In 1981, the guitarist from the biggest band in the world drove
to a small studio in Parkstone, Dorset, to make a record his
label actively did not want him to make. Andy Summers had known
Robert Fripp since their teens in Bournemouth. They'd kept in
touch through the decades, jamming occasionally, circling
something neither had quite articulated. With The Police between
Ghost in the Machine and Synchronicity, and Fripp
reconvening King Crimson for the Discipline trilogy, a window
opened. Summers booked a week at Arny's Shack, a studio run by
an engineer named Tony Arnold who smoked a pipe while he
recorded, with further sessions at Island Studios in London.
Fripp joined for the second week. They made it up as they went.
The result, I Advance Masked, came out in October 1982 on
A&M Records, the same label that had tried to kill it. "The
label didn't want me to do it," Summers
told Louder Sound
in 2025, "but didn't want to piss me off." The album reached number 52 on the
Billboard 200, where it spent eleven weeks. For a wholly instrumental record built
on guitar synthesisers and tape loops, that was, in Summers'
words, "the ultimate FU to the record company."
What makes the album strange, and what keeps it interesting
forty-three years later, is how little it resembles either
musician's day job. This isn't The Police plus King Crimson.
The Neuguitars Substack called it
"a cold fusion of two very distinct and mutually opposed sounds",
which gets at the chemistry without overselling it. Fripp laid
down polyrhythmic lines in odd metres, using his
Frippertronics tape loop system to build layered,
self-decaying textures. Summers described Fripp's parts as
"the bones of a piece," onto which he'd graft harmony chords,
guitar synth washes, and the occasional bluesy solo that
wandered in from some other record entirely.
The Frippertronics technique
deserves a moment here, because it's central to why these
records sound the way they do. Two Revox reel-to-reel decks,
spaced apart. Tape travels from the supply reel of the first to
the take-up reel of the second. Sound records on one, plays back
on the other, feeds back to the first. Delays of three to six
seconds, decaying gradually, building loops in real time. Terry
Riley pioneered the method in 1963. Pauline Oliveros expanded it.
Fripp encountered it through Brian Eno during the No
Pussyfooting sessions in 1972 and made it his own. On I
Advance Masked, you hear it most clearly on "Under Bridges of
Silence" and "In the Cloud Forest," tracks where the technique
creates something closer to weather than music, atmospheric
systems that shift and resettle.
I keep returning to this: Frippertronics is a palimpsest
machine. Every new phrase writes over the last, but the last
never fully disappears. It degrades, blurs, becomes a ghost of
itself while the next layer takes its place. The loops don't
erase; they haunt. If you wanted to design a technology purpose-
built for
hauntological
sound, for music that carries the residue of its own past within
it, you'd struggle to improve on two tape decks and a length of
quarter-inch tape.
Nobody has written the hauntological reading of these records,
which surprises me. The raw material is sitting right there.
The guitar synth timbres on I Advance Masked instantly
date the album to 1982, the same way that a BBC Radiophonic
Workshop piece dates itself to its decade through the
technology available. But the compositional thinking, the
textural ambition, points somewhere else, somewhere that hadn't
arrived yet. The albums occupy a temporal crack: too experimental
for Police fans who wanted "Every Breath You Take," too
pop-adjacent for the avant-garde who dismissed anything on a
major label. They fell between audiences, between eras, between
the identities of the men who made them. That kind of
commercial orphan status is exactly where
hauntological objects tend to reside,
in the margins where culture forgets to look.
The criticism of I Advance Masked is real and worth
acknowledging. The
Moving the River review
is blunt: "under-produced, tentative and unfinished-sounding."
The drum programming is limp. The bass playing is, charitably,
amateurish. These were two guitarists playing everything
themselves, and it showed. The shorter ambient pieces lack
coherence, drifting without arriving. But I think the roughness
is part of what makes the album age well. Polished records from
1982 sound like 1982. Rough ones sound like drafts from a
future that didn't quite materialise, which is more or less
the definition of hauntology.
Bewitched, released in 1984, is a different animal. Summers
had a clearer sense of how to work with what he called Fripp's
"idiosyncratic genius," and the album brought in session
musicians: Sara Lee on bass, who'd played in both Gang of
Four and Fripp's own League of Gentlemen, real drums, actual song structures. The result is
more conventional and, track for track, more consistent. "Parade"
opens with New Wave percussion and a synth-guitar melody that
evokes Bowie's Low. "What Kind of Man Reads Playboy?" layers
wah-funk, harmonic textures, bebop, and blues into something
Moving the River called "a perfect distillation of the state of
the electric guitar in the mid-'80s." Side one of Bewitched is
genuinely excellent.
Side two is not. Multiple reviewers note the drop-off: short,
poorly recorded tracks that sound like outtakes rather than
finished pieces. Fripp himself acknowledged the shift in balance:
"The album is a lot more Andrew than it is me." He'd assumed a
deliberately recessive role, providing textural framework rather
than competing for the spotlight, and some critics found this
admirable but disappointing. The locked-room intimacy of the
debut, two guitarists and their machines, had been traded for
something more produced but less distinctive.
What sits between these albums now, in 2025, is a literal ghost.
During preparation for a
Complete Recordings 1981-1984 box set
on DGM/Panegyric, Summers found four tape reels in a Los
Angeles vault. Thirteen tracks. Enough for a full album, titled
Mother Hold the Candle Steady and newly mixed by David
Singleton. "I was sort of shocked that we had never used them,"
Summers said. The tapes had been gathering dust for forty years.
A lost album, discovered by accident, assembled decades after
the fact from material that was never intended to be heard.
If the original two records were ghosts of a future that didn't
arrive, Mother Hold the Candle Steady is something stranger:
a past that didn't happen, recovered and presented as though it
always existed. The box set also includes "Can We Record Tony?,"
an audio documentary assembled from Fripp's archival cassettes
of their earliest improvisations, sessions so preliminary they
barely qualify as recordings. These are signals from before the
signal, pre-echoes.
Summers and Fripp lost touch entirely after Bewitched. "Our
lives just shot off in different directions," Fripp said. There
is something fitting about that, two musicians who made
spectral, time-displaced music together, then vanished from each
other's lives completely, leaving behind a body of work that
sounds increasingly out of its own time.
The albums aren't nostalgic. They aren't period pieces. They
exist in a space that Summers, in a 2025
Guitar Player interview,
described with more accuracy than he probably intended: "It was
a time when you could still pull off new stuff that people
really hadn't heard yet." That sentence carries a quiet grief
for the moment it describes. A time when new stuff was still
possible. A future that was still open.
The Neuguitars writer admitted to entering what they called
"a hauntological, nostalgic, middle-aged phase" while
listening to the reissues, and I think that's honest in a way
that most music criticism isn't. These records don't just sound
like the early 1980s. They sound like what the early 1980s
thought the future would sound like, played on instruments that
now feel as analogue and irretrievable as a reel of quarter-inch
tape feeding through two Revox decks in a shack in Dorset.
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