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Pink Floyd – A Fleeting Glimpse

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Celebrating The Life Of Syd Barrett

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 07/07/2022 by Col T10/07/2022

Today we remember Syd Barret who sadly died on this day in 2006 aged 60.

He was the principal songwriter behind Pink Floyd’s debut – 1967 masterpiece The Piper at the Gates of Dawn – and a handful of strong early singles that helped define the psychedelic age. His creative genius was derailed by a drug-fueled psychological collapse, forcing his 1968 removal from the group he helped form.

Fans of Syd Barrett will be pleased to know we will be hosting an interview with Syd’s nephew in the upcoming months talking about Syd’s creativity and uniqueness and celebrating his life and legacy.
Posted in News

Roger Waters drives home themes of war, poverty and injustice in Pittsburgh tour opener

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 07/07/2022 by Col T10/07/2022

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W4sg0R-G-QA
So many questions going into the opening night of the This is Not a Drill Tour:

How many solo songs would Roger Waters sneak into the set of classic Pink Floyd?

Would this prickly and passionate artist, after a two-year pandemic tour delay, show any further signs of wear and tear at 78?

Would the “in the round” production rise to the level of grand spectacle of The Wall and The Us + Them Tours?

Would the band kill it right out of the gate?

And, perhaps most importantly, who would Roger offend this time?

The latter is emphasized because the show preview last week generated a stream of Roger hate on social media for his outspoken stances against Trump and Israel’s Palestinian policies, which adds up to a combined contingency of, oh, more than half the population. “He’s a communist!” “He’s an antisemite!”

That’s enough negative energy to power a small city.

Fittingly, his first show since closing Us + Them in December 2018 in Monterrey, Mexico, began at 8:20 Wednesday night at PPG Paints Arena with an announcement noting, in part, “If you’re one of those ‘I love Pink Floyd but I can’t stand Roger’s politics people,’ you might do well to [expletive] off to the bar right now.”

The music then kicked off in bold fashion, underplaying a Floyd classic often reserved for the encore.

Waters, unseen, launched “Comfortably Numb,” greeting the crowd with the ominous “Hello. Is there anybody in there?” amid claps of thunder. The heavy talk-sing carried on, and on, like a Gregorian chant through the entire song, accompanied by a sickly green video of people queued up in stillness on the long screen above the stage.

The drone was broken by a female voice coming in with a shrill howl. The famous solo? Skipped!

Waters, in all black with hair and beard trimmed, then jumped on stage for “The Happiest Days of Our Lives” and “Another Brick in the Wall, Parts 2 and 3,” played the way they were on “The Wall.” Through the show, he would switch sides, back and forth, on the long rectangular stage lined with red lights.

The middle of set 1 was an early offering of what people often joke about being bathroom breaks: those post-heyday songs that got little or no radio play. They were compelling though. From “Radio K.A.O.S.” came “The Powers That Be,” played as a lament about the inequities under the corporate capitalist system.

On the screen were the names of Black people killed by police, including Antwon Rose II, who was shot in East Pittsburgh in 2018. (The mention inaccurately said he was driving in a taxi.)

“The Bravery of Being Out of Range,” a rarity from the Gulf War era of 1992 that was a barking condemnation of politicians unleashing bombs and missiles that kill from a distance, began with a video of Ronald Reagan, branding him as a “WAR CRIMINAL” for his actions in Guatemala. It went on to put the same stamp, in bloody red, on the Bushes, Clinton, Obama and Trump. Nonpartisan, at least, right?

For Biden, it declared, “WAR CRIMINAL,” underlined with “Just getting started…”

Brand new was “The Bar,” an unreleased song written during the pandemic performed as a spare working-class ballad with Waters at piano. He joked that he would probably mess it up, but he pulled it off.

The latter part of the first set had him flipping the treasured 1975 “Wish You Were Here” over for the full side two. Of course, that’s three songs: the jagged “Have a Cigar,” the sweeping title track and the reprise of “Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts VI-IX).”

On the screen for “Wish You Were Here” scrolled a story about him and Pink Floyd co-founder Syd Barrett, ending with “When you lose someone, it serves as a reminder: This is not a drill.”

Waters loves his “Animals.” Last time, he ventured into that 1977 homage to Orwell with “Dogs” and “Pigs,” on which he unfurled the infamous “TRUMP IS A PIG” banner. This time, he opted for “Sheep,” a word that was weaponized quite a lot during the pandemic, as “sheeple.”

The song, depicting the sheep rising up to crush the dogs, came with a screenful of floating sheep and then a flurry of tweets about the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade.

During intermission we were entertained by the flying pig, emblazoned with “[expletive] the Poor” on one side and “Steal from the Poor. Give to the Rich” on the other. It was adorned, as well, with such defense contractor logos as Raytheon and Elbit Systems.

Jumping into set two, we were back to “The Wall,” with Waters in full-length leather coat and shades, for the aggressive combo of “In the Flesh” and “Run Like Hell.” He ended “In the Flesh” by firing at the crowd with a semi-automatic rifle. A fake one.

By that point, we had been through that album, “Wish You Were Here” and “Animals” with nary a glimpse of “Dark Side.”

The wait would continue through a few more solo songs: soaring power ballad “Déjà Vu,” beginning with a nod to Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning and rolling with messages for reproductive, trans and Palestinian rights that brought cheers from the crowd; and the mournful title track of “Is This the Life We Really Want?,” which blames all of us for the apathy that allows for so much global suffering.

He emphasized the ending, “We all stood by silent and indifferent. It’s normal.”

Sixteen songs in, we got the familiar cha-ching of “Money,” along with the first lead vocal from Jonathan Wilson, who, let’s say, lacked the grit of the song’s original singer.

It introduced side two of “Dark Side,” the dreamiest, most ethereal segment of the evening. “Us and Them” and “Any Colour You Like” were a contrast of melodic beauty with stabbing guitars and war-torn imagery.

Waters delivered one of his most tender vocals on “Brain Damage,” before eight green pyramid lasers wrapped the Jumbotron while backup singers Shanay Johnson and Amanda Belair helped bring “Eclipse” to a gorgeous climax.

For all of that, he thanked the crew and said, “Thank you, Pittsburgh, from the bottom of our hearts. We came here with a lot of love in our hearts and found a lot of love from your hearts.”

Emerging from that was “Two Suns in the Sunset,” his Pink Floyd sign-off from “The Final Cut,” a tranwquil ballad about nuclear annihilation and the doomsday clock, querying, “Could be the human race is run?”

After apologizing to Bob Dylan for borrowing an idea from “Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands,” he wrapped the show with a quiet reprise of “The Bar” that sounded like the bard, blending into “Outside the Wall.”

Conclusions:

On this rainy July night, classic rock connoisseurs had a choice between this or the Santana/Earth, Wind & Fire show at Star Lake (at least until that was postponed due to Santana’s heat exhaustion).

This was by no means the fun choice. It was, however, the more challenging one as Waters relentlessly drove home powerful themes about the human condition — from the disparity between “us” and “them” to the loss of rights to the threat of apocalypse.

It was, he said, in a recent statement, his “shout from the rooftop.”

It may have lacked the fiery urgency of the Trump-era tour and the jaw-dropping spectacle of the “Animals” factory filling the arena, but it came through loud, clear and inspirational.

Click For Setlist

Set 1: Comfortably Numb (New Version), The Happiest Days of Our Lives , Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2, Another Brick in the Wall, Part 3 , The Powers That Be, The Bravery of Being Out of Range, The Bar(New Song), Have a Cigar, Wish You Were Here, Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts VI-IX), Sheep Set 2: In the Flesh, Run Like Hell, Déjà Vu, Is This the Life We Really Want?, Money, Us and Them, Any Colour You Like, Brain Damage, Eclipse, Two Suns in the Sunset, The Bar (Reprise), Outside the Wall



Photos courtesy of
Lee Pizzini


Rogers tour merchandise courtesy of Pink Floyd Collectors

 

Posted in News

Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets Receive Private Tour Of Porsche Factory

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 06/07/2022 by Col T10/07/2022

 

When Nick Mason’s Saucerful of Secrets visited London’s Royal Albert Hall as part of their 2022 The Echoes Tour, they were contacted straight after by Bernd Wuersching, a colleague of the Porsche museum in Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen.

After playing even more dates on their critically acclaimed tour, they managed to find time in their busy schedule to pop in for a visit. This was an exciting visit for Bernd as, outside of music, Nick is also a car-collecting, motorsport-loving individual. A founding member of Pink Floyd, this king of the drums is almost as well-known for his incredible car collection as he is for his music career, but did you know he’s raced in the 24 Hours of Le Mans no fewer than five times? His La Sarthe debut was in a car from Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen.

As well as giving him a behind-the-scenes tour together with Alexander Klein, Manager of Porsche Car Collection, the guys at Porsche also showed Lee Harris, Guy Pratt, Garry Kemp, and Barrie Knight around the Taycan factory.

Posted in News

Guy Pratt & Gary Kemp : Rockonteurs Podcast Episode 91 with Barbara Charone

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 02/07/2022 by Col T02/07/2022

Rockonteurs is a podcast all about the real stories behind real music.

Presented by Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets /  Spandau Ballet’s Gary Kemp, who wrote and performed megahits like ‘Gold’ and ‘True’, and Guy Pratt, a bass player who shaped songs for the likes of Madonna and Pink Floyd & David Gilmour, you’ll hear exclusive stories of life on the road, in the studio and what really happened behind the scenes from artists who wrote, performed and produced the some of the biggest classic rock and pop tracks of all time.

Rockonteurs is a podcast all about the real stories behind real music.

This weeks upcoming episode is Number 91 and features guest Barbara Charone

 

Available from 3rd July 2022 on Itunes, Spotify and all other Listening Platforms. Click Here to be taken to Apple Musics Listening Page

Posted in News

Official Pink Floyd Shop Launches New Animals Merchandise Range

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 02/07/2022 by Col T02/07/2022

With the announcement of the long anticipated Pink Floyd Animals 2018 Remix release, it is no surprise that the official Pink Floyd shop has launched an entire new Animals merchandise range.

This unique collection features re-prints of the 1977 In The Flesh (Animals) Tour t-shirts and other unique collectables. The variety is endless.

Head on over to http://shop.pinkfloyd.com to view the entire range.

Posted in News

iHeartRadio Opening Night Live with Roger Waters

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 02/07/2022 by Col T02/07/2022


Roger Waters
is kicking off his “This Is Not A Drill Tour” on July 6th in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and fans will be able to catch some of the action during iHeartRadio Opening Night Live with Roger Waters.

Waters’ “This Is Not A Drill” Tour kicks off on July 6th in Pittsburgh, PA, and stops in cities across the country including Boston, Detroit, Chicago, Philadelphia, Nashville, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and more, before wrapping up in Dallas, Texas on October 8th. Tickets are on sale now, see the full list of tour dates below.

In a statement, Waters explained of the tour, “‘This Is Not A Drill’ is a groundbreaking new rock and roll/cinematic extravaganza, performed in the round, it is a stunning indictment of the corporate dystopia in which we all struggle to survive, and a call to action to LOVE, PROTECT and SHARE our precious and precarious planet home. The show includes a dozen great songs from PINK FLOYD’S GOLDEN ERA alongside several new ones, words and music, same writer, same heart, same soul, same man. Could be his last hurrah. Wow! My first farewell tour! Don’t miss it. Love R.”

During iHeartRadio Opening Night Live with Roger Waters, fans will get to hear from Waters himself during an exclusive interview with Jim Kerr, and live performances from his tour’s opening night.

Fans can listen and tune in free for a stream of the exclusive iHeartRadio Opening Night Live with Roger Waters on Wednesday, July 6th at 10pm ET/7pm PT via iHeartRadio’s Classic Rock Channel.

Posted in News

Pink Floyd : ‘Animals’ Deluxe Edition Released September 16th 2022

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 30/06/2022 by Col T22/07/2022

On September 16th 2022 in the UK and October 7th in the US, Pink Floyd will release a deluxe edition reissue of their 1977 album classic, “Animals.” The limited-edition 4-disc packages will feature the remixed album on LP, CD, Blu-ray and DVD, with the Blu-ray and DVD versions delivering new hi-resolution stereo and 5.1 mixes alongside the original 1977 stereo mix.

Roger Waters The bassist and architect of the original project confirmed that the reissue features new remixes of the UK band’s tenth studio record.

After claiming he has been “banned by Dave Gilmour from posting on Pink Floyd’s Facebook page with its 30,000,000 subscribers“, Waters went on to explain the hurdles he has faced in dealing with his former bandmate in recent years.

“What precipitated this note is that there are new James Guthrie Stereo and 5.1 mixes of the Pink Floyd album, “Animals”, 1977,” begins Waters. “These mixes have languished unreleased because of a dispute over some sleeve notes that Mark Blake has written for this new release. Gilmour has vetoed the release of the album unless these liner notes are removed. He does not dispute the veracity of the history described in Mark’s notes, but he wants that history to remain secret.

“This is a small part of an ongoing campaign by the Gilmour/Samson camp to claim more credit for Dave on the work he did in Pink Floyd, 1967-1985, than is his due. Yes he was, and is, a jolly good guitarist and singer. But, he has for the last 35 years told a lot of whopping porky pies about who did what in Pink Floyd when I was still in charge. There’s a lot of ‘we did this’ and ‘we did that,’ and ‘I did this’ and ‘I did that.‘”

“I am agreeing to the release of the new ‘Animals’ remix, with the sleeve notes removed,” Waters continues. “Good work James Guthrie by the way, and sorry Mark Blake. The final draft of the liner notes was fact checked and agreed as factually correct by me, Nick and Gilmour.“ Waters then goes on to share Blake’s liner notes for the set, which fans can read on his Facebook page.


Here are your quick links to Amazon.

 

CD: USA | UK | Canada | Germany

 

Blu-ray: USA | UK | Canada | Germany

 

Vinyl: USA | UK | Canada | Germany

2018 CD Version

1 Pigs On The Wing 1 (2018 Remix)
2 Dogs (2018 Remix)
3 Pigs (Three Different Ones) [2018 Remix]
4 Sheep (2018 Remix)
5 Pigs On The Wing 2 (2018 Remix)

 


Here are your quick links to Amazon.

 

CD: USA | UK | Canada | Germany

 

Blu-ray: USA | UK | Canada | Germany

 

Vinyl: USA | UK | Canada | Germany

2018 Vinyl Edition

Posted in News

Estate Of Syd Barrett Re-launch Official Website

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 27/06/2022 by Col T27/06/2022

Syd Barrett’s nephew, Ian Barrett, recently took to his social media platform to announce that he has given Syd’s official website a brand new, fresh look.

In a statement posted earlier today, –  ” We are delighted to tell you that we have done some work on the official Syd Barrett website.” It is now easier to use, has a few more features, and should work better on mobile.

To complement the relaunch, we have commissioned a new “Story Behind The Song“. This is an occasional feature where a fan of Syd writes a personal essay on a favourite song of his or hers and tells us what his music means to them.

This time we look at “No Good Trying,” The story is written by Mikey Vessel Georgeson, frontman of cult indie band ‘David Devant And His Spirit Wife. As well as being a successful musician, he is also a visual artist and lecturer.

We hope you enjoy this essay, and while you are there, take the time to listen to the song itself.

When you are finished, please hang around for a while and check out the rest of the website. “

Click Here to visit – www.sydbarrett.com
Posted in News

Floydpodcast : Southampton 69

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 26/06/2022 by Col T26/06/2022

For this edition of Brain Damage, its an excellent sounding, fully restored Pink Floyd recording form the 9th of May 1969.

This is the second show for the band on this date and they are on fire even for such a late show. We start things off with a nice sing-a-long from Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets recent visit to Luxembourg.

To listen to this edition of the podcast you can do so by heading to floydpodcast.com or by alternatively clicking here or the image above.

Posted in News

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Col Meeting Roger Waters, In The Flesh Tour 2002
Col Meeting Roger Waters, Dark Side Of The Moon Tour 2007
Col Meeting Roger Waters, Dark Side Of The Moon Tour 2008
Col Meeting Storm Thorgeson, Taken By Storm Exhibition 2008
Col Meeting Guy Pratt, Breakfast Of Idiots Shows 2009
Col Meeting Roger Waters, Us & Them Tour 2018
Col Meeting Nick Mason's Saucerful Of Secrets, Echoes Tour 2023


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