The
Collectable King Crimson, Vol. 4 (2009) contains the second of two shows in Warsaw, Poland during the band's Eastern and Western European excursion. The 21st century double-duo incarnation of
Krim consisted of
Adrian Belew (guitar/vocals),
Robert Fripp (guitar/soundscapes),
Trey Gunn (touch guitar/ashbory bass/talker), and
Pat Mastelotto (electronic drumming) who were collectively embarking upon the first round of shows that
King Crimson had performed since the mid-'90s double-trio lineup. After the extended aggregate disbanded in the spring of 1997, the greater unit split into a variety of sub-groups (ProjeKcts) and when the smoke cleared, it was
Belew,
Fripp,
Gunn, and
Mastelotto left to pick up the pieces. The resulting album,
ConstruKCtion of Light (2001), was a step toward what would eventually coalesce more definitively on their follow-up,
Power to Believe (2003). Their set ranged little from stop to stop and
Collectable King Crimson, Vol. 4 (2009) is an apt reflection of the quartet as they unleashed selections from the recently released
ConstruKCtion of Light as well as a smattering of tracks dating as far back as 1982's
"Three of a Perfect Pair" -- which is given an authoritative acoustic rendering from
Belew after inquiring whether the audience has "any requests." Of the newer material, the dry humor-laden grunge rocker
"Into the Frying Pan" and the instrumentals
"Larks' Tongues in Aspic, Pt. 4" and
ProjeKct Four's
"Deception of the Thrush" are flawlessly rendered, with the free-form
"Improv: Warsaw" being the most inspired outing of the evening in question. There are other moments that come close, including a haunting and mesmerizing
"One Time." They close with a cover of
David Bowie's
"Heroes," which is actually not as surprising as it might initially seem since
Fripp had contributed the searing lead guitar to the original 1977 studio recording. In terms of fidelity, the audio quality gets top-shelf consideration thanks to a soundboard/mixing desk source tape. ~ Lindsay Planer