72 lines
3.9 KiB
Plaintext
72 lines
3.9 KiB
Plaintext
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PINK FLOYD - THE COMPLETE "TOP GEAR" SESSIONS
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Late being a popular group in Britain in the sixties, inevitably
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found the Pink Floyd appearing several times on John Peel's "Top
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Gear" program. Peel, who was originally a DJ for Radio London,
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went on to become BBC's "token hippie", regularly featuring the
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Floyd and other "progressive" bands. Their first appearance was
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on September 30, 1967 and gave the band, then fronted by Barrett
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the opportunity to perform some songs from their debut album,
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"The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn". They also played "Apples And
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Oranges" (a single that had yet to be released) which is the only
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known performance of the pieces. All songs remained true to
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their original recorded versions. The December 19th session was
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the last to include Syd, whose once great contribution to the
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band had become a burden. His songwriting and performing
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capabilities had become obscure to the point that rendered him
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incapable of playing with the other members of the Floyd, as his
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withdrawal into drugs and psychosis were taking its toll. His
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state of mind at the time was evident, with the unreleased tracks
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"Vegetable Man" and "Scream Thy Last Scream". These songs had
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been recorded earlier that year along with "Jugband Blues", which
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later appeared on "A Saucerful Of Secrets" and were played for
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the first time. David Gilmour had replaced Syd and performed
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with the group on "Top Gear's" June 25th show in 1968. This was
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one of the few times that they played "Julia Dream" and premiered
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two tracks from their soon to be released second album.
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"Murderistic Women" was the earliest incarnation of "Careful With
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That Axe, Eugene" and also it's shortest, omitting Roger's primal
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scream and most of the tensional build up. "The Massed Gadgets
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Of
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Hercules" was an early abbreviated version of "A Saucerful Of
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Secrets", which was also performed as the climax to "The Journey"
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later on that year. The Floyd's next appearance wasn't until
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early next year on January 14th. The set started off with "Point
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Me At The Sky", with a slightly altered lyric and extended spacey
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bridge (this session could be the only time this song was played
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live). "Baby Blue Shuffle In D Major" is an early version of
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"Narrow Way/Part One", which became one of Gilmour's acoustic
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contributions to the "Ummagumma" LP. This was one of the first
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pieces to be recorded for the new album along with "Embryo",
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which was dropped when the decision was made to divide
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"Ummagumma's" second LP into four solo sections. Since "Embryo"
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was performed by the entire group, it was not officially released
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until the US "Works" compilation came out in 1983 (and accidently
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on "Picnic", a Harvest sampler from 1970). The session ended
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with an unusually short version of "Interstellar Overdrive",
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which seemed to start off from the middle of the piece. Their
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final "Top Gear" performance was on May 12, 1969. This session
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best represented the Floyd's live repertoire at the time
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featuring selections from "The Man" and "The Journey", the band's
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first conceptual pieces. "Daybreak" (aka "Grantchester
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Meadows"), a pleasant acoustic number complete with sound
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effects, was the first part of "The Man" suite. "Green Is The
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Colour" had been seemlessly joined with "Careful With That Axe,
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Eugene", and were still in their early stages, along with
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"Cymbaline" which had yet to be released on the "More"
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soundtrack. The set concluded with "The Narrow Way/Part Three",
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the final contribution to Gilmour's portion of "Ummagumma" which
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was also featured during "The Journey". Although Pink Floyd had
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also made two classic appearances on John Peel's BBC One Show
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from the Paris Theatre in 1970 (eventually airing in the US on
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the "BBC Rock Hour"), these are the complete "Top Gear"
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performances. From their rise and fall with Syd, to their new
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beginning with Gilmour, these recordings represent the group
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throughout its embryonic evolution. The rest, as they say, is
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history.
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- Ron Fleischer
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