238 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
238 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Interview from Rock Compact Disc magazine, Issue 3, September 1992.
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Painstakingly transcribed by Martin Pitwood; typos probably mine.
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Dave Gilmour
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Dave Gilmour replaced Syd Barrett in Pink Floyd in 1968,
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and joined forces with Roger Waters to create one of the most
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successful songwriting teams in rock's history. Waters tried to
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officially dissolve the band in 1989, further fuelling rumours of
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terrible infighting and discontent in the ranks. Dave Gilmour
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hasn't forgotten how bad things became, nor has he forgiven Roger
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Waters.
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When you joined Pink Floyd you began transforming the sound
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from a very dense, late '60s English pop music into what we
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generally regard as _The_ Pink Floyd Sound.
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'The band felt we achieved something with the title track of
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A Saucerful of Secrets (1968). I can't say as I fully understood
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what was going on when it was being made, with Roger sitting
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around drawing little diagrams on bits of paper. But throughout
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the following period I tried to add what I knew of harmony and
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bring it slightly more mainstream, if you like. And the way they
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worked certainly educated me. We passed on all our individual
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desires, talents and knowledge to each other.'
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Was Roger an effective bassist back then?
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'He had developed his own limited, or very simple style. He
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was never very keen on improving himself as a bass player and
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half the time I would play bass on the records because I would
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tend to do it quicker. Right back to those early records; I mean,
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at least half the bass on all recorded output is me anyway.'
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This is not a widely acknowledged fact.
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'Well, I think it's been said, but it's certainly not something
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we go around advertising. Rog used to come in and say, "Thank
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you very much" to me once in a while for winning him bass-
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playing polls.
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Did you play the fretless bass on "Hey You"?
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'Yeah. Hmm. Roger playing fretless bass? Please! (laughs)'
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Do you think any of the aberrations in his lyrical ideas were an
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attempt to contrive the kind of madness Syd Barrett
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communicated?
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'I think there's something to that. How far you want to go I
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don't really know, but yes, I think there's certainly something to
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that.'
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Did you find any of the stranger lyrics hard to stomach?
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'No, very few. Once in a while I would find something
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uncomfortable to sing. The first lot Roger wrote for Dogs when it
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was called You Gotta Be Crazy, were just too many words to sing.
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But most of the ideas were ideas I felt good about, and
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encapsulated a lot of the thinking that I had as well. I often
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wished I had been able to express them as well as he did.'
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The potency of your creative relationship would lead an outsider
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to think that maybe his not wanting you to continue Pink Floyd
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was simply because he didn't want to see it exist without the
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Roger Waters/David Gilmour collaboration - not just because he
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thought it shouldn't go on without him. 'He didn't want it to
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continue with the Roger Waters/David Gilmour collaboration; he
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wanted it to continue with the Roger Waters-only writing force. He
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didn't want me to be part of it, which is why it got so difficult in
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the end. And the reason he didn't want us to carry on was
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because he wanted to go out as "Roger Waters of Pink Floyd" in
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rather large letters and purloin the name for himself.
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Yet looking at his solo records, he doesn't seem egomaniacal. He
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doesn't proselytise, he doesn't have any photos of himself on the
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sleeve. 'Hmm. He is an egomaniac, whatever particular way
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it wants to manifest itself.'
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But he eventually relented and let you be.
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'I think his lawyers advised him that he wasn't going to have
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any prayer of winning, and in the end we paid him off anyway. It
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was not a court case he had any chance of winning whatsoever. I
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mean, on what basis could someone leave something that had been
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successfully operating for a large number of years and then say
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the other people in it couldn't carry on?'
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Some would say the band's magic existed in the interplay, and
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that without Roger's input it'll be weaker.
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'Whether it's as good or to as many people's taste is besides
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the point. If they don't like it as much, they don't have to buy it.
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But no-one can tell me to stop doing it. I do my very, very best to
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make it as well as I can, to make the records and put on a show.
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I still fail to see why morally I should be persuaded to give up
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something I've given most of my adult life to, just 'cause one guy
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doesn't feel like doing it any more.'
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Except simply the fact that you could have both gone on to solo
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careers and left Pink Floyd, the creative dynamic between you, as
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a very pleasing piece of history.
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'Yeah, yeah, that's quite true; one could have done that. But
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why? Why would I want to do that? It's very, very hard work to
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struggle a solo career up to the level that Pink Floyd stands at.'
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But even so, wasn't the effort in putting on the last tour -
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travelling, fighting Roger's injunctions, worrying about re-
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acceptance - as draining as pushing on alone?
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'I didn't want to! I like the Pink Floyd very much. I don't
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want to get over-defensive about what I felt like doing, but it is
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what I do and I feel I should carry on doing it. And bring back
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into it the people who were pushed out. It would take a book to
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tell you what went on within our band, and Roger's later
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megalomaniac years, and precisely what psychologically he was
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attempting to do to all of us. Because he is a megalomaniac. He
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really is. His thirst for power is more important than anything
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else - more important than honesty, that's for certain.
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But he donated a lot of money to charity. And one symptom of
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megalomania is all-possessing greed.
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'Well, yeah. What money did he donate to charity?'
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The Berlin Wall proceeds.
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'You think that donated a lot of money to charity?'
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Certainly the TV rights, and the record sales, which were
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respectable, brought it in. It was a mammoth thing.
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'It was a mammoth thing from what I understand. And
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from what I understand, the costs of putting it on were absolutely
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enormous, and the receipts in were nothing like enormous, and the
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record didn't sell terribly well. TV rights were sold at the very last
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minute for very low money, because TV rights are not very easy
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to sell, I can tell you (chuckles). There's lots of stories about
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people not having been paid. Sorry, I don't want to get too heavily
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into that, but I suspect that the motivation for putting the Wall
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show on in Berlin was not charitable. I don't think that was
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Roger's motivation at all.'
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Have you been writing for a new Floyd record?
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'I've been writing a bit. I've spent more time in the studio
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fiddling around, but not really doing anything serious. Until it
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feels right. That last Pink Floyd project took a lot out of me. I
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haven't been in any great hurry to do it all again. I'm not a big
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workaholic. I've written quite a few things, but a lot is not
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complete which really requires me to sit down in a studio and
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start finding a direction and the desire to do it, which has been
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lacking in me. I'm beginning to feel it starting to trickle back.
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'The last tour was a very long, hard road and it took away
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my taste for it for a while. I've been busy flying airplanes and
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driving cars and enjoying those things. I'm 46, and being in Pink
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Floyd is not something I wish to take up all my waking hours or
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take up all my life.'
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Was it always all-consuming?
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'Yeah. Really, all the things we've done have been all-
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consuming affairs for a while, but have never been quite as high-
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pressure; it was hard to put the last one together because it was
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a lonelier task. I mean, I don't know what it was like for Roger
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because I'm not Roger, but he may have felt the same pressures
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doing things like The Wall. When Roger was writing The Wall, he
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had a band and experience, including my abilities, to help him
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achieve those things. Making this last one, it was very much me
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on my own. There was quite a lot of weight on my shoulders, as
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you would imagine.
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Now you've established that Pink Floyd can continue, will the
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approach differ from that of the past?
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'I don't see any change in the philosophy of where it comes
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from. The way of recording, the way we go through it, I suspect
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may change a bit. I'm very, very keen on doing it much more live,
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in-the-studio with people actually playing together. But when we
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get half a dozen people in the studio and playing together it does
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tend to start getting weighty and big. So I guess that's just the
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way I like it.
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'On the Momentary Lapse of Reason album (1987), Nick's
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belief in himself was pretty well gone, and Rick's belief in himself
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was totally gone. And they weren't up to making a record, to be
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quite honest about it.
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You mean the physical act of keeping time, or playing piano?
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'Yeah, I mean, Rick really just didn't believe he could play. You
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see, this is part of what 's been going on for years. Roger's very
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good at belittling people, and I think over the years he managed
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to convince Rick completely that he was useless and more or less
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convinced Nick of the same thing. And they both did not play a
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major part on that record. But we put a touring band together,
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and by halfway through the first leg of the tour, Nick was starting
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to believe in himself again. And by the time we did the live album
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at the end of the first year, they were both playing absolutely
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great, and the drumming on the live album is all straight Nick.
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And Rick's playing is great.'
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So on the new record you'll take a freer approach?
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'I don't know. You are putting words into my mouth there. I
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said I want to do it with a band playing in a studio; how much
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work it'll take before we get to that point, I don't know. Now that
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I've got Rick and Nick rehabilitated and playing as well as they've
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ever played, and I've got these good, younger characters to help fill
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it out and do stuff with me, we can go in with a sense of fun and
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still get to the end product.'
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Are you considering a concept record?
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'Concept, (hippie accent) a concept record. Umm. I'm
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considering all sorts of things, and that's one of the things under
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consideration, yes. I've got one, but I'm certainly not going to tell
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you about it (laughs). It's premature for any announcements.
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You envision another tour?
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'Yeah. I don't think I could handle another tour doing the
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same material. And having moved from a Pink Floyd that did
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basically the newest album on all our old tours to a sort of
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greatest-hits show last time, I couldn't do that same show. And we
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did pick all the numbers we liked - more than we felt justified in
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doing - that I had sung or had major involvements in.'
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Was it challenging setting Roger's lyrics to music? Did you work
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with him or bring together individual ideas?
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'Usually the music got written and the lyrics came afterwards.
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On Wish You Were Here, he wrote the song to the rhythm of the
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intro. We changed things until they started sounding nice. Dogs
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had so many words, I physically couldn't get them an in. (We) just
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cut out two-thirds of his words, to make it possible rather than
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impossible.
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'We had few big arguments or disagreements. We argued over
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Comfortably Numb like mad. Really had a big fight, went on for
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ages.
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Do you think your being the only vocalist in Pink Floyd works,
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and can work as a rule? A cynic could say that your highly
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processed vocals on A New Machine are an attempt to sound
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eccentric and shrill, perhaps like Waters at his more theatric,
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trying to create variety.
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'Would you say so? I don't know. I don't think so. I mean, I
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sang Money, that's fairly strident. I sang most of the early stuff
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on Meddle, Dark Side of the Moon, Wish You Were Here. It's
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never occurred to me to think about that. I think it's harder to sit
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through a whole album of Roger's voice than of mine. I always felt
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our two voices worked very well as counterpoints, but we don't
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have that option, so...'
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So things are unpatchable between the two of you?
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'Yeah. You could safely say that.'
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Review by Mat Resnicoff
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