Discipline (instrumental)

"Discipline"
Song by King Crimson from the album Discipline
Released September 1981
Recorded 1981
Genre Progressive rock, math rock, instrumental rock, avant-garde
Length 5:13
Label Warner Bros.
Composer(s) Adrian Belew, Bill Bruford, Robert Fripp, Tony Levin
Producer(s) King Crimson, Rhett Davies
Discipline track listing

"The Sheltering Sky"
(6)
"Discipline"
(7)
(end of album or "Matte Kudasai" alt. version on remaster)
(8)

"Discipline" is a 1981 instrumental composition by the progressive rock band King Crimson. It is the title track on Discipline, their return album after a seven-year hiatus. The piece is 5:13 in length and serves as the album's conclusion. It has a faster tempo and more of a new wave pre-techno sound compared to the preceding piece, "The Sheltering Sky". It contains heavy influences of minimal music in the form of a repeating theme with subtle variations introduced over time, creating a hypnotic effect.

The composition undergoes many time signature changes. There are two main guitars (one played by Robert Fripp the other by Adrian Belew) which are often in a different time signature, giving the song a chaotic and intense feel. Many times the guitars play similar patterns, but one drops a note making them go either out of sync or change time signatures. During the piece the two guitars of Belew and Fripp, respectively, move through the following sequence of pairs of time signatures: 5
8
and 5
8
, 5
8
and 4
4
, 5
8
and 9
8
, 15
16
and 15
16
, 15
16
and 14
16
, 10
8
and 20
16
, 15
16
and 15
16
, 15
16
and 14
16
, 12
16
and 12
16
, 12
16
and 11
16
, 15
16
and 15
16
, 15
16
and 14
16
. Throughout the drums play in 17
16
- the Bill Bruford drumming video Bruford and the Beat[1] builds up to an explanation of the 17
16
pattern used (including the fact that the 4
4
bass drum pattern is maintained as a "dance groove") and includes a live performance of the track interleaved with an interview with Robert Fripp about aspects of the track. In other interviews Fripp has explained that the track was composed as an exercise in discipline - no single instrument is allowed to take the lead role in the performance, nor to play as simply an accompaniment to the other instruments, but each player must maintain an equal role while allowing others to do the same.

Notes

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