Track Listing DISC 1: FIRST EDITION 1979 RELEASE: 1. Preface 2. You Burn Me up I'm a Cigarette 3. Breathless 4. Disengage 5. North Star 6. Chicago 7. Ny3 8. Mary 9. Exposure 10. Haaden Two 11. Urban Landscape 12. I May Not Have Had Enough of Me But I've Had Enough of You 13. First Inaugural Address to I.A.C.E Sherborne House 14. Water Music I 15. Here Comes the Flood 16. Water Music II 17. Postscript
DISC 2: THIRD EDITION 1983 REMIX: 1. Preface 2. You Burn Me up I'm a Cigarette 3. Breathless 4. Disengage 5. North Star 6. Chicago 7. New York, New York, New York 8. Mary 9. Exposure 10. Haaden Two 11. Urban Landscape 12. I May Not Have Had Enough of Me But I've Had Enough of You 13. First Inaugural Address to the I.A.C.E. Sherborne House 14. Water Music I 15. Here Comes the Flood 16. Water Music II 17. Postscript 18. Exposure 19. Mary 20. Disengage 21. Chicago 22. Ny3
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | Brian Eno, Daryl Hall, Narada Michael Walden, Peter Gabriel, Peter Hammill, Phil Collins, Terre Roche | | Producer: | Robert Fripp | | Distributor: | Ryko Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | AAD |
Album Notes Personnel: Robert Fripp (acoustic & electric guitars, keyboards, Frippertronics); Peter Gabriel, Daryl Hall, Phil Collins (vocals); Tony Levin (electric bass, Chapman Stick); Narada Michael Walden, Jerry Marotta (drums); Barry Andrews, Sid McGinniss, Peter Hammill, Terre Roche, Brian Eno. Engineers include: Steve Short, Jim Bonneford, Robert Fripp. Principally recorded at The Hit Factory, New York between January 1978 and January 1979. Digitally remastered by Robert Fripp and Brad Davies (1989, Marcus Studios). Easily Robert Fripp's most pop-oriented solo album--not that that's saying much--1979's EXPOSURE is also probably the best non-King Crimson or League of Gentlemen album of his career. Using guest vocalists Daryl Hall, Terre Roche, and Peter Gabriel, all of whom Fripp had produced albums for in the preceding year, Fripp's usual tape loops and fiery guitar solos are placed in recognizably song-oriented contexts for the first time in his solo career, and some of these, notably Hall's "North Star" and "You Burn Me Up I'm A Cigarette" and a new version of Gabriel's "Here Comes the Flood," are remarkable. Between the songs, Fripp alternates the sort of tape-delay guitar instrumentals he would later dub Frippertronics and oblique spoken-word found-tape passages not unlike those used by Brian Eno and David Byrne on MY LIFE IN THE BUSH OF GHOSTS. EXPOSURE is a fascinating, endlessly remarkable album.
Editorial Reviews 3.5 stars out of 5 -- 'Breathless' slams into ear canals with riff-crazy guitar and organized jazz-rock mayhem... Down Beat
4 stars out of 5 -- [T]he Frippery and flow in a way reminiscent of Fripp/Eno albums like NO PUSSYFOOTING. Uncut
4 stars out of 5 -- [I]t remains a triumph: a powerful and compelling redefinition of the pop and art in rock. Rolling Stone
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