The Great Deceiver (King Crimson album)

The Great Deceiver
Live album by
Released30 October 1992
Recorded23 October 1973 – 30 June 1974
GenreProgressive rock, experimental rock
Length264:31
LabelE.G.
Virgin
ProducerRobert Fripp
King Crimson chronology
Three of a Perfect Pair
(1984)
The Great Deceiver
(1992)
Vrooom
(1994)
Vol. 1 of 2007 double CD re-release
The original release was a four-CD box set. It was re-released in 2007 as two double-disc sets.
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
All About Jazz[2]
AllMusic[1]
Baltimore Sun[3]
Entertainment WeeklyB[4]
Record Collector[5]

The Great Deceiver is a 4-CD box set by the band King Crimson, consisting of live recordings from 1973 and 1974, released on Virgin Records in 1992. In 2007, it was reissued on Fripp's Discipline Global Mobile label as two separate 2-CD sets, each featuring new artwork. The box set is titled after a song from the group's 1974 album Starless and Bible Black.

The box set features portions of concert recordings of the band from 1973 to 1974. All tracks are performed by the lineup of guitarist/keyboardist Robert Fripp, bassist/vocalist John Wetton, violinist/keyboardist David Cross and drummer Bill Bruford. Percussionist Jamie Muir left the band in early 1973, and hence is not featured on the set. The band's 30 June 1974 concert from Providence, Rhode Island is presented in its entirety on CDs 1 and 2; this was the second-to-last live concert ever performed by this incarnation of King Crimson.

King Crimson's "Walk On" music in 1973-74 was an excerpt of "The Heavenly Music Corporation," from the album (No Pussyfooting) by Robert Fripp and Brian Eno. These "walk-ons" are reproduced here, and indexed as separate tracks.

Three recordings from this box set were previously available on other King Crimson albums, albeit in slightly altered forms. An abbreviated version of "We'll Let You Know" appears on the Starless and Bible Black album, released in 1974. Similarly, an abbreviated version of "Providence" was included on the Red album, also released in 1974. The live performance of "21st Century Schizoid Man" on CD Two was issued in 1975 as part of the album USA, featuring overdubbed violin from Eddie Jobson.

Many of the recordings on this album are band improvisations. One such piece is "The Law of Maximum Distress", which appears in two sections, as it was believed at the time that the tape had run out in the middle of the performance. This supposed incident gave the piece its title, a reference to Sod's law ("Whatever can go wrong will go wrong, at the worst possible moment."). As Robert Fripp notes in the CD jacket, "Most live recording follows the policy of two machines in use simultaneously to meet an eventuality such as this. We learn." However, it was later discovered while compiling the 2009 Live in Zurich Collectors' Club release that the middle portion of the track had actually been severed from the tapes and dubbed over for inclusion on Starless and Bible Black, as "The Mincer". The complete track was later digitally reassembled and released in 2014, as part of the Starless box set.[6]

The liner notes to The Great Deceiver runs to 68 pages. These notes feature comments from Fripp, Wetton and Cross, annotated excerpts from Fripp's 1974 diary, reviews of the previous King Crimson box set, Frame by Frame: The Essential King Crimson (1991), and a complete listing of all concerts performed by the band in 1973 and 1974.

The track "Exiles" is credited to Fripp/Wetton/Palmer-James on this box set. The correct credit, as listed on Larks' Tongues in Aspic and confirmed by BMI's records, is Cross/Fripp/Palmer-James. Despite having no legal co-writing credit for the song, John Wetton has indicated in interviews that he wrote the bridge for "Exiles."[citation needed]

  1. ^ Couture, François. "King Crimson: The Great Deceiver". allmusic.com. Allmusic.
  2. ^ John Kelman (12 October 2006). "King Crimson: The Great Deceiver (Live 1973-1974)". All About Jazz. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  3. ^ Considine J.D. (29 November 1992). "Compact Collections". baltimoresun.com. Baltimore Sun.
  4. ^ Dave DiMartino (22 January 1993). "The Great Deceiver: Live 1973-1974". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  5. ^ Tim Jones. "KING CRIMSON - THE GREAT DECEIVER VOLUMES I & II". Record Collector. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  6. ^ Singleton, David (1 February 2019). "King Crimson - The Mincer/Law of Maximum Distress [50th Anniversary | Starless Box Set 2014]". YouTube. Archived from the original on 22 December 2022. Retrieved 21 December 2022.