| Pink Floyd |

|
| Background information |
| Origin |
Cambridge, England |
| Genre(s) |
Progressive
rock
Psychedelic rock (early)
Art
rock
Space
rock
Hard
rock |
| Years active |
1965–present (on
indefinite hiatus since 1994) |
| Label(s) |
Tower (US:
1967–69)
Harvest (US: 1969–73;
Europe: 1969–84)
Capitol (US: 1967–74,
2001–present)
Columbia (US:
1974–2000) |
Associated
acts |
Sigma 6 |
| Website |
www.pinkfloyd.co.uk |
| Members |
David
Gilmour
Nick
Mason
Richard Wright |
| Former members |
Roger
Waters (1965–85)
Syd
Barrett (1965–68; d. 2006)
Bob
Klose (1965)
See Band
members for full line-up details. |
 |
This
article includes inline links to audio files. If you have trouble
playing the files, see Wikipedia Media help. |
Pink Floyd are an English rock
band that earned recognition for their psychedelic
rock music, and, as they evolved, for their avant-garde
progressive
rock music. They are known for philosophical lyrics, sonic
experimentation, innovative cover art, and elaborate live shows. One of rock
music's most successful
and influential acts, the group has sold over 250 million
albums worldwide
and an estimated 73.5 million albums in the United States alone.
Pink Floyd had moderate success in the late 1960s as a psychedelic
band led by the late Syd Barrett; however,
Barrett's erratic behaviour forced his colleagues to eventually replace
him with guitarist and singer David Gilmour. After
Barrett's departure, singer and bass player Roger
Waters gradually became the band's leader and main
songwriter. Under Waters' leadership, the band recorded several albums, achieving
worldwide success with The Dark Side of the Moon
(1973), Wish You Were Here
(1975), Animals
(1977), and The Wall (1979). In
1985, Waters declared Pink Floyd defunct, but the remaining members,
led by Gilmour, continued recording and touring under the name,
enjoying commercial success and eventually reaching a settlement with
Waters over the use of the name.
Waters performed with the band for the first time in 24 years
on July
2, 2005 at
the London Live 8 concert,
playing to Pink Floyd's biggest audience ever.
|
Contents
- 1 Band
history
- 1.1 Syd
Barrett-led era: 1965–1968
- 1.2 Finding
their feet: 1968–1970
- 1.3 Breakthrough
era: 1971–1975
- 1.4 Roger
Waters-led era: 1976–1985
- 1.5 David
Gilmour-led era: 1987–1995
- 1.6 Solo
work and more: 1995–present
- 2 Live
performances
- 3 Discography
- 3.1 Studio
albums
- 3.2 Live
albums
- 3.3 Singles
- 3.4 DVD
and Video
- 3.5 Additional
song samples
- 4 Band
members
- 4.1 Notable
or frequent contributors
- 5 Notes
- 6 References
- 7 See
also
- 8 External
links
- 8.1 Official
sites
- 8.2 Other
links
|
Band history
Syd Barrett-led era: 1965–1968
Pink Floyd evolved from an earlier rock band, formed in 1965,
which was at various times called Sigma 6, The Meggadeaths, The Architectural
Abdabs, The Screaming Abdabs, and simply The Abdabs. When the band
split up, some members — guitarists Rado
"Bob" Klose and Roger Waters, drummer Nick
Mason, and wind instrument player Rick Wright —
formed a new band called 'Tea Set'. After a brief stint with a lead
vocalist named Chris Dennis,
guitarist and vocalist Syd Barrett joined the band,
with Waters moving to bass.
When 'Tea Set' found themselves on the same bill as another
band with the same name, Barrett came up with the alternative name The
Pink Floyd Sound, after two blues musicians, Pink
Anderson and Floyd Council.
For a time after this they oscillated between 'Tea Set' and 'The Pink
Floyd Sound', with the latter name eventually winning out. The Sound
was dropped fairly quickly, but the definite article was still used
occasionally for several years afterward; David
Gilmour is known to have referred to the group as "The
Pink Floyd" as late as 1984,
though they never released any recordings under that name.
The heavily jazz-oriented
Klose left the band to become a photographer shortly before Pink Floyd
started recording, leaving an otherwise stable lineup with Barrett on guitar and lead
vocals, Waters on bass guitar and backing
vocals, Mason on drums
and percussion, and Wright switching to keyboards
and backing vocals. Barrett soon started writing his own songs,
influenced by American and British
psychedelic
rock with his own brand of whimsical humour. Pink Floyd became a
favourite in the underground movement, playing at
such prominent venues as the UFO club, the Marquee
Club and the Roundhouse.
At the end of 1966 the band were invited to contribute music
for Peter Whitehead's film Tonite Let's
All Make Love in London; they were filmed
recording two tracks ("Interstellar Overdrive" and
"Nick's Boogie") in January 1967. Although hardly any of this music
made it onto the film, the session was eventually released as London
1966/1967 in 2005.
As their popularity increased, the band members formed Blackhill
Enterprises in October 1966, a six-way business partnership with their
managers, Peter Jenner and Andrew King,
issuing the singles "Arnold Layne" in March 1967 and "See
Emily Play" in June 1967. "Arnold Layne" reached number 20 in the UK
Singles Chart, and "See Emily Play" reached number 6,
granting the band its first national TV appearance on Top
of the Pops in July 1967. (They had earlier
appeared, performing "Interstellar Overdrive" at
the UFO Club, in a short documentary, "It's So Far Out It's Straight
Down". This was broadcast in March 1967 but seen only in the UK's Granada
TV region.)
Released in August 1967, the band's debut album, The Piper at the
Gates of Dawn, is today considered to be a
prime example of British psychedelic music,
and was generally well-received by critics at the time. It is now
viewed as one of the better debut albums by many critics.
The album's tracks, predominantly written by Barrett, showcase poetic
lyrics and an eclectic mixture of music, from the avant-garde free-form
piece "Interstellar Overdrive" (sample
(
and that only after it was reissued in the wake of the band's stateside
commercial breakthrough in the 1970s. During this period, the band
toured with Jimi Hendrix, which helped to increase
its popularity.
Barrett's decline
As the band became more popular, the stresses of
life on the road and a significant intake of psychedelic
drugs took their toll on Barrett, whose mental health had been
deteriorating for several months. Barrett's strange behaviour has often
been attributed to his drug use.
In January 1968, guitarist David Gilmour joined the
band to carry out Barrett's playing and singing duties, though
evidently Jeff
Beck was considered. [5]
With Barrett's behaviour becoming less and less
predictable, and his almost constant use of LSD, he became very unstable, occasionally
staring into space while the rest of the band performed. During some
performances, he would just strum one chord for the duration of a
concert, or randomly begin detuning his guitar.
The band's live shows became increasingly ramshackle until, eventually,
the other band members simply stopped taking him to the concerts. The
last concert featuring Barrett was on January 20, 1968 on Hastings Pier. It was originally hoped
that Barrett would write for the band with Gilmour
performing live, but Barrett's increasingly difficult compositions,
such as "Have You Got It Yet?", which changed melodies and chord
progression with every take, eventually made the rest of the band give
up on this arrangement.
Once Barrett's departure was formalised in April 1968, producers Jenner
and King decided to remain with him, and the six-way Blackhill
partnership was dissolved.
The band adopted Steve O'Rourke as manager, and he
remained with Pink Floyd until his death in 2003.
After recording two solo albums (The
Madcap Laughs and Barrett)
in 1970 (co-produced by and sometimes featuring Gilmour, Waters and
Wright) to moderate success, Barrett went into seclusion. Again going
by his given name, Roger, he lived a quiet life in his native Cambridge
for more than 35 years. Barrett died at his home on July 7, 2006.
Finding their feet: 1968–1970
This period was one of musical experimentation
for the band. Gilmour, Waters and Wright each contributed material that
had its own voice and sound, giving this material less consistency than
the Barrett-dominated early years or the more polished, collaborative
sound of later years. As Barrett had been the lead
singer during his era, Gilmour, Waters and Wright now split both
songwriting and lead vocal duties. Waters mostly wrote low-key, jazzy
melodies with dominant bass lines and complex, symbolic lyrics, Gilmour
focused on guitar-driven blues jams, and Wright preferred melodic
psychedelic keyboard-heavy numbers. Unlike Waters, Gilmour and Wright
preferred tracks that had simple lyrics or that were purely
instrumental. Some of the band's most experimental
music is from this period, such as "A Saucerful of
Secrets", consisting largely of noises, feedback, percussions,
oscillators and tape loops, and "Careful with That Axe,
Eugene" (which went by a number of other names as well), a very
Waters-driven song with a bass and keyboard-heavy jam culminating in
crashing drums and Waters' primal screams.
Whilst Barrett had written the bulk of the first
album, only one composition by him, the Piper
outtake "Jugband Blues", appeared on the second
Floyd album. A Saucerful of Secrets
was released in June 1968, reaching #9 in the UK and becoming the only
Pink Floyd album not to chart in the U.S.
Somewhat uneven due to Barrett's departure, the album still contained
much of his psychedelic sound combined with the more experimental music
that would be fully showcased on Ummagumma.
Its centrepiece, the 12-minute title track (sample
(
although critics today tend to be kinder to the album in the context of
their body of work.
Future Pink Floyd albums would expand upon the idea of long, sprawling
compositions, offering more focused songwriting with each subsequent
release.
Pink Floyd were then recruited by
director Barbet Schroeder to produce a
soundtrack for his film, More, which
premiered in May 1969. The music was released as a Floyd album in its
own right, Music From the Film More,
in July 1969; the album achieved another #9 finish in the UK, and
peaked at #153 in the U.S.
Critics tend to find the collection of the film's music patchy and
uneven.
The band would use this and future soundtrack recording sessions to
produce work that may not have fit into the idea of what would appear
on a proper Pink Floyd LP; many of the tracks on More
(as fans usually call it) were acoustic folk
songs. Two of these songs, "Green Is the Colour" and "Cymbaline",
became fixtures in the band's live sets for a time and were a part of
their live The Man/The Journey
suite, as can be heard in the many available bootleg
recordings from this period. "Cymbaline" was also the first Pink Floyd
song to deal with Roger Waters' cynical attitude toward the music
industry explicitly. The rest of the album consisted of avant-garde
incidental pieces from the score (some of which were also part of "The
Man/The Journey") with a few heavier rock songs thrown in, such as "The
Nile Song".
The next record, the double album Ummagumma,
was a mix of live recordings and unchecked studio experimentation by
the band members, with each member recording half a side of a vinyl
record as a solo project (Mason's first wife makes an uncredited
contribution as a flautist).
Though the album was realised as solo outings and a live set, it was
originally intended as a purely avant-garde mixture of sounds from
"found" instruments. The subsequent difficulties in recording and lack
of group organization led to the shelving of the project. The title is Cambridge
slang for sexual intercourse
and reflects the attitude of the band at the time, as frustrations in
the studio followed them throughout these sessions. The band was wildly
experimental on the studio disc, which featured Waters' pure folk "Grantchester Meadows",
an atonal & jarring piano piece ("Sysyphus"),
meandering progressive rock textures ("The Narrow Way") and large
percussion solos ("The Grand Vizier's
Garden Party"). "Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered
Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict" is a five-minute song
composed entirely of Roger Water's voice played at varied speeds,
resulting in a noise resembling rodents and birds. Large portions of
the studio disc were previously played in their live "The Man/The
Journey" concept piece. The live disc featured acclaimed performances
of some of their most popular psychedelic-era compositions and caused
critics to receive the album more positively than the previous two
albums.
With fans, the album was Pink Floyd's most popular release yet, hitting
UK #5 and making the U.S. charts at #74.
1970's Atom
Heart Mother, the band's first recording with
an orchestra, was a collaboration with avant-garde
composer Ron
Geesin. One side of the album consisted of the title piece, a 23-minute
long "rock-orchestral" suite. The second
side featured one song from each of the band's then-current vocalists
(Roger Waters' folk-rock "If", David Gilmour's bluesy "Fat Old
Sun" and Rick Wright's nostalgic "Summer '68"). Another lengthy piece, "Alan's Psychedelic
Breakfast", was a sound collage of a man cooking and
eating breakfast and his thoughts on the matter, linked with
instrumentals. The use of noises, incidental sound
effects and voice samples would thereafter be an important part of the
band's sound. While Atom Heart Mother was
considered a huge step back for the band at the time
and is still considered one of its most inaccessible albums,
it had the best chart performance for the band up to that time,
reaching #1 in the UK and #55 in the U.S.
It has since been described by Gilmour as "a load of rubbish" and
Waters has said he wouldn't mind if it were "thrown in the dustbin and
never listened to by anyone ever again."
The album was another transitional piece for the group, hinting at
future musical territory such as "Echoes" in its ambitious title track.
The popularity of the album allowed Pink Floyd to embark on its first
full U.S. tour.
Before releasing its next original
album, the band released a compilation album, Relics,
which contained several early singles and B-sides,
along with one original song (Waters' jazzy "Biding
My Time", part of "The Man/The Journey" recorded during the Ummagumma
sessions). They also contributed to the soundtrack of Zabriskie Point,
though many of their contributions were eventually discarded by
director Michelangelo Antonioni.
Breakthrough era: 1971–1975
Classic Pink Floyd line-up, early 70s. From left to right: Wright,
Gilmour, Mason, Waters.
This is the period in which Pink
Floyd shed their association with the "psychedelic" scene (and its
association with Barrett) and became a distinctive band who are
difficult to classify. The divergent styles of their primary
songwriters, Gilmour, Waters and Wright, merged into a unique sound.
This era contains what many consider to be two of the band's
masterpiece albums, The Dark Side of the Moon
and Wish You Were Here.
The sound became polished and collaborative, with the philosophic
lyrics and distinctive bass lines of Waters combining with the unique
blues guitar style of Gilmour and Wright's haunting keyboard melodies.
Gilmour was the dominant vocalist throughout this period, and female
choirs and Dick
Parry's saxophone contributions became a notable part of the band's
style. The sometimes atonal and harsh sound exhibited in the band's
earlier years gave way to a very smooth, mellow and soothing sound, and
the band's epic, lengthy compositions reached their zenith with
"Echoes". This period was not only the beginning but the end of the
truly collaborative era of the band; after 1973 Waters' influence
became more dominant musically as well as lyrically. Wright's last
credited composition and last lead vocal on a studio
album until 1994's The Division Bell
were in this period ("Shine On You Crazy
Diamond" and "Time" respectively), and
Gilmour's writing credits sharply declined in frequency until Waters
left the band in 1985, though he continued to perform lead vocals and
write songs throughout the whole time. The last ties with Barrett were
severed in musical, as well as literal, fashion with Wish You
Were Here, whose epic track "Shine On You Crazy
Diamond" was written both as a tribute and eulogy to Barrett.
The band's sound was considerably
more focused on Meddle (1971), with
the 23-minute epic "Echoes" taking up the
second side of the LP. "Echoes" is a smooth progressive rock song with
extended guitar and keyboard solos and a long segue in the middle
consisting largely of synthesised whale song produced on guitar, along with
samples of crows cawing, described by Waters as a "sonic poem".
Meddle was considered by Nick Mason to be "the first
real Pink Floyd album. It introduced the idea of a theme that can be
returned to."
The album had the sound and style of the succeeding breakthrough-era
Pink Floyd albums but stripped away the orchestra that was prominent in
Atom Heart Mother.
Meddle also included the atmospheric "One
of These Days", a concert favourite featuring Nick Mason's menacing
one-line vocal ("One of these days, I'm going to cut you into little
pieces"), distorted and bluesy lap steel guitar, and a melody that
at one point segues into a throbbing synthetic pulse quoting the theme
tune of the cult classic science fiction television show Doctor Who.
The mellow feeling of the next three albums is very present on "Fearless",
and this track displays a folk influence, as does the prominent lap steel
guitar on "A Pillow of Winds." The latter
track is one of the Floyd's very few acoustic
love songs. Waters' role as lead songwriter began to take form, with
his jazzy "San Tropez" brought to the band
practically completed. Meddle was greeted both by
critics
and fans enthusiastically, and Pink Floyd were rewarded with a #3 album
chart peak in the UK; it only reached #70 in U.S. charts.
According to Nick Mason, this was partly because Capitol
Records had not provided the album with enough publicity support in the
U.S.
Today, Meddle remains one of their most
well-regarded efforts.
Obscured
by Clouds was released in 1972 as the soundtrack
to the film La Vallee, another art house film
by Barbet Schroeder. This was the band's first U.S. Top 50 album
(where it hit #46), hitting at #6 in the UK
While Mason described the album years later as "sensational,"
it is less well-regarded by critics.
The lyrics of "Free
Four", the first Pink Floyd song to achieve significant airplay in the
U.S., introduced Waters' ruminations on his father's death in World War
II which would figure in subsequent albums. Two other songs on the
album, "Wot's... Uh the Deal" and "Childhood's End",
also hint at themes used in later albums, the former focusing on
loneliness and desperation which would come to full fruit in the Roger
Waters-led era, and the latter hinting much at the next album, fixated
on life, death and the passage of time. "Childhood's End", inspired by
the Arthur C. Clarke book of the same
name, was also Gilmour's last lyrical contribution for 15 years.
The album was, to an extent, stylistically different from the preceding
Meddle, with the songs generally being shorter,
often taking a somewhat pastoral approach compared to the atmospheric
use of sound effects and keyboard on sections of Meddle,
and sometimes even running into folk-rock, blues-rock
and piano-driven
soft
rock ("Burning Bridges", "The Gold It's in the..." and
"Stay" being the best examples
for each).
The release of Pink Floyd's
massively successful 1973 album, The Dark Side of the Moon,
was a watershed moment in the band's popularity. Pink Floyd had stopped
issuing singles after 1968's "Point Me at the Sky" and was
never a hit-single-driven group, but The Dark Side of the Moon
featured a U.S. Top 20 single ("Money").
The album became the band's first #1 on U.S. charts
and, as of December 2006, is one of the biggest-selling albums in U.S.
history, with more than 15 million units sold,
and one of the best-selling
albums worldwide, with more than 40 million copies sold.
The critically-acclaimed album stayed on the
Billboard Top 200 for an unprecedented 741 weeks (including 591
consecutive weeks from 1976 to 1988),
establishing a world record. It also remained 301 weeks on UK charts,
despite never rising higher than #2 there,
and is highly praised by critics.
Saxophone forms an important part of
the album's sound, exposing the band's jazz influences (especially that of Rick
Wright), and female backing vocals play a key role in helping to
diversify the album's texture. For example, songs such as "Money" and "Time" ([[:Media:|sample]] ([[:Image:|info]]))
are placed on either side of mellow lap steel guitar sounds
(reminiscent of Meddle) in "Breathe
(Reprise)" and female vocal-laden song "The Great Gig in the Sky"
(with Clare
Torry on lead vocal), while minimalist instrumental "On the Run" (sample
(
proved a powerful catalyst for the band and together they drew up a
list of themes, several of which would be revisited by Waters on later
albums, such as "Us and Them"'s (sample (info))
musings on violence and the futility of war, and the themes of insanity and neurosis
discussed in "Brain Damage." The album's
complicated and precise sound engineering by Alan
Parsons set new standards for sound fidelity; this trait became a
recognisable aspect of the band's sound and played a part in the
lasting chart success of the album, as audiophiles constantly replaced
their worn-out copies.
Seeking to capitalise
on its newfound fame, the band also released a compilation album, A Nice
Pair, which was a gatefold
repackaging of The Piper at the Gates of Dawn and A
Saucerful of Secrets. It was also during this period that
director Adrian Maben released the first Pink Floyd concert
film, Live at Pompeii.
The original theatrical cut featured footage of the band performing in
1971 at an amphitheatre in Pompeii with no audience present except the
film crew and stage staff. Maben also recorded interviews and
behind-the-scenes glimpses of the band during recording sessions for The
Dark Side of the Moon at Abbey
Road Studios; although the timeline of events indicate the recording
sessions may have been staged after the recording, they provide a
glimpse into the processes involved in producing the album. This
footage was incorporated in later video releases of Live at
Pompeii.
Wish You Were Here,
released in 1975, carries an abstract theme of absence: absence of any
humanity within the music industry and, most poignantly, the absence of
Syd Barrett. Well-known for its popular title track, the
album includes the largely instrumental, nine-part song suite "Shine On You Crazy
Diamond", a tribute to Barrett in which the lyrics deal explicitly with
the aftermath of his breakdown. Many of the musical influences in the
band's past were brought together — atmospheric keyboards, blues guitar
pieces, extended saxophone solos (by Dick Parry), jazz fusion workouts and
aggressive slide guitar — in the suite's different
linked parts, culminating in a funeral dirge played with synthesised
horn and ending with a musical quote from their early single "See
Emily Play" as a final nod to Barrett's early leadership of the band.
The remaining tracks on the album, "Welcome to the Machine" and "Have a
Cigar", harshly criticise the music industry; the latter is sung by
British folk singer Roy Harper. It was the first
Pink Floyd album to reach #1 on both the UK and the U.S. charts,
and critics praise it just as enthusiastically as The Dark
Side of the Moon.
In a famous anecdote, a
heavyset man, his head and eyebrows completely shaved, wandered into
the studio while the band was mixing "Shine On You Crazy Diamond." The
band could not recognise him for some time, when suddenly one of them
realised it was Syd Barrett. On being asked how he had put on so much
weight, he retorted "I have a fridge full of pork chops".
In an interview for the
2001 BBC Omnibus documentary 'Syd Barrett:Crazy Diamond" (later
released on DVD as The Pink Floyd and Syd Barrett Story[6]),
the story is told in full. Rick Wright spoke about the session,
saying: "One thing that really stands out in my mind, that I'll never
forget; I was going in to the "Shine On" sessions. I went in the studio
and I saw this guy sitting at the back of the studio, he was only as
far away as you are from me. And I didn't recognise him. I said, 'Who's
that guy behind you?' 'That's Syd.' And I just cracked up, I couldn't
believe it... he had shaven all his hair off... I mean, his eyebrows,
everything... he was jumping up and down brushing his teeth, it was
awful. And, uh, I was in, I mean Roger was in tears, I think I was; we
were both in tears. It was very shocking... seven years of no contact
and then to walk in while we're actually doing that particular track. I
don't know – coincidence, karma, fate, who knows? But it was very,
very, very powerful". In the same documentary, Nick
Mason stated: "When I think about it, I can still see his
eyes, but... it was everything else that was different". In that same
interview, Roger Waters has said: "I had no idea who he was for a very
long time". David Gilmour stated : "None of us recognised him.
Shaved...shaved bald head and very plump". In the 2006 'definitive
edition' DVD release of The Pink Floyd and Syd Barrett Story
in the UK/Europe the director John Edginton's interviews with Barrett's
former Floyd colleagues are included unedited, with far more detail of
their feelings and actions during Syd Barrett's tragic breakdown and
withdrawal from the band.
Roger Waters-led era: 1976–1985
During this era, Waters
asserted more and more control over Pink Floyd's output. Wright's
influence became largely inconsequential, and he was fired from the
band during the recording of The Wall.
Much of the music from this period is considered secondary to the
lyrics, which explore Waters' feelings about his father's death in World
War II and his increasingly cynical attitude towards political figures
such as Margaret Thatcher and Mary
Whitehouse. Although still finely nuanced, the music grew more
guitar-based at the expense of keyboards and saxophone, both of which
became (at best) part of the music's background texture along with the
obligatory sound effects. A full orchestra (even larger than the brass
ensemble from Atom Heart Mother) plays a
significant role on The Wall and especially The
Final Cut.
By January 1977, and
the release of Animals (UK
#2, U.S. #3),
the band's music came under increasing criticism from some quarters in
the new punk
rock sphere as being too flabby and pretentious, having lost its way
from the simplicity of early rock and roll.
Animals was, however, considerably more
guitar-driven than the previous albums, due to either the influence of
the burgeoning punk-rock movement or the fact that the album was
recorded at Pink Floyd's new (and somewhat incomplete) Britannia
Row Studios. The album was also the first to not have a single
songwriting credit for Rick Wright. Animals again
contained lengthy songs tied to a theme, this time taken in part from George
Orwell's Animal Farm,
which used "Pigs", "Dogs"
and "Sheep"
as metaphors for members of contemporary society. Despite the
prominence of guitar, keyboards and synthesisers still play an
important role on Animals, but the saxophone and
female vocal work that defined much of the previous two albums' sound
is absent. The result is a more hard-rock effort overall, bookended by
two parts of a quiet acoustic piece. Many critics did
not respond well to the album, finding it "tedious" and "bleak,"
although some celebrated it for almost those very reasons.
For the cover artwork, a giant inflatable pig was commissioned
to float between the chimney towers of London's Battersea Power Station.
However, the wind made the pig balloon difficult to control,
and in the end it was necessary to matte
a photo of the pig balloon onto the album cover. The pig was created by
Dutch industrial designer and artist
Theo Botschuijver. The pig nevertheless became one of the enduring
symbols of Pink Floyd, and inflatable pigs were a staple of Pink Floyd live
performances from then on.
1979's epic rock opera
The
Wall, conceived by Waters, dealt with the
themes of loneliness and failed communication, which were expressed by
the metaphor of a wall built between a rock artist and his audience.
The deciding moment in which to conceive The Wall was during a concert
in Montreal, Canada in which Roger Waters spat on an audience member as
he attempted to climb up on stage - it was this point where Waters felt
the alienation between audience and band. This album gave Pink Floyd
renewed acclaim and their only chart-topping single with "Another Brick in the Wall
(Part 2)"
(sample
(
Even more than during the Animals sessions, Waters
was asserting his artistic influence and leadership over the band,
using the band's perilous financial situation to his advantage, which
prompted increased conflicts with the other members. The music had
become distinctly more hard-rock, although the large orchestrations on
some tracks recalled an earlier period, and there are a few quieter
songs interspersed throughout (such as "Goodbye
Blue Sky", "Nobody Home", and "Vera").
Wright's influence was completely minimalized, and he was fired from
the band during recording, only returning on a fixed wage for the live
shows in support of the album. Ironically, Wright was the only member
of Pink Floyd to make any money from the Wall
concerts, which were only performed in several cities (London, New York
and L.A.) over multiple nights, the rest covering the extensive cost
overruns of their most spectacular concerts yet.
Despite
never hitting #1 in the UK (it reached #3), The Wall
spent 15 weeks atop the U.S. charts in 1980.
Critics praised it,
and worldwide sales are unknown but today's estimated counts are at 35
million copies of which it has been certified 23x platinum by the RIAA,
for sales of 23 million copies in U.S. alone.
The huge commercial success of The Wall made Pink
Floyd the only artists since the Beatles to have the best-selling
albums of two years (1973 and 1980) in less than a decade.
A film
entitled Pink Floyd: The Wall
was released in 1982, incorporating almost all of the music from the
album. The film, written by Waters and directed by Alan
Parker, starred Boomtown Rats founder Bob
Geldof, who re-recorded many of the vocals, and featured animation by
noted British artist and cartoonist Gerald
Scarfe. Film critic Leonard Maltin referred to the movie
as "the world's longest rock video, and certainly the most depressing",
but it grossed over US$14 million at the North American box office.
A song which first appeared in the movie, "When the Tigers Broke
Free", was released as a single on a limited basis. This song was
finally made widely available on the compilation
album Echoes: The Best of
Pink Floyd and the re-release of The
Final Cut. Also in the film is the song "What
Shall We Do Now?", which was cut out of the original album due to the
time constraints of vinyl records. The only songs
from the album not used were "Hey You" and "The Show Must
Go On."
Their 1983
studio album, The Final Cut,
was dedicated by Waters to his father, Eric
Fletcher Waters. Even darker in tone than The Wall,
this album re-examined many previous themes, while also addressing
then-current events, including Waters' anger at Britain's participation
in the Falklands War, the blame for which he
laid squarely at the feet of political leaders ("The Fletcher Memorial
Home"). It concludes with a cynical and frightening glimpse at the
possibility of nuclear war ("Two Suns in the Sunset"). Michael
Kamen and Andy
Bown contributed keyboard work in lieu of Richard Wright,
whose departure had not been formally announced before the album's
release.
Though
technically a Pink Floyd album, the LP's front cover displayed no
words, only the back cover reading: "The Final Cut -
A requiem for the post-war dream by Roger Waters, performed by Pink
Floyd: Roger Waters, David Gilmour, Nick Mason". Roger Waters received
the sole songwriting credit for the entire record, which became a
prototype in sound and form for later Waters solo projects. Waters has
since said that he offered to release the record as a solo album, but
the rest of the band rejected this idea. However, in his book 'Inside
Out,' drummer Nick Mason says that no such discussions ever took place.
Gilmour reportedly asked Waters to hold back the release of the album
so that he could write enough material to contribute, but this request
was refused. The music's tone is largely similar to The Wall's
but somewhat quieter and softer, resembling songs like "Nobody Home"
more than "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)." It is also more
repetitive, with certain leitmotifs cropping up continually. Only
moderately successful with fans by Floyd's standards (UK #1, U.S. #6),
but reasonably well-received by critics,
the album yielded one minor radio hit (albeit in bowdlerised form ), "Not
Now John", the only hard-rock song on the album (and the only one
partially sung by Gilmour). The arguments between Waters and Gilmour at
this stage were rumoured to be so bad that they were supposedly never
seen in the recording studio simultaneously, and Gilmour's co-producer
credit was dropped from the album sleeve (though he received attendant
royalties).
There was no tour for the album, although parts of it have since been
performed live by Waters on his subsequent solo tours.
After The
Final Cut Capitol Records released the
compilation Works,
which made the 1970 Waters track "Embryo" available for the first time
on a Pink Floyd album, although the track had been released on the 1970
VA
compilation Picnic - A Breath of Fresh Air on the Harvest
Records label.
The band members then went their separate ways and spent time working
on individual projects. Gilmour was the first to release his solo album
About Face
in March 1984. Wright joined forces with Dave Harris of Fashion
to form a new band, Zee, which released the
experimental album Identity a
month after Gilmour's project. In May 1984, Waters released The Pros and Cons
of Hitch Hiking, a concept
album once proposed as a Pink Floyd project. Waters had written this at
the same time as The Wall and during proposal of both, the band
selected The Wall. A year after his bandmates' projects, Mason released
the album Profiles, a
collaboration with Rick Fenn of 10cc which featured guest appearances
by Gilmour and UFO keyboardist Danny Peyronel.
David Gilmour-led era: 1987–1995
Waters
announced in December 1985 that he was departing Pink Floyd, describing
the band as "a spent force creatively", but in 1986 Gilmour and Mason
began recording a new Pink Floyd album. At the same time, Roger Waters
was working on his second solo album, entitled Radio
K.A.O.S. (1987). A bitter legal dispute ensued
with Waters claiming that the name "Pink Floyd" should have been put to
rest, but Gilmour and Mason upheld their conviction that they had the
legal right to continue as "Pink Floyd." The suit was eventually
settled out of court.
After
considering and rejecting many other titles, the new album was released
as A Momentary Lapse of
Reason (UK #3, U.S. #3).
Without Waters, who had been the band's dominant songwriter for a
decade, the band sought the help of outside writers. As Pink Floyd had
never done this before (except for the orchestral contributions of
Geesin and Ezrin), this move received much criticism. Ezrin, who had
renewed his friendship with Gilmour in 1983 (as Ezrin co-produced
Gilmour's About Face album), served as co-producer as well as being one
of these writers along with Jon Carin who wrote the music for Learning
To Fly and played much of the Keyboards on the album .
Richard Wright also returned, at first as a salaried employee during
the final recording sessions, and then officially rejoining the band
after the subsequent tour.
Gilmour
later admitted that Mason and Wright had hardly played on the album.
Because of Mason and Wright's limited contributions, some critics say
that A Momentary Lapse of Reason should really be
regarded as a Gilmour solo effort, in much the same way that The
Final Cut might be regarded as a Waters album.
A year
later, the band released a double live album and a concert video taken
from its 1988 Long Island shows, entitled Delicate Sound of Thunder,
and later recorded some instrumentals for a classic-car racing film La Carrera Panamericana,
set in Mexico and featuring Gilmour and Mason as participating drivers.
During the race Gilmour and manager Steve O'Rourke (acting as his
map-reader) crashed. O'Rourke suffered a broken leg, but Gilmour walked
away with just some bruises. The instrumentals are notable for
including the first Floyd material co-written by Wright since 1975, as
well as the only Floyd material co-written by Mason since Dark
Side of the Moon.
1992 saw
the box
set release of Shine On.
The 9-disc set included re-releases of the studio albums A Saucerful of Secrets,
Meddle,
The Dark Side of the Moon,
Wish You Were Here,
Animals, The Wall,
and A Momentary Lapse of
Reason. A bonus disc entitled The
Early Singles was also included. The set's
packaging featured a case allowing the albums to stand vertically
together, with the side-by-side spines displaying an image of the Dark
Side of the Moon cover. The circular text of each CD includes
the almost illegible words "The Big Bong Theory". The year also saw the
release of Roger Waters' solo album Amused
to Death.
The band's
next recording was the 1994 release, The
Division Bell, which was much more of a group
effort than Momentary Lapse had been, with Wright
now reinstated as a full band member, but not appearing much on the
album. The
album was received more favourably by critics and fans alike than Lapse
had been,
but was still heavily criticised as tired and formulaic.
It was the second Pink Floyd album to reach #1 on both the UK and U.S.
charts.
The
Division Bell was another concept album, in some ways
representing Gilmour's take on the same themes Waters had tackled with The
Wall. The title was suggested to Gilmour by his friend Douglas
Adams. Many of the lyrics were co-written by Polly
Samson, Gilmour's girlfriend at the time, whom he married shortly after
the album's release. Besides Samson, the album featured most of the
musicians who had joined the A Momentary Lapse of Reason
tour, as well as saxophonist Dick Parry, a contributor to the mid-70s
Floyd albums. Anthony Moore, who had co-written the lyrics for several
songs on the previous album, penned the tune by Guy Pratt "Wearing the
Inside Out", Wright's first lead vocal on a Pink Floyd record since Dark
Side of the Moon. Moore's writing continued on nearly every
song on Wright's 1996 solo album, Broken
China.
The band
released a live album entitled P*U*L*S*E
in 1995. It hit #1 in U.S. and featured songs recorded during the
"Division Bell" tour from concerts in London, Rome, Hanover and Modena.
The Division Bell concerts featured entire performances of The Dark Side of the Moon.
The tour would mark the first time the band performed the Dark Side of
the Moon in its entirety in over two decades. VHS and Laserdisc
versions of the concert at London's Earl's Court 20 October
1994, was
also released. A DVD edition was released on 10 July 2006
and quickly topped the charts. The 1994 CD case had an LED, timer IC,
and battery which caused a red flash to blink once per second, like a
heartbeat, as it sat in the owner's CD collection.
Furthermore,
in 1995, the band received their first and only Grammy
Award for Best
Rock Instrumental Performance for "Marooned".
Solo work and more: 1995–present
On January
17, 1996,
the band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
by The Smashing Pumpkins frontman
Billy
Corgan. Waters did not attend.
A live
recording of The Wall was released in 2000,
compiled from the 1980–1981 London concerts, entitled Is
There Anybody Out There? The Wall Live 1980–81.
It reached #19 on the American album chart. In 2001, a
remastered two-disc set of the band's best-known tracks entitled Echoes
was released. Gilmour, Mason, Waters and Wright all collaborated on the
editing, sequencing, and song selection of the included tracks. Minor
controversy was caused due to the songs segueing into one another
non-chronologically, presenting the material out of the context of the
original albums. Some of the tracks, such as "Echoes", "Shine On You Crazy
Diamond", "Sheep", "Marooned",
and "High Hopes" have had
substantial sections removed from them. The album reached #2 on the
U.K. and U.S. charts.
In 2003,
an SACD
reissue of The Dark Side of the Moon was released
with new artwork on the front cover. The album was also re-released as
a 180-gram, virgin vinyl pressing in 2003, which included all the
original album art from the original release of the album, albeit with
a new poster. The reissue of Wish You Were Here is
in the works, with no release date announced.
Nick Mason's book, Inside
Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd was
published in 2004 in Europe and 2005 in the U.S. Mason made public
promotional appearances in a few European and American cities, giving
interviews and meeting fans at book signings. Some fans claimed that he
said he wished he were on a tour with the band rather than on a book
tour.
Longtime
Pink Floyd manager Steve O'Rourke died on October
30, 2003.
Gilmour, Mason and Wright reunited at his funeral and performed "Fat
Old Sun" and "The Great Gig in the Sky" at the Chichester
Cathedral in tribute.
Two years
later, on July
2, 2005, the
band reunited once again for a one-off performance at the London Live 8 concert. This
time, however, they were joined by Waters - the first time all four
band members were on stage together in 24 years. The band performed a
four-song set consisting of "Speak to Me/Breathe/Breathe
(Reprise)", "Money", "Wish You Were Here", and "Comfortably
Numb", with both Gilmour and Waters sharing lead vocals. At the end of
their performance Gilmour said "thank you very much, good night" and
started to walk off the stage. Waters called him back, however, and the
band shared a group hug that became one of the most famous images of
Live 8.
In the
week after Live
8, there was a revival of interest in Pink Floyd. According to record
store chain HMV,
sales of Echoes: The Best of
Pink Floyd went up, in the following week, by
1343%, while Amazon.com reported increases in sales of
The
Wall at 3600%, Wish You Were Here
at 2000%, The Dark Side of the Moon
at 1400% and Animals at
1000%. David Gilmour subsequently declared that he would donate his
share of profits from this sales boom to charity,
and urged all the other artists and record
companies profiting from Live 8 to do the same. On November
16, 2005
Pink Floyd were inducted into the UK
Music Hall of Fame by Pete Townshend. Gilmour and
Mason attended in person, explaining that Wright was in hospital
following eye surgery, and Waters appeared on a video screen, from Rome.
David
Gilmour released his third solo record, On an
Island, on March 6, 2006, and began a tour of small concert venues
in Europe, Canada and the U.S. with a band including Richard Wright.
During the tour, he performed Pink Floyd's first single, "Arnold
Layne". Waters was also invited to join them in London, but final
rehearsals for his 2006
Europe/U.S. tour required him to decline.
Waters was joined on stage by Mason on the 29th of June 2006 for the
second half of a show in Cork, Ireland where he performed the whole of
"Dark Side of the Moon".
Waters and
Wright are both reported to be working on solo albums, and there has
been talk of Roger Waters doing a Broadway musical version of The Wall,
with extra music to be written by Waters. Waters is also embarking on
his US/European tour The Dark Side of The Moon Live Tour; the setlist
consists of The Dark Side of the Moon in its entirety along with a
selection of other Pink Floyd favourites and a small number of songs
from Waters' solo career. Waters also contributed the song "Hello (I
Love You)," cowritten by Howard Shore, to the 2007 film The
Last Mimzy.
Future directions
Many fans
expressed hope that the band's Live 8 appearance would
lead to a reunion tour, and a record-breaking US$250 million deal for a
world tour was offered,
but the band have made it clear that they have no such plans. In the
weeks after the show, however, the rifts between the members seem to
have mostly healed. Gilmour confirmed that he and Waters are on "pretty
amicable terms",
but Waters has offered conflicting comments on the issue, with
statements as varied as "I [can] roll over for one show, but I couldn't
roll over for a whole fucking tour"
and "I hope we do it again,"
although most recently, his statements indicate his desire to play
together again, not for a whole tour, but for an event similar to Live
8.
On January
31, 2006,
David Gilmour issued a joint statement on behalf of the group stating
that they have no plans to reunite, refuting rumours from several media
outlets.
Gilmour later stated in an interview with La
Repubblica that he is finished with Pink Floyd
and wishes to focus on solo projects and his family. He mentions that
he agreed to play Live 8 with Waters to support the cause, to make
peace with Waters, and knowing he would regret not taking part.
However, he states that Pink Floyd would be willing to perform for a
concert "that would support Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts".
Then speaking with Billboard, Gilmour changed his "finished
with Pink Floyd" sentiment to "who knows".
2007 will
see the 40th anniversary of Pink Floyd's signing to EMI and the 40th
anniversary of the release of their first three singles "Arnold Layne",
"See Emily Play" and "Apples and Oranges" and their debut album The Piper at the
Gates of Dawn. This will be marked by the
release of a limited edition set containing mono and stereo mixes of
the albums, plus tracks from the singles and other rare recordings.
On May 10, 2007, Roger Waters
performed at the Syd Barrett tribute concert at the Barbican
Centre in London. This was then followed by a surprise performance by
the post-Waters Pink Floyd lineup of David Gilmour, Rick Wright and
Nick Mason of "Arnold Layne" to a rapturous applause and standing
ovation. However, hopes of a second reunion concert with the band's
classic lineup were dashed when Waters did not perform with the group.
Roger Waters took to the stage to screams of "Pink Floyd!" to which he
responded, "Later." Gilmour, Mason, and Wright took to the stage to
screams of "Roger Waters!" to which Gilmour politely responded, "Yeah,
he was here too, now the rest of us."
Live performances
-
Main
article: Pink Floyd live
performances
Pink Floyd
are renowned for their lavish stage shows, combining over-the-top
visual experiences with music to create a show in which the performers
themselves are almost secondary. They have always resisted the
temptation of a large screen portraying band members because they
"don't really do very much", preferring instead to show music
videos to run alongside the songs.
Discography
-
Main
article: Pink Floyd discography
Studio albums
- The Piper at the
Gates of Dawn (August 5, 1967)
- A Saucerful of Secrets
(June
29, 1968)
- Music from the Film More
(July
27, 1969)
- Ummagumma
(October
25, 1969)
(half live, half studio)
- Atom
Heart Mother (October 10, 1970)
- Meddle
(October
30, 1971)
- Obscured
by Clouds (June 3, 1972)
- The Dark Side of the Moon
(March
24, 1973)
- Wish You Were Here
(September
15, 1975)
- Animals
(January
23, 1977)
- The Wall
(November
30, 1979)
- The
Final Cut (March 23, 1983)
- A Momentary Lapse of
Reason (September 7, 1987)
- The
Division Bell (March 30, 1994)
Live albums
- Ummagumma
(October
25, 1969)
(half live, half studio)
- Delicate Sound of Thunder
(November
22, 1988)
- P*U*L*S*E
(May 29, 1995)
- Is
There Anybody Out There? The Wall Live 1980-81 (March 23, 2000)
Singles
- 1967: "Arnold
Layne"/"Candy and a Currant Bun"
(#20 UK)
- 1967: "See
Emily Play"/"The Scarecrow" (#6
UK, #134 U.S.)
- 1967: "Apples
and Oranges "/" Paint Box "
- 1968: "It
Would Be So Nice "/ "Julia Dream"
- 1968: "Point
Me at the Sky"/"Careful with That Axe,
Eugene"
- 1973: "Money" (#13 U.S.)
- 1979: "Another Brick in
the Wall (Part 2)"/"One of My Turns" (#1 UK, #1 U.S.)
DVD and Video
- Live
at Pompeii (1972)
- The
Wall (1982)
- La Carrera Panamericana
(1992)
Additional song samples