Progressive supergroup BEAT brought their show, five years in the making, to Massey Hall in Toronto last week. When guitarist/vocalist/noise guru Adrian Belew pitched the idea of showcasing King Crimson’s three 1980s albums, live over 40 years later, Crimson’s genius guitarist and head honcho Robert Fripp was all for it and gave his enthusiastic blessing. Only he didn’t want to actually do the shows himself. So Belew started the painstaking task of bringing on musicians who would bring the critically acclaimed material to life again. Bassist Tony Levin was a member of the ’80s King Crimson period, and he was game. But finding a guitarist to fill Fripp’s impossibly specialized shoes and a drummer to attempt to come close to what Bill Bruford could extract from a drum kit took more brainpowe...