634 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
634 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
From Musician magazine, August 1988
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Repent, Pink Floyd Idolaters!
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"This is definitely the biggest thing ever to hit Columbus,"
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declares one of the 240 clean-cut Ohio State University students
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whose good grades qualified them for the coveted position of
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Pink Floyd usher. For the first time ever, rockophobic school
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authorities have permitted the staging of a rock concert at
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their 66-year-old football stadium, and all tickets were snapped
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up within hours of going on sale on campus. Though the original
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plan was merely to give O.S.U.'s 100,000 students first crack at
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Ohio Stadium's 63,016 seats, any townies wishing to see the show
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were left with no choice but to pay scalpers upwards of $40.
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Throughout the past 24 hours, local stations have been
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regaling the state capital virtually nonstop with the classic
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1970's albums "Dark Side of the Moon," "Wish You Were Here," and
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"The Wall." As the band's police-escorted minibus proceeds
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through the sprawling campus, groups of jocks - some wearing
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nothing but, of all things, electric pink shorts - interrupted
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their volleyball to cheer and shake their fists in approval at
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the smoked windows. Dormitory windows are festooned with
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bouquets of pink balloons and announcements of "post-Pink"
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parties; and at least one campus bar attempts to lure customers
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with the promise of pink beer. (At the tour's previous
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university stop, some students went so far as to repaint their
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dorms pink.)
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In the eye of this storm of Pinkmania are three soft-spoken
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English gentlemen whose graying hair and unprepossessing
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appearance - and, above all, total lack of airs or pretensions -
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would seem the absolute antithesis of anyone's idea of rock 'n'
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roll superstars. Drummer Nick Mason and keyboardist Richard
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Wright are the remaining founding members of the group whose
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legendary original leader, Syd Barrett, christened "the Pink
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Floyd" over 22 years ago. Guitarist and singer David Gilmour -
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who has inherited the mantle of frontman and main composer
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following the recent acrimonious split with bassist and
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singer/songwriter/conceptualist Roger Waters - was originally
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recruited as a mere stand-in for his old school chum Barrett
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when the latter began to succumb to the LSD-fueled madness that
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compelled his 1968 departure from the group. Since launching
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their post-Waters live "comeback" in September 1987, Gilmour,
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Mason and Wright have been augmented onstage by a trans-Atlantic
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troupe of five musicians and three female singers - some of whom
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were barely out of their playpens when the London hippie
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underground celebrated its Summer of Love to the soundtrack of
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the Floyd's magical 1967 debut album "The Piper at the Gates of
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Dawn."
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Following a string of open-air concerts in the sun belt
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during which rain was so pervasive that the band had begun
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calling it the Pink Flood tour, the weather is at last
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gloriously cooperative. Behind the stadium, thousands of
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ticketless fans camp out on the playing field hoping at least to
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hear the show. The sole discordant note is provided by
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"Christian" picketers brandishing the signs WORSHIP GOD NOT PINK
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FLOYD SINNERS and REPENT PINK FLOYD IDOLATERS, and chanting
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slogans linking rock 'n' roll to such ungodly pursuits as
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homosexuality and drug-taking.
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"Have you ever noticed," observes Guy Pratt, the bassist with
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the pop-star good looks, "that these anally retentive bigots are
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almost invariably ugly?" "They must act like that because they
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could never get laid," cracks Californian saxophonist Scott Page.
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"This is the side of America that really scares me," Pratt
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says. "I can't even watch television in this country." The
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gaunt Rick Wright merely shrugs with the world-weary manner of
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one who has seen it all many times before.
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After the sound check, as the fans begin streaming into their
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seats, David Gilmour takes a casual tour of the vast stadium.
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"He's the most aware person," Page remarks. "He won't say much,
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and half of the time you wonder if he notices what's going on.
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But he sees everything, every detail to do with the lights,
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whatever."
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At first it simply doesn't occur to any of the punters that
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this stocky 42-year-old wandering the aisles could possibly be
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the leader of the fabled act they have all come to witness.
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When he is finally recognized, however, Gilmour signs several
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rounds of autographs with an air of cheerful resignation. "He
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can't be bothered with bodyguards and all that business," says
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second guitarist and longtime friend Tim Renwick. "He despises
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all the bullshit showbiz razzmatazz side of things, and has
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decided not to be trapped in that star syndrome which cuts you
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off from everyone. I admire him very much for being able to
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deal with a success like this."
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To see Pink Floyd backstage whiling away the moments before
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the show - reading, stuffing their faces at the lavish buffet,
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reminiscing about Syd Barret's cats, and chuckling at the
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mordant wisecracks supplied by New Yorker Howie Hoffman in his
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paid capacity of "Ambience Co-ordinator" - you might not suppose
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that this was the biggest tour in rock history. Biggest, at
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least, by the measure of its custom-built stage, production
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effects and quadraphonic PA system (which fill 56 trucks), the
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personnel involved (over 100), the time spent on the road
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(nearly 13 months), and the ground covered (some 150 shows on
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four continents). Not to mention the sizes of the venues and
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the number of tickets sold.
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Just after the sun goes down, the Floyd's trademark 32-foot
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circular screen, now ringed with computer controlled
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Vari-Lights, begins to swirl oranges and greens, and the first
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siren strains of their epic Syd Barrett tribute "Shine on You
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Crazy Diamond" respond through the billowing dry ice. Despite
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the music's languid tempo, the audience seems transfixed to a
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degree almost unheard-of at a 1980's rock concert, and drowns
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each familiar lick in ecstatic applause. "There is something
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incredible." Renwick says later, "about looking out at 70,000
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people and there's no movement, really intense - not like your
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normal heavy-metal gig where everyone's milling around and
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falling and throwing up."
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The recent album "A Momentary Lapse of Reason," which
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preempts the rest of the show's first half, is enhanced by a
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sequence of films featuring the handsome young actor Langley
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Iddens. ("Is he in Pink Floyd," a teenage girl in the audience
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asks eagerly.) After rowing down the Thames to appropriately
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aquatic sound effects from the quad PA, Iddens trades his canoe
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for a plane that soars out of the screen and across the stadium
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during "Learning to Fly."
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"The idea is always to pull the last kid in the last seat of
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the stadium into the show," says lighting designer mark
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Brickman. "That's also why the stage is so high and wide." Guy
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Pratt adds after the show, "The psychology of the quad is so
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wonderful because if you're at the back, you've still got stuff
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going on behind you. You're inside the event."
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All the while, computer-operated light banks and four mobile
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robotic "Floyd 'droids" cast ever-shifting shapes and colors
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over the stage. Jets of brilliant laser light shoot over the
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audience, coalescing into a shining green sea of laser waves for
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"Terminal Frost."
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But it is in the second half that the fans get what they
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really came to hear and see. On the spacey 1971 instrumental
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"One of These Days (I'm Going to Cut You into Little Pieces),"
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the Floyd's famous 40-foot inflatable anatomically correct pig,
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eyes glowering, lurches over the cheering crowd - whose fervor,
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if possible, only intensifies when the sounds of alarm bells and
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ticking clocks announce "Time," fir first of five selections
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from "Dark Side of the Moon." During "On the Run" Iddens
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reappears onscreen, strapped to a hospital bed, in a
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dramatization of the Lapse of Reason album cover; when the piece
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ends, a giant inflatable bed crashes into the stage in flames.
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So it goes through "Welcome to the Machine," "Us and Them"
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and "Money," each illustrated with vintage mind-bending Floyd
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film footage. And in the show's most poignant moment, the
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entire stadium, with no incitement from Gilmour, sings along
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with him throughout the acoustic "Wish You Were Here." The set
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climaxes with "Comfortably Numb" (the hands-down favorite of
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everyone involved in the tour), wherein Brickman inundates the
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high base of the stage with white smoke - to simulate that
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moment in the Floyd's famous 1980 concerts when Gilmour played
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his big solo atom the Wall - and the largest mirrorball in
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history splits open to flower into dazzling petals.
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For the final encore, "Run Like Hell," Brickman and his team,
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unleashing what he calls "Warp Factor Number 10," pull out all
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the stops with the special effects; even the near-full moon is
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briefly dimmed by the fireworks display that lights up the
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Columbus skies.
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Pink Floyd shows were not always so meticulously planned.
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During the Syd Barrett era they were renowned for their anarchic
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spontaneity; even in the year or two after the "madcap"'s
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departure, no two performances were ever quite the same. Tim
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Renwick fondly recalls one London concert during which the Floyd
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"built a table with rhythmic hammering and sawing. When it was
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done the roadies came on with a pot of tea and switched on a
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transistor radio and put a mike in front of it, with the
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audience listening to whatever happened to be on the radio at
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the time while the guys were drinking their tea." Their
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performance philosophy, like almost everything else about Pink
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Floyd, was to change dramatically over the years - in this
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instance because in their pioneering work with recording
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technique, the endless overdubbing process allowed little to be
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left to chance.
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During the course of the Memorial Day weekend, the members of
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Pink Floyd take time out to review milestones in the band's
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evolution with an openness that belies their 1970's reputation
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for being unforthcoming with writers. "We took on this lightly
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precious feeling," Nick Mason recalls, "that there wasn't much
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point in doing interviews. It generally became: 'Well, we're
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not going to do interviews because we always get slagged off,'
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and then thinking 'Well, they won't do interviews so we'll slag
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them off.'"
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All three - not least David Gilmour, who wasn't even on it -
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evince a special affection for the psychedelic fantasies of the
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Piper album. "Just listen to Syd's songs, the imagination that
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he had," Rick Wright says. "If he hadn't had this complete
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breakdown, he could easily be one of the greatest songwriters
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today. I think it's one of the saddest stories in rock 'n'
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roll, what happened to Syd. He was brilliant - and such a nice
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guy." The last time Write saw Barrett was during - ironically -
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the recording of "Wish You Were Here," when a shaven-headed and
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overweight Syd materialized at the sessions and no one at first
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knew who he was. Barrett's relatives subsequently asked the
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Floyd to keep their distance because any contact sends him into
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a deep depression. "He is aware of what happened," Wright says.
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"And what might have been."
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Mason reflects that "one of the reasons Syd is still a legend
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is the James Dean syndrome, that thing of not fulfilling what
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seems to be your destiny." The latest manifestation of that
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legend - the closest we're likely to get to a new Syd album - is
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"Beyond the Wildwood," a collection of barrett covers by young
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British bands, which none of the Floyd has yet heard. "That's
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excellent news," Wright says. "More money for Syd."
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"He seems reasonably content living with his mum," Mason
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says, "but he's certainly not able to function really and he
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can't be but back to work. There's a million people out there
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who'd love to see Syd do another album, come back and all that.
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I just think it's quite beyond him."
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Most of the second Floyd album, 1968's transitional
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"Saucerful of Secrets," was written by Waters or Wright. The
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latter now dismisses his pieces as "an embarrassment," adding
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that "through these songs I learned I wasn't a lyric writer."
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He and Gilmour subsequently let Waters assume responsibility for
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writing the words even to their own music. Says Gilmour: "I've
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never had the belief in myself in that direction, and I've let
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myself be dominated by Roger. Never argued with him having his
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idea for an album and me backing off saying, 'Okay, you do them,
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I don't do this really.'"
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Mason calls "Saucerful's" instrumental title suite the key to
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"helping sort out the direction we were going to move in. It
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contains ideas that were well ahead of the period, and very much
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a route that I think we have followed. Even without using a lot
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of elaborate technique, without being particularly able in our
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own right, finding something we can do individually that other
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people haven't tried...like provoking the most extraordinary
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sounds from a piano by scratching 'round inside it."
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"I still think it's great," Gilmour says of that track.
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"That was the first clue to our direction forwards, from there.
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If you take 'Saucerful of Secrets,' the track 'Atom Heart
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Mother,' then 'Echoes - all lead quite logically towards 'Dark
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Side of the Moon.'"
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None of the Floyd has a ready explanation for the phenomenal
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and ongoing success of that 1973 classic, still enjoying a ride
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on the charts. Mason cites, among other nebulous factors, "that
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peculiar '60s message" which "still applies to people of
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whatever age."
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"We always knew," Gilmour says, "that it would sell more than
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anything we had done before. Because it was better, more
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complete and more focused, better cover art. Every detail was
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well attended to." Yet both he and Wright seem at least as proud
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of the 1975's "Wish You Were Here," even though the pressure of
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following Dark Side made its composition and recording
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excruciatingly difficult for all concerned.
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It was around this time that Pink Floyd became a favorite
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punching bag among the new wave of punk rockers. "I remember it
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quite well," Mason says, "because I produced an album by the
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Damned. Quite illuminating in terms of watching people
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rediscover the roots of rock 'n' roll, which had become complete
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techno-flash overkill: Emerson, Lake and Palmer; Pink Floyd;
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huge massive dinosaurs rumbling across the earth. What punk did
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was say, 'We can make records for 20 quid again'; it was about
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energy and wanting to perform, not who's the greatest musician
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in the world.
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"Of course," he maintains, "you don't want the world
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populated only with dinosaurs, but it's a terribly good thing to
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keep some of them alive."
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Coincidentally or not, Waters' writing took a more
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hard-hitting and overtly topical tack on 1977's "Animals,"
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which, Wright says, "I'm not fond of. That was the first one I
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didn't write anything for and it was the first album where the
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group was losing its unity. That was where it was beginning
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where Roger wanted to do everything." Waters went on to
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incorporate his political preoccupations into the ambitious
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autobiographical psychodrama of "The Wall" (1979).
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"I love the Wall album," Gilmour emphasizes. "Whatever
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anyone says, I was there. I have my money on that record, tons
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and tons of stuff. Myself and [producer Bob] Ezrin. I know
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lots of people think of that as the first Roger Waters solo
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album, but it ain't. Roger wouldn't have been able to make that
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by himself, no way. He's had three other goes at making solo
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records, and you can judge for yourself the difference."
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It was at the time of "The Wall" that Rick Wright, in one of
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the murkier episodes in Pink history, tendered his resignation.
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According to Wright, "Roger and I just couldn't get on.
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Whatever I tried to do, he would say it was wrong. It was
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impossible for me, really, to work with him.
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"Then he said, 'Either you leave after the album's made, or
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I'm going to scrap the whole thing.' It was an impossible
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situation. It was a game of bluff, but knowing Roger he might
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have done what he threatened to do. Which would mean no
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royalties from the album [to pay off Floyd's taxes in the wake
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of an investment scam that left the group near bankruptcy]. So
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I had to say yes. And in some ways I was happy to get out,
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because I was fed up with the whole things. And then, from what
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I've heard, it just got worse and worse for Dave and Nick on
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"The Final Cut," which I had nothing to do with.
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"I wish Roger all the best in everything he does, but he's an
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extremely hard man to work with. It's a shame he isn't more
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open to other people's ideas, because it makes the music so much
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better."
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Ironically, Wright ended up the only member of Pink Floyd to
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make any money from the live performances of "The Wall" - which
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he remembers as "hell to do, but a brilliant concept and an
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amazing piece of theater" - because Waters had put him on a
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salary pending his final exit from the group, and the cost of
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the show (like everything else about it) was so spectacular that
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the band lost a fortune. "The Wall" behind him, Wright all but
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disappeared from the music scene for seven years, much of which
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he passed in "semi-retirement" on a Greek island.
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Gilmour, meanwhile, grew increasingly resentful of the
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autocratic regime during the recording of Water's bleakest and
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most strident song cycle to date. "Songs in there that we threw
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off The Wall, he brought them back for The Final Cut, same
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songs. I thought, 'Nobody thought they were that good then,
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what seems so good now?' I bet he thought I was being
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obstructive." That said, Gilmour calls three of the 12 numbers
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- "Gunner's Dream," "Fletcher's Memorial Home" and the title
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track - "really great. I wouldn't want to knock anything that's
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good, whoever it's by." But in view of the ill will generated
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by the Final Cut sessions, Waters simply declared Pink Floyd
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defunct, bringing his thematic and theatrical fixations to bear
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on a series of solo projects.
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Gilmour then recorded his second solo album "About Face" -
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which, significantly, sounded more "Floydian" than Waters' "Pros
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and Cons of Hitch-Hiking" - and undertook a sequence of
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low-profile gigs as sideman for the likes of Paul McCartney,
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Bryan Ferry and Pete Townshend. "It's probably every schoolboy
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guitar player's dream," Gilmour says, "to play things like
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'Won't Get Fooled Again,' instead of Pete, with Pete singing it.
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A seriously fun dream.
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"He asked me if I would do the shows with him because he
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wanted to move away from being the guitar hero. He refused
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point blank to play electric guitar, and people said, 'Oh, come
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on, at least "Won't Get Fooled Again," strap on a guitar and do
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it.' But he refused he wanted the whole project to be not 'Pete
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Townshend, guitar hero' but 'Pete Townshend, singer, writer,
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bank leader.' It was great."
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By 1986, however, Gilmour - who stresses he had "always made
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it absolutely clear" to Waters that he hadn't left the group -
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found himself missing the opportunities afforded by the vehicle
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of Pink Floyd. Assisted by producer Ezrin and a crack team of
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outside lyricists and musicians, he and Mason began concocting
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the "Momentary Lapse of Reason" album. "If I don't want to
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throw away 20 years of my hard work and start again with only my
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solo career, this is what I had to do." Alluding to the
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faceless Floyd mystique, he adds: "People don't know my name. I
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haven't spent 20 years building my name, I've spent 20 years
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building up Pink Floyd's name."
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Among longtime fans, the new Floyd's credibility was enhanced
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by the restoration of Rick Wright. "By the time this whole
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thing got started," Wright says, "I realized I had to get back;
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I was missing it. I went to Dave and said, 'If you ever need me
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or want to work with me, I really want to work with you.'
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Halfway through the recording of the album he asked me to come
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along and play on some tracks." Still not reinstated as a
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full-fledged partner in Pink Floyd, Wright was been working on a
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salary basis - much as had been the case on the Wall shows.
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:Both sides said, we'll see how it goes. For me, it's gone
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extremely well; I'm really happy."
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One person who was not happy about the developments was
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Waters, who bitterly denounced the new Floyd as a fraud, and
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even took legal action against Gilmour and Mason in an attempt
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to block their use of the band's name. Thus was Pink Floyd's
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inscrutable anonymity shattered by the barrage of attacks and
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counterattacks. "If one's kids behaved like that, fought in
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public like we have," Mason says, "I'd be very cross with them.
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There would be no pocket money for a week." He contends that
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Waters "wanted the band to finish, and he could have finished it
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by staying in it. His big mistake was to leave. Because by
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leaving suddenly it regenerated."
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"Roger said Pink Floyd was creatively dead. Quite right, it
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was. But by leaving it, the ashes suddenly picked up. Dave had
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been incredibly repressed by Roger, particularly over the past
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few years of Roger wanting to do more and more. There was a
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whole bunch of stuff waiting to get out, which I don;t think
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Dave even realized.
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"We could have taken five years to make another album, but
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Roger looking over the gunsights at us made it happen in 10
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months. There was absolutely no 'maybe we should, maybe we
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shouldn't.' It was 'let's do it now, who do we need, how will
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we do it.' It was galvanizing. I think most bands work best
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when they're just that bit hungry, when they want to prove
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themselves. That's why young bands are always so much hotter.
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The group spirit is there. Everyone wants to get on with it, do
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it together - not worry about who did what, and who's really the
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leader of the band, and can they buy another house in the south
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of France."
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While wrapping up work on the album, Gilmour and Mason spent
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five months devising the staging of the new show with Marc
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Brickman, production director Robbie Williams and set designer
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Paul Staples. In the process Gilmour says, :we typed up lists
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of titles from the first record onward right through. Every
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title, we'd tick against them reasons for doing them or not
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doing them. Like if I sang or co-wrote it, Rick co-wrote it,
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whatever. Or if we had a great piece of film to go with it. Or
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if it was a great song." He stresses that all but three of the
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final choices - "Crazy Diamond," "Another Brick in the Wall" and
|
||
"Run Like Hell" - originally featured his lead vocal exactly as
|
||
he performs them now. (Certain moments that did spotlight
|
||
Waters, such as the first part of "Comfortably Numb," are sung
|
||
onstage by Wright, Guy Pratt and/or Jon Carin.)
|
||
Gilmour says he won't let the bad blood between them affect
|
||
his appreciation for, and identification with, Water's old
|
||
lyrics. "Why should I suddenly feel strange about singing a
|
||
lyric I didn't feel strange about for 10 years? They are very
|
||
good lyrics, that I agree with and can feel for myself. I'd
|
||
have been proud to write some of those lyrics.
|
||
"Even the songs that Roger supposedly wrote by himself," he
|
||
adds, "it's never the full story. You can never say exactly
|
||
what happened when that record was made. The whole ending part
|
||
of 'Another Brick in the Wall Part 2,' he didn't write the
|
||
guitar solo or the chords in that section. He didn't make up
|
||
the drum parts, the rhythm. I'm not going to abandon something
|
||
I've worked really hard on, or feel I had something major to do
|
||
with, just because it says Roger Waters wrote it. Life's too
|
||
short."
|
||
Asked about the absence of pre-Dark Side music (apart from
|
||
Meddle's "One of These Days", Mason responds : "There's
|
||
something about a lot of the earlier material that's just a bit
|
||
too early, that feels dated - perhaps lyrically. 'Echoes' is
|
||
something a lot of people would like to hear, that we did
|
||
rehearse and did play for a while. But I think dave didn't
|
||
really feel comfortable singing about albatrosses and sunshine.
|
||
It was just a bit too sort of...hmmmm,hmmmm..." The droll
|
||
drummer chuckles and rolls his eyes.
|
||
"I love [Syd Barrett's] 'Astronomy Domine.' The trouble is
|
||
you're right back into the I Ching and interstellar exploration.
|
||
I think that's something Dave would have some problem with as he
|
||
approaches dignified middle age, shrieking out this information
|
||
to the audience. It's easier to talk about how hard life is and
|
||
how depressed one gets."
|
||
Mason says they considered performing Dark Side of the Moon
|
||
in its entirety for certain shows, but it "wasn't satisfactory
|
||
when you're moving from city to city to do that because it's not
|
||
a broad enough view of our work. People would have been
|
||
disappointed to miss out on stuff from The Wall and Wish You
|
||
Were Here, and it didn't feel right to switch back. But I still
|
||
like it as an idea for the future."
|
||
Animals is not represented at all - in part, Gilmour
|
||
explains, because "we could do three other great songs in the
|
||
time taken up by one of that Orwellian trilogy's rambling
|
||
compositions. "Sheep" came closest to inclusion "because I had
|
||
a lot to do with making it come out the way it came out and I
|
||
feel quite proud of it. But Roger sang it and I don't think I
|
||
could sing it with the same particular venom."
|
||
Waters, to give him his due, has certainly never lacked the
|
||
courage of his convictions - even if that meant steering Pink
|
||
Floyd away from what the fans expected, and ultimately
|
||
abandoning the group altogether. His latest concept album,
|
||
"Amused to Death," now nearing completion in London, is said to
|
||
feature such out-of-character elements as a catchy upbeat tune
|
||
or two, and - of all things - a happy ending.
|
||
Gilmour readily concedes that he would not be where he is
|
||
today had it not been for Waters, and that Pink Floyd is a
|
||
letter entity without him. Invoking the example of the Beatles,
|
||
he notes that "the whole was greater than the sum of its parts."
|
||
Fortunately for Gilmour, however, he can sing Waters' lyrics and
|
||
draw from the Floyd's 1970s arsenal of theatrical effects, and
|
||
few will notice the difference. Waters, by contrast, is left to
|
||
manage without not only the Pink Floyd brand name, but also
|
||
Gilmour's more tangible musical contribution. Still, one hopes
|
||
he will eventually take some pride in the fact that, even in his
|
||
absence, his old ideas are still reaching such a vast audience.
|
||
|
||
When David Gilmour set out to form an expanded live Pink
|
||
Floyd line-up, Tim Renwick must have seemed as logical a choice
|
||
for second guitarist as Ron Wood have been for the Rolling
|
||
Stones. After attending high school with Roger Waters, future
|
||
Floyd art director Storm Thorgerson (of Hipgnosis) and Syd
|
||
Barrett - who was also Tim's Boy Scout patrol leader! - Renwick
|
||
became an avid follower of Gilmour's pre-Floyd Cambridge band
|
||
Jokers Wild. "I remember the day Dave arrived in this frusty
|
||
little club in Cambridge called Alley CLub, and told me he'd
|
||
just been taken on as a member of the Pink Floyd. I remember
|
||
thinking, 'Wonder if this will ever happen to me.' Very strange
|
||
now."
|
||
In the 1970s his own band Quiver shared manager Steve
|
||
O'Rourke with the Floyd - of whom Renwick "was always very much
|
||
in awe" - and often served as their supporting act. After
|
||
Quiver merged with the Sutherland Brothers, Gilmour produced
|
||
some of their records, and Renwick ended up strumming an
|
||
acoustic guitar on the Wall film soundtrack. Having accompanied
|
||
Waters on his first solo tour, he boasts the distinction of
|
||
being the one musician to have worked with both rival Floyd
|
||
camps.
|
||
"Working with Roger was slightly strained," Renwick recalls.
|
||
"He's one of these people who needs to have ultimate control of
|
||
every facet of what's going on; he got very, very obsessive
|
||
about things. Dave is almost the exact opposite, very, very
|
||
relaxed. He leaves a lot of things up to you, whereas Roger
|
||
would have very fixed ideas: 'You are going to do THIS!' This
|
||
tour has been much more fun, much more sense of camaraderie, a
|
||
real group. Roger is a bit of a loner, sets himself apart.
|
||
"But when I spent a lot of time with him socially, he was
|
||
really a very charming bloke. Sometimes he's made out to be too
|
||
much of an ogre because he's got such strong opinions about
|
||
things. He tends to thrive on tensions in order to create."
|
||
(In any event, the Waters tour was ultimately a "wonderful
|
||
break" for Renwick, insofar as it triggered his long association
|
||
with Eric Clapton - whose participation in the "Pros and Cons"
|
||
shows was perhaps the most incongruous move in Slohand's entire
|
||
checkered career.)
|
||
Guy Pratt, who once played bass with the Dream Academy (which
|
||
Gilmour also produced), views his present position from the
|
||
slightly different perspective of a youthful Pink Floyd fan.
|
||
"When those kids go mad in the front rows, I know what it's like
|
||
- I was one myself." Scott Page, by contrast had only ever
|
||
heard one Pink Floyd song - "Another Brick in the Wall" - when
|
||
Gilmour invited him to play sax on Lapse of Reason and then the
|
||
tour.
|
||
"That's the honest-to-God truth - I must be the only person
|
||
in the world who'd never even heard Dark Side of the Moon," says
|
||
Page, who previously worked with the likes of Supertramp, Toto,
|
||
James Brown, and Chuck Berry. "But even so I got a kind of buzz
|
||
that there was something different about Pink Floyd; they've
|
||
created a mystique that's very special. And now I'm their
|
||
biggest fan. To me Gilmour's the master of melody. He can kill
|
||
you with two little notes; every night he's immaculate. Every
|
||
night the hair stands up on my arm when he plays 'Comfortably
|
||
Numb.'
|
||
"This is the first gig where I've been able to 'wear my own
|
||
clothes.' Meaning I can do what I want to without someone
|
||
constantly telling me to be someone else. This is the easiest
|
||
gig I've ever had, as far as there's no pressure.
|
||
"One night we're on the bandstand, and all the synthesizers
|
||
go down. You'd think Gilmour would be freaking - but he's
|
||
laughing. There's no tension, the guy's not worried about it at
|
||
all. Big deal. And that kind of low pressure makes it really
|
||
easy to work.
|
||
"Dave's such a positive-thinking guy. So's Nick Mason. It
|
||
took a while for some of us to realize Nick brings something
|
||
that you just can't buy, a style and a feeling that's a big part
|
||
of the Pink Floyd magic. Rick, too."
|
||
In light of the futuristic image for which the Floyd became
|
||
famous, it seems slightly ironic that Mason and Wright are each
|
||
now shadowed by a young musician schooled in the technological
|
||
advances that have overtaken their instruments. Like all his
|
||
colleagues, Gary Wallis - whom Gilmour spotted when the
|
||
classically trained percussionist was accompanying Nik Kershaw -
|
||
stresses the tour's relaxed and nurturing ambience. "Dave
|
||
encourages you to play your own thing within his structure -
|
||
that's why he employed you, for what you do. SOme bands, when
|
||
you fuck up they snarl or give you the bad eye, whereas Dave
|
||
just laughs. By doing that, you want to correct yourself a lot
|
||
more."
|
||
After meeting synthesizer wizard Jon Carin when both were
|
||
backing Bryan Ferry at Live Aid, Gilmour invited them to jam at
|
||
his home, where Carin popped up with the chord progression that
|
||
inspired "Learning to Fly." Jon was pleasantly surprised when
|
||
he was credited as co-writer - "just shows you what kind of a
|
||
guy Dave is." The proliferation of bylines on Lapse of Reason
|
||
notwithstanding, Carin - who played on the album - characterizes
|
||
all the songs as "99 percent Dave."
|
||
Rounding out the line-up are the seasoned young chanteuses
|
||
Margaret Taylor and Rachel Fury, and Durga McBroom. Gilmour had
|
||
never heard McBroom when he added her to the lineup last
|
||
November on the strength of her photograph (and the Nile Rogers
|
||
album cited in her resume) to fulfill his whim that a black
|
||
singer bring a "bit of color," as she puts it, to a full-length
|
||
Floyd concert film. Though its commercial release remains
|
||
uncertain, it has yielded videoclips of "On the Turning Away"
|
||
and "Dogs of War" as well as live tracks on a recent
|
||
maxi-single.)
|
||
If there is one thing this diverse troupe has in common, it
|
||
is an extraordinary regard for, and fascination with, David
|
||
Gilmour. "He's a real thrill seeker," the voluble Page says of
|
||
the author of "Learning to Fly." "Here we are on a big giant
|
||
tour, and the guy is out jetskiing, cableskiing, hang gliding,
|
||
flying 757s - he wants to be able to do everything.
|
||
"Every night when we hand with the crew or in the hotel
|
||
rooms, the conversation always comes back to Gilmour. he really
|
||
affects everybody, in a strange way."
|
||
|
||
By the time Pink Floyd hits its next city, the normally
|
||
smooth-running tour has taken such a farcical turn that the band
|
||
is not calling it Spinal Tap. Nick Mason's passport and
|
||
computer have mysteriously vanished from his Columbus hotel
|
||
room; then at the Pittsburgh airport Rick Wright and the
|
||
auxiliary musicians and singers are obliged to broil on the
|
||
tarmac for two hours because someone has forgotten to arrange
|
||
ground transportation. "This would never happen if Steve were
|
||
here," Wright sighs. Manager Steve O'Rourke, along with Gilmour
|
||
and Mason - for whom automobile racing relegates even drumming
|
||
to second place among his major passions - have taken the day
|
||
off to attend the Indianapolis 500. "They received us like
|
||
royalty there," Mason reports later. "On a scale of enjoyment
|
||
from one to ten, I'd rate the day at least a fifteen."
|
||
Not so for the rest of the musicians. The Floyd's Pittsburgh
|
||
hotel is hosting, of all things, a convention of blind bowlers,
|
||
and most of the guests appear to be equipped with metal canes or
|
||
seeing-eye dogs. In attending to their needs, the hotel staff
|
||
has neglected to get the Floyd entourage's rooms ready in time
|
||
for their arrival.
|
||
The following afternoon, the chauffeur loses his way during
|
||
the short drive to Three Rivers Stadium, then ends up driving
|
||
the band to the stage door full-speed in reverse. Even the fan
|
||
zeal seems to have gone slightly out of hand: Among such
|
||
customary Floyd totems as silkscreen banners depicting
|
||
characters from The Wall against the album cover's white brick
|
||
backdrop, a real pig's head, decked out in sunglasses, leers
|
||
atop a blood-stained pole.
|
||
To cap it all off, the power blows during "Sorrow,"
|
||
occasioning an unplanned 10-minute intermission. "That song was
|
||
getting a bit boring, anyway," Gilmour drily announces when the
|
||
power is restored. "Let's try another one." From there on in,
|
||
the performance proceeds in its usual spectacular form, and
|
||
51,101 mostly-young Pittsburgers respond with rapturous ovations.
|
||
The day's mishaps have hardly dented the band's morale.
|
||
"This is the happiest tour that I've ever been on," Wright says,
|
||
"in terms of friendship, and being with the other musicians.
|
||
After The Wall, where the ego trips made life unbearable, this
|
||
tour is the opposite. You can tell in the way we play, the way
|
||
the music is sounding onstage. Nick and Dave are playing better
|
||
that ever before, partly because of the good feelings we have
|
||
for each other backstage. This year has gone so fast; I know
|
||
when we finish I'm going to miss it."
|
||
After the European finale late this summer, Write intends to
|
||
spend three weeks sailing the Aegean on his yacht before
|
||
buckling down to writing material that he hopes will prove "good
|
||
enough for Dave to say, 'Yeah, I like that'" - and include on
|
||
the next Floyd album. He also expresses an interest in
|
||
composing film scores.
|
||
As we talk in the hotel lobby, two teenage boys interrupt to
|
||
ask if we know which floor Pink Floyd is staying on, saying
|
||
they'd dreamed for years of getting one of their autographs.
|
||
When Wright deadpans that he is unaware the Floyd was even at
|
||
the hotel, the boys wander off disconsolately.
|
||
"There are two advantages to our anonymity, to our never
|
||
having sold ourselves with our faces," Wright says. "One is
|
||
that you can walk around the street with no problem. The other
|
||
advantage, which we're now finding out, is that since nobody
|
||
looks on us as rock stars we can go out at 45 and play our music
|
||
as long as we want, because people have never come to see us
|
||
like they;d go to see Mick Jagger or Rod Stewart. There'll come
|
||
a time when poeple won't accept Mick Jagger as a 60-year-old man
|
||
prancing around. But I can see now Pink Floyd playing into
|
||
their 70's. Because a Pink Floyd show is not the individuals,
|
||
it's the music and the lights."
|
||
Whereupon the two autograph hounds reappear, having gleaned
|
||
the secret of Wrights identity - only to discover that they've
|
||
left their pens at home. One attempts to stem the embarrassment
|
||
with, "What do you think of Roger Waters?"
|
||
"He's a very clever man," Wright replies. "If you want to
|
||
know more, buy the next issue of 'Musician.'" Then he takes it
|
||
upon himself to borrow paper and pen from the front desk so that
|
||
the boys might have their Pink Floyd autograph.
|
||
|