Thrak Explained

THRAK
Type:studio
Artist:King Crimson
Cover:THRAK_-_Original_Album_Cover.jpeg
Recorded:24 October – 4 December 1994
Studio:Real World (Box, Wiltshire)
Genre:
Length:56:35
Label:Virgin
Producer:
Prev Title:VROOOM
Prev Year:1994
Next Title:The ConstruKction of Light
Next Year:2000

THRAK is the eleventh studio album by the band King Crimson released in 1995 through Virgin Records. It was preceded by the mini-album VROOOM in 1994. It was their first full-length studio album since Three of a Perfect Pair eleven years earlier, and the only full album to feature the "double trio" lineup of Robert Fripp, Adrian Belew, Tony Levin, Trey Gunn, Bill Bruford and Pat Mastelotto. It is the group's final studio album to feature Bruford or Levin.

Recording

THRAK was recorded in late 1994 at Peter Gabriel's Real World Studios in Box, Wiltshire, England, with producer David Bottrill. Bottrill had previously produced Fripp and David Sylvian's 1993 album The First Day, which had featured Trey Gunn as a session player. With the band consisting of two guitarists, two bassists and two drummers, the opening track begins with all six musicians in the center of the audio mix; as the album progresses, they are split into two trios, with one in each stereo channel.

"Sex Sleep Eat Drink Dream" and "One Time" were developed at studio rehearsals for the 1994 mini-album VROOOM in Woodstock, New York, during the spring of 1994. Instrumental outtakes and improvisations from these sessions would later be released as The Vrooom Sessions in 1999. "Sex Sleep Eat Drink Dream" developed from the instrumental outtake "No Questions Asked".

"Fashionable" was another instrumental from The Vrooom Sessions that was re-recorded at Real World Studios during the recording of THRAK. It features a guitar line reminiscent of David Bowie's "Fashion", on which Fripp played in 1980. Despite being reworked with various additions and refinements by the band members, the piece was ultimately cut from the album.[1]

"VROOOM VROOOM" incorporates a middle section originally composed by Fripp in 1974 for Red’s instrumental title track.[2] The band also experimented with said section in 1983, while working on Three of a Perfect Pair; evidence of this is the track "Working on Sleepless" from the 2016 compilation Rehearsals & Blows.

Release

First released on 3 April 1995, THRAK reached number 58 in the UK Albums Chart, their most recent release to make the chart.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Live. D. G. M.. 2016-10-10. King Crimson, 30 October, 1994 Fashionable, 1994. 2020-06-15. DGM Live. en.
  2. Web site: Live. D. G. M.. 2016-11-07. The Double Trio - Robert Fripp. 2020-06-15. DGM Live. en.
  3. Web site: Fripp's DGM Live diary . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304030532/http://www.dgmlive.com/diaries.htm?entry=15529 . 4 March 2016 . 19 May 2018 . Dgmlive.com.
  4. Book: Oricon Album Chart Book: Complete Edition 1970–2005. Oricon Entertainment. Roppongi, Tokyo. 2006. 4-87131-077-9. ja.
  5. Web site: King Crimson | Full Official Chart History | Official Charts Company |website=Official Charts Company] |access-date=6 August 2016}} The album was reissued on CD in 2002 in a remastered edition. A significantly different 5.1 surround sound mix by Jakko Jakszyk was released as a CD/DVD-A release in October 2015 for the “40th Anniversary Series”.[3] This edition also featured a reimagined new stereo mix by Fripp and Jakszyk. These two mixes were also included in the 2015 THRAK BOX alongside previously unissued studio and live recordings from the period.

    Reception

    Trouser Press described it as "an absolute monster, a cerebral sextet adventure stunning in its precisely controlled rock power."

    In a retrospective review of Thrak, Allmusic called King Crimson "The only progressive rock band from the '60s to be making new, vital, progressive music in the '90s" and expressed high regard for the various ways they exploited the double trio format on the album. While they noted the album makes a number of nods to previous King Crimson works, they felt that this was a subtle acknowledgment of King Crimson's established fan base rather than a preoccupation with their own past.

    Personnel

    King Crimson
    Technical personnel

    External links

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