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No Pussyfooting

No Pussyfooting
Artist: Fripp & Eno
Label: Dgm / Inner Knot
Category: Music

List Price: $16.98
Buy New: $13.99
You Save: $2.99 (18%)



Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 36 reviews
Sales Rank: 6195

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.5

MPN: 5007
UPC: 633367500724
EAN: 0633367500724
ASIN: B001DU48XG

Release Date: October 21, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  Disc 1
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • Swastika Girls
  • Swastika Girls
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation

  Disc 2
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • The Hevenly Music Corporation
  • Swastika Girls
  • Swastika Girls

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  • Everything That Happens Will Happen Today
  • The Equatorial Stars

Customer Reviews:   Read 31 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars NO KIDDING   December 1, 2008
Kerry Leimer (Makawao, Hawaii United States)
Enough has been said about this and "Evening Star", with NP being the more important of the pair, that little need be added. What's new with the reissues is the addition of "Swastika Girls" and "The Heavenly Music Corporation" in reverse, a seemingly too-naked innovation that still manages to provide a new appreciation for the melodic elegance of Fripp's solos (the Eno pads remain largely unaffected by the change in direction). The half-speed nugget is a nice acknowledgment of Tape, but mostly solicits a "meh" around the house. All that aside, the remastering here is a bit of a revelation. Hard to believe that an open loop ReVox could offer up so much hidden detail, but it does. The sonic re-examination reveals greater complexity and less sweetness than original vinyl and subsequent CD editions, casting the work in an even more favorable light -- freed of those initial impressions of mere "prettiness".


5 out of 5 stars Not for the "musically narrow"   November 25, 2008
Jim Z
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

The musically narrow-minded will never understand or appreciate this work. The original was , and remains a classic , but this version has so much more to offer. A 44 minute half-speed version of "Heavenly Music" , and a reversed version "Swastika Girls".

The ever so subtle nuances in the pitch and tone modulation made this a groundbreaking effort when it was first released , and this MAGNIFICENT remaster improves the masterpiece.

Lower the lights , have a beverage of choice and let Robert & Brian amaze you.



5 out of 5 stars Revelatory   November 14, 2008
Listener
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

While I have previously expressed some dismay at Fripp's decision to include repetitions of tracks between at least two of his Soundscape albums, I can say that owning this "repetition" is, to my ears, worth the investment. I own the vinyl and previous CD release of these tracks, and can say the remastering alone makes a significant positive contribution to the listening experience. The sound is more vibrant and richer in detail -- "fresher" may capture it.

The half-speed HMC is fun to listen to, but I found the real revelations in the backward version of SG and HMC. They don't "sound backwards," perhaps due to a lack of percussive reference points that would give that aspect away. What I found most remarkable, though, is that Fripp must have played some lines that were palindromatic, for they sound almost identical backward as forward. Besides these moments, the logic and melodies of the solos are consistent with "forward" Fripp solos, so what you end up with is a treatment of these songs (is that the word for them?) as if they were jazz standards with solos that are variations on their "themes" with inventive surprises throughout.

So by playing the recording backwards, does it still mean Fripp "played" these solos? Considerations of artistic intentions aside, I found the experience of new-yet-familiar exhilarating, and would recommend it to anyone, though especially to those who hold the original versions this music in high esteem.



5 out of 5 stars Throw away your 1990 version and buy this one now   October 25, 2008
The Glass Guitar
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Fripp's remastering of "No Pussyfooting" reveals layers of music that were never audible before. The beginning of "The Heavenly Music Corporation," which originally sounded like a drone increasing in intensity, on this remastered version becomes a symphony of guitar loops. Many of the background sounds, which were really difficult to distinguish on the original recording, are clear on this one.

The reverse version of "Swastika Girls" is fascinating in that it sounds similar, but not identical to, the original version. The reverse version of "The Heavenly Music Corporation" is so surreal it defies description. The half speed version is a bit less interesting, but it is a good ambient piece.

Overall, there is no comparison between this remastering and the 1990 release, or the tracks on "The Essential Fripp and Eno." If you've always enjoyed "No Pussyfooting," buy this release without hesitation.



5 out of 5 stars A Definitive Groundbreaking Classic Finally Reissued!!!!   October 21, 2008
Louie Bourland (Nashville TN via Garden Grove CA)
5 out of 6 found this review helpful

It has been 35 years since King Crimson's Robert Fripp and the then-recently departed Roxy Music keyboardist Brian Eno joined forces to create "No Pussyfooting", an album that over the years would go down in history as one of the forerunners of what is now known as Ambient Music.
While music of this nature is now considered commonplace, back in 1973, it was quite a different story. When "No Pussyfooting" was initially released, critical reactions were quite mixed. Some didn't know what to think about an albums worth of sustained guitar lines looped through two tapes machines while others found the sounds embedded in the record grooves to be groundbreaking. Over time, the public slowly caught on to the innovative ideas heard in this album and it's now considered to be a timeless classic.
The original album contained two long tracks (one per side of the original LP). The opening track "The Heavenly Music Corporation" was recorded in August 1972 and consists soley of Robert Fripp's guitar being played through two Revox tape machines. The tape machines are manipulated by Brian Eno to create looped phrases and a massive wall of sound. The overall effect is beautiful and terrifying at the same time. Fripp would later perform similar music to this on his own coining the term "Frippertronics" to this guitar/loop technique.
The other track "Swastika Girls" was recorded one year later is more 'composed' in its over all structure. In addition to Robert Fripp's sustained lead guitar and frentic rhythmic guitar loops, Eno adds a busy synthesizer sequence to the music which repeats throughout the entire piece giving it somewhat of a base-structure.
After its initial release on CD in the early '90s, "No Pussyfooting" fell out-of-print and became a sought-after collectors item. Now in 2008, the album is available once again in its most definitive version - a remastered 2-CD edition that includes the complete original album plus the entire album played in reverse and a half-speed version of the opening track "The Heavenly Music Corporation". The reversed and half-speed versions of these tracks give the music a new dimension and offers a completely new listening perspective. While listening to the reversed version of the album, it's almost unnoticeable that the music is actually being played backwards. In fact, it almost sounds like alternate takes played forwards. As for the half-speed nearly 42-minute version of "The Heavenly Music Corporation", the music becomes a deep ambient drone and doesn't sound too different from today's artists who uses low drones as the basis for their music (think of the long-form drone works of Steve Roach or Robert Rich).
All in all, it's great to have this classic album available again. It has definitely been worth the wait. The music is as wonderful now as it was then and shows just how ahead their time Fripp and Eno were and still are. Without any hesitation, this newly remastered 2-disc edition of "No Pussyfooting" is HIGHLY recommended.


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