The fall of Pink Floyd |
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uduwudu
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 17 2007 Status: Offline Points: 2601 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 21:16 | ||||||
The Final Cut was the last concept album form PF. Diviosn Bell has some idea of communication but it's not a concept album as much as DSOTM to The Final Cut. One should consider Water's musical partners now Rick Wright was not around. Michael Kamen added so much texture to The Final Cut. It's an austere album but has a lot to it. Not pop music.
Interestingly I once read a comment criticisng Waters' work. Would any record company distribute or consumer purchase these records had they been by some unknown? A rhetorical question I thought. Probably some critic trying to make sense of Pro And Cons... PF only fell when their compilations hit the stores. Shine On is awful and missing so much; the rarities album should at least have been added to Relics which should have been paert of OBTW. The golden greats Echoes has (so I hear) a truncated Echoes - about 10 mins lost. |
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17512 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 20:24 | ||||||
Ohhh ... I get it ... if you like it because of Roger, then it is good ... and if you don't like it is ain't good ...
You do know that if the artist was me, or you, what we would say, right? ... I wouldn't want you to buy my work! And please leave off!
Pink Floyd was an "entity" ... not one person ... and I'm not sure that "The Wall" would have stood out as well as it did without David's guitar work, or Richard's excellent keyboards, and Roger's dedication to his own feelings to help make it what it became ... and there are many things in there that David has no problem singing or playing with.
What you want to say, is that the "entity" was not the same as the one that you thought you liked better ... but that doesn't make it the last "true" Pink Floyd album ... the ones that David did, also count ... not to you ... but to everyone ... and above all ... to the people involved, because you are denying them their life! Think about it!
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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paroxix
Forum Newbie Joined: September 06 2010 Status: Offline Points: 33 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 19:52 | ||||||
what i meant by that was the final cut was a good album and was the last good floyd album in my opinion (except the divison bell) so i liked it becuase of the war themes in it but a momentary laspe of reason wasn't so good but when roger waters left after the final cut it all went downhill so the final cut is the last true floyd album
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Music is the only safe kind of high-Jimi Hendrix
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uduwudu
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 17 2007 Status: Offline Points: 2601 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 19:37 | ||||||
When pop(ular) music ceases to bea consuner driven product (based on appealing to basic senses) then pop hand / or rock has progressed.
Prog rock does get treated as though it's pop (same mentality.) After all if a jazz musician leaves someone's band no one notices much or cares - it happens all the time. But if Paul is dead (swoon...) The paradigm of the Beatles as providing the idea of the pop group is one that lasts. Just because this acceptance has lasted 40 years has no bearing on whether prog / pop / whatever has progressed. It merely shows dormancy and mental moribundity. Toe the line... So you need a test. Would (if music sells at all now) your test subjects appeal should their albums be released in plain white sleeves with only technical information/ credits? While it's a shame for the art of rock covers to be absent (Hipgnosis / Roger Dean) there aren't really that many album covers that are particularly good. So it's an imaginary test. Choose your victims from any aspect of music (baroque to blues, Abba to Zappa, Korn, Hole etc.) Take the pop out of music and see what's left. |
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17512 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 19:24 | ||||||
Again, some of the material in "The Final Cut" was originally a part of The Wall before it was cut down to fit 2 LP's ... the other song or two were added cuts like "Not Now John" ... the anti was material was originally a part of The Wall.
If you take the anti-war material and put sit it next to The Wall, just like you would one of those puzzle like things, you can place the anti-war stuff in several areas and show that The Wall as a concept, would make much more sense, specially the side 4 stuff with the militaristic stuff and the marching hammers ... it helps the story be fuller and more complete. As it is right now, The Wall's story is haphazard and not very complete or good, and the kid is just a lost soul that has a problem with the military ... ohh wait ... the social milieu is the military ... ohhh wait ... who's the nazin in this whole thing ... wait a minute ... what's? .... you can go on and on, and it is unclear and incomplete because of the cuts. The visualness in the film for these moments is what makes them valuable ... but if you did not have that, I think that you would have said ... what the fu__ is that all about?
But, as Dean mentioned, one could start a discussion of Roger's distate with commercial anything and the nazi style of control and things, would be a big part of that ... but in the end, either th emilitaristic stuff becomes a part of a convoluted story, or you clear it up ... screwed up time with parents from WW2, and then misguided information, and then malicious schooling causes a kid to go at it alone and become a menace to society? ... usually society doesn't care and just tells you take this heroin and die so we can say ... what a tragedy! And Roger knows that!
If there were no restrictions, The Wall would be 3 LP's long, at about 120/130 minutes of music and film at the very least ... the film run time is about 95 minutes on the videos ... so if you take away some cartoon/visual time, you have the 2 LP's at about 80 to 85 minutes or so.
I would agree, however, that some of this is thinking and adding in my own head and might not be real, or complete, but the original version of The Wall that was tested ran over 100 minutes, and I think I had 103 minutes before .,.. some of which was restored on a director's cut, but still missing the complete cut of the original film ... or the military stuff would not make sense and neither would the concert in Berlin, later, and then the recent version, which is much more overtly political, which is closer to the Final Cut ideas, than it is to the anti-social themes in The Wall, commenting on schools and the time and place, which usually does not feature mom's, dad's and history much, but a very personal view.
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17512 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 18:57 | ||||||
With all due respect, I think that he is pretty good ... not great ... but very good in some cases, and not so good in others.
The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976) - Nicholas Roeg film, that also uses his music and Brian Eno's, some music of which ended up in one of his albums. Very good. The film is better, because of how it is directed and photographed, which is Nich's strength.
Baal (1982) TV Movie and the Kurt Weill music thing I told you about. Was not seen in America that I am aware of, as only PBS would have shown it, but PBS ... is not that hip after all! Not sure this is available To my knowledge, this is not widely distributed or heard. Most Bowie fans can not relate to Weill/Brecht.
The Hunger (1983) Based on the famous writer's work, is very good, and has a very good cast. Susan Sarandon is better than him, but she makes him work. Catherine Deneuve is no pushover either, and people like him would not be there if they could not hold their ground well enough. Tony Scott directed. Based on Whitley Strieber's novel.
Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence (1983) Nagisa Oshima's film is excellent and also features Ryuichi Sakamoto's music and his acting as the Japanese boss in the camp. A bit cartoonish, but more towards the samurai idealism, than any of the actors involved in it. It is a very nice film and has excellent music, and the characterization in the film is very good, and the two "englishman" (Tom Conti is one) are probably more "conventional" than David would be.
Basquiat (1996) Were this not a very good film all around, and a real show about what New York was all about ... take notice all you proggies!!! ... I would not recomend this, but Julian Schnabel's film is quietly personal and gentle and allows the actors their space. David is a bit of a show off playing Andy Warhol, but by that time, Andy was absolutely horrendously pathetic in front of any camera ... and had become a total cartoon and Daevid played that up some, but left the cartoon at home ... which is good for the film, because he could have blown it up!
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17512 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 17:54 | ||||||
Wow ... can we write this last paragraph 100 times bigger and tickle some of the other folks in this board with it? The same thing goes for a lot of "progressive" music ... we still think that because it sells and is mentioned in other places, that it is good ... and comments that are not on par with everyone else are not cool or worth the discussion or comment.
We have to be careful though ... that comment says a lot about some people that post here and spam and troll the threads and never say anything except ...
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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paroxix
Forum Newbie Joined: September 06 2010 Status: Offline Points: 33 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 17:17 | ||||||
The Final Cut is where the floyd i know best ended though the divison bell was an excellent album
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17512 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 16:33 | ||||||
I've always thought that the problem was not Harvest, or EMI ... at least in those days. I tend to think that the American distribution machine was the one that caused the problems and might have not liked what they were going to release ... American bands are notorious for sounding the same ... and you and I know it has nothing to do with talent ... because we know it exists!
I do think that all the folks in there (England) were making enough money off it all that ... it was easier to let it go, and do something else, because ... they had the material for it anyway! But in America, the money is boss ... big time boss and the media hurts you if you think otherwise.
All of which is quite visible in the bootlegs ... let's call it a child becomes a young man, and then a man ... right in front of your eyes! ... no different than you or I, btw! Edited by moshkito - December 29 2010 at 17:55 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17512 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 16:24 | ||||||
And many times I have to pull a Frank Zappa and tell the fans to shut up ... so I can play or enjoy the music!
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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Rockjf1
Forum Newbie Joined: December 29 2010 Location: 2 Status: Offline Points: 24 |
Posted: December 29 2010 at 16:10 | ||||||
To Me Pink Floyd is great I mean they did not make a bad album but too me the material change drasticly with The Wall not to insult the wall great concept album I just mean that it changed there and after that we had the final cut, momentary lapse of reason and division bell I think everyone agrees that those 3 albums are not pink floyds best
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JeanFrame
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 01 2010 Location: London, England Status: Offline Points: 195 |
Posted: December 23 2010 at 02:23 | ||||||
Fresh ears, yes, but not fresh brains, indoctrinated as they are with all the hype and hyperbole of the mass media, blinded with the flashing lights of these bands' success staring them in the face. Hardly a fresh beginning! But I find myself sounding like I'm on the other side of the fence from Floyd fans - I'm not, I am a fan. I'm just pointing out the poignancy of the dilution.
You cannot maintain that level of success on popularity alone simply because the public is discriminatory and fickle with it. Being popular because you are popular is ephemeral fame. Prolonged success (for what is now 43 years) requires more than just popularity, there has to be some level of artistic value that not only keeps old fans interested, but also attracts new fans..[/quote]
I think my previous note answers this point, though again I stress that Floyd without Syd were still talented people.
"in comparison with what might have been" ... I'm unable to make that comparison. Without inherrent talent both musically and artistically Floyd could not have applied Syd's attitude and approach - if that is all that's needed then we'd all do it.[/quote]
True, and already agreed with.
I have no axe to grind - I just view the evidence with a little more caution than most people because I am a born sceptic - you will undoubtably have noticed I didn't deny 1-2-3 played it live in 1967 (or 68), I just question the validity and provenance of the sole recording I have heard. This subject has been discussed on this forum at length here and here.
As to your comment of it being ironic that the Prog Archives are just about the last place on the web to give that credit, then it would appear you haven't read the Cloud's biography, where that credit is given. (all be it objectively rather than subjectivley - but that is the nature of all our biogrpahies) [/quote]
Just when I build myself up to get self-righteous you confound me with a restrained objectivity that caught me by surprise. No complaints about these comments, and thank you for the prog archive links which I hadn't known about. I stand censored re the Clouds website, which I obviously haven't read as well as I thought I had.
I like Bowie and what he does a lot, but I have to disagree about what he brings to the borrowings. The voices he hears in his head as he sings belong to someone else, and that decides what happens in the orbit of the voice. It’s clearly craftwork and creativity, but it isn’t original or unique in any way, and definitely not in excess of where it came from. He is a consummate performer and studio artist, but he is an actor primarily before anything else.[/quote]Really? I think he's a dreadful actor.[/quote] I wasn't talking about his film work, that's another subject, I was referring to his ability to play roles in a musical performance. He plays 'David Bowie' to perfection, the person off-stage - David Jones - is someone else completely. It's probably the key to his personal survival as well as his continued popularity. He is definitely an exceptional person.
Time has told - 40 years is an aeon in Pop-years. I doubt much more will change in the next 40 years. Past that I'll be in no state to notice.[/quote]
This is true. But it's not about you and I, we're just passing through. But then, you know that. |
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Chris S
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: June 09 2004 Location: Front Range Status: Offline Points: 7028 |
Posted: December 22 2010 at 21:33 | ||||||
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...As I venture through the slipstream, between the viaducts in your dreams...[/COLOR] |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 22 2010 at 19:55 | ||||||
I don't doubt what you say, but this is Pop music (regardless of the pretentions we hold for Progressive Rock, it's still just Pop) and 40 years is not a passing fad that has now covered 2 generations, with the young people coming to this music now, with fresh ears and an unjaded view of history see it for what it is as an art form and as stand alone, unbaggaged music. That's the test that seperates the dumb en masse from the true classic, the art from the box-shifters.
You cannot maintain that level of success on popularity alone simply because the public is discriminatory and fickle with it. Being popular because you are popular is ephemeral fame. Prolonged success (for what is now 43 years) requires more than just popularity, there has to be some level of artistic value that not only keeps old fans interested, but also attracts new fans..
"in comparison with what might have been" ... I'm unable to make that comparison. Without inherrent talent both musically and artistically Floyd could not have applied Syd's attitude and approach - if that is all that's needed then we'd all do it.
I have no axe to grind - I just view the evidence with a little more caution than most people because I am a born sceptic - you will undoubtably have noticed I didn't deny 1-2-3 played it live in 1967 (or 68), I just question the validity and provenance of the sole recording I have heard. This subject has been discussed on this forum at length here and here.
As to your comment of it being ironic that the Prog Archives are just about the last place on the web to give that credit, then it would appear you haven't read the Cloud's biography, where that credit is given. (all be it objectively rather than subjectivley - but that is the nature of all our biogrpahies)
Time has told - 40 years is an aeon in Pop-years. I doubt much more will change in the next 40 years. Past that I'll be in no state to notice.
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JeanFrame
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 01 2010 Location: London, England Status: Offline Points: 195 |
Posted: December 22 2010 at 18:40 | ||||||
Not sure whether it is possible to extrapolate Syd at his creative best in any predictable direction so specualtion is wild and limited only by our capacity to appreciate Syd for what he was and what he did. A copy of Terrapin (the Barrett Appreciation Society fanzine) from the early 70s reprinted an article by Fred Frith (Henry Cow) on the genius of Syd's guitar playing, so even just a few years after his disappearance from the public eye he had been elevated to cult status, and that has continued to this day.
I think what we can extrapolate is the invention, the heart of the matter, the idiosyncratic nature of a kind of genius that knew no bounds. I say this not as a Syd fan, but I see it as a fact. Public perception (as with public taste) has no relevance whatsoever here, many commercially-successful bands and writers will not be considered worth a light in future years. Let’s face it, the record-buying public are dumb en masse, as are the book-buying public, etc etc. What sells sells, art is forever.
I find it difficult to accept that the four remaining members of Floyd could sustain a career of the magnitude they did by riding on the shirt-tails of the master. There are no other examples of that within the music industry - take away the main creative force and the remainder can probably carry-on for one mediocre album before collapsing in disarray. Yet Floyd went from strength to strength, from Saucer to Ummagumma to Atom Heart Mother to Meddle to Dark Side Of The Moon to Wish You Were Here. WYWH is about Barrett and inspired by him, but there is nothing of Barrett in there, in fact I would go as far as to say there is nothing of Barrett in any of the post-Barrett albums aside from an attitude and approach.
Of course it’s possible to ‘sustain a career of the magnitude they did’ , whatever the quality or lack of, that’s the nature of success, it’s not based on excellence, but on popularity, and lack of discrimination on the part of the public.
On the other hand, I don’t want to be put into a position where it looks like I’m against post-Syd Pink Floyd, I’m not. I like what they do, but it definitely pales into comparison with what might have been, and it’s without doubt a parody of Syd himself. You give yourself a clue to this when you say that Syd is in the post-Barrett albums in ‘attitude and approach’. That sounds like confirmation to me.
Hmm, I think 1-2-3 have been raised several levels above their ability - if they had that artistic spark then it would have carried over into Clouds, and it doesn't. I've listened to their version of America very closely and believe it to be a construction - even if you accept the story that they heard a demo cut of the Simon & Garfunkle song a whole year before it was released, the audience screaming at the beginning is too "Beatlemania", too hysterical and too "big" to ever have fitted into the Wardor Street Marquee; the reverb on the recording is also too "big" for the Marquee and the recording of each instrument is too separated to have been recorded in one live take on a 4-track; also the drums and overheads (cymbols) are too far back in the mix for a live recording in a small club (which is what Wardor Street was at that time). It may be genuine, but the technical inconsistences bother me - I sugest that if it was recorded at the Marquee, then it was in the upstairs studio, not in the club itself, however I suspect it may have been recorded much later, feasibly as Clouds and possibly after the Yes version. I think 1-2-3's failure to make it big was simply down to lack of creative artistic ability, that their 1967 set incuded so many covers by (relatively) unknown artists (S&G and David Bowie were not household names at that time) suggests to me they may have been technically compitent, but not artistically capable. I also find it suspicious that there is little documentation of their headline residency at the Marquee at this time - they played there, that is certain, but little actual evidence exists of them before Clouds.
Yes released their version of America four years later - any link to 1-2-3 is tenuous - to have heard a band play a song live and then replicate that in a studio four years later - even with Yes's technical talent that is highly unlikely.
Yes had recorded two non-symphonic albums prior to that that - if they were apeing 1-2-3, then they would have done it in 1968-69, not 1971-72. Inspired by - maybe; Copied - no.
I don’t really want to argue the toss too much about 1-2-3
in this discussion, given that this is meant to be about Pink Floyd, and it
sounds like you have an axe to grind on that subject. I just threw in that
comment because it’s clear to me (and to history) where Yes came from, I was
trying to draw a comparison about pre and post Barrett Floyd and 1-2-3/Yes. I have
to disagree about ‘little actual evidence’ of 1-2-3, on the contrary, loads of
history exists about all that. I can’t comment on the tape, I’m not qualified
and you sound like you are, but as regards provenance, I do know that 1-2-3
played America
at the Marquee in 1967 and Yes did it in 1971 with suspiciously similar
passages. Inspired is fine, but it was the concept of the band that was copied,
though Yes weren’t the only ones by any means. Bowie and others have commented
on all that already, so perhaps this needs another forum discussion altogether! And I do like Yes by the way, just credit where credit's due. Ironic that prog archives are just about the last place on the web to give that credit, when the debt they owe is more than most. Nuff said.
Bowie has one saving grace - his ability to create melody. He may borrow ideas and build on them, but the melody and musical structures he uses are unique and original. Even when he is taking on Krautrock, Philly Soul or Jungle his feel for melody and composition are far inexcess of whatever was being done in those genres at the time. That is the mark of a truely progressive artist - to take disparate ideas and fuse them into something new and original. Fame is not a pastiche, Subterraneans is not a parody, Little Wonder is not a lampoon - each is a unique perspective from the view of an Outsider looking in, just as all Prog artists have done with Jazz, Classical and Eastern music - yet he did it with contemporary music and that makes him an impersonator - no, I don't believe it does.
I like Bowie and what he does a lot, but I have to disagree about what he brings to the borrowings. The voices he hears in his head as he sings belong to someone else, and that decides what happens in the orbit of the voice. It’s clearly craftwork and creativity, but it isn’t original or unique in any way, and definitely not in excess of where it came from. He is a consummate performer and studio artist, but he is an actor primarily before anything else.
I enjoyed your comment about Michaelangelo, but my comment about Van Gogh wasn’t related to Syd himself, it was a reference to the difficulty in separating artistic quality from commercial success. Time will tell. |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 22 2010 at 16:28 | ||||||
10 million is a fanciful number even today.
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moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Online Points: 17512 |
Posted: December 22 2010 at 15:26 | ||||||
I threw a number out ... that would be slighlty more on par with today's numbers ... it was not meant to be an exact number.
From my point of view, I really thought that they were asked to do something else, or probably better mentioned as ... do that other piece over there that you have that does this and that ...
I do have an interview where it is stated that they always played various new pieces as a way to find out if they could improve it or change it or get other ideas for it ... or to smooth it out. I doubt, however, that this was possible from by the time that WYWH album came out, and their show was so structured and mechanical that I am not sure that they could improvise as much as they had in the early days, which was what all the bootlegs were about ...
I do think that by that time, however, they were all good enough and competent enough to be able to do it night after night and not lose the touch ... and usually that is the mark of an excellent group of people and musicians.
To me, from beginning to the end, this is one of the most important rock bands ever, and it wasn't just about the music ... it was about the art of it all ... and the fact that it was done is the part that is most important for me ... it wasn't perfect ... and we can never (all of us) agree on any perfection ... but that is what it is ... and all of us were touched by it in some way.
Couldn't ask for a lot more from my generation ... I'm proud of that history and work. Not sure I would be about a lot of rap and metal conversely.
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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Rush77
Forum Groupie Joined: October 27 2010 Location: Ohio Status: Offline Points: 60 |
Posted: December 22 2010 at 13:40 | ||||||
If u ask me the nail in the coffin for me was when Waters left. After that, the Gilmour era, didnt make any interesting music and thts prob y the "fell"
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 22 2010 at 07:06 | ||||||
Not sure whether it is possible to extrapolate Syd at his creative best in any predictable direction so specualtion is wild and limited only by our capacity to appreciate Syd for what he was and what he did. A copy of Terrapin (the Barrett Appreciation Society fanzine) from the early 70s reprinted an article by Fred Frith (Henry Cow) on the genius of Syd's guitar playing, so even just a few years after his disappearance from the public eye he had been elevated to cult status, and that has continued to this day.
I find it difficult to accept that the four remaining members of Floyd could sustain a career of the magnitude they did by riding on the shirt-tails of the master. There are no other examples of that within the music industry - take away the main creative force and the remainder can probably carry-on for one mediocre album before collapsing in disarray. Yet Floyd went from strength to strength, from Saucer to Ummagumma to Atom Heart Mother to Meddle to Dark Side Of The Moon to Wish You Were Here. WYWH is about Barrett and inspired by him, but there is nothing of Barrett in there, in fact I would go as far as to say there is nothing of Barrett in any of the post-Barrett albums aside from an attitude and approach.
Hmm, I think 1-2-3 have been raised several levels above their ability - if they had that artistic spark then it would have carried over into Clouds, and it doesn't. I've listened to their version of America very closely and believe it to be a construction - even if you accept the story that they heard a demo cut of the Simon & Garfunkle song a whole year before it was released, the audience screaming at the beginning is too "Beatlemania", too hysterical and too "big" to ever have fitted into the Wardor Street Marquee; the reverb on the recording is also too "big" for the Marquee and the recording of each instrument is too separated to have been recorded in one live take on a 4-track; also the drums and overheads (cymbols) are too far back in the mix for a live recording in a small club (which is what Wardor Street was at that time). It may be genuine, but the technical inconsistences bother me - I sugest that if it was recorded at the Marquee, then it was in the upstairs studio, not in the club itself, however I suspect it may have been recorded much later, feasibly as Clouds and possibly after the Yes version. I think 1-2-3's failure to make it big was simply down to lack of creative artistic ability, that their 1967 set incuded so many covers by (relatively) unknown artists (S&G and David Bowie were not household names at that time) suggests to me they may have been technically compitent, but not artistically capable. I also find it suspicious that there is little documentation of their headline residency at the Marquee at this time - they played there, that is certain, but little actual evidence exists of them before Clouds.
Yes released their version of America four years later - any link to 1-2-3 is tenuous - to have heard a band play a song live and then replicate that in a studio four years later - even with Yes's technical talent that is highly unlikely.
Yes had recorded two non-symphonic albums prior to that that - if they were apeing 1-2-3, then they would have done it in 1968-69, not 1971-72. Inspired by - maybe; Copied - no.
Bowie has one saving grace - his ability to create melody. He may borrow ideas and build on them, but the melody and musical structures he uses are unique and original. Even when he is taking on Krautrock, Philly Soul or Jungle his feel for melody and composition are far inexcess of whatever was being done in those genres at the time. That is the mark of a truely progressive artist - to take disparate ideas and fuse them into something new and original. Fame is not a pastiche, Subterraneans is not a parody, Little Wonder is not a lampoon - each is a unique perspective from the view of an Outsider looking in, just as all Prog artists have done with Jazz, Classical and Eastern music - yet he did it with contemporary music and that makes him an impersonator - no, I don't believe it does.
And back to Barrett - he wasn't a forgotten genius unrecognised in his lifetime - he had the fame, adulation and recognition, perhaps too much and too soon, but he was a Michaelangelo not a Vincent Van Gogh. Edited by Dean - December 22 2010 at 07:09 |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: December 21 2010 at 21:37 | ||||||
I think you are way off the mark on several counts. Firstly 10 million (£ or $) in 1975 is a major exaggeration - in 1975 A Night At The Opera was alleged to be the most expensive album ever made, and is believed to have cost £45,000 to record. 15 million copies of DSotM were sold in 23 years in the USA - if we assume 600,000 copies per year, by 1975 it would have grossed EMI/Capitol around £6 million¹ so it is extremely unlikely that the label would advance £10 million for the next album. Secondly, Floyd were signed to Harvest, an EMI imprint specialising in Progressive music - they were not phased by new, odd, weird or strange - they positively encouraged it. At that time scaredy cats Capitol Records had no say or influence in what Pink Floyd were doing in the studio.
I disagree in spades.
Pink Floyd were commercially successful and famous before the release of DSotM and had their first #1 album back in 1970, three years before DSotM and five years before WYWH. They stopped releasing singles in the UK in 1968 (Point Me At The Sky) - no band under "studio control" would have been allowed to do that. They then went on to record music for four Art-house films (two of which were not released as soundtrack albums) again showing a band in control of what they do and not under studio control.
Roger Waters cynicism of record labels and the music industry goes back further than Machine and Cigar:
"A butterfly with broken wings is falling by your side
The ravens all are closing in and there's nowhere you can hide Your manager and agent are both busy on the phone Selling coloured photographs to magazines back home" ~ Cymbaline ~ Roger Waters (1969) "So all aboard for the American tour,
And maybe you'll make it to the top. And mind how you go, and I can tell you, 'cause I know You may find it hard to get off" ~ Free Four ~ Roger Waters (1972) So whatever Waters wrote in 1975, he had been brewing the idea for at least 6 years prior to that. My interpretation of both those tracks (Machine and Cigar) is they were written about Floyd's first encounter with Columbia Records in 1967 and not of Harvest Records in 1975.
I don't believe force was involved - I doubt that Harvest/EMI had any input at all. It was 100% Waters, both Raving and Drooling and Gotta Be Crazy were not included on the album because they didn't fit musically with Shine On You Craxy Diamond, lyrically he could have changed them to fit the WYWH concept, but he didn't. Their lyrics were changed when they were eventually used on Animals, so it's clear that Floyd were not adverse to changing the lyrics at the time.
Lyrically the original versions of both those songs were, if anything, too close to DSotM (A Piece for Assorted Lunatics).
Floyd were also well known for airing tunes on tour before recording them. Some of these tunes morphed and changed considerably before being recorded - Echoes is the most extreme example (known as "Nothing", "Son of Nothing" and "Looking Through the Knothole in Granny's Wooden Leg" and went through several music and lyric changes before being recorded. Another is Embryo - only ever studio recorded as a 4 minute song, in live shows this extended to a 25 minute "improvised" piece before being discarded completely in favour of Echoes (the live set in 1971 featured both tunes). Yet another is "The Man and The Journey" an album length concept not disimilar to DSotM from 1969, while not being composed entirely of original material, those pieces of it that were original and new were later reworked and remodelled for Ummagumma, and for the soundtracks for More, and Zabriskie Point.
Opinion. I think that the reworkings of both Raving & Droolin' and Gotta Be Crazy as Sheep and Dogs respectively are better than anything I've heard of the earlier versions from the Winter Tour of 1974.
¹ it was late and I was half asleep when I calcualted that - it's not £6 million at all, it's £3 million - (600,000 x 2) x £2.50 = £3,000,000 Edited by Dean - December 22 2010 at 04:32 |
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