This led to a much improved remastered CD version (see below) in time for the album's 40th anniversary. The original first-generation stereo master tapes were thought to be lost, but were finally located in a storage vault in 2003. All of these versions were based on tape copies that were several generations removed from the originals. The album was remastered and re-released on vinyl and CD several times during the 1980s and 1990s. The album was named as one of Classic Rock magazine s "50 Albums That Built Prog Rock". In the Q & Mojo Classic Special Edition Pink Floyd & The Story of Prog Rock, the album came fourth in its list of "40 Cosmic Rock Albums". The Who's Pete Townshend was quoted as calling the album "an uncanny masterpiece". In his 1997 book Rocking the Classics, critic and musicologist Edward Macan notes that In the Court of the Crimson King "may be the most influential progressive rock album ever released". The album is generally viewed as one of the first works to truly embody the progressive rock genre, where King Crimson largely departed from the blues influences that rock music had been founded upon and mixed together jazz and classical symphonic elements. The album reached number five on the British charts, and is certified gold in the United States, where it reached #28 on the Billboard 200. In the Court of the Crimson King an Observation by King Crimson is the debut studio album by the British rock group King Crimson.