266 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
266 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
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Q Magazine - Waters Story, 1992
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From: Aaro J Koskinen <akoskine@cc.helsinki.fi>
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Subject: Q Magazine: Who the hell does Roger Waters think he is? (long)
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To: echoes@tcs.com
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Date: Thu, 12 Nov 92 2:56:26 EET
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(Sorry if there's too much typos...)
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>From Q magazine, November 1992
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How did it go again? "We dahn nee nur edercayshun..." Yes, that was it! "We
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dahn nee nur fort corntrawel" It's good to know that in these days of silly
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disposable pop rubbish, there remains one man brave and brilliant enough to
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address the Really Big Questions. Questions, suggests Tom Hibbert, like...
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Who the hell does
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ROGER WATERS
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think he is?
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"SO HOW'S Syd these days?" If one happened to bumb up against an existing
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member of the legendary rock combo Pink Floyd in some "social situation"
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(cocktails at Brands Hatch, probably), that's the only thing one would be
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inclined to say. "How's Syd?" one would go and the existing member of Pink
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Floyd - whether Dave Gilmour or Nick Mason or the other one - would, no doubt,
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blink briefly, pop a cheese'n'pineapple-savoury-on-a-toothpick into his mount,
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bray "What? Cor! Frightfully good, these canapes!" and wander off to hob-nob
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with Nigel Mansell or somebody really interesting.
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"Syd" is, of course, Syd Barrett, original member of Pink Floyd, beautiful
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boy who wrote extraordinary things like Apples And Oranges and Astronomy Domine
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and flipped his cork and disappeared. But there is another original member, no
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longer in the legendary rock experience that was "Floyd", who appears to be a
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degree off beam: Roger Waters. He's the one who invented giant inflatable pigs,
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the one who tortured schoolyards of children by making them sing his catchprase
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("We dahn nee nur edercayshun, we dahn nee nur fort corntrawel") all out of
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tune, the one who once recorded a "song" called Several Species Of Small Furry
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Animals Gathered Together In A Cave Grooving With A Pict, the one whose doomy
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sound "anthems" about "alienation" and how awful everything is have worried
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listeners all over the world for several years.
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IN THE guest lounge of a genteel hotel in the picturesque town of Stockbridge,
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Hampshire - where Waters has a home because the fishing is excellent down here,
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apparently - the lofty rock icon sits gazing at the cover of an ancient Country
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Life, a pint glass of local ale before him. He's got jeans on. He's got long
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hair. And he's wearing exactly the same T-shirt (well, it's a different shade -
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pink not black - but of identical cut) that he was sporting on the cover of
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Pink Floyd's 1969 LP Umma Gumma. One has to ask. "How's Syd?"
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"I don't know. I haven't seen him for 10 years... more than 10 years,
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probably. I don't know what went wrong with Syd because I'm not an expert in
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whatever it is, what they call schizophrenia. I don't know a lot about it. Syd
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was extraordinarily charming and attractive and alive and talented but...
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whatever happened to him, happened to him."
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Roger Waters is thought, by many, to be the gloomiest man in rock. The Wall
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was gloomy and his solo LPs, The Pros And Cons Of Hitchhiking (1983) and Radio
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K.A.O.S. (1987), were gloomy, and his latest work, Amused To Death, is
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frightfully gloomy. Water's voice drones along to warn us that: a) there's a
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squaggly Jeff Beck guitar solo coming up any minute; b) everything is horrible,
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especially television, war, the entire universe and Andrew Lloyd Webber.
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In recording Amused To Death, Waters has utilised a snazzy new scientific
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recording concept that's called "Q Sound" (nothing to do, I hasten to add, with
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this magazine, which should immediately sue) and with this natty new technique,
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if the listener sticks his/her head in the correct place betwixt the speakers,
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all sorts of amazing things happen! Isn't technology fab? I tried this at home.
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It didn't work that well because I have a deafness problem, but standing and
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forking my neck at an uncomfortably angle, I could clearly detect (I think) the
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sound of a peacock rattling pencils inside an old electric kettle (or
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something). Marvellous! More discernible still was the gloomy groan of some who
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was saying how ghastly everything is...
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Roger Waters folds his arms and defies his beer as I compose a second
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question. Which is: "Are you or are you not the gloomiest man in rock?"
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"You can't expect me to take a question like that seriously," he says, in his
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posh, soft voice. "I refuse to answer that question on the grounds that it is
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stupid."
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Immediately I warm to the man. He has such a chip on his shoulder it's a
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wonder his arm doesn't drop off.
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"I've been reading the nonsense that's been written about Amused To Death.
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Adam Sweeting [music journalist who said, in The Guardian, that the LP wasn't
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much cop], well, he's a complete prat. Always was, always will be."
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I protest. Adam Sweeting is not a prat; he's entitled to his opinion and a
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very nice man to boot, I say. Waters will have none of this.
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"Sweeting is not a nice man. I don't know him but I know him. He says I write
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twaddle. He's wrong! He's one taco short of a Mexican meal. Sweeting is not the
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only arsehole: there's other cunts like Andy Gill and Charles Shaar Murray."
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Andy Gill and Charles Shaar Murray. They write for Q.
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"Do they? Who gives a fuck who they write for when they can't fucking write?"
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This man is argumentative. This man is, er, several bass guitar short of a
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decent tune.
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"It is extraordinary that Andy Gill and Adam Sweeting and Charles Shaar
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Murray didn't notice The Wall. They are supposed to be music journalists; how
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could they not have noticed this extraordinary well constructed, deep and
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meaningful and moving and important piece of work? What the fuck's the matter
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with these arseholes? And now, with Amused To Death, they've missed another
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one, Adam Sweeting and Andy Gill and the other fucker and all the rest, they
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should be in hospital. I am confident that I am really clever and that I am
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really good at what I do so I'm not going to have prats like Sweeting and Andy
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Gill and Shaar bloody Murray telling me that I'm no good because they're wrong.
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Amused To Death is fucking, fucking good. Isn't it?"
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He fixes me with a steely eye and I say that Amused To Death is probably
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magnificent but I can't really tell because, due to my "technical problems", I
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cannot appreciate the superb and magnificent benefits of "Q Sound". He accepts
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this weedy excuse. He says:
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"Well, anyway, I am one of the best five writers to come out of English music
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since the War."
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LET US turn the clock back. Let us go a-whizzing away to the 1960s when the
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world was young and Pink Floyd were wearing preposterous neckerchiefs and
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singing about Arnold Layne, a character given to stealing women's underwear, on
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drugs in clubs like UFO. What grand times those must have been.
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"No, they weren't," says Mister Gloomy. "I don't want to go back to those
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times at all. There wasn't anything 'grand' about it. We were laughable. We
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were useless. We couldn't play at all so we had to do something stupid and
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'experimental'."
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This is too much. Pink Floyd's first LP, Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, is an
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absolute monument of, er, a record that's quite good.
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"Well, that was Syd. Syd was a genius. But I wouldn't want to go back to
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playing Interstellar Overdrive for hours and hours."
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Waters doesn't seem to like being in pop groups very much at all. In 1973,
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his group recorded Dark Side Of The Moon and billions of people bought it (even
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though it was useless) and, naturally, this commercial success cheesed off
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Roger enormously.
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"We'd cracked it. We'd won the pools. What are you supposed to do after that?
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Dark Side Of The Moon was the last willing collaboration: after that,
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everything with the band was like drawing a teeth; 10 years of hanging on to
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the married name and not having the courage to get divorced, to let go; 10
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years of bloody hell. It was all just terrible. Awful. Terrible."
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YES, WATERS, the Mister Glum who refuses even to sniff at his brimming beaker
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of beer, is the gloomiest man in rock. He's enough to depress a gadfly. Perhaps
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I should jolly up the proceedings by telling you, soaraway-twingo-bingo-Sun-
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style...20 Things (Trimmed Down To A Handy, Fun-Packed Eight) You Didn't Know
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About Roger Waters, probably:
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* He doesn't much care for Radio One!
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"Radio One won't play my fucking single (What God Wants) because they know
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it's no good. They know it's not as good as Erasure or Janet fucking Jackson.
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They know that the British public shouldn't be listening to it. It makes my
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blood boil! If you're not 17 with a baseball hat on back to front, they don't
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want to know."
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* He's crackers!
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"It is very important, in our current predicament, that we try to give each
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other the change to confront our feelings about things. There's some branches
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of the medical profession that now agree with me, saying that it's vital to
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hang on to what you felt when you were 16 or 17 or four, retaining a grasp on
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that stuff we had when we were children, when we saw the picture of the world
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in bright colours and strong sensations before it was turned into a grey,
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uncaring mush be Adam Sweeting and Andrew Lloyd Webber.
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* He doesn't (unlike other people) much care for war!
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" What irritates Adam Sweeting and Charles Shaar Murray and Andy Gill and all
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you journalists is that I gloomily and boringly enough find that my concern
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with war as big business doesn't diminish as the years go by. I feel just as
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gloomy about it at the age of 49 as I did when I was 17. I'm sure that my
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hatret of was has spurred on by the death of my father (_killed as a pilot in
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World War II_). I find myself compelled to feel for everyone's father or son
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who is killed in a war - and for what?"
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* He's crackers!
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"It's important for people to grasp sensations, like the kind I get when I am
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fishing. Some of us are gatherers and some of us are hunters. I'm a hunter. I
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need the mud of river oozing between my toes. It's like Proust."
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* He doesn't much care for Sinead O'Connor!
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(Ms O'Connor appeared at Waters's 1990 performance of The Wall in Berlin, in
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aid of Leonard Cheshire's Memorial Fund For Disaster Relief.)
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"It was very, very hard work organising that Wall concert but everyone was
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fabulous to work with - Bryan Adams, Van Morrison, Cyndi Lauper, bloody
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brilliant. All brilliant. Except for Sinead O'Connor. Oh, God! I have never
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ever met anybody who is so self-involved and unprofessional and big-headed and
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unpleasant. She is so far up her own bum it's scary. With The Wall, she was so
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worried that there weren't any other (_adopts Irish "brogue"_) 'young people on
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the show'. I and everybody else were old farts in her opinion so she was
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worried that she was doing something that wasn't 'street' enough. And because
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it wasn't 'street' enough, she came up with this brilliant idea: she said that
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I should employ Ice-T or one of those people to re-work one of my songs as a
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rap number! I am not joking! And neither was she fucking joking! That's the sad
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thing - she was serious! And then a couple of months after the show, when the
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record was out, she did an interview on American television, millions of
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viewers, and she rubbished the whole thing, said the Wall concert was a load of
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wank. I don't give a fuck what she though about it but she should have kept her
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fucking mouth shut because it could only hurt the charity, the memorial fund
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and everything that Leonard (Cheshire) had done. She doesn't understand
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anything. She's just a silly little girl. You can't just lie in the corner and
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shave your bloody head and stick up your arse and occasionally pull it out to
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go (_"brogue"_) 'Oh, I tink this is wrong and dat is wrong' and burst into
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tears."
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* He doesn't much care for "stadium rock"!
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"Rock'n'roll in stadiums is genuinely awful. These concerts are just like
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Tupperware parties - held in honour of the Great God Tupper - with 50,000
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people, only they don't buy Tupperware, they buy hot dogs and T-shirts and
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occasionally look up to watch those disgusting video screens that are all out
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of sync and make you feel sick and torture you. It's funny how people try to
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work their way around the greed of it all. Like U2 whose rationale is (_feigned
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Irish accent_) 'Ooh, we have to play in stadiums 'cos all our fans want to come
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and see us'. Well, fine; give your fans a really shitty show in a stadium - but
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for fuck's sake don't charge them 25 quid for it!"
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* He's a wag!
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"Michael Jackson performs in stadiums, too - but he's not doing it for
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himself, he's doing it to save all the little children in the world."
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* He's crackers! But not _that_ crackers because he doesn't much care for
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Andrew Lloyd Webber!
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(There's a lyric on Amused To Death which runs thus: "Lloyd Webber's awful
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stuff/Runs for years and years/An earthquake hits the theatre/But the operetta
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lingers/Then the piano lid comes down/And breaks his fucking fingers.")
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"Andrew Lloyd Webber sickens me. He's in your face all the time and what he
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does is nonsense. It has no value. It is shallow, derivative rubbish, all of
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it, and it makes me very gloomy. Actually, I've never been to one of his shows
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but having put that slightly savage joke on the record, I though I'd better
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listen to some Andrew Lloyd Webber and I was staying in a rented house in
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America this summer and the people who owned the house had a whole bunch of his
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rubbish so I though I'd listen to Phantom Of The Opera and I put the record on
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and I was slightly apprehensive. I though, Christ, I hope this isn't good - or
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even mediocre. I was not disappointed. Phantom Of The Opera is absolutely
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fucking horrible from start to finish."
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Yes, the music of "Sir" Andrew Lloyd Webber is rather horrible - but has not
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Waters, in condemning Phantom Of The Opera as "fucking fifteenth rate from
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beginning to end", as he does, missed something? Has he not noticed something
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uncanny about Phantom Of The Opera, the title song, something about the opening
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notes that go "DAAAA-da-da-da-da-da"?
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"Yes, Echoes"! he booms. (Echoes was an LP-side-long, and rather-good-
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actually, track on Pink Floyd's Meddle.) "Echoes. Yeah the beginning of that
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bloody Phantom song is from Echoes. (_He sings_) DAAAA-da-da-da-da-da. I
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couldn't believe it when I heard it. It's the same time signature - it's 12/8 -
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and it's the same structure and it's the same notes and it's the same
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everything. Bastard. It probably is actionable. It really is! But I think that
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life's too long to bother with suing Andrew fucking Lloyd Webber. I think that
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might make me really gloomy."
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WATERS HAS spent many years of late in a suing situation. This is because what
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he does not much care for most of all is the new so-called Pink Floyd. In 1983,
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after the Final Cut LP, Waters flounced from the band. Four years later, the
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others, Gilmour, Mason and Wright, assembled, called themselves Pink Floyd,
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played lots of Waters songs on stages before huge and enthusiastic audiences,
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and made pots of money. Meanwhile, Waters toured to promote Radio K.A.O.S. but
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he wasn't called Pink Floyd so nobody gave a hoot. This made Roger gloomy.
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Lengthly litigation ensued. The animosity lingers.
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"When those people went out calling themselves Pink Floyd, it made me very,
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very gloomy. And it made them very happy. Well, I don't know if it did make
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them happy. I don't think they are happy, actually. You should ask them. Ask
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them: 'Are you happy? You sold out. You sold out everything. Did it make you
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happy?' I mean, how can they find it within themselves to go on stage and do my
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songs - songs from The Wall? I wrote The Wall as an attack on stadium rock -
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and there's 'Pink Floyd' making money out of it by playing it in stadiums! Oh
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well, that's for them to live with. They have to bear the cross of that
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betrayal. They have to live with the denial of what the work was about. But
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when all that nonsense started, it made me fucking gloomy. I stood by a river
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and stared at myself in the water. Pathetic, I said. They despoiled my
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creations and there was nothing I could do about it.
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"My one pathetic victory was that they had to put testicles on the pig (ie
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the blow-up pig he designed for the cover of the Animals LP, the pig that broke
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loose from its moorings at Battersea power station and ran amok through the
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Home Counties' skies). If the pig had been exactly the same as the pig that I
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designed, I could have stopped them using it in their shows. So they put balls
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on my pig. Fuck them. Gilmour and Mason now own the name 'Pink Floyd'. They
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keep it in a box."
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Waters chuckles a chuckle born of loathing and self-pity. If only I had a
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shiny sixpence, I might press it into the old man's palm.
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Earlier in this conversation, Waters "pointed out" that he was one of the
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five best writers of music since the War. So who could possibly rank above him,
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I wonder? With furrowed brow he ponders the question. "John Lennon," he says.
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"I'm trying to think," he says. "Er, I can't think of anybody else. You see, I
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don't much like listening to records. I'm a bit isolationist and insular. I'd
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rather be fishing. The list of great writers is very, very short but I am
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definitely in it. Er, who else is there that's better than me? I really don't
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know. Freddie Mercury, maybe..."
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Roger Waters stares into his untouched pint pot. Then he picks it up,
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apparently toying with the idea of putting it to his lips. He smiles to himself
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and then he grins at me. He does not take a drink. Careful, as they say, with
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that axe, Eugene...
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