Three of a Perfect Pair | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ||||
Studio album by | ||||
Released | 23 March 1984 (UK) 26 March 1984 (US)[1] | |||
Recorded | May – November 1983 | |||
Studio |
| |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 41:15 1:08:14 (2001 remaster) | |||
Label | ||||
Producer | King Crimson | |||
King Crimson chronology | ||||
| ||||
King Crimson studio chronology | ||||
| ||||
Singles from Three of a Perfect Pair | ||||
No videos available
1984 studio album by King Crimson
Three of a Perfect Pair is the tenth studio album by English progressive rock band King Crimson, released on 23 March 1984 in the UK by E.G. Records.[4] It is the group`s final studio album to feature the quartet of Robert Fripp, Adrian Belew, Tony Levin and Bill Bruford, which broke up later that year, though all four would appear in the sextet lineup featured on THRAK in 1995.
Leer más
1984 studio album by King Crimson
Three of a Perfect Pair is the tenth studio album by English progressive rock band King Crimson, released on 23 March 1984 in the UK by E.G. Records.[4] It is the group`s final studio album to feature the quartet of Robert Fripp, Adrian Belew, Tony Levin and Bill Bruford, which broke up later that year, though all four would appear in the sextet lineup featured on THRAK in 1995.
Leer másAccording to Robert Fripp, the album "presents two distinct sides of the band’s personality, which has caused at least as much confusion for the group as it has the public and the industry. The left side is accessible, the right side excessive."[5]
The "other side" of bonus material on the 2001 CD remaster consists of two instrumental outtakes from the 1983 sessions, three alternate mixes of "Sleepless", and a 1989 a cappella recording (first published in the 1991 "Frame By Frame" box set) in which Tony Levin performs the barbershop quartet "The King Crimson Barber Shop".[6]
American hip hop duo Gang Starr would sample "Dig Me" on "Words I Manifest (Remix)" from their 1989 debut album No More Mr. Nice Guy.[citation needed]
The title of the album is based on the idea of “perfect opposites”, or someone`s truth, someone else`s truth, and an objective truth (the idea of “three sides to every story”).[citation needed]
The Peter Willis designed artwork illustrates the sacred–profane dichotomy while being a simplified version of the Larks` Tongues in Aspic cover; a rising phallic object represents a male solar deity about to penetrate the crescent figure, a female lunar deity.[citation needed] According to Fripp, the artwork is “a presentation of a reconciliation of Western & Eastern Christianity...the front cover has the two elements, representing the male & female principles. The back cover has the third element drawing together & reconciling the preceding opposite terms”.[7][8]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [9] |
Robert Christgau | B−[10] |
Kerrang! | mixed[12] |
Rolling Stone | [11] |
Released in March 1984, Three of a Perfect Pair peaked at number 30 in the UK Albums Chart.[13]
Trouser Press described it in a mixed review as "a most disjunct album from a band that prided itself on carefully matched contradictions. The Left Side sports four of Adrian Belew`s poorer songs and a self-derivative instrumental; the flip is nearly all-instrumental, nearly free-form, nearly brilliant...apparently the Frippressive `discipline` that forged the critically acclaimed pop/art synthesis of the first two latter-day Crimson albums is not a permanent condition."[14]
A 5.1 surround sound mix of the album by Fripp and Steven Wilson was released in October 2016 for the band`s 40th Anniversary Series as a standalone CD/DVD package and as part of the On (and off) The Road (1981–1984) box set.
All lyrics are written by Adrian Belew; all music is composed by Belew, Bill Bruford, Robert Fripp and Tony Levin, except "The King Crimson Barber Shop", with music & lyrics by Levin.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Three of a Perfect Pair" | 4:13 |
2. | "Model Man" | 3:49 |
3. | "Sleepless" | 5:24 |
4. | "Man with an Open Heart" | 3:05 |
5. | "Nuages (That Which Passes, Passes Like Clouds)" (instrumental) | 4:47 |
Total length: | 21:18 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
6. | "Industry" (instrumental) | 7:04 |
7. | "Dig Me" | 3:16 |
8. | "No Warning" (instrumental) | 3:29 |
9. | "Larks` Tongues in Aspic (Part III)" (instrumental) | 6:05 |
Total length: | 19:54 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
10. | "The King Crimson Barber Shop" | 1:37 |
11. | "Industrial Zone A" (instrumental) | 1:44 |
12. | "Industrial Zone B" (instrumental) | 4:33 |
13. | "Sleepless" (Tony Levin mix) | 7:26 |
14. | "Sleepless" (Bob Clearmountain mix) | 5:24 |
15. | "Sleepless" (Dance mix - F. Kevorkian) | 6:18 |
King Crimson
Production personnel
Chart (1984) | Peak position |
---|---|
Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[15] | 43 |
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[16] | 58 |
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[17] | 37 |
UK Albums (OCC)[18] | 30 |
US Billboard 200[19] | 58 |
1984 studio album by King Crimson
Three of a Perfect Pair is the tenth studio album by English progressive rock band King Crimson, released on 23 March 1984 in the UK by E.G. Records.[4] It is the group`s final studio album to feature the quartet of Robert Fripp, Adrian Belew, Tony Levin and Bill Bruford, which broke up later that year, though all four would appear in the sextet lineup featured on THRAK in 1995.
According to Robert Fripp, the album "presents two distinct sides of the band’s personality, which has caused at least as much confusion for the group as it has the public and the industry. The left side is accessible, the right side excessive."[5]
The "other side" of bonus material on the 2001 CD remaster consists of two instrumental outtakes from the 1983 sessions, three alternate mixes of "Sleepless", and a 1989 a cappella recording (first published in the 1991 "Frame By Frame" box set) in which Tony Levin performs the barbershop quartet "The King Crimson Barber Shop".[6]
American hip hop duo Gang Starr would sample "Dig Me" on "Words I Manifest (Remix)" from their 1989 debut album No More Mr. Nice Guy.[citation needed]
The title of the album is based on the idea of “perfect opposites”, or someone`s truth, someone else`s truth, and an objective truth (the idea of “three sides to every story”).[citation needed]
The Peter Willis designed artwork illustrates the sacred–profane dichotomy while being a simplified version of the Larks` Tongues in Aspic cover; a rising phallic object represents a male solar deity about to penetrate the crescent figure, a female lunar deity.[citation needed] According to Fripp, the artwork is “a presentation of a reconciliation of Western & Eastern Christianity...the front cover has the two elements, representing the male & female principles. The back cover has the third element drawing together & reconciling the preceding opposite terms”.[7][8]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [9] |
Robert Christgau | B−[10] |
Kerrang! | mixed[12] |
Rolling Stone | [11] |
Released in March 1984, Three of a Perfect Pair peaked at number 30 in the UK Albums Chart.[13]
Trouser Press described it in a mixed review as "a most disjunct album from a band that prided itself on carefully matched contradictions. The Left Side sports four of Adrian Belew`s poorer songs and a self-derivative instrumental; the flip is nearly all-instrumental, nearly free-form, nearly brilliant...apparently the Frippressive `discipline` that forged the critically acclaimed pop/art synthesis of the first two latter-day Crimson albums is not a permanent condition."[14]
A 5.1 surround sound mix of the album by Fripp and Steven Wilson was released in October 2016 for the band`s 40th Anniversary Series as a standalone CD/DVD package and as part of the On (and off) The Road (1981–1984) box set.
All lyrics are written by Adrian Belew; all music is composed by Belew, Bill Bruford, Robert Fripp and Tony Levin, except "The King Crimson Barber Shop", with music & lyrics by Levin.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Three of a Perfect Pair" | 4:13 |
2. | "Model Man" | 3:49 |
3. | "Sleepless" | 5:24 |
4. | "Man with an Open Heart" | 3:05 |
5. | "Nuages (That Which Passes, Passes Like Clouds)" (instrumental) | 4:47 |
Total length: | 21:18 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
6. | "Industry" (instrumental) | 7:04 |
7. | "Dig Me" | 3:16 |
8. | "No Warning" (instrumental) | 3:29 |
9. | "Larks` Tongues in Aspic (Part III)" (instrumental) | 6:05 |
Total length: | 19:54 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
10. | "The King Crimson Barber Shop" | 1:37 |
11. | "Industrial Zone A" (instrumental) | 1:44 |
12. | "Industrial Zone B" (instrumental) | 4:33 |
13. | "Sleepless" (Tony Levin mix) | 7:26 |
14. | "Sleepless" (Bob Clearmountain mix) | 5:24 |
15. | "Sleepless" (Dance mix - F. Kevorkian) | 6:18 |
King Crimson
Production personnel
Chart (1984) | Peak position |
---|---|
Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[15] | 43 |
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[16] | 58 |
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[17] | 37 |
UK Albums (OCC)[18] | 30 |
US Billboard 200[19] | 58 |