Originally posted to Echoes on Wed, 27may98

From The "All Music Guide to Rock", Miller Freeman Books, 1995

PINK FLOYD (Group, Art-rock/Progressive-Rock, Psychedelic) Practically from its inception in 1965, Pink Floyd was on the cutting edge of psychedelic rock experimentalism, utilizing feedback, sound effects, light shows, unorthodox lyrical themes, and spacey productions.

It was band member Syd Barrett (b. Jan. 6, 1946) who gave the band its moniker, inspired by Georgia bluesmen Pink Anderson and Floyd Council. Barrett's trippy songwriting on their debut album, "The Piper at the Gates of Dawn" (UK #6), set the band even further apart from most bands of the time. Barrett, however, left the band due to psychological deterioration encouraged by drug abuse, leaving bassist Roger Waters (b. Sep. 9, 1944) to take over the primary songwriting duties.

The band's sonic explorations achieved focus with 1973's seamless The Dark Side of the Moon (#1), an album that placed them firmly in the big time. Follow-up albums Wish You Were Here (#1), Animals (#3), The Wall (#1) and The Final Cut (#6) enjoyed phenomenal success.

Waters revealed an increasingly vitriolic spirit in his conceptual themes as he addressed the breakdown of individual dignity in the face of perceived Orwellian post-World War II social order.

It should be said that guitarist David Gilmour's (b. Mar. 6, 1946) soaring guitar work and songwriting contributions on The Wall's Comfortably Numb gave him a high profile in the band. After The Final Cut, Waters and the band acrimoniously split up in 1983, leaving them to pursue various solo efforts, with moderate success.

Gilmour reformed Pink Floyd in 1987 with drummer Nick Mason (b. Jan. 27, 1945) and keyboardist Rick Wright (b. Jul. 28, 1945), releasing A Momentary Lapse of Reason (#3), which sparked a flurry of lawsuits between Waters and the band over the ownership of the name. While the album lacks the thematic bite of Waters's input, the band's sound is intact, helping the album become a world-wide hit. The new Pink Floyd's success continued in 1994, when The Division Bell topped the charts upon its release. -- Rick Clark


 THE PIPER AT THE GATES OF DAWN / Aug. 5, 1967 / Capitol ***** The
 	debut album combines long, group-written, largely instrumental
 	compositions with shorter, whimsical, eclectic pop songs written
 	by lead singer and guitarist Syd Barrett (his only full-length album
 	appearance with the group). A wonderful evocation of the distinctly
 	British take on '60s psychedelic music. (NOTE: Avoid the out-of-
 	print LP version "Pink Floyd," Tower 5093, which alters the
 	original UK album). -- William Ruhlmann
 
 TONIGHT LET'S ALL MAKE LOVE IN LONDON / 1968 / CBS *** Peter
 	Whitehead's 1967 film "Tonight Let's All Make Love in London"
 	was an attempt to document the mid-'60s Swinging London pop
 	scene at its peak. The soundtrack was an instant collector's
 	item, divided between interview snippets with such scenemakers
 	as Michael Caine, David Hockney, Julie Christie, and Mick
 	Jagger, and marginal incidental music by unmemorable pop
 	acts produced by Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham
 	(Vashti and Twice As Much). The Small Faces' contribution,
 	'Here Comes the Nice,' is easily available elsewhere. Allen
 	Ginsberg (misspelled "Alan" on the original sleeve) reads the
 	poem that gave the film its own name. The chief attraction of this
 	CD reissue is the addition of two lengthy, otherwise unavailable
 	cuts by the original Pink Floyd lineup in 1967 (mere snippets
 	had appeared on the original LP). Their 16-minute version of
 	'Interstellar Overdrive' (recorded for their first LP) starts off
 	scintillatingly, then degenerates into a rather aimless jam. The
 	12-minute 'Nick's Boogie,' not available in any other version, is a
 	considerably more aimless, free-form instrumental piece
 	dominated by scraping guitars. Even in its expanded CD reissue,
 	this album will only appeal to hard-core collectors. -- Richie
 	Unterberger
 
 THE (sic) SAUCERFUL OF SECRETS / June 29, 1968 / Capitol *** A
 	transitional album on which the band moved from Barrett's
 	relatively concise and vivid singles to spacey, ethereal material
 	with lengthy instrumental passages. Barrett's influence is still
 	felt (he actually did manage to contribute one track, the jovial
 	'Jugland Blues'), and much of the material retains a gentle,
 	fairy-tale ambience. 'Remember a Day' and 'See Saw' are
 	highlights; on 'Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun,' 'Let
 	There Be More Light,' and the lengthy instrumental title track,
 	the band begin to map out the dark and repetitive pulses that
 	would characterize their next few records. -- Richie Unterberger
 

 MORE / July 1969 / Capitol ** Commissioned as a soundtrack to the
 	seldom-seen French hippie movie of the same name, "More"
 	was a Floyd album in its own right, reaching the Top 10 in
 	Britain. The group's atmospheric music was a natural for the
 	movies, but when assembled for record, these pieces were
 	unavoidably a bit patchwork, ranging from folksy ballads to
 	fierce electronic instrumentals to incidental mood music.
 	Several of the tracks are pleasantly inconsequential, but this
 	record does include some strong compositions, especially
 	'Cymbaline,' 'Green is the Colour,' and 'The Nile Song.' All of
 	these developed into stronger pieces in live performances, and
 	better, high-quality versions are available on numerous
 	bootlegs.	-- Richie Unterberger
 
 UMMAGUMMA - Nov. 1969 / Capitol *** A two-disc set containing a
 	definitive live set, the second, experimental contributions from
 	each of the band members. -- William Ruhlmann
 
 ATOM HEART MOTHER / Oct. 1970 / Capitol *** Pink Floyd started to
 	stretch out its long numbers here, with the orchestrated title
 	track taking up an entire side of the album. Still not as focused
 	as they would be, the group nevertheless was beginning to show
 	the musical ambition that would lead to their later successes.
 	-- William Ruhlmann
 
 RELICS / May 1971 / Barclay **** A singles collection from the Syd
 	Barrett era, containing the British hits 'Arnold Layne' and 'See
 	Emily Play,' among other psychedelic nuggets. -- William
 	Ruhlmann
 
 MEDDLE / Oct. 30, 1971 / Capitol **** With "Meddle," Pink Floyd
 	instrumentally arrived at an airy ensemble sound, which would
 	eventually find full flower on their 1973 classic "The Dark Side
 	of the Moon." This approach is particularly evident on 'Echoes,'
 	a periodically languorous jam that takes up one half of the album.
 	Nevertheless, there are enough sonic concepts and pleasant
 	melodies at work on this album to make it worthwhile to the
 	Floyd fan looking to dig deeper than "The Dark Side of the
 	Moon" and "The Wall." -- Rick Clark
 
 OBSCURED BY CLOUDS / June 1972 / Capitol ** Like 'More,' 'Obscured
 	by Clouds' was a soundtrack album Pink Floud threw together
 	quickly for a film by Barbet Schroeder. Songs like 'Free Four' 
 	show Roger Waters developing the songwriting skill that would
 	catapult Pink Floyd to mass stardom with its next release, "The
 	Dark Side of the Moon." -- William Ruhlmann
 
 DARK SIDE OF THE MOON (sic) / March 24, 1973 / Capitol ***** Pink
 	Floyd's instrumental prowess and mastery of sound effects, 
 	married for the first time to bassist Roger Waters' lyrics about
 	madness, 'Time,' 'Money,' and other concerns make for the most
 	impressive mood music of the decade (and sales of 25 million
 	copies so far). -- William Ruhlmann {28 million in 1998 - Wayne}
 
 WISH YOU WERE HERE / Sept. 12, 1975 / Columbia ***** A concept
 	album paying tribute to Syd Barrett ('Shine On You Crazy
 	Diamond') and lambasting the music industry ('Have a Cigar').
 	-- William Ruhlmann
 
 ANIMALS / Oct. 2, 1977 / Columbia *** Consisting of heavily reworked
 	songs that had long been a part of Pink Floyd's live repertoire
 	and were now given an Orwellian overview. "Animals" found
 	Pink Floyd acting as the mouthpiece for Roger Waters'
 	increasingly vitriolic takes on modern life. The result was one of
 	its less successful later efforts. -- William Ruhlmann
 
 THE WALL / Nov. 1979 / Columbia ***** This is Roger Waters' meditation
 	on the travails of a rock star, whose unhappy life causes him to
 	build a psychological barrier between himself and the rest of the
 	world. Contains the #1 hit 'Another Brick in the Wall (Pt.2)' and
 	the concert favorite 'Comfortably Numb,' (cowritten by David
 	Gilmour). -- William Ruhlmann
 
 COLLECTION OF GREAT DANCE SONGS (sic) / Nov. 1981 / Columbia
 	**  Anyone who knew anything about Pink Floyd knew that a
 	dance band they were not, so this profit-taking, holiday-season
 	compilation, courtesy of Columbia Records, was intended
 	ironically. Arguably the quintessential album band, Pink Floyd
 	is not well-served by compilations, especially one on which two
 	parts of 'Shine On You Crazy Diamond' are edited together and
 	there's a re-recording of 'Money.' Stick to the full-length versions.
 	-- William Ruhlmann
 
 WORKS / 1983 / Capitol ** Capitol records gets into the Pink Floyd
 	compilation game, but why bother when all you have in mind is
 	the same old tired tracks, plus one previously unreleased song
 	appropriately called 'Embryo'? -- William Ruhlmann
 
 THE FINAL CUT / April 1983 / Columbia *** A Roger Waters solo album
 	in all but name, containing the composer's response to Britain's
 	Falklands War in the form of a massive condemnation of war
 	and government. -- William Ruhlmann
 
 A MOMENTARY LAPSE OF REASON / 1987 / Columbia ** A David
 	Gilmour album in all but name, heavily featuring the kind of
 	atmospheric instrumental music and Gilmour guitar sound
 	typical of the Floyd before the now-departed Roger Waters
 	took over, but lacking Waters' unifying vision and lyrical ability.
 	-- William Ruhlmann
 
 DELICATE SOUND OF THUNDER (sic) / Jan. 2, 1988 / Columbia **
 	This live album documents their 1987-1988 world tour.
 	-- Rick Clark
 
 SHINE ON (Box Set) / Nov. 17, 1992 / Columbia **** A lavish and
 	expensive nine-CD box set of Pink Floyd's greatest hits -
 	which are all albums, naturally. Seven albums ('A Saucerful
 	of Secrets,' 'Meddle,' 'The Dark Side of the Moon,' 'Wish You
 	Were Here,' 'Animals,' 'The Wall,' and 'A Momentary Lapse
 	of Reason') have been digitally remastered; when the 8 discs
 	are set together on the shelf, their spines form the prism and
 	rainbow from the cover of 'The Dark Side of the Moon.' 'Shine
 	On' also includes an extra disc of early singles, housed in a
 	digi-pak, and a hardcover book with plenty of pictures and text.
 	Since there is no previously unreleased material included on
 	the set, the only incentive for hardcore fans who already own
 	the albums is the packaging and remastering, both of which
 	are impressive. 'Shine On' is certainly worth the investment for
 	those who don't already own the music. -- Stephen Thomas
 	Erlewine 
 
 THE DIVISION BELL / 1994 / Columbia ** The second post-Roger Waters
 	Pink Floyd album is less forced and more of a group effort than
 	"A Momentary Lapse of Reason" - keyboard player Rick Wright
 	is back to full band membership status and has co-writing
 	credits on five of the 11 songs, even getting lead vocals on
 	'Wearing the Inside Out.' Some of David Gilmour's lyrics (co-
 	written by Polly Sampson and Nick Laird-Clowes of the Dream
 	Academy) might be directed at Waters, notably 'Lost for Words'
 	and 'A Great Day for Freedom,' with its references to "the wall"
 	coming down, although the more specific subject is the Berlin
 	Wall and the fall of Communism. In any case, there is a
 	vindictive, accusatory tone to songs such as 'What Do You
 	Want From Me' and 'Poles Apart,' and the overarching theme,
 	from the album title to the graphics to the "I-you" pronouns in
 	most of the lyrics, has to do with dichotomies and distinctions,
 	with "I" always having the upper hand. Musically, Gilmour,
 	Nick Mason and Wright have largely turned back the clock to
 	the pre-'Dark Side of the Moon' Floyd, with slow tempos,
 	sustained keyboard chords and guitar solos with a lot of echo.
 	-- William Ruhlmann
 
 PULSE / 1995 / Columbia ** Pink Floyd claim they had no intentions of
 	recording another live album when they began 'The Division Bell'
 	tour, but performing 'The Dark Side of the Moon' in its entirety
 	convinced the group to release another double live set, called
 	'Pulse.' There's no question that the group is comprised of
 	talented musicians, including a number of studio professionals
 	that augmented the trio on tour. Whether they're inspired
 	musicians is up to debate. A large part of Pink Floyd's live
 	show is based on the always impressed visuals; on the
 	'Division Bell' tour, they closed each show with an unprecedented
 	laser extravaganza. In order for the visuals and the music to
 	coincide, the group needed to play the sets as tightly as possible,
 	with little improvisation. Consequently, an audio version of this
 	concert, separated from the visuals, is quite dull. Pink Floyd
 	play the greatest hits and the new songs professionally, yet the
 	versions differ only slightly from the original recordings, making
 	'Pulse' a tepid experience. (The first edition of the album featured
 	a blinking red light - a symbolic representation of the "pulse" - in
 	the spine of the disc and cassette). -- Stephen Thomas Erlewine
 
 DARK SIDE OF THE MOO / Bo*tleg **** Look at the title carefully; it's not
 	the Floyd _meisterwerk_, but a wittily titled (and packaged, with
 	"Atom Heart Mother"-like cows on the cover) bo*tleg of their rarest
 	studio tracks. Presented in 99-100% of their original fidelity,
 	these include some choice and necessary items that would cost
 	you quite a bit to assemble piece by piece. From the Syd Barrett
 	era, we have 'Candy and a Currant Bun,' the brilliant B-side to
 	their debut 'Arnold Layne' single, and 'Apples and Oranges,' the
 	legendary flop single from late 1967. Other late-'60s (post-Syd)
 	flop singles include the pleasant psychedelic ballads 'It Would
 	Be So Nice' and 'Point Me at the Sky.' A number of the other
 	tracks, including contributions to the "Zabriski Point" soundtrack,
 	the original studio version of 'Astronomy Domine' (cut off the
 	U.S. version of the first LP), and the different 'Interstellar Overdrive'
 	that showed up on the "Tonight Let's All Make Love in London"
 	soundtrack, have appeared on CD since the mid-'80s issue of
 	this bo*tleg. If you're not inclined to spend an additional $50 or
 	so tracking these down, it certainly makes sense to spring for
 	this, if you can find it. -- Richie Unterberger
 
 RHAPOSDY IN PINK (THE PSYCHEDELIC YEARS: The Incredible BBC
 	Recordings) / Bo*tleg **** Packaged under various titles, this is
 	*the* collection of material to hunt for if you're looking for
 	unreleased Floyd from the post-Barrett, pre-'Dark Side' era.
 	Bo*tleg fidelity doesn't come any better than this; it's one of the
 	very few occasions where you could argue that the sound may
 	actually be *better* than most official releases. These BBC
 	airshots from the late '60s and early '70s focus on rather obscure
 	material; 'Julia Dream, 'If,' 'Green is the Colour,' 'Embryo,' and the
 	never-released 'Muderistic Women' (a blueprint for 'Careful With
 	That Ax, Eugene.') There are also full-bore workouts of 'Echoes'
 	and 'Atom Heart Mother Suite' that, depending on one's taste,
 	could be argued to exceed the officially issued versions. The
 	double LP, still findable, contains about 85 minutes of music
 	and is a great value. -- Richie Unterberger
 
 SAUCERFUL OF OUTTAKES / Bo*tleg *** There is a huge demand for
 	Syd Barrett material, and, alas, a very limited supply. This is
 	probably the best compilation of unreleased Barrett-era Floyd,
 	through the material and sound quality are erratic. 'Lucy Leave'
 	and 'I'm a Kingbee' are the band's very first demos, showing a
 	much more R&B-oriented outfit, and the live version of
 	 'Astronomy Domine' is pretty good. The BBC sessions contain
 	a bunch of songs from the classic 'Piper at the Gates of Dawn'
 	album in muffled, hissy fidelity that is nonetheless an
 	improvement on many previous bo*tlegs. These included two
 	of the most coveted Barrett-Floyd treasures, the unreleased
 	songs 'Vegetable Man' and 'Scream Thy Last Scream,' chaotic
 	but fascinating pieces which illustrate Syd's decent into
 	madness more vividly than anything else he recorded with the
 	group. Be on the lookout, though, for much clearer studio
 	outtakes of these two songs	(perhaps recorded with the Floyd,
 	perhaps solo) that have appeared on bo*tlegs throughout the
 	years. -- Richie Unterberger

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