318 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
318 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
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Interview from Rock Compact Disc magazine, Issue 3, September 1992.
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Painstakingly transcribed by Martin Pitwood; typos probably mine.
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Roger Waters
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In an age which is starting to see a generation of Rock stars
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going to seed in the comforting cocoon of a Georgio Armani suit,
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there's something almost unnerving about Roger Waters. Holding
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court for the day at London's Conrad Hotel, the estranged Pink
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Floyd bass guitarist, vocalist, songwriter - and, if some sources are
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to be believed, musical despot does not look like a man
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approaching his 49th birthday. Waters has the look of a tanned,
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affluent executive with hair slightly longer than might be
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acceptable on the Stock Exchange floor. As he politely offers me a
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beer from the well stocked drinks cabinet, it's difficult to believe
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that this is the same man that co-wrote Floyd's Dark Side Of The
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Moon, a hash-stained copy of which graced every student bedsit
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throughout the 1970s. Whatever legal wrangles and bitter power
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struggles have occupied his time since leaving Pink Floyd, Roger
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Waters is no casualty.
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The original shoe-gazing band, Pink Floyd were pioneers of
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the hi fi era and one of the first band to experiment with the
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mammoth sound systems and stage shows which have since
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become a staple part of rock performances. As the Seventies drew
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to a close Floyd enjoyed their finest hour with The Wall, the
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deeply personal creation of the band's principal songwriter Roger
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Waters. With many of their peers coming under the knife in the
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wake of the Punk explosion, The Wall found Waters aligning
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himself with the new breed; a disgruntled thirty-something ranting
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and raving and scoring a number one single in the process with
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the wonderfully doomy Another Brick In The Wall (Part Two).
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In 1983 Waters recorded his last Pink Floyd album, The Final
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Cut. A year later he released his first solo album, The Pros And
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Cons Of Hitchhiking, following it up in 1987 with Radio K.A.O.S. -
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all album 'dedicated to all those who find themselves at the
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violent end of monetarism. Having officially resigned from the
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band in 1989 Waters set about staging his own production of The
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Wall in Berlin with an all-star cast that included the likes of Joni
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Mitchell, Tim Curry, Jerry Hall and Sinead O'Connor. It was one
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of the most ambitious musical productions ever, later immortalised
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on album and video. Meanwhile a bitter legal war raged between
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Waters and Floyd guitarist David Gilmour and drummer Nick
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Mason when the two admitted their intentions to continue as Pink
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Floyd without him. Waters subsequently issued several law suits
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to prevent them using the name and even the band's distinctive
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flying pig mascot. While Floyd had left the Seventies on a musical
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peak, the end of the 1980s found them at each other's throats.
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Roger Waters' reason for breaking silence is the release of his
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third solo album Amused To Death through Columbia records.
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Alongside several members of the Bleeding Heart Band (from
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1987's Radio K.A.O.S. tour) the album includes cameo
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performances from Don Henley, Rita Coolidge and Jeff Beck, as
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well as being the first collaboration between Waters and Patrick
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Leonard, the former Madonna producer who played keyboards on
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the post-Waters Floyd album A Momentary Lapse Of Reason. Now
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enjoying a taste of life on the other side of the Floyd fence,
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Leonard's involvement with what Waters has scathingly called the
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'fake Floyd' is apparently of little consequence.
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'I liked the cut of his jib,' quips Waters, flashing the first of
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several disconcerting smiles. 'Whatever Pat had done before didn't
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interest me. He had sat in a Chicago theatre aged 14 watching
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Pink Floyd play Dark Side Of The Moon when it was still called
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Eclipse. He knew all my work and I was impressed.'
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Like all of Waters' work since Dark Side Of The Moon,
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Amused.. has a central theme running throughout. This time the
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plot concerns the power of television (the 'alien prophet')
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characterized by a monkey flicking through TV channels trying to
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find something of interest. Ironically, while most of the record was
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written and conceived before the Gulf war, Waters' recurrent
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obsession with human conflict is evident in the lyrics to songs like
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Perfect Sense, The Bravery Of Being Out Of Range and Watching
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TV, a cutting indictment of the Tiananmen Square massacre which
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includes a vocal duet with former Eagle Don Henley. In the light
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of recent events the album's message seems even more poignant.
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'The Gulf war has given the album a topical edge,' agrees
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Waters. 'It's proved to be quite prophetic in the light of what's
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happened. My main inspiration behind the song Perfect Sense
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came from thinking about the days of the Roman empire, when
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they would flood the coliseum and have fights between rival
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galleys. I've always been intrigued by this notion of war as an
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entertainment to mollify the folks back home and the Gulf conflict
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fuelled that idea.'
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Waters believes television is 'one of the most influential
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factors in the modern world. Amused To Death deals with the
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argument of whether TV is good or bad. And I set out to show
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that it can be both. A great inspiration to me was a television
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documentary in which World War One veterans talked about their
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experiences. It was from this programme that I sampled dialogue
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for the album's first track The Ballad Of Bill Hubbard and then
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again for the last song, Amused To Death.'
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Alfred Razzell (ex-Royal Fusiliers) is heard talking about his
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failed attempt to save a fellow soldier's life during the Battle of
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the Somme. And the album is in fact dedicated to the soldier,
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Private William Hubbard.
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'There was always a question mark in the back of my mind
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as to how relevant it was to include his dialogue,' offers Waters.
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'I found it very moving but I didn't know whether anybody else
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would. So far the reaction from those people who have heard the
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record has been favourable. They're making the connection. That
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original programme confronted the horrors of war and told the real
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story. It was an example of television taking its responsibilities
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seriously.'
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Waters expressed his serious doubts about the sinister misuse
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of satellite communications on the Radio K.A.O.S. album and
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admits that it is still an obsession of his. 'I watched with horror
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and amazement CNN's coverage of the Gulf conflict (parodied
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during Perfect Sense Part II) and I've viewed with mounting
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disgust the way in which they have built his empire on that, their
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finest hour. Worse still, we, the public seem to be buying this
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notion that a global communications network is a good thing.'
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Like some of Waters' previous work, notably Floyd's Shine On
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You Crazy Diamond from Wish You Were Here, the album's key
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composition What God Wants is split into three parts across the
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album. The first part is strident hard rock enlivened by Jeff Beck's
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swooping guitar - 'a charming man, a real sweetheart' - and the
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vocal backbone of a full Welsh choir. It also pulls few lyrical
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punches with lines like 'God wants peace, God wants war, God
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wants famine, God wants chain stores...'
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'I'm very upset by religious dogma,' reveals Waters. 'I get
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angry, gobsmacked in fact when I hear George Bush saying that
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God was on their side during the Gulf war. It's amazing that in
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1992, one of the most powerful men in the world can reduce
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political rhetoric to that level. But that's what he has to do, to get
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votes and maintain power and then use that power to help the
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American automobile industry.
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'I've spent the last six months in the US and the entire
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nation is obsessed by the trade war with Japan, brought about
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because there are more Toyotas on the streets than AMC cars.
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They want to nuke these people back to the Stone Age. Yet they're
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oblivious to the fact that America encouraged competition and free
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trade. They created the beast that's now nipping at their ankles.
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They've developed an us and them mentality which is being fuelled
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by the TV networks.'
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Ironically, while Waters has targeted the crassness of cable
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television 'it's a real de-humanizing, deadening experience,' the
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need to get his music across to a wider audience has led to him
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agreeing to submit a video clip from the new album to MTV. 'Part
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of me wishes I was brave enough to say no,' he laughs. 'I watched
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that channel when I was in Madrid a couple of days ago. I
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thought it was horrible. There was this prat, all mouth and
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trousers, delivering nasty, cheap, puerile banter about the video
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countdown... What is this video countdown? Is it based on real
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sales figures?' Waters frowns disgustedly. 'I recently found out how
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Billboard magazine compile their charts. They've shifted the
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emphasis away from proper record stores to super markets. That's
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why Garth Brooks is Number One in the US. This is what people
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buy when they're passing through the checkout with their weekly
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groceries.
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'I have an obvious interest in this because of the Floyd back
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catalogue. Both Dark Side Of The Moon and The Wall should be
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in the Billboard Top 200. They're not because they've created a
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rule which says that if a record drops out of the 200 it's never
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allowed to go back in again. Yet The Wall still does anything up
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to 4 million each year. Instead they've created a catalogue chart
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in which to place all these old albums, leaving the main chart free
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for all the artists record companies will want to book advertising
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space for. It just offers further evidence of the dishonesty that's
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rife in this business.
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Enthusiasts of the Floyd back catalogue will find the new
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Waters album spiced with musical and lyrical references to the
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past, including the battle of wills that has raged since Waters'
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departure from the band. 'I don't want to go into all that,' he
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insists. Yet one obvious dig at his former colleagues deserves a
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mention and occurs during Too Much Rope with the line 'Each
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man has his price Bob, and yours was pretty low...'
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A reference to former Floyd producer Bob Ezrin who, having
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agreed to work with Waters on Radio K.A.O.S. ended up producing
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A Momentary Lapse Of Reason instead?
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Waters starts grinning before crooning the line in the fashion
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of Bob Dylan. 'When we recorded the album I would sometimes
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rehearse vocal takes by impersonating Bob Dylan. That line
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originally read "Each man has his price my friends...'' so make of
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that what you will. As a joke I sung Bob instead and Pat insisted
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that we left it in. So although it was unintentional I'm happy that
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it's there for Bob Ezrin. I hope he appreciates it.'
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Waters remains philosophical about the continued existence of
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Pink Floyd. Even if beneath the calm exterior there's the distinct
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feeling that he remains appalled by their decision to carry on
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using the name after his departure. 'Dave's done what he's done
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and that's his problem,' he states flatly, averting his gaze and
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staring blankly at the table in front. 'He has to live with it. It
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would have been just as wrong if I had carried on using the name.
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Pink Floyd was four people and as those four people are no longer
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working together, in my mind that band doesn't exist any more.'
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Have the rows and disagreements tarnished your opinion of
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the music?
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'Not at all,' replies Waters. 'There's some of it I'm very keen
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on. Atom Heart Mother is a really awful and embarrassing record.
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But most of the albums were good in one way or another. I
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honestly believe we were very progressive for the time.
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'I think Floyd hit two real peaks in terms of creativity. Dark
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Side Of The Moon and The Wall were the most complete albums
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we ever made. Wish You Were Here came close, without being a
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complete classic.' I mention the fact that readers of the Amazing
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Pudding Floyd fanzine voted Wish You Were Here best Floyd
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album in their 1989 poll. Waters looks surprised before continuing:
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'I can see why to some degree, but for me that record and Animals
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signalled the end of the band as it had been before.'
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Floyd's 1983 death rattle, The Final Cut was a particularly
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bitter pill to swallow. With the rest of the band relegated to
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backing musicians it was virtually a Waters solo effort.
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On revealing that I always found it painfully depressing
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Waters bursts out laughing. 'That was a reflection of the time and
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the problems we were going through. A lot of that aggravation
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came through in the vocal performance, which looking back really
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was quite tortured. As a body of work I'm quite proud of them all.
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Although you can't expect everything to be a fucking masterpiece.
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'I think The Wall is stupefyingly good,' he continues, warming
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to the subject. 'Christ! What a brilliant idea that was. It holds
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together so well. I played it the other week and The Trial scene
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still grabs me. And of course Dave (Gilmour)'s musical influence
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on that was considerable. Despite what has happened between us
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since then, I still have great respect for him as a guitarist.'
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Considering the success of The Wall Live In Berlin project
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would you ever consider performing it again?
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'I'd love to do it in the year 2000,' murmurs Waters. 'We did
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it in 1980, then again in 1990. I think it works best in 10 year
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cycles. I've already got my eye on the Grand Canyon as a possible
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venue, or somewhere equally dramatic. It would have to be
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different from Berlin show and there wouldn't be an all-star cast.
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In order to sell the idea to TV I had to get people to commit
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themselves and it very nearly killed me. I've vowed never to get
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involved in anything where I have to rely totally on other artists.
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The likes of Joni Mitchell and Bryan Adams were prepared to say
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yes from the start but there were so many others who were just
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waiting to see who else was involved before they made up their
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minds. At this point in time I'm considering touring with Amused
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To Death but only if it's a success.'
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What would qualify it as a success?
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He pauses. 'If it sold between three to four million worldwide,'
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he replies. finally. 'I'd have to feel sure in my own mind that
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there was enough interest. I don't know whether we'd just perform
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the album or include material from the other records. Last week
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Andy Fairweather Low (guitarist in the Bleeding Heart Band and
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I played through some of the songs from the The Pros And Cons...
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album and I was struck by how good they sounded. Looking back
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that record dragged a little but individually some of the material
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was excellent.'
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'Radio K.A.O.S. I'm less sure about. Between Ian Ritchie and
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myself we really fucked that record up. We tried to hard to make
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it sound modern. Also the part where Billy (the album's central
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character) pretends that he's just started the third world war I
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now find faintly embarrassing, and I dislike the backing vocals on
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The Tide Is Turning...' He hesitates. 'Then again if we performed
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live there would always be a demand some of the old Floyd stuff.
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Perhaps we'd relent and play some encores,' he adds, grinning. 'In
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fact you've really got my mind ticking over now...'
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It comes as little surprise to find that Waters now has a
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desire to break into print: 'Most of the songs I've written have
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always followed the lyrics. I've often tailored the music to fit the
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words, especially something like Money or Mother from The Wall.
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But until recently I would never have considered writing prose. I
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always used to look at books and wonder how anybody could come
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up with so many words. But my divorce (from Carolyne Waters)
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and then falling in love with somebody else has released in me an
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ability to write in other ways apart from songs. I've now written
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four or five short stories based on events in my life, going back as
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far as 1960 when I spent some time hitchhiking in the Lebanon.
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I can't really say much more about them at the moment. But I
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think they're very good.'
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With Waters considering the material for publication would
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the next step be an autobiography? An opportunity to put across
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his side of events?
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'Oh God, no,' he shakes his head. 'It would be too much hard
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work. I couldn't write an autobiography without going through that
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whole thing with band...' he waves his hand, dismissively. 'Frankly
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I don't give a shit about all that any more.' He cracks another
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smile. 'Well, yes I do give a shit actually. I probably always will
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but I can't face going through it all again.'
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If The Wall was Roger Waters ranting against the injustices
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in the world and seeing no possible solution then Amused To
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Death finds him addressing the same problems while sounding
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optimistic for the future. Waters is adamant that Amused... does
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not end on a pessimistic note: 'If it does then I've failed to make
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record I set out to. I feel very strongly that there's something in
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this record that people can relate to. The feeling that what we do
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does matter. We can make a difference. You can't give up. You
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have to keep bashing away or else you're finished as a human
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being.'
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Review by Mark Blake
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