659 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
659 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
Record Collector February 1992 Article
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I mailed a bit about this when the magazine came out, but here it is at
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last - the entire article. Note Record Collector is a UK magazine so
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it refers to UK releases, unless specified otherwise. The discographies
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and valuations will follow in due course.
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Martin
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------
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PINK FLOYD ON CD
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KEVIN WHITLOCK LOOKS AT DIGITAL RELEASES
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BY THE BAND WHO WERE "MADE FOR CD"
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If there was ever a group who could have been made for compact
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disc, it is Pink Floyd. Indeed, EMI's first ever CD release was
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that perennial fantasy object for Seventies hi-fi buffs, "Dark Side
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Of The Moon". Given the group's almost legendary attention to sound
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quality, it's not surprising to find CD devotees enthusing over
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other Floyd albums, but it has to be said that the band's catalogue
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hasn't always been treated with the respect it deserves-- both in
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this country and abroad.
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Although "Dark Side", "Meddle" and "Wish You Were Here" were
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all issued in the early days of the digital medium, it wasn't until
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1987 that the complete catalogue of the band's non-compilation
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items appeared. There was no systematic reissue programme (strange,
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when you consider the excellent job EMI made of the Beatles
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catalogue), and discs leaked out in dribs and drabs without any
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sense of cohesion.
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Furthermore, the packaging and sound quality haven't always
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been up to standard. This is particularly odd bearing in mind that
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the Floydian back catalogue is the most valuable on EMI after the
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Beatles. It would make commercial sense for EMI to re-release all
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the CDs, mastering them from the original tapes and restoring the
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original packaging. Perhaps there is even room for a box set,
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rather like the excellent "Led Zeppelin" 6-LP/ 4-CD package of last
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year, with choice selections from the Floyd's back catalogue and
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unissued items such as "Scream Thy Last Scream" and "Vegetable
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Man".
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In this article, I shall be examining the Floyd's British Cds
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in detail. As well as commercial releases (which are rated out of
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10 for performance and CD sound quality), I shall also be covering
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promos and other rarities. In a future issue I will sift through
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all the overseas items, again including promos and radio shows.
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THE PIPER AT THE GATES OF DAWN
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(Performance: 10/CD Sound Quality: 8)
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Despite being over 24 years old, the Floyd's debut release
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still sounds as fresh as ever (in marked contrast to its famous
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contemporary "Sgt. Pepper"). A unique combination of English whimsy
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and avant-garde sounds, "Piper" features studio versions of the
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Floyd's most supremely psychedelic songs, the underground anthems
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"Astronomy Domine" and "Interstellar Overdrive". Two things in
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particular stand out: Rick Wright's strange ethereal organ sound
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and the sheer power and magic of Syd Barrett's songwriting--he
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wrote or co-wrote 10 of the 11 songs present -- and guitar playing.
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Since the packaging of the original album was always rather
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lacklustre, EMI can hardly be blamed for the slim four-page
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booklet. "Piper" on CD also offers considerably better sound
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quality (i.e. more authentic and closer to the original) than the
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many vinyl reissues since the album's first appearance in 1967
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although if you can get hold of an original Mint vinyl copy, buy
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that! The mix featured on this CD release is of course the stereo
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version. The mono mix--which contains slightly different takes of
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some tracks--remains unissued on CD.
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It is something of a pity, however, that EMI did not take
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advantage of the longer playing time offered by the medium. They
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could have quite easily tacked "See Emily Play", "Arnold Layne" and
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"Candy And A Currant Bun"--single A- and B-sides from the period
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-- onto the end. This gripe apart "Piper" is a faultless disc,
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which should grace anyone's collection.
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A SAUCERFUL OF SECRETS
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(Performance: 8/CD Sound Quality: 7)
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In many ways, "A Saucerful Of Secrets" is the Floyd's
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strangest album. Something of a transitional work, it features
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recordings made during the "Piper" sessions the previous year
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alongside tracks from May 1968, after Syd Barrett had left the
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group. It is, in the words of the late PF biographer Nick
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Schaffner, "a hodgepodge of possible Floyds".
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Syd plays on at least two songs, "Remember A Day" (a left-
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over from the first album) and his own "Jugband Blues". He may have
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also played on "Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun", Roger
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Waters' first distinctive solo composition. Aside from this piece,
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the most important track was the 12-minute, carefully-constructed
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title suite, which simultaneously exorcised the spirit of Syd and
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mapped out the direction the group were to take for the next 11
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years.
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Being recorded in such a haphazard manner, "Saucer" suffers
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from much less polished sound than its illustrious predecessor; and
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the rather carelessly mastered CD only emphasises this. In
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addition, the impact of Hipgnosis's innovative sleeve design is
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lost by reducing it to a five-inch-square four-page "booklet".
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MORE
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(Performance: 8/CD Sound Quality: 7)
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Always one of the most under-rated items in the Pink Floyd
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canon, "More" is something of a gem. Recorded during one week at
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Abbey Road in March 1969, "More" was an intermission in the Floyd's
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quest for the Great Work (they took time off from recording their
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intended magnum opus "Ummagumma" to work on this soundtrack album).
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It exhibits the more pastoral side of the Floyd, and showcases them
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at their most relaxed. Waters in particular-- who composed the
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lion's share, including such in-concert staples as "Cymbaline" and
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"Green Is The Colour"--displays impressive development as a
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songwriter.
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"More" is also one of the Floyd's most musically varied
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albums, ranging from straight heavy metal like "The Nile Song"
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through to acoustic ballads ("Crying Song"), via abstract
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electronics ("Quicksilver"), blues pastiches like "More Blues" and
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musical "jokes" like Gilmour's "A Spanish Piece".
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However, EMI's packaging is very shoddy --and the original LP
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packaging was bad enough! Music of the quality found on "More"
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deserves far better than the unimaginative insert found on this CD.
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The disc is also poorly mastered, hiss being particularly bad on
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some of the quieter pieces.
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UMMAGUMMA
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(Performance: 10/CD Sound Quality: 7)
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Apparently this double disc--an obligatory purchase for all
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hipsters on its release in 1969--isn't too highly regarded by the
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Floyd themselves these days ("Ummagumma-- what a disaster!", Roger
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Waters is said to have remarked); but it's one of the most
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adventurous mainstream rock ventures of all time, and certainly the
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Floyd's best stab at being avant-garde.
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As with the original LP, the CD set is divided into two discs.
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The first contains the live album of four old favourites, recorded
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at favoured Floyd venues of the time (June 1969) like Mothers Club
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in Birmingham and the Manchester Institute of Technology. The
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sparkling version of "Astronomy Domine" and a chilling "Careful
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With That Axe, Eugene" are particularly outstanding, and helped
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cement the Floyd's status as cult superstars.
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The studio disc, where each group member was given half a
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vinyl side to experiment with, causes latter-day listeners more
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problems, but the overall impression is one of a spirit of
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adventure and optimism--qualities conspicuously absent in the
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group's later works.
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The CD release of "Ummagumma" in March 1987 was something of
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a disappointment, particularly the packaging, which is worthy of
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a bootleg. The famous shot of two roadies posing with the group's
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equipment on a runway is missing and, interestingly enough, Roger
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Waters' first wife Judy Trim is missing from the spread of group
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photos. The sound quality isn't too hot either, with tape hiss and
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distortion being particularly noticeable on some sections of the
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live album and also on Dave Gilmour's studio opus "The Narrow Way".
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ATOM HEART MOTHER
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(Performance: 4/CD Sound Quality: 8)
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Although it was Pink Floyd's first No. 1 record, "Atom Heart
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Mother" is in retrospect their worst-ever album. "Rolling Stone"
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summed it up best with the concluding statement of its "Atom Heart"
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review: "Try freaking out again, Pink Floyd!"
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The side-long title track, their most ambitious piece of work
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so far, speaks volumes about the pretensions of the time; it's also
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a strange affair, being little more than a dutiful trudge through
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the group's book of musical styles (except, obviously, for Syd's
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pure psychedelic pop obviously) embellished with horns and a choir.
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Only Ron Geesin's sprightly contributions save it from total
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tedium. Side Two is if anything even worse, containing as it does
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Wright's ghastly "Summer '68", Waters' cloying "If" and the
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throwaway (if initially amusing) "Alan's Psychedelic Breakfast",
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whose sound effects constitute the most interesting thing on the
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entire record.
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The thing most people remember "Atom Heart" for these days is
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its spectacular cover, featuring nothing but cows; however, this
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loses its impact when reduced to a flimsy 5" booklet covered in
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inappropriate red graphics. The audio quality, on the other hand,
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is a great improvement on the compressed, muffled sound of the
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original LP.
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MEDDLE
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(Performance: 8/CD Sound Quality: 9)
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"Meddle", despite being an extremely patchy record (lowlights
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include the pointless cocktail jazz of "San Tropez", the limp
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acoustic whimsy of "Pillow Of Winds" and the throwaway "Seamus"),
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contains two extremely important songs in the Pink Floyd story.
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One, the powerful, spacey "One Of These Days I'm Going To Cut You
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Into Little Pieces", marked a welcome return to simplicity; while
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the other, the side-long "Echoes", saw the Floyd succeeding where
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"Atom Heart Mother" failed.
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On this track they managed to dispense with additional
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musicians and became, in effect a four-piece orchestra. The song
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marked the first real appearance of the lush, symphonic sound that
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was such an obvious feature of their music from then on. "Echoes"
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was the finest thing they'd recorded since Syd left, and featured
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Dave Gilmour's first significant contributions to the group's
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sound. In the future, Roger Waters may have dominated the group
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conceptually and lyrically, but from "Echoes" on, it was Dave's
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guitar playing which defined the Floyd musically.
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"Meddle" was one of the earliest Floyd CDs to appear. Its
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sound quality is excellent (slight traces of hiss at the beginning
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of "Echoes" being the only noticeable flaw), but for some reason,
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the original artwork has been tinted blue.
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OBSCURED BY CLOUDS
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(Performance: 6/CD Sound Quality: 7)
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Like "More" three years earlier, "Obscured By Clouds" was a
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film soundtrack which saw the group eschewing their usual approach.
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However, while "More" was refreshing in its simplicity, "Obscured"
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seemed self-conscious.
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As a result, the "rocky" numbers like 'The Gold It's In The
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. . ." sound forced, while the ballads are just embarrassingly
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twee. Only the drone of the title track, Gilmour's grinding
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"Childhood's End" and Waters' deliciously cynical "Free Four" are
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worthy of real attention. To make matters worse, the packaging is
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very shoddy; and sloppy mastering only emphasises what is already
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a rather second rate and primitive (by Floydian standards)
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recording.
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DARK SIDE OF THE MOON
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(Performance: 9/CD Sound Quality: 9)
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It seems rather appropriate that "Dark Side" was EMI's first
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rock CD release. If there was a prime candidate for the new digital
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medium, then this was it. Inevitably, the release of "Dark Side"
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on CD helped give the album a new lease of life. Its success was
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80 great--legend has it that there was an EMI factory which did
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nothing but churn out "Dark Side" CDs--that it enabled the album's
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U.S. chart run to top 730 weeks.
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The sound quality is predictably good-- although a good vinyl
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pressing (such as a Japanese Toshiba/EMI Pro-Use Series or a U.S.
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Mobile Fidelity Half-Speed-Mastered Recording) sounds far better
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on a decent turntable. As a side note, it is rumoured that initial
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U.K CDs were mastered not from the original tapes, but from second-
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generation copies. The story among Floyd buffs is that Dave Gilmour
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discovered this and ordered a shame-faced EMI to rectify this
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situation straight away. It is possible, therefore, that there may
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be some difference between early versions of the CD and later
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pressings--although there is no way of confirming the difference
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except by listening to them, as to all intents and purposes they
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are outwardly the same. Certainly the packaging--which manages to
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reproduce most of the original LP sleeve and accompanying
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posters--does not mention this at all.
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At this point, it may be worth relating the history of early
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Floyd CDs in this country. In the early 1980s, when the compact
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disc first appeared, the discs themselves were all imported from
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Japan, which was at that time the only country with the facilities
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to manufacture the new format. Initial British issues of "Dark
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Side", "Wish You Were Here", "Meddle", "Animals", "The Wall" and
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"The Final Cut" had "Made in Japan" on the discs themselves, while
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the inserts stated the country of origin as the U.K.
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These early discs--which are said to be superior to standard
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U.K./U.S. issues--can easily be distinguished because they have an
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all-black label side with silver lettering. These Japanese-
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manufactured CDs are now highly prized by hardcore collectors, both
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for their vastly superior sound quality and for their rarity.
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Expect to pay around 20 or so for copies.
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WISH YOU WERE HERE
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(Performance: 9/CD Sound Quality: 9)
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At the time of its release, "Wish You Were Here" received
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markedly mixed reviews: after the success of "Dark Side", many
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thought it was a distinct anti-climax. However, it has aged very
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well. The lush strains of the album's centrepiece, "Shine On You
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Crazy Diamond", found a new audience in the late '80s among new
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agers and ambient house freaks; while the title track--perhaps the
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Floyd's most melodic song since the days of Syd Barrett--remains
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perennially popular.
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EMI did an excellent job in transferring "Wish" to the digital
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medium. Hipgnosis' lavish packaging (which Floyd buffs regarded as
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being as important to the overall product as the music itself)
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survives intact, although once again it loses some of its impact
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by being reduced in size.
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The sound quality is also very good, although some of the more
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obsessive fans complain that the nine parts of "Shine On" can't be
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accessed individually. Like its predecessor, "Wish You Were Here"
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on CD has one distinct advantage over its vinyl counterpart: the
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listener doesn't have to turn the record over. This means that the
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songs flow together as one seamless piece of music. As well as
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being linked by common themes, the Floyd's quintet of albums from
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"Dark Side" to "The Final Cut" also showcased their (or more
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accurately, Waters') fondness for repeating musical motifs over the
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length of an album as if it were one composition.
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ANIMALS
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(Performance: 10/CD Sound Quality: 8)
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Of all the Floyd's mega-selling 70s albums "Animals" is
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perhaps the best. Although it only contained three very long tracks
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bookended by the brief acoustic love songs "Pigs On The Wing" Parts
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1 and 2, it didn't sound altogether out of place in 1977, the year
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of punk.
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This is because it contained the group's most strident music
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to date and expressed a worldview that was both self-laceratingly
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ironic and (superficially, at least) nihilistic. Despite containing
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music that was very much harder than that found on any previous
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Floyd record, "Animals" notched up impressive sales.
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Not surprisingly, then, it became one of the earliest Floyd
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CD releases. Storm Thorgerson's famous image of Battersea Power
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Station made it onto the sleeve, and once again there were no
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complaints about the overall package. The sound quality was
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disappointing, being slightly "woolly", but once again the
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impression of listening to one complete piece of music was conveyed
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well by the digital medium.
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THE WALL
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(Performance: 6/CD Sound Quality: 8)
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It would be a great pity if in years to come, Pink Floyd were
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best remembered for this sprawling double set, but sadly, it looks
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as if this will be the case. Not only does "The Wall" contain the
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least interesting, most reactionary music ever committed to a PF
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record (the bloated pomp-rock parody "In The Flesh?" sets the
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scene) but it suffers from fuzzy thematic development. Waters'
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efforts to cram just about every conceivable Big Theme into 26
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songs is initially dazzling, but eventually tiring. Slight
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statements on "major themes" are overwhelmed by a combination of
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musical bombast and overweening self-pity. In the end, it's
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impossible to respond to Waters' ideas because you end up just not
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caring very much.
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"The Wall" is hugely impressive as a construction job, and
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there are some excellent songs lurking in the morass (notably
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"Comfortably Numb" and the sparkling cock-rock parody "Young
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Lust"), but eventually one must conclude that, as in the case of
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"Atom Heart Mother", the sound effects are the most
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interesting--and profound--aspect of the record.
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Although "The Wall" is rumoured to be the biggest-selling
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double CD set of all time (over 750,000 in the U.K. alone), it's
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worth mentioning that Japanese or good quality U.K. vinyl pressings
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beat the CD hands down. This is a pity: for all its other faults,
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"The Wall" is an excellent recording. On CD, however, most of the
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punch and dynamics are lost, and "The Happiest Days Of Our Lives"
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has been incorrectly programmed so that it is impossible to access
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it individually from the beginning.
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A COLLECTION OF GREAT DANCE SONGS
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(Performance: 9/CD Sound Quality: 9)
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EMI issued this curious collection in 1981, but it wasn't
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until 1990 that it finally made its way onto CD, as a mid-price
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release. Despite being a rather unsatisfactory introduction to the
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work of Pink Floyd (EMI probably only conjured it up in the first
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place to cash in on the massive success of "The Wall"), it
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nevertheless offers the collector some interesting rarities. For
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a start, there's a rerecorded version of "Money" (recorded entirely
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by Dave in his home studio, with Dick Parry on sax); the take of
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"Another Brick In The Wall Part 2" manages to combine the single
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version beginning with the ending of the album cut; and "Shine On
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You Crazy Diamond" features a selection from parts 1, 2, 4 and 7.
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The sound quality is excellent, and the original packaging has
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remained intact, but "A Collection Of Great Dance Songs" is a
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rather superfluous release, notwithstanding the quality of the
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songs themselves. A far more useful idea would have been a
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collection of Floydian singles: not one of the group's early
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classic 45s is available on CD in the U.K. "Arnold", "Emily",
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"Paintbox", "Julia Dream" and "Careful With That Axe, Eugene" can
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be obtained on import; which leaves all-time greats such as "Apples
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And Oranges", "Candy And A Currant Bun" and "Point Me At The Sky"
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completely unavailable anywhere (Floyd's first post-Barrett single,
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"It Would Be So Nice", doesn't count -- it's so awful that it to
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enshrine it on CD would only add to the embarrassment of band and
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fans alike. In my opinion, some things are best left alone.) Even
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a straight CD release of "Relics" would offer a greater selection
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of rarities.
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THE FINAL CUT
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(Performance: 8/CD Sound Quality: 9)
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"The Final Cut" is perhaps the most controversial Pink Floyd
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LP of all. By this time, Rick Wright had left the fold, Gilmour and
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Mason were reduced to the status of mere session men, and Waters'
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domination of the group reached its height.
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This may account for its low status among fans, though a
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minority acclaim it as one of the group's best ever records. It's
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certainly rather low on melody but it does contain some of Waters'
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best lyric writing and some of Floyd's most strident music. By
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sticking to one basic theme--the betrayal of the post-1945
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socialist dream by the Thatcher government--Waters was able to
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write far more incisively than he had done on "The Wall". A couple
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of the songs, "The Final Cut" and "The Gunner's Dream", are among
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the least Floydian the group ever committed to vinyl, but are
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nevertheless examples of Waters' writing at its very best. As might
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be expected, the sound quality is state-of-the-art (it was one of
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the first Floyd albums to appear on the fledgling digital format),
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and the LP packaging has been retained in its entirety. Curiously,
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however, the second part of "The Hero's Return" (which appeared as
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the B-side of the accompanying single "Not Now John") was left off;
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another example of the record company not making full use of the
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extended playing time offered by the CD medium.
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A MOMENTARY LAPSE OF REASON
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(Performance: 6/CD Sound Quality: 10)
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Following a four-year hiatus that saw Roger Waters leave Pink
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Floyd, Dave Gilmour and Nick Mason (with a little help from the re-
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instated Rick Wright) returned to the charts with "AMLOR",
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acclaimed by some fans as the most 'musical' record the group had
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made in years.
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It was also the first Floyd LP to be simultaneously released
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on CD, and the group took full advantage of the advances in
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recording techniques and presentation that had taken place during
|
||
their absence. "AMLOR" sounds superb--Gilmour and Bob Ezrin
|
||
produced the album magnificently--but sadly, there's little
|
||
substance to the sounds. Save for the epic, grinding "Sorrow", the
|
||
atmospheric "Signs Of Life", and some predictably fine guitar work
|
||
from Gilmour, "AMLOR" could best be described as "turgid", the low
|
||
spot being the trite, bombastic "Dogs Of War" (which has twice
|
||
topped a poll of worst-ever Pink Floyd tracks in the Floydzine "The
|
||
Amazing Pudding").
|
||
|
||
Apart from their state-of-the-art production sheen, the post-
|
||
Waters Floyd sounded completely out of tune with the times (though
|
||
to be fair, this may be why fans lapped it up). The packaging, a
|
||
magnificent spread of beached beds designed by ex-Hipgnosis man
|
||
Storm Thorgerson, was equally anachronistic, but it successfully
|
||
recreated the airbrushed surrealism which had graced the sleeves
|
||
of Floyd's classic 70s albums. Since Hipgnosis's sleeves defined
|
||
the group in the 1970s almost as much as albums like "Dark Side"
|
||
and "Wish", their work complemented the retro qualities of "AMLOR"
|
||
perfectly. The CD booklet was actually more impressive than the LP
|
||
sleeve, featuring extra David Bailey portraits of Nick and Dave.
|
||
|
||
DELICATE SOUND OF THUNDER
|
||
(Performance: 7/CD Sound Quality 9)
|
||
As a souvenir of Pink Floyd's marathon 1987-88 tour, "DSOT"
|
||
is rather unsatisfactory. The media tended to focus on the fact
|
||
that the tour was the biggest ever mounted, with gate receipts to
|
||
match, but beneath the technology and bluster, some of the old Pink
|
||
magic shone though. Unfortunately, this isn't evident on this live
|
||
album, which is rather lacking in atmosphere. This may be due to
|
||
a number of factors, including the crystal-clear but sterile
|
||
recording (what happened to the audience? Or the concert hall
|
||
ambience?) and the fact that it was recorded right at the end of
|
||
the tour, in August 1988 at Nassau Coliseum.
|
||
|
||
The good news, however, is that most of the "Momentary Lapse"
|
||
tracks--with the inevitable exception of "Dogs Of War"--sound a
|
||
good deal more sprightly here than they did on the originals. It's
|
||
on the versions of Floyd oldies that the album falls down: "One Of
|
||
These Days", in particular, has had all the life beaten out of it,
|
||
and only superb versions of "Shine On" and ~Comfortably Numb"
|
||
really hit home.
|
||
|
||
The packaging is excellent, featuring a lavish thick booklet
|
||
with a fine spread of photos from the tour. Although "DSOT" on CD
|
||
contains an extra track, "Us And Them" not on the LP version, it
|
||
is once again to be regretted that the Floyd and EMI chose not to
|
||
take full advantage of the extra time offered by compact disc:
|
||
"Welcome To The Machine", "One Slip", "The Great Gig In The Sky"
|
||
or even "Echoes" (which was performed at the very beginning of the
|
||
tour back in 1987) would have been welcome additions.
|
||
|
||
CD SINGLES
|
||
|
||
In 1987, the Floyd briefly struck a note with trivia buffs
|
||
with the release of "Learning To Fly", claimed as the world's first
|
||
CD-only single! Whether or not this was true (a number of vinyl
|
||
singles were also released), the CD single also served as a taster
|
||
for the forthcoming post-Waters Floyd album. It wasn't a
|
||
particularly reassuring greeting, but the single is well worth
|
||
obtaining, because it contains three otherwise unavailable versions
|
||
of "AMLOR" songs: edited takes of "One Slip" and "Learning To Fly"
|
||
and a "DYOL" version of"Terminal Frost". "DYOL", incidentally,
|
||
stands for "Do Your Own Lead", and the mix featured some missing
|
||
guitar parts, the idea being for musically-minded listeners to play
|
||
along and do their own Gilmour impersonation!
|
||
|
||
A few months later, in December 1987, a second single was
|
||
taken from "AMLOR". As well as being issued in 7" and 12", it was
|
||
also released in the by-then customary CD format. Unlike the
|
||
"Learning To Fly" CD--which was packaged in a simple cardboard
|
||
sleeve-- this came in a jewel box.
|
||
|
||
The lead song was the dull anthem "On The Turning Away", but
|
||
it was once again accompanied by two otherwise unavailable
|
||
tracks--live versions of "On The Turning..." and an excellent "Run
|
||
Like Hell", both recorded at the Omni in Atlanta, Georgia on
|
||
November 5 1987.
|
||
|
||
This concert was also the source for one of the tracks on the
|
||
Floyd's third CD single released in June 1988, not long before the
|
||
group's tour arrived in the U.K. The cut in question was "The Dogs
|
||
Of War" (also unavailable elsewhere), and the lead track was the
|
||
full album version of "One Slip". "Terminal Frost" was the third
|
||
song. All three CD singles are bound to rise in value in the
|
||
future, and are already becoming quite scarce.
|
||
|
||
COMPILATIONS
|
||
|
||
Most compilations featuring Pink Floyd aren't particularly
|
||
worth bothering with-- they all seem to feature "Another Brick In
|
||
The Wall Part II"--and the releases themselves tend to be mass-
|
||
marketed and aren't particularly collectable. "Knebworth--The
|
||
Album" contains live versions of "Comfortably Numb" and "Run Like
|
||
Hell" (Performance: 8/CD Sound Quality: 7), but these were recorded
|
||
in such a way that all the life was knocked out of them.
|
||
|
||
There are, however, two U.K. compilations that feature
|
||
otherwise unavailable material --which does make them essential for
|
||
Floyd buffs. "Zabriskie Point" features three Floyd tracks which
|
||
were recorded in Rome in December 1969 for Michaelangelo
|
||
Antonioni's film of the same name. Originally Pink Floyd had been
|
||
asked to score the entire film, but most of their material failed
|
||
to impress Antonioni, who in the end decided he'd rather have a
|
||
selection of U.S. artists for his tale of an American nightmare.
|
||
|
||
The Floyd's three tracks (Performance: 7/CD Sound Quality: 7)
|
||
are a strange mixture: "Crumbling Land" is an attempt at a C&W
|
||
sound, which, as Dave Gilmour himself pointed out, Antonioni could
|
||
have gotten any number of American groups to do ten times better;
|
||
"Heart Beat, Pig Meat" is an engaging piece of musique concrete;
|
||
and "Come In No. 51" is a fiery reworking of "Careful With That
|
||
Axe, Eugene" which was used to brilliant effect as an accompaniment
|
||
to the film's final apocalyptic scene.
|
||
|
||
As an interesting sideline, at least four tracks were left
|
||
over from the "Zabriskie" sessions, all of which have made their
|
||
way onto bootleg in one form or another. These include "Oneone",
|
||
"Fingal's Cave", "Rain In The Country" and "The Violent Sequence",
|
||
which of course later became "Us And Them" on "Dark Side".
|
||
|
||
The second compilation is "Tonite Let's All Make Love In
|
||
London", the soundtrack to Peter Whitehead's famous Swinging London
|
||
documentary, which first appeared in 1968 on Andrew Loog Oldham's
|
||
short-lived Instant label. It quickly gained a reputation among
|
||
Floyd collectors, because it featured snippets of the group's
|
||
legendary version of "Interstellar Overdrive" recorded with Joe
|
||
Boyd at the same time as "Arnold Layne" and "Candy And A Currant
|
||
Bun".
|
||
|
||
After over 20 years as a mega-rarity, See For Miles re-
|
||
released the album in 1990, but with an added bonus which made fans
|
||
drool. This time there were two tracks from this famous session
|
||
present (Performance: 10/CD Sound Quality: 7): the full 17-minute
|
||
version of "Interstellar Overdrive" and a previously unreleased
|
||
track, the 12-minute "Nick's Boogie". Controversy actually
|
||
surrounds the latter--some sources claim it comes from the
|
||
"Arnold"/"Candy"/"Interstellar" recording sessions in February
|
||
1967, while others are more inclined to date the piece from 1968,
|
||
after Barrett had been replaced by Dave Gilmour. Because Dave and
|
||
Syd's styles were so similar at this time (Gilmour has admitted
|
||
that he deliberately tried to "play like Syd" for his first few
|
||
months in the group), it's difficult to know who is right. The book
|
||
by the Floyd's resident archivist, Nick Mason--if and when it
|
||
appears--may be able to shed some light on the matter.
|
||
|
||
Many fans rate these two recordings as the best thing the
|
||
group have ever done; whatever their origin, both show the Floyd
|
||
in their full glory, playing with real experimental vigour. And as
|
||
a document of Syd's Pink Floyd at their height, "Tonite . . ."
|
||
cannot be recommended too highly (See For Miles' excellent
|
||
packaging, with its extensive sleeve notes and rare photos, also
|
||
deserves praise). Moreover the appearance of "Nick's Boogie" has
|
||
increased speculation (and heightened hopes) among Floyd buffs that
|
||
more unissued, unheard material languishes in the vaults-- and that
|
||
it too may see the light of day.
|
||
|
||
PROMOS
|
||
|
||
Currently, there is only one U.K. promotional CD in
|
||
circulation: a "Delicate Sound Of Thunder" disc which contains
|
||
"Wish You Were Here", "Learning To Fly" and "Run Like Hell" all
|
||
taken from the live album. The 'label' is a rather lurid shade of
|
||
pink, and the disc comes in a plain jewel case. Current asking
|
||
price is around 20. EMI distributed this to coincide with the
|
||
Floyd's 1989 batch of European dates.
|
||
|
||
UNOFFICIAL RELEASES
|
||
|
||
There are also a number of semi-official items around,
|
||
including three interview discs which are only of interest to
|
||
fanatical completists. Two are vaguely interesting, but are of poor
|
||
quality, but the third, a Nick Mason interview packaged in an
|
||
attractive LP-sized box, lasts only 12 minutes and can best be
|
||
described as a rip-off.
|
||
|
||
There are also at least 70 CD bootlegs doing the rounds. Most
|
||
of these are expensive and of poor quality, being dubbed from vinyl
|
||
or multi-generation tapes, and should thus be approached with
|
||
extreme caution. There are a few titles which could be recommended,
|
||
however, both for their quality and the performance. These include:
|
||
"Black Holes In the Sky" "Staying Home To Watch The Rain", "In The
|
||
Flesh", "Brain Damage", "The Best Of Tour 72", "The Heart Of The
|
||
Sun" and "Ultra Rare Trax Volumes 1-3".
|
||
|
||
SOLO RELEASES
|
||
|
||
Syd Barrett's career after he left the Floyd was covered in detail
|
||
back in RC 104; while the solo activities of Messrs Waters, Wright,
|
||
Mason and Gilmour were profiled in RC 132. Interested parties
|
||
should refer back to those issues for further information.
|
||
|
||
In fact, with the exceptions of Roger Waters and Syd Barrett,
|
||
most Floydian solo material remains unavailable on CD, at least in
|
||
the U.K.. The relatively poor sales of the I original albums may
|
||
have something to do with this. Only Gilmour's lacklustre second
|
||
solo outing "About Face" has been issued over here on CD
|
||
(Performance: 5/CD Sound Quality: 9). Nothing from Mason or Wright
|
||
has so far appeared.
|
||
|
||
Both Barrett and Waters have been more I fortunate and have
|
||
had their entire solo L output converted to CD. In fact, Waters'
|
||
second solo album, the tuneless "The Pros And Cons Of Hitch-
|
||
Hiking", was one of EMI's earliest-ever CDs (Performance: 4/CD
|
||
Sound Quality: 9).
|
||
|
||
It was followed in 1986 by his soundtrack to the cartoon film
|
||
"When The Wind Blows" (Performance: 7/CD Sound Quality: 8), and
|
||
then by his best solo work, "Radio K.A.O.S." (Performance: 8/CD
|
||
Sound Quality: 10). "K.A.O.S." was accompanied by two CD singles,
|
||
"Radio Waves" (one of the earliest examples of the format, and,
|
||
these days, very elusive, hence its price tag of 15+) and "The
|
||
Tide Is Turning". In 1989, EMI issued his low-key 1970
|
||
collaboration with Ron Geesin, "Music From The Body" (Performance:
|
||
8/CD Sound Quality: 7) as a mid-price CD.
|
||
|
||
Syd Barrett's reputation ensured that it wasn't too long
|
||
before EMI released his solo recordings, despite their somewhat
|
||
limited commercial appeal. "The Madcap Laughs" (Performance: 10/CD
|
||
Sound Quality: 7) and "Barrett" (Performance: 8/CD Sound Quality:
|
||
7) are both available on mid-price. In 1988 the excellent "Opel"
|
||
album appeared. This collected out-takes and unreleased tracks from
|
||
Syd's sessions during the period 1968-1970 (Performance: 10/CD
|
||
Sound Quality: 8). Strange Fruit Records unearthed Syd's excellent
|
||
1970 Peel session on CD, also in 1988.
|
||
|
||
Finally, there was of course Roger Waters' "Wall" extravaganza
|
||
in Berlin last year. This was marketed as an all-star live album
|
||
(Performance: 5/CD Sound Quality: 10), accompanied by two singles,
|
||
"Another Brick In The Wall Part 2" and "The Tide Is Turning". The
|
||
latter was withdrawn almost as soon as it reached the shops,
|
||
ensuring its instant collectability. Already difficult to find, it
|
||
currently commands a price of 10.
|
||
|
||
More valuable still is the sole U.K. promo from the event,
|
||
"Pieces From The Wall", which contains edited versions of "Another
|
||
Brick 2" and "Young Lust" alongside "In The Flesh" and "Run Like
|
||
Hell". This has become quite hard to track down recently, and is
|
||
now valued at over 15.
|
||
|
||
Many thanks to Andy Mabbett of the specialist Pink Floyd
|
||
Magazine "The Amazing Pudding" for his help in the writing of this
|
||
article. TAP can be contacted via Andy at 61 Meynell House, Browns
|
||
Green, Birmingham B20 1BE.
|
||
|