It hadn’t been an auspicious beginning for The David Cross Band’s stateside tour; their opening night in Asheville, North Carolina was scuttled by Hurricane Helene’s brutal landfall, blowing a hole in their plans (and their finances) and stranding them in the disaster zone for a couple of fateful days, until they could source a full tank of gas and find an open road north. As they took the stage at Grand Rapids’ Pyramid Scheme, you could tell they felt for the devastated community they’d left behind — but also that they were also grateful to be back on track and playing for an enthusiastic (if compact and shall we say, mostly of a certain vintage) audience.
Electric violinist Cross, best known for his early-1970s stint in King Crimson, wasn’t messing around. As guitarist/vocalist John Mitchell — yep, fellow Progarchists, that genial jack of all trades from The John Wetton Band/Frost*/Lonely Robot’/Kino/Arena/It Bites/etc. — hit a chord, Cross took off on the kind of free improvisation that awed Crimson fans back in the day (including the drummer two seats over from me, who raved about a stop at GR’s Aquinas College 50 years ago). Cross, Mitchell, bassist/vocalist Mick Paul, keyboardist Sheila Maloney and drummer Jack Summerfield quickly locked in, building the folky core material to a simmering peak with classical flourishes and just the right amount of rock muscle. The epic Cross original “Calamity” shared a similar brooding feel, while “Tonk” and “Starfall” (the latter written with Crimson lyricist Richard Palmer-James) proved convincing slabs of the hard-hitting odd-time prog-metal the crowd had come to hear.
But as cool as Cross’ original work is, this North American stint isn’t called the “Larks Tongues’ 50+” tour for nothing; there was plenty of classic King Crimson on tap. “The Great Deceiver” was a high-octane update of the “flying brick wall” groove with which Bill Bruford and Wetton had terrorized Robert Fripp and Cross back in the day, as Paul, Mitchell and Maloney belted out Palmer-James’ sardonic lyrics; “Red” remains every inch the monstrous instrumental stomp it was in 1974. And after an apropos announcement in the vein of the Who’s Keith Moon from Mitchell (“Silence for rock history, please – especially up there in the jazz club”), the band launched into the entire Larks’ Tongues in Aspic album — complete with the extended thumb-piano intro that opens Part 1 of the title track.
Throughout the night, Summerfield and Paul drove the band forward with propulsive power and a wicked edge, while Maloney served up lush keyboard colors, the occasional synth solo, and a nifty electronica backbone to freshen the mournful ballad “Exiles”. Paul’s rough-hewn voice soared on that tune, and Mitchell’s singing spanned the tender ardor of “Book of Saturday” and the vicious kiss-off of “Easy Money”, channeling Fripp’s monolithic power chords and tritone-laced solo style all the while. At center stage, Cross covered all bases with aplomb; buzzing like a hornet’s nest, shrieking like a banshee or launching sustained flights of aching, soaring melody, he moved with the music in the moment, no matter its direction or destination. Eschewing the precision tooling of recent King Crimson tours for a freer flow, the band built the tribal funk of “The Talking Drum” to a fever pitch, then pumped up the crushing Hendrix-plays-Stravinsky riffs of “Larks’ Tongues Part Two” to a shattering climax.
The final touch could only be “Starless”, one of the last pieces Cross played live with Crimson in those early salad days. Mitchell rose to the occasion, singing Wetton & Palmer-James’ melancholy words with fervor and grace. Then Summerfield and Paul cranked the tension of the instrumental build to a tipping point. From that height, Cross dove into the breakneck double-time coda, blazing the trail for Maloney and Mitchell to follow. As the quintet stuck the landing, the audience hit their feet (with only minimal prompting from Mitchell), glad to be in the moment with a band that, on this night, had ascended to a sweet spot where memory and spontaneity combine.
The David Cross Larks’ Tongues Band’s North American tour continues through October; check out currently scheduled tour dates here.
— Rick Krueger
Setlist:
- The Pyramid Scheme (improvisation)
- Tonk
- The Great Deceiver
- Red
- Starfall
- Calamity
- Larks’ Tongues in Aspic, Part 1
- Book of Saturday
- Exiles
- Easy Money
- The Talking Drum
- Larks’ Tongues in Aspic, Part 2
- Starless

