When the smoke cleared, Giles, Giles Fripp had ceased to exist, having evolved into King Crimson, with the bassist spot covered by Greg Lake, an old friend of Fripp's who not only played bass but also sang lead. Peter Giles was next heard from on two projects that spun out of the collapse of that King Crimson lineup, barely a year later. In early 1970, after the original group had fallen apart following its American tour, he was playing bass in a transitional Crimson lineup, pulled together by Fripp to complete a single, Cat Food, and an album, In the Wake of Poseidon. In May of that same year, he also joined his brother and Ian McDonald at Island Records' Basing Street studio to play bass on the McDonald Giles album. By then, however, his real work was with computers, and the younger Giles brother wasn't heard from again in music until 2002, with the founding of the 21st Century Schizoid Band. Suddenly, he was back in the bassist spot that might have been his in 1969, singing backup as well, and touring internationally, something that Giles, Giles Fripp never had an opportunity to do. His bass work with the band was all that 30 years of mystery and expectation surrounding his career would lead one to hope for -- sublimely beautiful and every bit as powerful as any other four-string player this side of Chris Squire or Tony Reeves. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi