Search - Robert Fripp :: Love Cannot Bear

Love Cannot Bear
Robert Fripp
Love Cannot Bear
Genres: Dance & Electronic, International Music, Special Interest, New Age, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (8) - Disc #1

Love Cannot Bear is the brand new album of Soundscapes by Robert Fripp. Soundscapes, consisting of improvised guitar solos played through a variety of electronic processors and sound modules, have been the primary focus of...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Robert Fripp
Title: Love Cannot Bear
Members Wishing: 4
Total Copies: 0
Label: Discipline Us
Original Release Date: 1/1/2005
Re-Release Date: 10/31/2005
Genres: Dance & Electronic, International Music, Special Interest, New Age, Pop, Rock
Styles: Ambient, Europe, Britain & Ireland, Experimental Music, Progressive, Progressive Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 633367055224

Synopsis

Album Description
Love Cannot Bear is the brand new album of Soundscapes by Robert Fripp. Soundscapes, consisting of improvised guitar solos played through a variety of electronic processors and sound modules, have been the primary focus of Fripp's solo performances for more than a decade. The early generations of Soundscapes were presented via a quintet of albums released by DGM between 1994 and 1996. While there have been many memorable Soundscapes concerts in the interim period, allowing the sound world and approach to the work to evolve substantially, DGM's continuing commitment to Robert's work in all its forms King Crimson (live, studio and archive work), the ProjeKcts series etc., has left his key area unintentionally under-represented on CD. The Soundscapes concept has also been presented to a much larger audience over the last few years. The Soundscapes concept has also been presented to a much larger audience over the last few years. As well as the ongoing series of individual concerts, Robert has played as part of the sell-out G3 tours of Europe and South America with Joe Satriani and Steve Vai in 2004, with Porcupine Tree in the US in 2005 and ,most recently, in a series of warmly received concerts at this year's open air Big Chill festival in the UK. While most Soundscapes performances embody many moods and musical areas, Love Cannot Bear presents Soundscapes in their most positive, tonal settings and is drawn from a series of live performances in the US in June this year. 9 tracks. Panegyric. 2005.
 

CD Reviews

THE PRACTICE OF MUSIC
Kerry Leimer | Makawao, Hawaii United States | 11/09/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Fripp, of course, needs no advice from us. So, aside from questioning the wisdom of beginning his liner notes with the heading "From The Guitarist's Stool" this set of recordings -- the seventh or eighth or ninth installment in his Soundscape series -- requires that very little more need be said. Still, Love Cannot Bear proves to be a collection of some of the most approachable and deeply affecting performances of the series. Less preoccupied with the abstractions of vertical music, these pieces are the product of seemingly ideal settings -- small audiences in small venues witnessing the results of a virtuoso who lures and teases out a music of immediacy, intimacy and interest. The experience is one often based upon that which is left unstated, of that which results from restraint. Yet, at a recent soundscapes performance, Fripp shared his experience of being repeatedly and consistently booed during his G3 soundscape openers. Those audiences demanded "more notes". But here, safely back among the sane, even casual listening offers access to the momentary culminations of decades of dedication to craft, dedication to the shared experience of music. Somewhere in the mix there is also a good measure of the artist's sacrifice for his art. To be forever on the road, forever on the stage, at times before less than receptive audiences, while consistently working towards those few singular moments can't simply be about earning a living. So here, as with other Soundscapes, the music shudders among remote outreaches of beauty, never descending to "pretty". Along the way, the notion of virtuosity extends beyond the instrument to what Fripp has clearly devised as an entire system of music creation, one that emphatically and successfully includes the audience. After so many years, what's left to do? Addressing the never-ending imperative of doing."
A welcome return.
Michael Stack | North Chelmsford, MA USA | 11/08/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"After several years focusing on King Crimson and related activities, Robert Fripp returned his focus to soundscapes-- the result is 2005 was quite a rennaissance for Fripp's ambient work, seeing the release of his first collaboration with Brian Eno in thirty years ("The Equatorial Stars") and his first solo soundscapes record in seven years.



For any who are unfamiliar, soundscapes are quite a different beast then Fripp's work with Crimson and others. For historical context-- in the early '70s, Eno and Fripp developed a scheme by which infinite feedback and looping could be generated utilizing two tape loops in real time, this system was dubbed Frippertronics, produced two collaborative albums between the two musicians, and shaped Fripp's career outside of King Crimson for the next couple decades. At some point in the early '90s, Fripp moved this technology to the digital realm and retitled it soundscapes. The music on these recordings is not conventional-- Fripp soaks his guitar in processing and the sound is generally hazy, even when it becomes more aggressive. Fripp improvises his soundscapes, and as a result, they tend to be far be extremely expressive and emotive.



So the album itself is primarily culled from live performances in 2005, augmented by a few other tracks. The 2005 pieces all follow a similar formula-- slow to build, developing ideas over time, and reaching a state of shockingly overwhelming beauty. Two of the remaining tracks are from 2000 performances at New York City's World Financial Center, one featuring an odd, treated, spoken vocal, and a pair of pieces are culled from earlier releases. They all blend seemlessly with the remainder of the record.



One anomoly on the album is the presence of a piece from 1983-- "Easter Sunday", originally released (I believe) on a flex-disk in a magazine. It's a nice rarity to have, but it sounds nothing like the rest of the album, a mild loop plays over which Fripp solos delicately on acoustic and electric guitar.



When I first listened to this album, I was driving in my car and started thinking about death-- not in a morbid way, but in that sort of "what happens when you die" kind of way. This isn't generally something I think about, but the music elicited a response for me. To that end, it's rather successful. I suspect there's not much more for me to say-- the album is a thing of fragile beauty, I don't think it's his best ("A Blessing of Tears" gets that vote from me), but it is a welcome return. Highly recommended."
Atypical Fripp
D. Porter | Coeur d'Alene, ID | 05/20/2007
(3 out of 5 stars)

"I like Fripp when he is a bit more edgy. This album is a bit too ambient for my tastes and seems to lack coherence. I compare this with his current work with A. Belew and find that I miss Adrian's contribution. When I purchased this CD I was hoping for more of the softer music that Fripp does with King Crimson."