evening, knowing Tony only from his work with Gabriel and being totally unfamiliar with Adrian... and damn, I wish the Savoy theater had had seat belts. "Mind blown" is an understatement; the four of you were exponentially greater than the sum of the individuals. And to this day I vividly recall all of you except RF exiting the stage at the end... whereupon he walked from his darkened down-left corner to center stage, took a quick bow, and exited up left. For being considered so egg-headed and "serious," Uncle Bobby has quite the spiky sense of humor.
Wow...I remember seeing this on live TV in high school. Very cool to finally see it again! Interestingly, I think this may be both the first and the last time I've ever witnessed Fripp cracking a smile during a performance.
One of the greatest songs by one of the greatest bands in what is argueably their greatest lineup...words are not enough to express my gratitude mister Bruford but thank you for your commitment and dedication to your craft, you're a gentleman and a scholar!
Astonishing! Not only for the fact this happened on mainstream US TV (!), but look at Fripp's little face! I've never seen him smile so much! A fabulous rendition. It reminds me of better times…
This band should be in the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame. One of the greatest bands I ever heard. Love Adrian Belew..He is one of the most gifted Guitarist and singers ever. I am sure Frank Zappa and Talkin' Heads were happy to have him in their bands.
Robert smiled! For years I have searched the interned for anything from the most musically inclined drummer of the Rock-n-Roll era with limited success. But now, oh my gosh, I’ll be living here for a while! Thanks Bill for thinking of us!
You can hear why Belew fit in so naturally with Talking Heads
Same with Frank Zappa. All of the signature changes.
duh Belew was raped for his genius and discarded
And see. Look at that damn suit 😂
This sounds like Talking Heads and Primus at the same time.
In some of their live recordings I really hear David Byrne
Probably the most 'fun' King Crimson line-up? Gloriously complex music disguised as danceable pop and working on every level!
Agreed...danceable orchestration.
I love the description.
,,, nuff said ...
I really wish there was significantly more music in the general sphere of this and Remain In Light
With how well received these albums were, it's surprising there aren't a bunch of decent ripoffs from a year later
Discipline one of the best albums of the eighties
Adrian Belew is incredible. He brings such levity to this art.
HEs among the most perfect frontmen!
@@mixolydian2010 often people will associate him with guitar tricks but the fans know how much of a well rounded all in one type of musician he really is . there is practically nothing the man does not do and when he does its done REALLY well . inspiring is the word i choose to use for him .
@@peteytwofinger Well, he also played with Frank Zappa, and that would be a hard gig.
He was hand picked by the greats. Could you imagine being poached by Talking Heads, David Bowie, Frank Zappa, and King Crimson? That resume speaks volumes about the kind of musician he is, I wish he was more widely celebrated in the pantheon of guitar greats. Rolling Stone didn't even put him in the top 100 guitarists, which boggles my mind to no end.
@@billyjackoff That's because RS is worthless...
Is Mr Fripp smiling?!
Only when he realizes that he's on camera.
I don't know exactly when was this recorded in relation to this incarnation's second album: beat. However, before beat came to be, Mr Fripp has explained that he was very excited and happy with the idea of having a band as techically skilled as the one he had assembled, and also he liked how this new band seemed willing to follow his ideas on the gamelan-rock ideals, or something like that. So, I imagine this is one of those periods in krim history where Fripp was really happy with the band, something that wouldn't last for long, as the beat album nearly separated the group.
@@MarceloKatayama This was from their first album Discipline and this performance was before they recorded Beat. And yes, Beat just about killed the band. Very stressful time. Most of the other band members thought Beat was a really good album, probably better than Discipline. Mr. Fripp disagreed. He later said at least one of the three albums they recorded was good. I still love all three of their albums from the 80s, but have to agree with Robert that Discipline was the best of the three.
He was taken to ER after the performance to have his face put back in place.
Kidding aside - he's probably smiling because he realizes that he has the most ass kicking band in the history of rock music.
Yep and it sounds really frightening... He must've had a bad day 😁 but really having Belew on stage, it's hard not to smile.
You can that hear Levin’s influence on Les Claypool was profound.
I was searching for this comment
This song was the inspiration for Jerry Was a Racecar Driver
Jerrywasaracecardriver...
y se nota que también salió DMV
IMO, You can hear that David Byrne's influence on Adrian Belew was profound.
The level of sheer instrumental virtuosity in this band was and remains mind-roasting.
🎉totally agree 🎉
Adrian Belew is hypnotically entertaining to hear and watch. A true machine.
Also a Zappa team memve. He know,s hi shit
@@luannabbate2624 Adrian was one of the only non-sight-reading musicians that Zappa ever accepted into his bands, post-early Mothers '68-'69. That alone puts Adrian into rarified company.
The mainstream public have hardly heard anything better since then.
Yep. So much junk is what the mainstream pub goes for, generally.
Two words: Black Midi
@@olivercrowley9367 same shit
But, those of us with taste appreciate the bands these guys inspired like Between the Buried and Me. They did a cover of Three of a Perfect Pair that's just fucking incredible.
@@tenshko5055 I am starving for another band producing shit on the same wavelength as Crimson so I hope it's the "same shit" lmao
Still listen to 'Discipline' pretty regularly 40 years later.
I consider it Crimson's finest moment, in any incarnation.
Discipline was my favorite album of the 80's.
This is what got me and my friend heavily into King Crimson. Saw them in Montreal for Beat and Toronto for Three of a Perfect Pair.
@@satyrosphilbrucato9140 Being born in 1973, I got into "Larks In Aspects Tongue" first. So I was shocked, in a way, to like the 1980s incarnation of King Crimson better already. That being said, I still love me some 1970s King Crimson!
me too
Kudos to the director who must have been paying attention during rehearsals. The camera takes were spot on for this lively performance.
Fridays music segments were almost always superior to SNL's, and their audience support was always better than Midnight Special.
Adrian Belew is an absolute monster. The whole band is at a level of musicianship that few others will ever equal. Mind bending.
It's not antics, it's impossible guitar job
3:21 proud moment for this guy... what a goof
That solo. My goodness. This was the first band I saw live - 10th grade, Mann Music Center, June 1984. Modern English was the opener.
Robert Fripp + Adrian Belew + Tony Levin + Bill Bruford = the best King Crimson lineup of the 80s
1:57 - 2:06 a rare moment of Robert Fripp actually smiling and enjoying himself
Um, they were the only KC lineup 'of the 80s'
Make that ever
I wonder whether he was enjoying himself, or feeling incredibly self-conscious being on camera. Might have been what turned him off being photographed while playing!
It's not only the smiles, but the fact that he's actually improvising throughout the song and not just playing it straight.
@@bomagosh That's a super hammy smile, so probably related to that. I assume a reaction to the "camera's live" light since he's drawn to it and smiles the moment the booth selects that camera. I relate to that, I've NEVER liked being in photos and withdraw the moment a camera is even angled in my direction lol
Robert Fripp trying his best to control himself from losing control over Adrien's antics.... but Adrien gets the better of him and Fripp ends up smiling and gives in.
Yeah, from the performances I've seen, Fripp wasn't much of a smiler, or did he appear to really enjoy his groves, just methodical.
Bollocks
I get the feeling someone told Fripp he should smile when on TV and he did his best 😂
Wow Fripp is smiling and looking happy
Heheh - I noticed that, too!
Love how Belew is always such a showman, he’s always so fun on stage
In 1981 I was a middle school rock-n-roll kid without a clue of earlier 70's pro-rock. I saw this show on TV and without ever having heard of KC before I was instantly a dedicated follower. It took me until the 90's to fully comprehend their music, and then had to take it all in again in '95, but this very broadcast is what started it all for me.
ASTOUNDING! Adrian is beating that Strat within inches of it's life!
I saw them on the Beat tour in 1982, and can confirm that Adrian was still beating on that same Strat. If that guitar could talk...
Every once in a while he tells the story of how a buddy of his actually torched that thing the second he got it used in a shop in '77
@@andyharman3022 You have to fight against the Strat to make sound... Once you're tired of fighting as, anyway, it won't sound the way you want, you go and buy a good guitar
I watched this performance on my TV that night, and it blew my mind SO HARD! It affected me musically for the rest of my life! 🤩❤
Not sure if anyone mentioned it yet, but huge kudos to the person whose idea it was to have Crimson perform on Network TV. They probably gained some new fans due to this performance.
I would have run out and bought the album If I had seen this. As such, I'm late to the party.
Fr
Yep! Me! Bought the LP immediately & worship it to this day.
Robert smiling? I know Toyah gets him laughing in the videos now but back then, he\d always have that serious look on his face.
I remember watching this on tv that Friday night. It truly changed my freakin’ world.
'' With King Crimson every note is accounted for '' Robert Fripp
This Blew. Me. Away. when I saw it on TV. I thought I was watching the future, and I suppose I was.
Bought the album as soon as I could find it. Still love every incarnation of KC 41 years later.
It Belew me away!!
When I saw this comment I just knew what the reply was going to be. 😂
Bill! Thanks for posting all of these. You DEFINITELY know and appreciate your fans. WHO EVEN DOES THIS?!?!?!
Bill B is a drummer that makes us thinkable persons. I like it!
Wow, Belew is something else; a really good singer, a terrific and innovative guitar player and an incredible front man. Zappa really knew how to spot talent!
Oh, and the rest of King Crimson aren't too shabby either! Great band and great tune.
Glorious! Never seen Robert smile that much :-) Adrian positively killing it back then.
I LOVE Bill Bruford's drums so damn much here. Every snare drum stroke is so accurate and has this intense punch that he doesn't force. He has great forearm strength and doesn't have to use brute force.
Truly epic drummer. And for as good as he is, you could argue he's underrated!
The guy is on another level and he’s got those old school Simmons pads here I think
Actually he said he had a weak left arm and had to use rim shots to be heard. Regardless, he’s my favorite drummer and as a bassist he’s the drummer I’d want to play with the most. Stewart Copland too. The Tama brothers. If you include Neil Peart, they’d be the Tama triplets.
He's one of my all-time favorites. Up there with the best from the 70s/80s but never gets included in the conversation
@@sthomasond He always gets included in my conversations about rock drummers. In prog, him and Carl Palmer tower over everyone else IMO. Such originality, precision and mastery.
Holy shit never saw this before. One of the better live TV performances I've seen. Bet this blew some minds back in 1981 😂
Oh, it belew some minds alright
Yeah I was stoned as a bat and would listen to the whole album and not realize time was going by
@@tgshort7638I’ve never seen a stoned bat 🦇? 😂
My head freaking exploded when this came on broadcast TV. I was well aware of King Crimson’s first incarnation, yet this was something I had not yet beheld.
Along with Devo’s satisfaction on SNL, among the most eye-opening and revelatory TV appearances by any band ever, and yes, I include the Beatles on Sullivan
Have you seen Focus play Hocus Pocus on Midnight Special in 1973? That was super colossal.
agree 100%. i tell friends all the time that it's the greatest single-song live performance by any band...ever. and re-watchings only add additional proof. astounding
@@andyharman3022 you're so right - 'twas epic! now you've got me wond'ring: where is Thiis Van Leer?
I saw this live on television too. It was pretty mind blowing. I was a King Crimson fan from then on. I was exposed to Frank Zappa before, and also a big fan, there aren't many bands of this caliber.
Devo was on Friday’s too
I was a Crimson fan from the 70's, still aching from their breakup in 1975. I kept up with Robert Fripp's activities since, and had his albums Exposure and League of Gentleman. Then I heard he had formed a new band called Discipline and was waiting for an album. When I saw Discipline in a record store in 1981, and it had actually morphed into a new incarnation of King Crimson, my heart skipped a beat, and I snapped it up immediately. I probably didn't listen to any other album for a couple of months after that. I somehow missed their appearance on Fridays when it happened, and I am still regretting it 40 years later.
Did you notice in 1979 that Robert Fripp was the producer on the Roches' album? Tony Levin played some bass on that, too (though nothing like this...)
@@yournamehere6719 Yes, heard that. He also played guitar for David Bowie on Heroes.
@@andyharman3022 And on "Scary Monsters" which featured 'Fashion' and 'Teenage Wildlife,' two awesome Fripp vehicles.
I couldnt stop laughing when the crowd tried to clap along to Tony Levin but then slowly died down
Adrian Belew is hilarious!! Even has Fripp smiling! What a joy to see such consumate musicians having a blast!!
I just saw Adrian Belew w/ Jerry Harrison & the crew a month ago on the "Remain In Light" tour, in SF, awesome performance! X opened the show, so there was never a doubt that I had to be there. I got standing room about 3 rows back from Adrian's edge of the stage; Julie Slick on bass behind him (she was bored & unchallenged until they tore into Thela Hu Ginjeet). I'd seen Adrian a few times before, including when I was a teen in 1977 (78?) with Frank Zappa in Milwaukee... Adrian is a legend in my book!
You can see it in their faces, they know how good they just sounded ❤
might be the best performance i've ever seen. can't sing enough praises of this. no matter how many times i hear or watch... just WOW.,
The first half-dozen times I watched it, I assumed it had to be lip-synched because of how impossibly tight & balanced the sound is, and how plain-old impossible the song is.
That answered a LOT of questions I had about their technique.
This is so very good… I saw them at the Hullabaloo in Rensselaer NY on this tour. I was 17 or 18yrs old. Blew me away. I’m 60yrs old now and hands down still my all time #1 show. Thank you King Crimson and Mr. Bruford! ❤🎶🥁
I was at that show and just happened to end up directly against the stage, dead center. The four of them were 10 feet away from my unobstructed view. It absolutely changed my life instantly in the new potential for what was possible in music
I saw them right around this time, touring for Discipline and they were amazing live. Just to hear these complex polyrhythms wash over you with the clever wordplay of the lyrics was a transformative experience. Fripp was and still is one of the most unique guitar players and Belew always made these performances fun with his positive energy and very creative guitar bashing style. Hearing Tony play the Chapman Stick live was also a highlight and of course, Bruford was a monster and very creative drummer. A moment in time that will live forever, musically they were breaking new ground with this, there's never been anything else quite like it.
Best live performance in the history of television.
Three bands that made Rock sound so Beautiful , " King Crimson, Rush & Yes".
Certainly the best.. maybe add Zappa.. the 3 you mention are perfect, tho... time to jam Closer To The Edge.. ❤
And...ELP
Genesis too
@@Emlizardorelax, mate. One man's trash is another's treasure. Robert Fripp himself doesn't agree with your take on those bands, so slag off to him too?
I love Rush and Yes more than King Crimson, but I'm still a fan of KC...
Fridays was where we first saw Michael Richards do a "Kramer-type" character in sketches. A very nervous guy.
Coolest part of this performance? That funky rest at 3:15...along with Fripp's sheepish grin after starting his lead a nanosecond late.
Adrian and Robert are 180 degrees opposite one another. I like how at the end they shake hands. I can only imagine what was said. "Good show. See you Monday? Yep. Have a good weekend!!".
The close-ups at the end are hilarious. Just some shy, well mannered young men who've just melted thousands of brains via network TV and turned loads of kids onto African music, minimalism, experimental guitar music, electronics, jazz, funk and whatever comes their way. Job well fucking done.
Incredible camera work, actually showing what the musicians are doing moment by moment.
Yeah, "Fridays" is a forgotten gem. Blew the then-moribund SNL out of the water.
Possibly their finest rendition of this tune.
Best. Moment. Ever. In all history. Of TV.
I remember watching this LIVE. Fridays was a cool little show. I loved it cause they had some of the COOLEST bands of the time LIKE King Crimson, Devo and The Pretenders. Saturday Night Live was cool, but Fridays had the better bands of the 80's. It was where I FINALLY got to see Adrian, Bill, Tony And Fripp play "live". SO cool. I just remembered how Fripp always had a smile on his face like he was loving what he was doing. Elephant Talk was a favorite song too so it was a bonus watch all around. Fond memory. Thank you, Bill.
You realize that Devo played on SNL in 1978, right? And The Pretenders in 86.
@@chanthing I missed Devo on SNL and The Pretenders I believe played on Fridays first.
@@chanthing both bands performed live for Fridays back in 1981, Devo being a highlight, performing 3/4 songs from their "New Traditionalists" album with treadmills which was unseen at that time
Watched this at a friend's house that Friday night. We'd never heard of KC but knew we had never heard anything like it.
You forgot the Clash played also!
They played 4 songs, holy balls I was in 11th grade at girls house, parents were gone and there were about 7 of us partying.
I used to make up insane dances to this when I was 6 years old. This is one of my favorite songs of all time.
As Bob F. said to me at the time, "This is the best touring band in the world right now." Chicago Park West Theater, November 10, 1981. p.s. Happy Birthday Bob! 76 big ones!
Someone backstage told a man who has never smiled to smile and it's really creepy
How could just four instruments put out such a gloriously huge edifice of sound? It's incredible.
Adrian is on tour this summer, just saw him at Ludlow Garage in Cincinnati. 72 years young and shredding it still.
this blew my mind completly when i saw it as a live broadcast. I had no idea people could make sounds like this. Changed my musical life.
It's so mind-boggling to think of a TV audience of normies tuning in and seeing THIS wacky shit. When was the last time late-night had off-the-beaten-path musicians like this on? I know Mars Volta did some late-night spots in support of _The Bedlam in Goliath_ but that was over a decade ago.
I seriously remember seeing this when I was 11 and thinking it was a joke. Eight years later it was my favorite thing ever.
I remember seeing this broadcast; this was also the time when I started making music, inspired by Brian Eno's Another Green World, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts with David Byrne, and of course, King Crimson's Discipline, etc! Even if I couldn't play like them, there was a sense of experimentation back then! I feel as if that was the perfect time to start a music career, because there was so much music that eschewed genres, even a network like ABC would air performances like these! Fridays even has The Residents once, but that is another story!
I remember watching this live when I was probably 14 years old. COMPLETELY blew my mind then as it does now. Ending up buying a lot of King Crimson and Bruford side projects over the next decade-plus. Thanks so much for posting this!
Been a fan of King Crimson for a lot of years now.... Never get tired of listening to this great band and album....
To be honest it took me awhile to warm up to this. I was exited that King Crimson was reforming and with Bill. Then I saw this on Fridays and was not sure what to make of this more post punk direction. Over time I grew to love it.
@@cycologist7069 So back in the 80's I was taking courses at the local Community College. I was sitting and doing Algebra problems one Saturday while listening to some music. I was tuned into WMNF in Tampa
(USF's Station) and they had an 'alternative' music show that aired Saturday afternoons... I always tried to catch the show since I do enjoy some alternative stuff. Anyway, they played King Crimson Indiscipline and i was instantly hooked... Been a fan ever since...
For some reason, when ever I hear Les Claypool and Primus it reminds me a lot of King Crimson... Seems to me they have similar styles, but I'm no expert on musical styles.... I just enjoy music.
@@witchdoctor7398 I was very much into punk rock and its various offshoots, and also into prog (a rare thing in those days to like both). At was just interesting to see KC go in that direction. In retrospect it shouldn’t be because music always changes and genres come and go and morph into other things. And yes, Les Claypool was very influenced by that specific period of King Crimson.
ELP, PFM, Focus, Triumvirat, Mahavishnu, and Fropp all appeared on late-night US TV shows in the early '70s.
They were revolutionary! It's crazy they made it onto prime time.
One of the best rock albums of all time. I have to be in the right mood for it but when I am, it gets CRANKED.
Greatest live TV performance EVER.
Wow, truly the best music I've heard, and I never heard any of it until this week. I'm blown away like cherry blossoms in a gale.
Lucky you: Adrian Belew, Tony Levin, Danny Carey & Steve Vai have put together a nation-wide tour of this music, starting Summer 2024!
They are calling it "Beat" (Robert Fripp reserves the name King Crimson")
@@yournamehere6719 What brought me here was watching the Rick Beato interview with those very musicians, thanks!
You know the audience was like what the fuck is happening
The greatest thing I've ever seen on network television.
When Leland Palmer beat laura Palmer's cousin to death with his bare hands that was pretty good too
From Kentucky, Zappa discovered him in a Nashville honky tonk.
The mind still boggles. What a performance. I love how Robert smiles at the camera, the dapper gentleman.
Discipline is an all time favourite album.
Side note, any Crimson fans here who haven’t listened before to XTC’s ‘Apple Venus Volume 1’ get into it. I don’t want to say it’s their best, just infer it ;P
Thank you for uploading this, Bill.
This is my 'ohh by the way, have you ever heard this?' song when I'm several drinks in.
I bought the album the day it was released. A friend of mine had a VCR and taped this show so we were able to re-watch it over and over. I still my copy of the tape packed away somewhere.
@@melomane2010 Schoolkids? Did you go to their concert at the Blind Pig? Memorable.
I can't believe a network TV program contained both the genius of Larry David and King Crimson...
Hopefully you will also upload Thela Hun Gingeet from the same show?
I saw quite a few shows of the Discipline tour. The Savoy in Times Square was quite memorable. Not too often we see Fripp smiling!
This is priceless due to Fripp smiling. Oh, and the music is pretty amazing, too!
I consider King Crimson to be the band that put out the most intense music of that decade. Discipline is one of my favorite studio prog albums. Loaded with great tunes. My two favorites from this incredible album are Elephant Talk and Thela Hun Ginjeet. They also put out a bunch of great live concerts during the 1980s. Crimson was King in the 1980s.
I didn't even look at who posted this at first. Ha!
Pretty cool. Thank you Bill.
These geniuses' music comes from another beautiful planet.
This sounds so much better than the version they're doing on their 2024 tour but, hey, I'm so glad to see they're still around.
Crazy to think this was already 40 years ago
I’m not going to Google this. If memory serves me - we got Tony Levin, Adrian Belew, Robert Fripp, & of course Mr. Bruford.
I 'member being like 20 and watching this 'live' when it aired. IT BLEW MY EFFING MIND. 🤯Literally went to the mall the next day (Saturday) to buy _Discipline_ ...
This song puts me in a manic state and I always LOVE IT! WORDS!!!
Saw KC at my small college (UC San Diego) gym during the Discipline tour. Fripp stopped the show for a few when someone took a photo. Levin inventing things on The Stick. Bruford looking like he was going to barf the entire night. Thought is was magnificent noise - bought and wore out the album and the T-shirt. It took a few spins before coming to really appreciate what I'd seen - one of the most amazing live acts ever. Elephant Talk was a highlight. Thx, Bill!
Fantastic rendition of one of my favorite King Crimson songs. One of the greatest television live performances ever thank you Mr. Bruford Bill.
I GOT THE PRIVILEGE OF SEEING YOU AND CRIMSON MANY YEARS AGO WHEN THE BAND HAD THE TWO ARTIST PER INSTRUMENT SET-UP !
SIMPLY MIND-BLOWING !
Sounds like the "THRAK" tour (1994-1995) with the "double trio" lineup! Saw that lineup at the Tower Theater in Upper Darby, PA (outskirts of Philadelphia) in April 1995. They were like a well-oiled machine. Marvelous show!
Amazing after seeing them live and playing the records cointless times, to just see the seperate parts played and meshing together.
I remember seeing KC on the Discipline tour in NYC. I was a long-time fan of The Crim, but didn't know what to expect that evening, knowing Tony only from his work with Gabriel and being totally unfamiliar with Adrian... and damn, I wish the Savoy theater had had seat belts. "Mind blown" is an understatement; the four of you were exponentially greater than the sum of the individuals.
And to this day I vividly recall all of you except RF exiting the stage at the end... whereupon he walked from his darkened down-left corner to center stage, took a quick bow, and exited up left. For being considered so egg-headed and "serious," Uncle Bobby has quite the spiky sense of humor.
Best recording of this song on the internet. The energy coming from the band is just fantastic.
Wow...I remember seeing this on live TV in high school. Very cool to finally see it again! Interestingly, I think this may be both the first and the last time I've ever witnessed Fripp cracking a smile during a performance.
That was Absolutely Fantastic. Sounded just like the Record..Great Original music.
They were firing on all cylinders that night! Dang
One of the greatest songs by one of the greatest bands in what is argueably their greatest lineup...words are not enough to express my gratitude mister Bruford but thank you for your commitment and dedication to your craft, you're a gentleman and a scholar!
Somewhere, someone has this is in stereo, and it probably sounds amazing.
There was a vinyl bootleg version of the Discipline album with this very recording as the opening track. I miss it.
Thank you for this gem Mr. Bruford
The guitar madness over that percision rhythm...
That's the formula.
Astonishing!
Not only for the fact this happened on mainstream US TV (!), but look at Fripp's little face! I've never seen him smile so much! A fabulous rendition.
It reminds me of better times…
I remember this . Watched with Dad -
I was 14 ( and a half ) - I became a fan, and my mind was blown from that moment on ….
Long live King Crimson
This band should be in the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame. One of the greatest bands I ever heard. Love Adrian Belew..He is one of the most gifted Guitarist and singers ever. I am sure Frank Zappa and Talkin' Heads were happy to have him in their bands.
Incredible!!! What a performance!! Andrian's guitar doing exactly as it did on the album, so no tricks, etc. just elephant talk!!
Robert smiled!
For years I have searched the interned for anything from the most musically inclined drummer of the Rock-n-Roll era with limited success. But now, oh my gosh, I’ll be living here for a while! Thanks Bill for thinking of us!
One of my favourite albums ever discipline it's ridiculous how incredible they are these 4 crimson line up I'm lost for words ill stop ✋️
Saw this live in Detroit Incredible! Every musician in town was there that night. INCREDIBLE !!