Level Five (commentary)
๐ต 1244 characters
โฑ๏ธ 1:47 duration
๐ ID: 11142955
๐ Lyrics
Level Five from Meltdown: Live in Mexico
Level Five was composed and first performed in 2001
By the double duo of Adrian Belew, Robert Fripp, Trey Gunn and Pat Mastelotto
The first recording which was a live rendition
Was released later in the same year as part of the Level Five EP
I'm occasionally asked if the studio recording of Level Five
Which appears on The Power to Believe album, is also live
As some faint applause can be heard at the end
It was entirely recorded in the studio
Although we did use a small snatch of live recording in the segue
Which joins Level Five to Eyes Wide Open which follows it
Level Five is one of the pieces that's been wonderfully reinvigorated and reinvented
By the current incarnation of King Crimson
As captured by this recording in Mexico from 2017
In recent setlists, it's usually preceded by varying part of the Radical Action suite
And is now given its original name of Larks' Tongues in Aspic (Part V)
The name was changed to Level Five when it was first released
So that it would be heard free of expectation
And not just dismissed as another Larks' Tongues piece
But using the original name correctly places it as part of that body of work
So here it is, Level Five from Meltdown: Live in Mexico
Level Five was composed and first performed in 2001
By the double duo of Adrian Belew, Robert Fripp, Trey Gunn and Pat Mastelotto
The first recording which was a live rendition
Was released later in the same year as part of the Level Five EP
I'm occasionally asked if the studio recording of Level Five
Which appears on The Power to Believe album, is also live
As some faint applause can be heard at the end
It was entirely recorded in the studio
Although we did use a small snatch of live recording in the segue
Which joins Level Five to Eyes Wide Open which follows it
Level Five is one of the pieces that's been wonderfully reinvigorated and reinvented
By the current incarnation of King Crimson
As captured by this recording in Mexico from 2017
In recent setlists, it's usually preceded by varying part of the Radical Action suite
And is now given its original name of Larks' Tongues in Aspic (Part V)
The name was changed to Level Five when it was first released
So that it would be heard free of expectation
And not just dismissed as another Larks' Tongues piece
But using the original name correctly places it as part of that body of work
So here it is, Level Five from Meltdown: Live in Mexico
โฑ๏ธ Synced Lyrics
[00:01.55] Level Five from Meltdown: Live in Mexico
[00:08.07] Level Five was composed and first performed in 2001
[00:12.19] By the double duo of Adrian Belew, Robert Fripp, Trey Gunn and Pat Mastelotto
[00:18.39] The first recording which was a live rendition
[00:20.50] Was released later in the same year as part of the Level Five EP
[00:27.49] I'm occasionally asked if the studio recording of Level Five
[00:31.07] Which appears on The Power to Believe album, is also live
[00:34.45] As some faint applause can be heard at the end
[00:38.80] It was entirely recorded in the studio
[00:41.40] Although we did use a small snatch of live recording in the segue
[00:45.43] Which joins Level Five to Eyes Wide Open which follows it
[00:50.81] Level Five is one of the pieces that's been wonderfully reinvigorated and reinvented
[00:55.77] By the current incarnation of King Crimson
[00:58.19] As captured by this recording in Mexico from 2017
[01:03.77] In recent setlists, it's usually preceded by varying part of the Radical Action suite
[01:09.79] And is now given its original name of Larks' Tongues in Aspic (Part V)
[01:15.45] The name was changed to Level Five when it was first released
[01:19.01] So that it would be heard free of expectation
[01:21.92] And not just dismissed as another Larks' Tongues piece
[01:26.80] But using the original name correctly places it as part of that body of work
[01:35.01] So here it is, Level Five from Meltdown: Live in Mexico
[01:39.63]
[00:08.07] Level Five was composed and first performed in 2001
[00:12.19] By the double duo of Adrian Belew, Robert Fripp, Trey Gunn and Pat Mastelotto
[00:18.39] The first recording which was a live rendition
[00:20.50] Was released later in the same year as part of the Level Five EP
[00:27.49] I'm occasionally asked if the studio recording of Level Five
[00:31.07] Which appears on The Power to Believe album, is also live
[00:34.45] As some faint applause can be heard at the end
[00:38.80] It was entirely recorded in the studio
[00:41.40] Although we did use a small snatch of live recording in the segue
[00:45.43] Which joins Level Five to Eyes Wide Open which follows it
[00:50.81] Level Five is one of the pieces that's been wonderfully reinvigorated and reinvented
[00:55.77] By the current incarnation of King Crimson
[00:58.19] As captured by this recording in Mexico from 2017
[01:03.77] In recent setlists, it's usually preceded by varying part of the Radical Action suite
[01:09.79] And is now given its original name of Larks' Tongues in Aspic (Part V)
[01:15.45] The name was changed to Level Five when it was first released
[01:19.01] So that it would be heard free of expectation
[01:21.92] And not just dismissed as another Larks' Tongues piece
[01:26.80] But using the original name correctly places it as part of that body of work
[01:35.01] So here it is, Level Five from Meltdown: Live in Mexico
[01:39.63]