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Guy Pratt & Gary Kemp : Rockonteurs Podcast Episode 79 with Jim Kerr

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 09/04/2022 by Col T09/04/2022

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 79 and features guest Jim Kerr Of Simple Minds

 

 

Available from 10th April 2022 on Itunes, Spotify and all other Listening Platforms. Click Here to be taken to Apple Musics Listening Page

Posted in News

David Gilmour Interview With Rolling Stone

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 09/04/2022 by Col T09/04/2022

The courage of the people of Ukraine inspired Gilmour and drummer Nick Mason to release their first new song as Pink Floyd since 1994: “We want to spread this message of peace, and we want to raise the morale of the people who are defending their homeland”

A few days after Russia invaded Ukraine, singer-turned-soldier Andriy Khlyvnyuk posted video of himself belting “The Red Viburnum in the Meadow” — a folk song about the country’s strength in the face of adversity — to Instagram. The vocalist, who fronts the Kyiv group Boombox, had hoped to be playing gigs in the U.S. last month. But when he heard Russia had invaded his homeland, he returned to defend it. At the outbreak of the war, he told Rolling Stone he felt it was his duty to stick up for Ukraine for the sake of the world. “[The West] needs us as the shield to protect it all,” he said.

In the video, he’s wearing fatigues and clinging to a submachine gun as he serenades the empty streets: “Our glorious Ukraine shall hey, hey, rise up and rejoice.”

Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour watched the clip with awe. “My daughter-in-law, who actually is Ukrainian, sent it to me and I thought, ‘Wow, that’s fantastic,‘” Gilmour tells Rolling Stone. “It just struck me that here we are, with our name [Pink Floyd] and this platform, and we could use it more. That piece of singing immediately got me thinking of turning it into something.” So he sequestered himself in his studio, figured out the chords that would support Khlyvnyuk’s powerful vocals, and wrote what became “Hey, Hey, Rise Up” — the first new Pink Floyd recording in nearly 30 years.

“I thought this could be something that we use our platform for, for enormous good,” Gilmour says. So I called [Pink Floyd drummer] Nick [Mason] up and said, ‘Did you want to be a part of it?’ And he said, ‘Yes, great.‘” Last week, the pair, along with bassist Guy Pratt and keyboardist Nitin Sawhney, recorded the song, which sticks to the traditional melodies of the folk song (notwithstanding a few emotive guitar solos) at Gilmour’s home studio with a projection of Khlyvnyuk’s original video. It was the first time Gilmour and Mason had recorded a new Pink Floyd song since the sessions for 1994’s The Division Bell.

Gilmour had closed the book on Pink Floyd after 2014’s The Endless River, which he and Mason had built from recordings made during the Division Bell sessions. But with “Hey, Hey, Rise Up,” he changed his mind. Pink Floyd rushed to release the song quickly to raise awareness for the civilians suffering in Ukraine and to raise money for humanitarian relief in the country.

“I hope the song does some good,” Gilmour tells Rolling Stone, explaining why he decided to resurrect Pink Floyd. “I hope we achieve something with it.”

What was it about Andriy’s video that inspired you to write a new Pink Floyd song?
It’s just very moving when you see Andriy standing in the square in Kyiv, in the midst of all this turmoil, and just opening his voice up for the hell of it and singing that rousing Ukrainian song to no one and to nothing.

Why was it important to release the song as Pink Floyd and not one of your own recordings?
Well, obviously, the following that we have as Pink Floyd — the size of the platform. When I spoke to Nick, and he said he was willing to do it as Pink Floyd, it seemed like a no-brainer. We want to spread this message of peace, and we want to raise the morale of the people who are defending their homeland there in Ukraine. So why not?

How familiar were you with Andriy’s music previously?
In 2015, I was asked to be a part of a benefit concert to support the Belarus Free Theatre. [The members of the theatre] are constantly harassed, imprisoned, and very badly treated in their homeland of Belarus, so we were helping to raise awareness and money for them. Boombox were on the same show. Unfortunately, Andriy couldn’t get there because his visa went wrong at the last moment, but [Boombox] were my backing band for the concerts and we played four songs together. They were really good musicians. So when I read recently about Andriy leaving his tour, going back to Ukraine to fight for his homeland, it was an inspiring and chilling thing. He’s a brave man.

How did Andriy react when you told him you wanted to record his song?
He sounded thrilled. I managed to get his number and I gave him a ring, and I think he was maybe a little suspicious of whether I was genuine or not. He said, “Could we do this on a FaceTime video call?” So I said, “Sure.” When he recognized me and he was assured that it was all for real, from then on, he was great. He loved the track, and I’m just thrilled for him and for us for taking a little step for humanity in the midst of all the inhumanity that’s been going on there.

The recording session was just a week ago. How quickly did this come together?
I literally started thinking about it just over two weeks ago, and here we are now.

How did it feel to be recording with Nick Mason again?
Well, it’s fantastic. Nick is like no other drummer. It’s a wonderful thing for us to be together playing a song that means something fantastic.

“Hey, Hey, Rise Up” begins with a choir. Who is singing?
From the first moment of seeing Andriy singing in the square in Kyiv, I was looking at other videos; you look at one and it suggests another. One that came up was a Ukrainian folk choir called Veryovka. They were singing a different version of [“The Red Viburnum in the Meadow”] in the video I watched. That beautiful part is how they open the song up. I just thought I would put that on in the beginning to see how it sounded, and it sounded great. So we got in touch with them and got their permission to use it.

Хор імені Г. Верьовки - Ой, у лузі червона калина

How did you conceptualize the song’s arrangement?
Well, first of all, you have to figure out what the chords are that he is hearing in his head when he’s singing it. There’s a certain amount of guesswork and then a certain amount of checking against other versions. I worked out the chords for the vocal part of it, and I played those through a few times. I took his voice and put it into my recorder and played it back in time with a click track and then played along with it on my guitar. When the vocal finished, I just kept going and let my guitar lead me into some new guitar chords and parts for the rest of the song. [Those chords] sounded like they could be part of the same song but that part of a new sequence. I think it fits pretty well with the topic and the other music.

Did you improvise the guitar solos?
I suppose what I do a lot is improvise and then fix. If I make mistakes — which I make a lot of — we go in and figure out a new bit for that part. Usually the best part of it is the stuff that comes straight off the top of your head.

The chords that I was using for the solos led themselves out of the music that Andriy is singing over, so what I’m playing over is inspired by that. So you could say there’s a fairly direct and improvised influence of Ukraine and what I’m thinking of, but when I’m playing, I’m not thinking of anything. I’m going to let my mind be devoid of everything and just let it steer itself.

Are you considering more Pink Floyd music? How did this fit into the rest of the music you’re working on?
This is a one-off for Pink Floyd. I’m casually working away all the time. I’m hoping to get an album finished at some point, but my focus at this very moment is just on this.

You have been outspoken against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine from the beginning. How has the war touched your life personally?
Any war, but particularly a war that is started by a world superpower against an independent democratic nation, has got to raise enormous anger and frustration in one. As I said before, I have a small connection there; my daughter-in-law is from Ukraine. And the band Boombox are Ukrainian people that I already knew — not well, but from some time ago. It’s an enormously difficult, frustrating, and anger-making thing that one human being could have the power to go into another independent democratic nation and set about killing the population. It’s just obscene to an extent that is just beyond my belief.

I felt the frustration of not being able to do anything. And Andriy coming along with this piece of vocal helped to free me from that to some extent that I could actually put my abilities and reputation towards doing something concrete for that particular nation at this particular moment. This is the story of the moment, and you want to keep that story alive and do as much as you can to boost the morale of the people involved with it. You want to keep it in the news and keep people’s consciences active on the topic.

In March, you pulled your music and some of Pink Floyd’s music from streaming services in Russia and Belarus. How did you decide to do that? I noticed it wasn’t all of Pink Floyd’s music.
The last thing I want to do is to rob the actual population because Russia is not full of terrible people. It’s just that their leadership has gone so horribly wrong. But the fact is that that is the way the sanctions thing works. I feel that if we did something like that, it might help to make people within Russia think more about what was going on and try to get them to agitate more for change in their country.

I got Nick’s approval and shortly afterwards the Syd Barrett family estate’s approval and we took down everything we could.

How did you feel about the reaction you got from removing the music?
Well, if you want to go troll-chasing, there’s a lot of it about. I tend to avoid it, but I’ve had a lot of favorable and enthusiastic and grateful comments about it from all over. People in Ukraine are grateful if that people are doing something and trying to stand up for them and show solidarity with what the hell they’re going through.

How else would you like to see the rest of the world reacting to Russia’s invasion?
A lot of the world is reacting in the right way. They are angry and they are frustrated. You can see and hear the frustration in the leaders of the other world’s countries. We can see it in the voice of your president, President Biden. He has let slip a couple of his feelings a couple of times over there. Other world leaders have done the same. And I think there’s a groundswell of opinion worldwide. This sort of thing shouldn’t be able to happen. It shouldn’t be able to be allowed. But we are in a world where still, here we are, a fifth of the way through the 21st century and still this obscene situation can happen. The mind boggles. It’s beyond my comprehension.

This article was conduced by Kory Grow of Rollingstone.com

Posted in News

Pink Floyd – Hey Hey Rise Up (Feat. Andriy Khlyvnyuk of Boombox) Official Video

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 07/04/2022 by Col T07/04/2022
Pink Floyd - Hey Hey Rise Up (feat. Andriy Khlyvnyuk of Boombox)

‘Hey Hey Rise Up‘, released in support of the people of Ukraine, sees David Gilmour and Nick Mason joined by long time Pink Floyd bass player Guy Pratt and Nitin Sawhney on keyboards, all accompanying an extraordinary vocal by Andriy Khlyvnyuk of Ukrainian band Boombox.

All proceeds go to Ukrainian Humanitarian Relief.

The track uses Andriy’s vocals taken from his Instagram post of him in Kyiv’s Sofiyskaya Square singing ‘Oh, The Red Viburnum In The Meadow’, a rousing Ukrainian folk protest song written during the first world war.

The title of the Pink Floyd track is taken from the last line of the song which translates as ‘Hey, hey, rise up and rejoice’.

The video for ‘Hey Hey Rise Up‘ was filmed by acclaimed director Mat Whitecross and shot on the same day as the track was recorded, with Andriy singing on the screen while the band played.

Gilmour, who has a Ukrainian daughter-in-law and grandchildren says: “We, like so many, have been feeling the fury and the frustration of this vile act of an independent, peaceful democratic country being invaded and having its people murdered by one of the world’s major powers”.

Speaking about his hopes for the track Gilmour says, “I hope it will receive wide support and publicity. We want to raise funds and morale. We want to show our support for Ukraine and in that way, show that most of the world thinks that it is totally wrong for a superpower to invade the independent democratic country that Ukraine has become.“

The artwork for the track features a painting of the national flower of Ukraine, the sunflower, by the Cuban artist, Yosan Leon. The cover of the single is a direct reference to the woman who was seen around the world giving sunflower seeds to Russian soldiers and telling them to carry them in their pockets so that when they die, sunflowers will grow.

Posted in News

‘This is a crazy, unjust attack’: Pink Floyd re-form to support Ukraine

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 07/04/2022 by Col T07/04/2022

David Gilmour and Nick Mason, flanked by Nitin Sawhney and Guy Pratt, who have contributed to the new Pink Floyd recording. Photograph: Sarah Lee/The Guardian

A couple of weeks ago, Pink Floyd’s guitarist and singer David Gilmour was asked if he’d seen the Instagram feed of Andriy Khlyvnyuk, frontman of Ukrainian rock band BoomBox. Gilmour had performed live with BoomBox in 2015, at a London benefit gig for the Belarus Free Theatre – they played a brief, endearingly raw set of Pink Floyd songs and Gilmour solo tracks – but events had moved on dramatically since then: at the end of Feburary, Khlyvnyuk had abandoned BoomBox’s US tour in order to fight against the Russian invasion.

On his Instagram, Gilmour found a video of the singer in military fatigues, a rifle slung over his shoulder, standing outside Kyiv’s St Sofia Cathedral, belting out an unaccompanied version of Oh, the Red Viburnum in the Meadow, a 1914 protest song written in honour of the Sich Riflemen who fought both in the first world war and the Ukrainian war of independence. “I thought: that is pretty magical and maybe I can do something with this,” says Gilmour. “I’ve got a big platform that [Pink Floyd] have worked on for all these years. It’s a really difficult and frustrating thing to see this extraordinarily crazy, unjust attack by a major power on an independent, peaceful, democratic nation. The frustration of seeing that and thinking ‘what the fuck can I do?’ is sort of unbearable.”

The result is Hey Hey, Rise Up!, a new single by Pink Floyd that samples Khlyvnyuk’s performance, to be released at midnight on Friday with proceeds going to Ukrainian humanitarian relief.

Most observers assumed Pink Floyd were long defunct. They last released original new music 28 years ago, although in 2014 Gilmour and drummer Nick Mason reconvened to turn outtakes from their 1994 album The Division Bell into the largely instrumental The Endless River, as a tribute to the band’s late keyboard player Rick Wright. At the time, Gilmour was insistent that was the finale for a band that began in 1965 and sold more than 250m albums. Pink Floyd couldn’t tour without Wright, who died of cancer in 2008, and there was to be no more music: “It’s a shame,” he told the BBC, “but this is the end.”

This is an excerpt of an exclusive article posted by The Guardian – CLICK HERE to read the entire article

Posted in News

BREAKING NEWS : Pink Floyd Announce NEW single !!

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 07/04/2022 by Col T07/04/2022

Tonight at midnight, Pink Floyd will release ‘Hey Hey Rise Up‘, in support of the people of Ukraine.

This is the first new original music that they have recorded together as a band since 1994’s The Division Bell. The track sees David Gilmour and Nick Mason joined by long time Pink Floyd bass player Guy Pratt and Nitin Sawhney on keyboards and features an extraordinary vocal performance by Andriy Khlyvnyuk of Ukrainian band Boombox.

The track, recorded last Wednesday (30th March), uses Andriy’s vocals taken from his Instagram post (https://www.instagram.com/p/Cae5TydPAxh/) of him singing in Kyiv’s Sofiyskaya Square.

The song itself ‘The Red  Viburnum In The Meadow’ is a rousing Ukrainian protest song written during the first world war which has been taken up across the world over the past month in protest of the invasion of Ukraine. The title of the Pink Floyd track is taken from the last line of the song which translates as ‘Hey Hey Rise up and rejoice

Posted in News

Guy Pratt & Gary Kemp : Rockonteurs Podcast Episode 78 with Rick Astley

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 01/04/2022 by Col T01/04/2022

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 78 and features guest Rick Astley

 

 

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

Posted in News

David Gilmour Reaches Out To ‘Boombox’ Singer Andrey Khlivnyuk After Russia / Ukraine Injury

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 31/03/2022 by Col T31/03/2022

The leader of the Boombox group, Andrey Khlyvnyuk, was recently wounded during mortar attacks by Russian occupiers. The artist’s face was damaged by shrapnel.

David Gilmour, frontman of Pink Floyd, decided to support the Ukrainian singer. The British singer sent a message to Boombox, where he wrote that he would like to talk to Khlyvnyuk or other members of the group. And so it happened!

Andrey Khlyvnyuk posted a screenshot of their video call on Instastories. However, what exactly the musicians were talking about remains a mystery. Maybe they will record some track together?!

In addition, the leader of the “Boombox” told how he feels after being injured and showed how he looks. While the artist is in the hospital, he assures that everything is fine with him, also sending a message out to the Russian military with an appeal to lay down their arms and retreat.

Posted in News

Nick Mason Pays Tribute To Foo Fighters Drummer Taylor Hawkins

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 30/03/2022 by Col T30/03/2022

Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason recently joined among many rockstars who pay tribute to the talented Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins who passed away in Columbia. Mason stated how sad it is to lose another fantastic drummer in his new Twitter post.

The world was shocked to hear about the sudden death of Taylor Hawkins recently in Columbia, where he went with his band to perform for their fans. Hawkins’ certain cause of death is still not officially determined, but the authorities believe the drummer was under the influence of a cocktail of drugs, and his heart couldn’t take it.

According to the Columbian authorities, an emergency call from his hotel was made after Hawkins contacted the front desk to ask for help because he was having chest pain. Although the death doesn’t seem like an overdose but rather a heart attack, the investigation around the drugs found in his room continues.

His death was sudden and surprising, primarily because the musician was very young and looking healthy on the road with his band. The entire rock and roll world is dressed in grief and pays their tributes, sharing their memories with the loved drummer. Most recently, Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason shared his tribute on his Twitter account.

He expressed how sad it was to lose another drummer and revealed that Hawkins would send him his mixes and versions of Pink Floyd songs. Mason still ‘treasures’ those records he left behind for him and wishes ‘condolences’ to his bandmates Dave Grohl, Nate Mendel, Pat Smear, Chris Shiflett, Rami Jaffee, and his family.

Here is what Mason said about Hawkins’ passing:

“Nick Mason pays tribute to Taylor Hawkins: So sad to lose another wonderful drummer. I still treasure some mixes that he sent me of his own interpretation of some Pink Floyd songs. Condolences to the band and his family.”

pic.twitter.com/cD95B4yndD

— Nick Mason (@nickmasondrums) March 28, 2022

Posted in News

Syd Barrett Estate Pulls Solo Discography From Russia And Belarus Digital Streaming Platforms.

Pink Floyd - A Fleeting Glimpse Posted on 30/03/2022 by Col T30/03/2022

Following in the footsteps of David Gilmour, the Estate of the late Syd Barrett has decided to show support during the current Russia-Ukraine war by removing all Syd Barrett solo material from digital streaming platforms in Russia and Belarus.

A statement issued on March 29th, 2022, reads.

“As with the works of Pink Floyd from 1987 onwards, and David Gilmour’s solo material, all of Syd Barrett’s solo recordings are now being removed from all digital music providers in Russia and Belarus. This is to stand with the world in strongly condemning Russia’s continued attack and invasion of Ukraine.“

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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