588 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
588 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
Syd Barrett Story from ROIO-LP
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From: bondt@dutiws.tudelft.nl (Piet de Bondt)
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Subject: Barrett, the continuing story (part II)
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To: echoes@fawnya.tcs.com (Pink Floyd Submissions)
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Date: Sun, 15 Mar 92 15:48:17 MET
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Hi guys,
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As said before I have - besides the 'Opel' story I posted to echoes
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recently - a few other Pink Floyd (related) stories [Gerhard: I did
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not get the 'Opel' story from you, but it is in fact the inside of
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the CD booklet :-)].
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Here's the next one: again a story about Syd Barrett. It was included
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with my LP-RoIO red-vinyl Interstellar Overdrive (from "Tonite Let's
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All Make Love In London"). A few other stories and interviews will
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follow when I have some spare time again.
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Enjoy it (although it's a tragedy to read what has happened with such
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a genius: "Barrett is still alive and basically functioning").
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PIET
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BTW: Any (group of) words within *'s is in italics on my copy, but
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elm and vi don't quite understand what italics is. Why can't we
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have ElmTeX or so ? :-)
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= ===== cut here ===== cut here ===== cut here ===== cut here ===== =
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SYD BARRETT
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THERE IS a story that exists pertaining to an incident which occurred
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during one of Syd Barrett's last gigs with the Pink Floyd. After a
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lengthy interval, the band decided to take the stage (there is a certain
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amount of dispute as to which venue this all took place at) - all except
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for Syd Barrett, who was left in the dressing room, manically trying to
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organise his anarchically-inclined hairstyle of the time.
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As his comrades were tuning up, Barrett - more out of desperation than
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anything - emptied the contents of a jar of Mandrax, broke the pills
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into tiny pieces and mixed the crumbs in with a full jar of Brylcreem.
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He then poured the whole coagulated mass onto his head, picked up his
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Telecaster, and walked on stage.
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As he was playing his customary incoherent, sporadic, almost catatonic
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guitar-phrases, the Mandrax-Brylcreem combination started to run amok
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under the intense heat of the stage-lighting and dribbled down from his
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scalp so that it looked like his face was melting into a distorted wax
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effigy of flesh.
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THIS STORY is probably more or less true. It exists amidst an infinity
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of strange tales - many of them fact, just as many wistful fiction -
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that surround and largely comprise the whole legend-in-his-own-time
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schtick of which Syd Barrett is very much the dubiously honoured
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possessor.
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Barrett is still alive and basically functioning, by the way.
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Every so often he appears at Lupus Music, his publishing company
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situated on Berkely Square which handles his royalties situation and has
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kept him in modest financial stead these last few dormant years. On one
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of his last visits (which constitute possibly Barrett's only real
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contact with the outside world), Brian Morrison, Lupus' manager, started
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getting insistent that Barrett write some songs. After all, demand for
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more Syd Barrett material is remarkably high at the moment and E.M.I.
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are already to swoop the lad into the studio, producer in tow, at any
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given moment.
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Barrett claimed that no, he hadn't written anything, but dutifully
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agreed to get down and produce *some* sort of something.
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His next appearance at the office occurred last week. Asked if he'd
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written any new tunes, he replied in his usual hazy condition, hair
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grown out somewhat from its former scalp-shaved condition, "No.". He
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then promptly disappeared again.
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This routine has been going on for years now. Otherwise Barrett tends to
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appear at Lupus only when the rent is due or when he wants to buy a
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guitar (a luxury that at one point became an obsession and consequently
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had to be curtailed).
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The rest of Barrett's tune is spent either sprawled out in front of the
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large colour TV in his two-room apartment situated in the hinterland of
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Chelsea, or else just walking at random around London. A recent
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port-of-call was a clothes store down the King's Road where Syd tried on
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three vastly different sizes of the same style of trousers, claimed that
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all of them fitted him perfectly and then disappeared again, without
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buying any.
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And that's basically what the whole Syd Barrett story is all about - a
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huge tragedy shot through with so many ludicrously comic aspects that
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you could easily be tempted to fill out a whole article by simply
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relating all the crazy anecdotes and half-chewed tales of twilight
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dementia, and leave it at that. The conclusion, however, is always
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inescapable and goes far beyond the utterly bogus image compounded of
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the artist as some fated victim spread out on an altar of acid and
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sacrificed to the glorious spirit of '67.
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Syd Barrett was simply a brilliant innovative young songwriter whose
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genius was somehow amputated, leaving him hamstrung in a lonely limbo
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accompanied only by a stunted creativity and a kind of helpless
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illogical schizophrenia.
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THE WHOLE saga starts, I suppose at least for convenience's sake, with a
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band called The Abdabs. They were also called the 'T'-Set and noone I
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spoke to quite knew which had come first. It doesn't really matter
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though.
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The band was a five-piece, as it happens, consisting of three young
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aspiring architects, Richard Wright, Nick mason and Roger Waters, a jazz
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guitarist called Bob Close and - the youngest member - an art student
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called Roger Keith Barrett (Barrett, like most other kids, had been
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landed with a nickname - "Syd" - which somehow remained long after his
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schooldays had been completed).
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The band, it was generally considered, were pretty dire - but, as they
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all emanated from the hip elitist circles of their home-town Cambridge
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they were respected after a fashion at least in their own area. This hip
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elite was, according to fellow-townsman Storm of "Hypgnosis" (the
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well-respected record-sleeve design company who of course have kept a
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close and solid relationship all along with the Floyd), built on several
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levels of acquaintances, mostly tied by age.
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"It was the usual thing, really, 1962 we were all into Jimmy Smith. Then
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1963 brought dope and rock. Syd was one of the first to get into The
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BEatles and the Stones.
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"He started playing guitar around then - used to take it to parties or
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play down at this club called The Mill. He and Dave (Gilmour) went to
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the South of France one summer and busked around."
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Storm remembers Barrett as a "bright, extrovert kid. Smoked dope, pulled
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chicks - the usual thing. He had no problems on the surface. He was no
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introvert as far as I could see then."
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Bfore the advent of the Pink Floyd, Barrett had three brooding interests
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- music, painting, and religion. A number of Barrett's seniors in
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Cambridge were starting to get involved in an obscure form of Eastern
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mysticism known as "Sant Saji" which involved heavy bouts of meditation
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and much comtemplation on purity and the inner light.
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Syd attempted to involve himself in the faith, but he was turned down
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for being "too young" (he was nineteen at the time). This, according to
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a number of those who knew him, was supposed to have affected him quite
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deeply.
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"Syd has always had this big phobia about his age." states Pete Barnes,
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who became involved in the labyrinthine complexities of Barrett's
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affairs and genaral psyche after the Floyd split.
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"I mean, when we would try to get him back into the studio to record he
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would get very defensive and say 'I'm only 24, I'm still young. I've got
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time.' That thing with religion could have been partly responsible for
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it."
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At any rate, Barrett lost all interest in spiritualism after that and
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soon enough he would also give up his painting. Already he'd won a
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scholarship to Camberwell Art School in Peckham which was big potatoes
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for just another hopeful from out in the sticks.
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Both Dave Gilmour and Storm claim that Barrett's painting showed
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exceptional potential: "Syd was a great artist. I loved his work, but he
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just stopped. First it was the religion, then the painting. He was
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starting to shut himself off slowly then."
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Music, of course, remained. The Ab-Dabs . . . well let's forget about
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them and examine the "Pink Floyd Sound", which was really just the old
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band but minus Bob Close who "never quite fitted in." The Pink Floyd
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Sound named after a blues record he owned which featured two bluesmen
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from georgia - Pink Anderson and Floyd Council. The two names meshed
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nicely so ...
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Anyway, the band was still none too inspiring - no original material,
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but versions of "Louie Louie" and "Road Runner" into which would be
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interpersed liberal dosages of staccato freak-out. Kinda like the Blues
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Magoos, I guess.
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"Freak-out" was happening in the States at the time - the time being
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1966, the year of The Yardbirds, The Mothers of Invention and the first
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primal croaks from the West Coast. Not to mention "Revolver" and "Eight
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Miles High."
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The fat was obviously in the pan for the big 1967 Summer of Love
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psychedelic bust-out. However, The Pink Floyd Sound weren't exactly
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looking to the future at this juncture.
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Peter Jenner, a lecturer at the L.S.E. and John "Hoppy" Hopkins were in
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the audience for one of their gigs and were impressed enough to offer
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them some sort of management deal.
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Admits Jenner: "It was one of the first rock events I'd seen - - I
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didn't know anything about rock really." (Jenner and Hopkins had in
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fact made one offer prior to the Floyd - to a band they'd heard on
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advance tape from New York called The Velvet Underground).
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"Actually the Floyd then were barely semi pro standard, now I think
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about it, but I was so impressed by the electric guitar sound. The band
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was just at the point of breaking up then, y'know. It was weird - they
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just thought "Oh, well, might as well pack it all in." But as came along
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and so they changed their minds."
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THE FIRST trick was the light show and the U.F.O. concerts. The next was
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activating a policy of playing only original compositions.
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This is where Syd Barrett came into his own. Barrett hadn't really
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composed tunes before this - a nonsense song called "Effervescing
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Elephant" when he was, maybe, 16 - and he'd put music to a poem to be
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found in James Joyce's "Ulyses" called "Golden Hair", but nothing beyond
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that.
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Jenner: "Syd was really amazing though. I mean, his inventiveness was
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quite astounding. All those songs from that whole Pink Floyd phase were
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written in no more than six months. He just started and took it from
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there."
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The first manifestation of Barrett's songwriting talents was a bizarre
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little classic called "Arnold Layne". A sinister piece of vaguely
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commercial fare, it dealt with the twilight wanderings of a
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transvestite/pervert figure and is both whimsical an singularly creepy.
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The single was banned by Radio London who found its general connotations
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a little too biarre for even pirate radio standards.
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The Floyd were by now big stuff in Swinging London. Looking back on it
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all, the band came just on like naive art-students in Byrds-styled
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granny glasses (the first publicity shots are particularly laughable),
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but the music somehow had an edge. Certainly enough for prestigious folk
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like Brian Epstein to mouth off rhapsodies of praise on French radio,
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and all the 'chic' mags to throw in the token mention.
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There were even TV shows - good late night avant garde programmes for
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Hampstead trendies like "Look of the Week" on which the Floyd played
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"Pow R. Toc H."
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But let's hear more about Syd's inventiveness. Jenner again: "Well, his
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influences were very much the Stones, The Beatles, Byrds and Love. The
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Stones were the prominent ones - he wore out his copy of "Between the
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Buttons" very quickly. Love's album too. In fact, I was once trying to
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tell him about this Arthur Lee song I couldn't remember the title of, so
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I just hummed the main riff. Syd picked up his guitar and followed what
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I was humming chord-wise. The chord pattern he worked out he went on to
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use as the main riff for 'Interstellar Overdrive'."
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And the Barrett guitar style ? "Well, he had this technique that I found
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very pleasing. I mean, he was no guitar hero - never remotely in the
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class of Page or Clapton, say."
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The Floyd Cult was growing as Barrett's creativity was beginning to hit
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its stride. This creativity set the stage in Barrett's song-writing for
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what can only be described as the quintessential marriage of thetwo
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ideal forms of English psychedelia - musical rococo freak-outs
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underpinning Barret's sudden ascendency into the artistic realms of ye
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olde English whimsical loone, wherein dwelt the likes of Edward Lear and
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Kenneth Grahame. Pervy old Lewis Carrolll of course, presided at the
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very head of the tea-party.
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And so Arnold Layne and washing lines gave way to the whole Games-for-
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May ceremony and "See Emily Play."
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"I was sleeping in the woods one night after a gig we'd played
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somewhere, when I saw this girl appear before me. That girl is Emily."
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Thus quoth the mighty Syd himself back in '67, obviously caught up in
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it all like some kite lost in spring.
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And it *was* glorious for a time. "Piper at the Gates of Dawn" was being
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recorded at the same time as "Sergeant Pepper" and the two bands would
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occasionally meet up to check out each other's product.
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McCartney stepped out to betow his papal blessing on "Piper", an album
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which still stands as my fondest musical memory of 1967 - even more so
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than "Pepper" or "Younger than Yesterday." (All except for "Bike" which
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reeks of crazy basements and Barrett eccentricities beginning to lose
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control - psychedelic whimsy taken a little too close to the edge.)
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You see, strange things were starting to happen with the Floyd and
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particularly with Barrett.
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"See Emily Play" was Top Five which enabled Barrett to more than
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adequately live out his pop star infatuation number to the hilt - the
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Hendrix curls, kaftans from "Granny's", snakeskin boots and Fender
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Telecasters were all his for the asking - but there were the, uh,
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unstabilising influences.
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First came the ego-problems and slight prima donna fits, but gradually
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the Floyd, Jenner et al realised that something deeper was going on.
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Take the Floyd's three Top Of The Pops appearances for "Emily."
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Jenner: "The first time Syd dressed up like a pop star. The second time
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he came on in his straightforward, fairly scruffy clothes, looking
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rather unshaven. The third time he came to the studio in his pop star
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clothes and then changed into complete rags for the actual TV spot."
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It was all something to do with the fact that John Lennon has stated
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publicly he wouldn't appear on Top of the Pops. Syd seemed to envisage
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Lennon as some sort of yardstick by which to measure his own situation
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as a pop star. "Syd was always complaining that John Lennon owned a
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house while he only had a flat." states Peter Barnes.
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But there were far darker manifestations of a definite impending
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imbalance in the Barrett psyche.
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HE WAS at that point involved in a relationship with a girl named Lynsey
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- an affair which took an uncomfortably bizarre turn when the lady
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involved appeared on Peter Jenner's doorstep fairly savagely beaten up.
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"I couldn't believe it at the time. I had this firm picture of Syd as
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this really hentle guy, which is what he was, basically."
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Something was definitely awry. In fact there are numerous faily
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unpleasant tales about this particular affair (including one that claims
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Barrett to have locked the girl in a room for a solid week, pushing
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water-biscuits under the door so she wouldn't starve) which are best not
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dwelt on.
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But to make matters worse, Syd's eyes were often seen to cement
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themselves into a foreboding, nay quite terrifying, stare which *really*
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started to put the frighteners on present company. The head would tilt
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back slightly, the eyes would get misty and bloated. Then they would
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stare right at you and right through you at the same time.
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One thing was painfully obvious: the booy genius was fast becoming
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mentally totally unhinged.
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Perhaps it was the drugs. Barrett's intake at the time was suitably
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fearsome, while many considered his metabalism for such chemicals to be
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a trifle fragile. Certainly they only tended towards a further tipping
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of the psyche-scales, but it would be far too easy to write Barrett off
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as some hapless acid amputee - even though certain folks now claim that
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a two-month sojourn in Richmond with a couple suitably named "Mad Sue"
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and "Mad Jock" had him drinking a cup of tea each morning which was
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unknown to Syd, spiked with a heavy dosage of acid.
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Such activity can, of course, lead to a certain degree of breain-damage,
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but I fear one has to stride manfully blindfolded into a rather more
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Freudian landscape, leading us to the opinion of many of the people I
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talked to who claimed that Syd's dilemma stretched back to certain
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childhood traumas.
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The youngest of a family of eight, heavily affected by the sudden death
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of his father when Syd was twelve years old, spoilt by a strong-willed
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omther who may or may not have imposed a strange distinction between the
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dictates of fantasy and reality - each connection forms a patch-work
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quilt like set-up of insinuations and potential cause-and-effect
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mechanisms.
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"Everyone is supposed to have fun when they're young - I don't know why,
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but I never did" - Barrett talking in an interview to *Rolling Stone*,
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Autumn 1971.
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PETER JENNER: "I think we tended to underrate the extent of his problem.
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I mean, I thought that I could act as a mediator - y'know having been a
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sociology teacher at the L.S.E. and all that guff...
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"I think, though... one thing I regret now was that I made demands on
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Syd. He'd written "See Emily Play" and suddenly everything had to be
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seen in commercial terms. I think we may have pressurised him into a
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state of paranoia about having to come up with another 'hit single'.
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"Also we may have been the darlings of London,but out in the suburbs it
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was fairly terrible. Before 'Emily' we'd have things thrown at us
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onstage.
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After 'Emily' it was screaming girls wanting to hear our hit song."
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So the Floyd hit the ballroom circuit and Syd was starting to play up.
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An American tour was then set up in November - three dates at the
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Fillmore West in San Fransisco and an engagement at L.A.'s Cheetah Club.
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Barrett's dishevelled psyche started truly manifesting itself though
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when the Floyd were forced onto some TV shows.
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"Dick Clark's Bandstand" was disastrous because it needed a miming job
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on the band's part and "Syd wasn't into moving his lips that day."
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"The Pat Boone Show" was quite surreal: Boone actually tried to
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interview Barrett on the screen, asking him particularly inane questions
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and getting a truly classic catatonic piercing mute stare for an answer.
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"Eventually we cancelled out on 'Beach Party'," says Jenner's partner
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and tour-manager Andrew King.
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So there was the return to England and the rest of the Floyd had made
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the decision.
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On the one hand, Barrett was the songwriter and central figure - on the
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other his madness was much too much to handle. He just couldn't be
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communicated with.
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Patience had not been rewarded and the break-away was on the cards.
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But not before a final studio session at De Lane Lea took place - a mad
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anarchic affair which spawned three of Barrett's truly vital twilight
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rantings. Unfortunately only one has been released.
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"Jug Band Blues", the only Barrett track off "Saucerful of Secrets", is
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as good an explanation as any for Syd not appearing on the rest of the
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album.
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"Y'see, even at that point, Syd actually knew what was happening to
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him," claims Jenner, "I mean 'Jug Band Blues' is the ultimate
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self-diagnosis on a state of schizophrenia -".
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*"It's awfully considerate of you to think of me here.
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And I'm most obliged to you for making it clear that I'm not here.
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And I'm wondering who could be writing this song."*
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Barrett even had a Salvation Army Band troop in during the middle of the
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number. The two unreleased numbers (incidentaly these, contrary to
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belief, are the *only* unreleased numbers Barrett has ever recorded) are
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both unfinished creations - one a masterful splurge of blood-curdling
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pro-Beefheartian lunacy - "Scream Your Last Scream"...
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*"Scream You Last Scream/Old Woman with a basket/Wave your arms madly,
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madly/Flat tops of houses/Houses Mouses/She'll be scrubbing apples on
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all fours/Middle-dee-tiddle with Dumpy Mrs. Dee/we'll be watching
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telly for all hours."*
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The other, "Vegetable Man," is a crazy sing-along.
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"Syd", recalls Jenner, "was around at my house just before he had to go
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to record and, because a song was needed, he just wrote a description of
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what he was wearing at the time and threw in a chorus that went
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'Vegetable man - where are you'?"
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A nationwide tour of great Britain followed - Jimi Hendrix, The Move,
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The Nice and the Floyd on one package - which distanced things out even
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further. Syd often wouldn't turn up on time, sometimes didn't play at
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all, sat by himself on the tour-coach.
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The rest of Floyd socialised with The Nice (guitarist Favid O'List
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played with the band when Barrett was incapable). But surely the two
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uncrowned kings of acid-rock - Hendrix and Barrett - must have
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socialised in some capacity ?
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"Not really," states Jenner, "Hendrix had his own limousine. Syd didn't
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really talk to anyone. I mean, by now he was going onstage and playing
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one chord throughout the set. He was into this thing of total
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anarchistic experiment and never really considered the other members of
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the band."
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There was also this thing with Syd that the Floyd were "my band". Enter
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Dave Gilmour, not long back from working with various groups in France -
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an old mate and fair guitar. The implications were obvious.
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Jenner: "At the time Dave was doing very effective take-offs of Hendrix-
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style guitar-playing. So the band said 'play like Syd Barrett'."
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Yeah, but surely Dave Gilmour had his own style - y'know, the slide and
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echo sound ?
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"That's *Syd*. Onstage Syd used to play with slide and a bunch on
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echo-boxes."
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Hmmm.
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The Floyd played maybe four gigs with the five-piece and then Barrett
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was ousted. It was a courageous move - he reacted and everyone seems to
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agree that it was all perfectly warranted. Except, maybe, Syd.
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Jenner: "Yeah, Syd does resent the Floyd. I don't know - he may *still*
|
|
call them 'my band' for all I know".
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|
|
|
FROM HERE ON IN, the whole Barrett saga goes a trifle haywire.
|
|
Barrett himself loped off into the back country of Earl's Court to greet
|
|
the usual freak show, but not before he'd stayed over at South
|
|
Kensington awhile with Storm.
|
|
"Syd was well into his 'orbiting' phrase by then. He was traveling very
|
|
fast in his own private sphere and I thought I could be a mediator of
|
|
some sort. Y'see, I think you're going to have to make the point that
|
|
Syd's madness was not caused by any linear progression of events, but
|
|
more a circular haze of situations that meshed together on top of
|
|
themselves and Syd. Me, I couldn't handle those stares though!"
|
|
By that time, the Floyd and Blackhill Enterprises had parted company,
|
|
Jenner choosing Barrett as a brighter hope.
|
|
What happened to the Floyd si history - they survived and flourished off
|
|
on their own more electronic tangent, while Syd didn't.
|
|
"The Madcap Laughs", Barrett's first solo album, took a sporadic but
|
|
nonetheless laborious year to complete. Production credits constantly
|
|
changed hands - Peter Jenner to Malcolm Jones (who gave up half the way
|
|
through), ultimately to Dave Gilmour and Roger Waters.
|
|
By this time Barrett's creative processes refused to mesh properly and
|
|
so the results were often jagged and unapproachable. Basically they were
|
|
essays in distance - the Madcap waving whimsically out from the haze. Or
|
|
maybe he was drowning ?
|
|
*"My head kissed the ground/I was half the way down... Please lift a
|
|
Hand/I'm only a person/With Eskimo chain I tattooed my brain all the
|
|
way/Would you miss me/Oh, wouldn't you miss me at all?"*
|
|
On "Dark Globe" the anguish is all too real.
|
|
Many of the tracks though, like "Terrapin", almost just lay there,
|
|
scratching themselves in front of you. They exist completely inside
|
|
their own zone, like weird insects and exotic fish, the listener looking
|
|
inside the tank at the activity.
|
|
In many ways, "Madcap" is a work of genius - in just as many other ways,
|
|
it's a cranked-up post-acid curio. It's still a vital, throughly unique
|
|
album for both those reasons.
|
|
Jenner: "I think Syd was in good shape when he made 'Madcap'. He was
|
|
still writing good songs, probably in the same state as he was during
|
|
'Jugband Blues'."
|
|
Storm: "The thing was that all those guys had to cope with Syd out of
|
|
his head on Mandrax half the time. He got so 'mandied' up on those
|
|
sessions, his hand would slip through the strings and he'd fall off the
|
|
stool."
|
|
"Barrett", the second album, was recorded in a much shorter space of
|
|
time. Dave Gilmour was called in to produce, and brought in Rick Wright
|
|
and Jerry Shirley, Humble Pie's drummer, to help.
|
|
Gilmour: "We had basically three alternatives at that point, working
|
|
with Syd. one, we could actually work with him in the studio, playing
|
|
along as he put down his tracks - which was almost impossible, though we
|
|
succeeded on 'Gigolo Aunt'. The second was laying down some kind of
|
|
track before and then having him play over it. The third was him putting
|
|
his basic ideas down with just guitar and vocals and then we'd try and
|
|
make something out of it all.
|
|
"It was mostly a case of me saying 'Well what have you got then Syd ?'
|
|
and he'd search around and eventually work something out."
|
|
The Barrett disintegration process continued through this album giving
|
|
it a feel more akin to that of a one-off demo. The songs, though totally
|
|
off the wall and often vague creations, are shot through with the
|
|
occasional sustained glimpse of Barrett's brain-belled lyricism at its
|
|
most vivid.
|
|
Like "Wolfpack", or "Rats", which hurtles along like classic "Trout Mask
|
|
Replica" Beefheart shambling thurider, with crazed doubled-edged
|
|
nonsense lyrics to boot.
|
|
*"Rats, Rats/Lay Down Flat/We Don't Need You/We Act Like Cats/If you
|
|
think you're unloved/Well we know about that."*
|
|
"Dominoes" is probably the album's most arresting track, as well as
|
|
being the only real pointer to what the Floyd might have sounded like
|
|
had Barrett been more in control of himself. The song is exquisite - a
|
|
classic kind of Lewis Carroll scenario which spirals up and almost
|
|
defies time and space - "You and I/And Dominoes/A day Goes By." - before
|
|
drifting into an archetypal Floyd minor-chord refrain straight out of
|
|
"More".
|
|
Gilmour: "The song just ended after Syd had finished singing and I
|
|
wanted a gradual fade so I added that section myself. I played drums on
|
|
that, by the way."
|
|
|
|
GILMOUR BY this time had become perhaps the only person around who could
|
|
communicate with Barrett.
|
|
"Oh, I don't think *anyone* can communicate with Syd. I did those albums
|
|
because I liked the songs, not, as I suppose some might think, because I
|
|
felt guilty taking his place in the FLoyd. I was concerned that he
|
|
wouldn't fall completely apart. The final re-mix on 'Madcap' was all
|
|
mine as well."
|
|
In between the two solo albums E.M.I., Harvest or Morrison had decided
|
|
to set up a bunch of press-interviews for Barrett, whose style of
|
|
conversation was scarcely suited to the tailor-made ends of the Media.
|
|
Most couldn't make any sense whatsoever out of his verbal ramblings,
|
|
others tumbled to a conclusion and warily pinpointed the Barrett malady
|
|
in their pieces. Peter Barnes did one of the interviews.
|
|
"It was fairly ludicrous on the surface. I mean, you just had to go
|
|
along with it all - y'know Syd would say something completely
|
|
incongruous one minute like 'It's getting heavy, innit' and you'd just
|
|
have to say, 'Yeah, Syd, it's getting heavy,' and the conversation would
|
|
dwell on *that* for five minutes.
|
|
"Actually, listening to the tape afterwards you could work out that
|
|
there was some kind of logic there - except that Syd would suddenly be
|
|
answering a question you'd asked him ten minutes ago while you were off
|
|
on a different topic completely!"
|
|
Hmmm, maybe a tree fell on him. Anyway another Syd quirk had always been
|
|
his obsessive tampering with the fine head of black hair that rested
|
|
firmly on the Barrett cranium.
|
|
Somewhere along the line, out hero had decided to shave all his
|
|
lithesome skull appendages down to a sparse grizzle, known
|
|
appropriately, as the "Borstal crop".
|
|
Jenner: "I can't really comment too accurately, but I'm rather tempted
|
|
to view it as a symbolic gesture. Y'know - goodbye to being a pop-star,
|
|
or something."
|
|
Barrett, by this time, was well slumped into his real twilight period,
|
|
living in the cellar of his mother's house in Cambridge. And this is
|
|
where the story gets singularly depressing.
|
|
An interview with *Rolling Stone* in the Christmas of '71 showed Barrett
|
|
to be living out his life with a certain whimsical self-reliance. At one
|
|
point in the rap, he stated "I'm really totally together, I even think I
|
|
should be."
|
|
Almost exactly a year later, from the sheer frustration of his own
|
|
inertia, Barrett went temporarily completely haywire and smashed his
|
|
head through the basement ceiling.
|
|
In between these two dates, Syd went into the studios to record.
|
|
"It was an abortion", claims Barnes, "He just kept over-dubbing guitar
|
|
part on guitar part until it was jst a total chaotic mess. He also
|
|
wouldn't show anyone his lyrics - I fear actually because he hadn't
|
|
written any."
|
|
Jenner was also present: "It was horribly frustrating because there were
|
|
sporadic glimpses of the old Syd coming through, and then it would all
|
|
get horribly distorted again. Nothing remains from the sessions."
|
|
And then there was Stars, a band formed by Twink, ex-drummer of
|
|
Tomorrow, Pretty Things and Pink Fairies.
|
|
Twink was another native of Cambridge, had previously known Barrett
|
|
marginally well, and somehow dragged the Madcap into forming a band
|
|
including himself and a bass-player called Jack Monck. It is fairly
|
|
strongly considered that Barrett was *used* - his legendary reputation
|
|
present only to enhance what was in effect a shambling, mediocre rock
|
|
band.
|
|
The main Stars gig occurred at the Corn Exchange in Cambridge where they
|
|
were second-billed to the MC5. It was an exercise in total musical
|
|
untogetherness and, after an hour or so, Barrett unplugged his guitar
|
|
and sauntered off the stage to return once again to his basement.
|
|
|
|
SINCE THAT TIME, Syd Barrett may or may not have worked in a factory for
|
|
a week or so/worked as a gardener/tried to enroll as an architectural
|
|
student/grown mushrooms in his basement/been a tramp/spent two weeks in
|
|
New York busking/tried to become a Pink Floyd roadie.
|
|
All the above are stories told to me by various semi-authentic sources.
|
|
More than likely, most of them are total fabrications. One thing, though
|
|
appears to be clear: Syd Barrett is unable to write songs. ("Either that
|
|
or he writes songs and won't show them to anyone" - Jenner.)
|
|
In the meantime, Barrett has been elevated into the position of becoming
|
|
perhaps the leading mysterioso figure in the whole of rock. Arthur Lee
|
|
and Brian Wilson are the only other figures who loom large in that
|
|
echelon of twilight zone notoriety and myth-weaving.
|
|
His cult-appeal has reached remarkable proportions in America, to the
|
|
extent that Capitol Records are finally releasing the two Barrett solo
|
|
albums in a double package, while in countries as diverse as France and
|
|
Japan, Barrett is a source of fanatical interest.
|
|
And then there is the Syd Barrett International Appreciation Society
|
|
centred in Britain, which puts out a magazine, tee-shirts, and buttons.
|
|
It is unfortunately as trivial as it is fanatical.
|
|
"I mentioned the Society to Syd once," states Peter Barnes. "He just
|
|
said it was O.K., y'know. He's not interested in any of it. It's ironic.
|
|
I suppose - he's much bigger now as the silent cult-figure doing nothing
|
|
than he was when he was functioning."
|
|
And still the offers to take Syd back into the studio come in from all
|
|
manner of illustrious folk. Jimmy Page has long wanted to produce
|
|
Barrett, Eno has eagerly inquired about such collaborations, Kevin Ayers
|
|
has wanted to form a band with the Madcap for ages.
|
|
David Bowie is a zealous admirer (his version of "See Emily Play" on
|
|
"Pinups" will certainly keep Syd financially in adequate stead for a few
|
|
months).
|
|
"Syd has always said that when he goes back into the studio again he
|
|
will refuse to have a producer. He still talks about making a third
|
|
album. I don't know - I think Dave is the only one who could pull it
|
|
off. There seems to be a relationship there."
|
|
|
|
THE LAST words are from Dave Gilmour:
|
|
"I don't know what Syd thinks or *how* he thinks. Sure I'd be into going
|
|
back into the studio with him, but I'm into projects like that anyway.
|
|
Period.
|
|
"I last saw him around Christmas in Harrod's. We just said 'hi', y'know.
|
|
I think actually of all the people you've spoken to, probably only Storm
|
|
and I really know the whole story and can see it all in the right focus.
|
|
"I mean Syd was a strange guy even back in Cambridge. He was a very
|
|
respected figure back there in his own way.
|
|
"In my opinion, it's a family situation that's at the root of it all.
|
|
His father's death affected him very heavily and his mother always
|
|
pampered him - made him out to be a genius of sorts. I remember I really
|
|
started to get worried when I went along to the session for 'See Emily
|
|
Play'. He was strange even then. That stare, y'know!
|
|
"Yeah, it was fairly obvious that I was brought in to take over from
|
|
him, at least on stage ... It was impossible to gauge his feelings
|
|
about it. I don't think Syd has opinions as such.
|
|
He functions on a totally different plain of logic, and some people will
|
|
claim, 'Well yeah amn he's on a higher cosmic level' - but basically
|
|
there's something drastically wrong.
|
|
"It wasn't just the drugs - we'd both done acid before the whole Floyd
|
|
thing - it's just a mental foible which grew out of all proportion. I
|
|
remember all sorts of strange things happening - at one point he was
|
|
wearing lipstick, dressing in high heels, and believing he had
|
|
homosexual tendencies. We all felt he should have gone to see a
|
|
psychiatrist, though someone in fact played an interview he did to R.D.
|
|
Laing, and Laing claimed he was incurable. What can you do, y'know ?
|
|
"We did a couple of songs for 'Ummagumma' - the live tracks - we used
|
|
'Jugband Blues' for no ulterior motive - it was just a good song. I mean
|
|
that 'Nice Pair' collection will see him doing alright for a couple of
|
|
years, which postpones the day of judgment.
|
|
"I dunno - maybe if he was left to his own devices, he might just get it
|
|
together. But it is a tragedy - a great tragedy because the guy was an
|
|
innovator. One of the three or four greats along with Dylan.
|
|
"I know though that something is wrong because Syd isn't happy, and that
|
|
really is the criteria, isn't it ? But then it's all part of being a
|
|
'legend in your own lifetime'."
|
|
|