Label: Pink Floyd Music Ltd. (Europe), 5054197181146
Style: Progressive Rock, Psychedelic Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 42:58
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 257 Mb
When
Pink Floyd first premiered what would become the most successful rock
album of all time, it was quite literally too big for the system to
handle. A half-hour into the band’s concert in Brighton on January 20,
1972-the live debut of what was then called “Eclipse: A Piece for
Assorted Lunatics”-the band started to play “Money,” which required
synchronizing their performance to a pre-recorded sound collage of
jingling coins and ka-ching-ing cash registers. But coupled with the
band’s power-sucking sound system and lighting rig, the show slowly
ground to a halt. After a brief break, bassist Roger Waters came to the
mic to explain: “Due to severe mechanical and electronic horror, we
can’t do any more of that bit, so we’ll do something else.” Less than a
month later, the band had to abandon a performance at the Manchester
Free Trade Hall when the same thing happened.
Over the prior
half-decade, Pink Floyd had established themselves as, if not the best
psychedelic rock band, then certainly the most technologically
extravagant. From late 1966 through the fabled Summer of Love, they were
the house band at the UFO, the Swinging London rock club/art space/drug
den, which gave them free rein to blend their droning jams with trippy
visuals, sound effects, fog machines, and extreme volume. That August,
Waters told Melody Maker that he wanted Pink Floyd to travel from city
to city with a circus-style big top. “We’ll have a huge screen 120 feet
wide and 40 feet high inside and project films and slides.”
His
prediction never came to be, but for an invite-only gig at Queen
Elizabeth Hall in May 1967, the band installed a joystick dubbed “The
Azimuth Co-ordinator” on top of Richard Wright’s keyboard to send the
band’s potent, droning sound and sci-fi effects careening around the
first-of-its-kind quadraphonic playback system in the venue. For the
back cover photo of the 1969 double album Ummagumma, drummer Nick Mason
arranged the band’s road gear to resemble an aircraft carrier, a concise
reversal of one philosopher’s claim that rock music is not much more
than “a misuse of military equipment.” Waters told Melody Maker that
Pink Floyd’s gear fixation was a matter of going where no band had gone.
“We’re trying to solve problems that haven’t existed before.”
(full version: pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/pink-floyd-the-dark-side-of-the-moon/)
01. Speak To Me (01:11)
02. Breathe (02:45)
03. On The Run (03:33)
04. Time (07:05)
05. The Great Gig In The Sky (04:44)
06. Money (06:22)
07. Us And Them (07:50)
08. Any Colour You Like (03:25)
09. Brain Damage (03:50)
10. Eclipse (02:08)

No comments:
Post a Comment