Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Роберт Фріпп" in Ukrainian language version.
Robert Fripp is one of the biggest inspirations on me as a musician, someone who's had a career since the 60s and he's like constantly been an innovator, constantly pushing himself, trying new things, just constant source of inspiration [...]
Interviewer: In the past it was always riffs front and center, interspersed with hard solos. Now you explore the middle ground and distance with coloristic parts that are neither monster riffs nor flashy solos.
Kirk Hammett: There are fewer 30-part orchestrated guitar sections, fewer massive, bludgeoning riffs perfectly replicated by lames. There are more flexible ideas, more artistic flourishes, more colors. I've probably been influenced in that direction by people like Robert Fripp, Adrian Belew and David Torn. I'm more interested in using guitar sounds as textures and using effects in a more textural fashion. To paraphrase Robert Fripp, I'm more interested in painting a soundscape like he and Adrian Belew do in King Crimson, on Bowie records and in Fripp's solo stuff. Fripp is one of the most interesting guitar players I've ever heard--and I've just discovered him!
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(довідка)[...] At the time I wrote the introduction to "Textures", I was a big fan of Robert Fripp and his Crafty League of Guitarists records. I later learned about King Crimson having that side too, because of Robert's influence. All that counterpoint madness he wrote was brilliant. Also the use of loops and ambient environments as backdrops to these sonically beautiful pieces. Much of our progressive jazz/fusion influences found their way into the songs in the form of our chord choices and harmony.
Hal Hartley: I made a list of all the influences I could remember from the time I was 18 to the present. Here it goes: Robert Fripp and King Crimson [...]
Mes guitaristes préférés sont Allan Holdsworth, Jason Becker, Piggy (Denis D'amour, VOIVOD), Marty Friedman, Devin Townsend, Robert Fripp [...] (My favorite guitarists are Allan Holdsworth, Jason Becker, Piggy (Denis D'amour, VOIVOD), Marty Friedman, Devin Townsend, Robert Fripp.)
I’m a big fan of Robert Fripp [guitarist and founder of Sixties/Seventies progressive rock masters King Crimson—GW Ed.], and I still love a lot of his stuff. I was especially into his work with Brian Eno, on albums such as Another Green World, and I was really into King Crimson’s Larks Tongues in Aspic, which is one of my all-time favorite albums. I like Red, too. Then there’s the stuff he did later for his Discipline Records label. The "patterny" thing that Fripp is known for had a big influence on me.
Fripp’s playing caused me to “wake up” to music when I was younger.
Fripp is my number one influence, no question. […] When I was very young and first heard those King Crimson records, I would think «That's just wrong. You're playing the guitar wrong, mate!» But the more you start to listen to Fripp's playing, the more you appreciate his choices of notes. Fripp is a very unique man and his guitar playing reflects that. He doesn't pick notes in any sort of logical way, but he plays them with conviction. He blew my mind open when I heard his solos on King Crimson's «A Sailor's Tail» and Brian Eno's «Baby's on Fire.» Just extraordinary stuff. I'll never be able to play like that because you have to have the mind of Fripp to do that, but there is certainly an influence from him in terms of choosing unique notes and making them sound beautiful.
[...] For me, people are surprised to know, my true guitar heroes were Robert Fripp and Steve Howe and guys who were playing all different styles within the context of a rock band. I always loved the idea of how they approached guitar, which is to orchestrate the song with different guitar sounds and different guitar styles. [...]
Q: What is your favorite David Bowie period?
Leopold Ross: Scary Monsters could rival Master of Puppets as my favorite album ever. What I like about that is that without a blueprint, it's just really weird music. Robert Fripp is an astonishingly good guitar player. Just doing the wierdest shit. You listen to the guitar in 'Fashion' and you're like, 'What the fuck is that?' He played on Scary Monsters, Low and I think Lodger as well. Low is one of my favorite albums ever.
Q: Dette til tross, du kan ikke nekte for å være utpreget influert av King Crimson og Robert Fripp.
Omar Rodríguez-López: Selvfølgelig ikke! Jeg gjør faktisk ingen forsøk på å skjule min affekt for Fripps arbeider. [...] ble jeg introdusert for King Crimson, og på nytt kollapset alt, men på en konstruktiv måte. [...] Fripp tryllet i alle fall fram de vakreste toner jeg hadde hørt, og han kunne ikke ha gitt seg til kjenne på et mer gunstig tidspunkt i mitt liv. [...] Ingen kan nekte for at Robert Fripp, også helt tidlig i karrieren, var opptatt av jazz eller de blå notene. Durskalaer og oppstemte gjengroprefrenger har aldri appellert til meg, så da King Crimson ble meg til del var det som å smake på en bit av himmelriket.
(Q: You can't deny that you're influenced by Robert Fripp and King Crimson, right?
Omar Rodríguez-López: No, of course not! I make no attempt to hide my affection for Fripps work. [...] I was introduced to King Crimson and again everything collapsed, but in a constructive way. [...] Fripp made the most beautiful notes that I had heard, and he couldn't have been introduced to me at a better time in my life. [...] As soon as someone discovers jazz, it will influence their approach irrespective of which style or band the person concerned contributes to. It can't be denied that Robert Fripp was into jazz throughout his career or the blue notes. The major-scales and euphoric stadium-rock choruses have never appealed to me so when I got familiar with King Crimson's music it was like getting a taste of heaven.)
[...] Robert Fripp is definitely another one who I would consider an influence.
I have so many favorite guitar players; Piggy from Voivod, Randy Rhoads, Robert Fripp, Ty Tabor, Dime, I can't list them all here but they continue to shape my playing and note choices long after they have turned off their amps.
Q: Who were your guitar influences?
Richard Pinhas: [...] As a music composer, it would be Robert Fripp and King Crimson, yet I was more incensed by [Fripp & Eno's] Evening Star and the first one, No Pussyfooting. [...]
[...] A few years after that, I was really influenced by Al DiMeola, Robert Fripp, John McLaughlin and keyboardist Keith Emerson.
I guess some of my biggest influences are people like John Mclaughlin from Mahavishnu Orchestra, Robert Fripp from King Crimson [...]
[...] the biggest ones that influenced the playing I did in the Rollins Band would have to be the “Red/Starless & Bible Black/Lark’s Tongue”-era King Crimson work of Fripp [...]
[...] when I got into more technical guitar playing and things like that, I jumped right to fusion. So things like Crimson and stuff like that. [...] I was really heavily into Robert Fripp [...]
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: Обслуговування CS1: bot: Сторінки з посиланнями на джерела, де статус оригінального URL невідомий (посилання)Q: Dette til tross, du kan ikke nekte for å være utpreget influert av King Crimson og Robert Fripp.
Omar Rodríguez-López: Selvfølgelig ikke! Jeg gjør faktisk ingen forsøk på å skjule min affekt for Fripps arbeider. [...] ble jeg introdusert for King Crimson, og på nytt kollapset alt, men på en konstruktiv måte. [...] Fripp tryllet i alle fall fram de vakreste toner jeg hadde hørt, og han kunne ikke ha gitt seg til kjenne på et mer gunstig tidspunkt i mitt liv. [...] Ingen kan nekte for at Robert Fripp, også helt tidlig i karrieren, var opptatt av jazz eller de blå notene. Durskalaer og oppstemte gjengroprefrenger har aldri appellert til meg, så da King Crimson ble meg til del var det som å smake på en bit av himmelriket.
(Q: You can't deny that you're influenced by Robert Fripp and King Crimson, right?
Omar Rodríguez-López: No, of course not! I make no attempt to hide my affection for Fripps work. [...] I was introduced to King Crimson and again everything collapsed, but in a constructive way. [...] Fripp made the most beautiful notes that I had heard, and he couldn't have been introduced to me at a better time in my life. [...] As soon as someone discovers jazz, it will influence their approach irrespective of which style or band the person concerned contributes to. It can't be denied that Robert Fripp was into jazz throughout his career or the blue notes. The major-scales and euphoric stadium-rock choruses have never appealed to me so when I got familiar with King Crimson's music it was like getting a taste of heaven.)
[...] Robert Fripp is definitely another one who I would consider an influence.
[...] At the time I wrote the introduction to "Textures", I was a big fan of Robert Fripp and his Crafty League of Guitarists records. I later learned about King Crimson having that side too, because of Robert's influence. All that counterpoint madness he wrote was brilliant. Also the use of loops and ambient environments as backdrops to these sonically beautiful pieces. Much of our progressive jazz/fusion influences found their way into the songs in the form of our chord choices and harmony.
[...] For me, people are surprised to know, my true guitar heroes were Robert Fripp and Steve Howe and guys who were playing all different styles within the context of a rock band. I always loved the idea of how they approached guitar, which is to orchestrate the song with different guitar sounds and different guitar styles. [...]
I have so many favorite guitar players; Piggy from Voivod, Randy Rhoads, Robert Fripp, Ty Tabor, Dime, I can't list them all here but they continue to shape my playing and note choices long after they have turned off their amps.
Q: Who were your guitar influences?
Richard Pinhas: [...] As a music composer, it would be Robert Fripp and King Crimson, yet I was more incensed by [Fripp & Eno's] Evening Star and the first one, No Pussyfooting. [...]
[...] They are very Voivodian and we can tell the influences of Piggy more than (his work for) Voivod. He was an Alex Lifeson fan, and a fan of Robert Fripp [...]