God Save The Queen/Under Heavy Manners is an album by Robert Fripp, release on the Polydor Records label in 1980. The album largely consists of Frippertronics, overlaid notes on distorted guitar fed through a very long delay building up a heavily layered effect, much of the work being performed by improvisation. On this album, the effect was modified in what Fripp described as "Discotronics", adding a solid drum beat to create a dancier sound. The original planned title for the album was "Music for Sports", but Fripp eventually decided to choose a title unconnected from colleague Brian Eno's "Music for..." album series.
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| - God Save The Queen/Under Heavy Manners
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| - God Save The Queen/Under Heavy Manners is an album by Robert Fripp, release on the Polydor Records label in 1980. The album largely consists of Frippertronics, overlaid notes on distorted guitar fed through a very long delay building up a heavily layered effect, much of the work being performed by improvisation. On this album, the effect was modified in what Fripp described as "Discotronics", adding a solid drum beat to create a dancier sound. The original planned title for the album was "Music for Sports", but Fripp eventually decided to choose a title unconnected from colleague Brian Eno's "Music for..." album series.
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| - God Save The Queen Under Heavy Manners Cover.jpg
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| - God Save The Queen/Under Heavy Manners is an album by Robert Fripp, release on the Polydor Records label in 1980. The album largely consists of Frippertronics, overlaid notes on distorted guitar fed through a very long delay building up a heavily layered effect, much of the work being performed by improvisation. On this album, the effect was modified in what Fripp described as "Discotronics", adding a solid drum beat to create a dancier sound. The original planned title for the album was "Music for Sports", but Fripp eventually decided to choose a title unconnected from colleague Brian Eno's "Music for..." album series.
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