| Nick Mason |

Nick
Mason at a booksigning
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Nicholas Berkeley Mason |
| Born |
January 27, 1944 (1944-01-27) (age 63)
Birmingham,
England |
| Genre(s) |
Progressive
Rock
Psychedelic Rock
Instrumental Rock |
| Occupation(s) |
Musician, Producer,
Author |
| Instrument(s) |
Drums |
| Years active |
1964 - present |
| Label(s) |
Capitol
Columbia
Sony
EMI
Harvest |
Associated
acts |
Pink Floyd
Sigma
6
The
Screaming Abdabs |
Nicholas Berkeley "Nick" Mason (born January
27, 1944 in Birmingham,
England)
is the drummer
for Pink
Floyd. He has been the only constant member of the band since
its formation. He also competes in auto racing events, such as the 24
Hours of Le Mans.
He was born in Birmingham but brought up in Hampstead, London (many
online biographies mistakenly cite the street address Downshire Hill -
sometimes as "the Downshire Hills" - as a district of Birmingham) and
attended Frensham Heights School, Surrey. He later
studied at the Regent Street Polytechnic
(now the University of Westminster), where he teamed up with Roger
Waters, Bob Klose and Richard Wright
in 1964 to form Pink Floyd's predecessor, Sigma 6.
|
Contents
- 1 Career
- 1.1 Pink
Floyd
- 1.2 Other
work
- 2 Away
from music
- 3 Solo
albums
- 4 Books
- 5 References
- 6 External
Links
|
Career
Pink Floyd
Mason has played on every Pink Floyd album, although it was
later revealed that his contributions to the album A Momentary Lapse of
Reason were quite minimal, only playing on "Learning to Fly", "On
the Turning Away" and "Yet Another Movie".
Mason as he is pictured for the 1971 album Meddle.
Despite conflicts over ownership of the name 'Pink Floyd',
Roger Waters and Nick Mason are now on good terms. Mason joined Waters
on the last two nights of his 2002 world tour to play drums on the Pink
Floyd song "Set the
Controls for the Heart of the Sun", and he also played drums on some
concerts of Waters' European tour in 2006, and during performances in Los
Angeles and New York City in the United
States. On May
12, 2007,
Mason joined Waters again on stage at Earls
Court to play Dark Side of the Moon.
In July 2005, Mason, Gilmour, Wright, and Waters played
together on stage for the first time in 24 years. A four song set was
played at the Live 8 concert in London.
Mason also joined David Gilmour and Richard Wright for the encore
during Gilmour's show at the Royal Albert Hall, London, on May 31, 2006, reuniting the
post-Waters Pink Floyd. Mason has also claimed to be the link between
Gilmour and Waters, and believes the band will play live again. His
answers have ranged from "playing again for a charitable cause" to "a
tour" given in various interviews in the last few years. He also stated
in 2006 that Pink Floyd have not officially disbanded yet.
The only Pink Floyd songs that are solely credited to Mason
are "The Grand Vizier's
Garden Party Parts 1-3" (from Ummagumma) and "Speak to
Me" (from The Dark Side of the Moon).
The one-off song by the band entitled Nick's
Boogie was named after him.
The only times Mason's voice has been included on Pink Floyd's
albums are "Corporal Clegg", the single spoken
line in "One of These Days" and spoken
parts of "Signs of Life" and "Learning
to Fly" (the latter taken from actual recording of Mason's first solo
flight) from A Momentary Lapse of
Reason. He does, however, sing lead vocals on
the unreleased but heavily bootlegged "Merry Xmas Song" (1975-1976). In
live performances of the song "Sheep", he did the spoken section.
Unlike the other members of Pink Floyd, Mason has rarely
played an instrument other than his usual one (drums). He has only ever
played non-percussive instruments on "The Grand Vizier's Garden Party",
his personal composition from Ummagumma, where he
provided some keyboard, guitar and bass noises, and on live versions of
"Outside the Wall", where he played acoustic guitar. He has claimed
that he took some failed violin and piano lessons as a child.
Other work
Mason has done some work with other people, notably as a
drummer and producer for Steve
Hillage and Robert Wyatt, drummer for Michael
Mantler and producer for The Damned.
Nick Mason's book, Inside
Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd, was
published in the UK in October 2004. It is also available, abridged, as
a 3CD audio book, read by Mason.
Away from music
| Nick
Mason |
| Nationality |
British |
| 24
Hours of Le Mans career |
| Participating years |
1979 – 1980, 1982 – 1984 |
| Teams |
Dorset Racing Associates
EMKA
Productions
Dome Racing
GTi Engineering |
| Best finish |
18th (1979) |
| Class wins |
0 |
Mason is married (to his second wife, Nettie) and has four
children; two daughters (Holly and Chloe) from his first marriage and
two sons (Guy and Cary) from his second. They live in the Wiltshire
town of Corsham
in the former home of Camilla Parker Bowles.
As Floyd's recording and touring schedule grew more sporadic,
Mason was left with more time to pursue his favourite hobby, auto
racing. He owns (through his company Ten
Tenths) and races several classic cars, and has competed
successfully at the 24 hours of Le Mans. He is also
a qualified pilot, and flies a Aerospatiale
AS 350 Squirrel helicopter in specially painted colours
Mason was invited by Ferrari to purchase one of their 400 Enzos,
which Jeremy Clarkson pleaded with him to
borrow for reviewing purposes on the BBC motoring programme Top Gear.
Mason agreed, on the sole condition that throughout the review,
Clarkson promoted the release of Inside Out. This
led to Clarkson using Pink Floyd album titles in his description of the
Enzo. Mason says that his favourite car of all time is the Ferrari
250 GTO, and owns one of the 39 built.
He is the only member of Pink Floyd who never smoked
cigarettes.
Solo albums
- Fictitious Sports
- May 3, 1981
- Profiles - July 29, 1985
Books
- Inside
Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd - October
28, 2004
References
External Links
| v • d • e Pink Floyd
|
| David
Gilmour • Nick Mason •
Roger
Waters • Richard Wright
Syd
Barrett • Bob
Klose • Roger
Waters
Discography
Studio
albums: The Piper at the
Gates of Dawn (1967) • A Saucerful of Secrets
(1968) • Ummagumma
(1969) • Atom
Heart Mother (1970) • Meddle
(1971) • The Dark Side of the Moon
(1973) • Wish You Were Here
(1975) • Animals
(1977) • The Wall
(1979) • The
Final Cut (1983) • A Momentary Lapse of
Reason (1987) • The
Division Bell (1994)
Soundtracks: Tonite Let's
All Make Love in London (1968) • More
(1969) • Zabriskie Point
(1970) • Obscured
by Clouds (1972)
Live: Ummagumma
(1969) • Delicate Sound of Thunder
(1988) • P•U•L•S•E
(1995) • Is
There Anybody Out There? The Wall Live 1980-81
(2000)
Compilations: Relics
(1971) • A Nice
Pair (1973) • Masters of Rock
(1974) • A Collection of
Great Dance Songs (1981) • Works
(1983) • Shine
On (The
Early Singles) (1992) •
1967
Singles Sampler (1997) • Echoes
(2001)
Unreleased material: Lucy Leave
(1965) • I'm a King Bee
(1965) • One
in a Million (1967) • Vegetable
Man (1968) • Scream Thy Last Scream
(1968) • Moonhead
(1968) • Seabirds
(1969) • Pink Floyd Live
at Montreux Casino (1970)
Films
Live at Pompeii
• The Wall
• Delicate Sound of
Thunder • La Carrera Panamericana
• P•U•L•S•E
• The
Making of The Dark Side of the Moon •
The Pink Floyd
and Syd Barrett Story • London
'66-'67
Related articles
Steve
O'Rourke • Contributors
• Live performances •
Household Objects •
Pigs
• Publius
Enigma • Dark Side of the Rainbow •
The Man and the Journey
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