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Pink Floyd's roots go
back to the mid sixties when they
were formed in England by
guitarist/vocalist "Syd" Barrett,
bassist Roger Waters, drummer Nick
Mason and keyboard player Rick
Wright. Initially taking on a
number of various names such as
The Screaming Abdabs and the
T-Set, they finally settled on
Pink Floyd, a name suggested by
Barrett, inspired by an album by
Georgia blues musicians Pink
Anderson and Floyd Council. The
band spent their early days at the
UFO Club, spearheading England's
psychedelic movement with
extended, improvised sets and a
highly visual lightshow, which
would later become a major feature
of their concerts. They signed to
EMI Records and released their
debut album, "The Piper at the
Gates of Dawn" in 1967. The album
charted almost immediately and the
band embarked on a series of
tours, including a particularly
memorable one with the Jimi
Hendrix Experience. Barrett was
proving to be a major problem in
that his use of drugs was having a
serious affect on his ability to
perform live with the band, not to
mention his inabilty to converse
coherently with interviewers.
Guitarist/vocalist Dave Gilmour,
who'd been a pupil at Cambridge
High School with Barrett and
Waters in the early sixties, was
recruited in place of Barrett, who
subsequently followed a
short-lived solo career. The band
went on to record a number of
fairly successful albums, the pick
of the crop being 1971's "Meddle"
and 1972's "Obscured by Clouds"
soundtrack. Pink Floyd's simmering
talent finally exploded in 1973
with the release of "Dark side of
the Moon", an album that is still
popular to this day. The band's
subsequent history is quite
extensive and they continued to
release many charting albums,
despite internal problems with
Waters and Gilmour. Wright, Waters
and Gilmour have all released solo
albums. A few months ago, the
beautifully packaged double "Is
there anybody out there - The Wall
Live 1980 -1981" album was
released. Awesome stuff, and a box
set certainly worth adding to the
collection.
(If you have more info on this
band, please
e-mail us)

Biography by Richie Unterberger
Pink Floyd is the premier space
rock band. Since the mid-'60s,
their music relentlessly
tinkered with electronics and
all manner of special effects to
push pop formats to their outer
limits. At the same time they
wrestled with lyrical themes and
concepts of such massive scale
that their music has taken on
almost classical, operatic
quality, in both sound and
words. Despite their astral
image, the group was brought
down to earth in the 1980s by
decidedly mundane power
struggles over leadership and,
ultimately, ownership of the
band's very name. After that
time, they were little more than
a dinosaur act, capable of
filling stadiums and topping the
charts, but offering little more
than a spectacular recreation of
their most successful formulas.
Their latter-day staleness
cannot disguise the fact that,
for the first decade or so of
their existence, they were one
of the most innovative groups
around, in concert and
(especially) in the studio.
While Pink Floyd are mostly
known for their grandiose
concept albums of the 1970s,
they started as a very different
sort of psychedelic band. Soon
after they first began playing
together in the mid-'60s, they
fell firmly under the leadership
of lead guitarist Syd Barrett,
the gifted genius who would
write and sing most of their
early material. The Cambridge
native shared the stage with
Roger Waters (bass), Rick Wright
(keyboards), and Nick Mason
(drums). The name Pink Floyd,
seemingly so far-out, was
actually derived from the first
names of two ancient bluesmen
(Pink Anderson and Floyd
Council). And at first, Pink
Floyd were much more
conventional than the act into
which they would evolve,
concentrating on the rock and
R&B material that were so common
to the repertoires of mid-'60s
British bands.
Pink Floyd quickly began to
experiment, however, stretching
out songs with wild instrumental
freak-out passages incorporating
feedback; electronic screeches;
and unusual, eerie sounds
created by loud amplification,
reverb, and such tricks as
sliding ball bearings up and
down guitar strings. In 1966,
they began to pick up a
following in the London
underground; on-stage, they
began to incorporate light shows
to add to the psychedelic
effect. Most importantly, Syd
Barrett began to compose
pop-psychedelic gems that
combined unusual psychedelic
arrangements (particularly in
the haunting guitar and
celestial organ licks) with
catchy melodies and incisive
lyrics that viewed the world
with a sense of poetic,
childlike wonder.
The group landed a recording
contract with EMI in early 1967
and made the Top 20 with a
brilliant debut single, "Arnold
Layne," a sympathetic, comic
vignette about a transvestite.
The follow-up, the kaleidoscopic
"See Emily Play," made the Top
Ten. The debut album, The Piper
at the Gates of Dawn, also
released in 1967, may have been
the greatest British psychedelic
album other than Sgt. Pepper's.
Dominated almost wholly by
Barrett's songs, the album was a
charming fun house of driving,
mysterious rockers ("Lucifer
Sam"); odd character sketches
("The Gnome"); childhood
flashbacks ("Bike," "Matilda
Mother"); and freakier pieces
with lengthy instrumental
passages ("Astronomy Domine,"
"Interstellar Overdrive," "Pow R
Toch") that mapped out their
fascination with space travel.
The record was not only like no
other at the time; it was like
no other that Pink Floyd would
make, colored as it was by a
vision that was far more
humorous, pop-friendly, and
lighthearted than those of their
subsequent epics.
The reason Pink Floyd never made
a similar album was that Piper
was the only one to be recorded
under Barrett's leadership.
Around mid-1967, the prodigy
began showing increasingly
alarming signs of mental
instability. Barrett would go
catatonic on-stage, playing
music that had little to do with
the material, or not playing at
all. An American tour had to be
cut short when he was barely
able to function at all, let
alone play the pop star game.
Dependent upon Barrett for most
of their vision and material,
the rest of the group was
nevertheless finding him
impossible to work with, live or
in the studio.
Around the beginning of 1968,
guitarist Dave Gilmour, a friend
of the band who was also from
Cambridge, was brought in as a
fifth member. The idea was that
Gilmour would enable the Floyd
to continue as a live outfit;
Barrett would still be able to
write and contribute to the
records. That couldn't work
either, and within a few months
Barrett was out of the group.
Pink Floyd's management, looking
at the wreckage of a band that
was now without its lead
guitarist, lead singer, and
primary songwriter, decided to
abandon the group and manage
Barrett as a solo act.
Such calamities would have
proven insurmountable for 99 out
of 100 bands in similar
predicaments. Incredibly, Pink
Floyd would regroup and not only
maintain their popularity, but
eventually become even more
successful. It was early in the
game yet, after all; the first
album had made the British Top
Ten, but the group was still
virtually unknown in America,
where the loss of Syd Barrett
meant nothing to the media.
Gilmour was an excellent
guitarist, and the band proved
capable of writing enough
original material to generate
further ambitious albums, Waters
eventually emerging as the
dominant composer. The 1968
follow-up to Piper at the Gates
of Dawn, A Saucerful of Secrets,
made the British Top Ten, using
Barrett's vision as an obvious
blueprint, but taking a more
formal, somber, and
quasi-classical tone, especially
in the long instrumental parts.
Barrett, for his part, would go
on to make a couple of
interesting solo records before
his mental problems instigated a
retreat into oblivion.
Over the next four years, Pink
Floyd would continue to polish
their brand of experimental
rock, which married psychedelia
with ever-grander arrangements
on a Wagnerian operatic scale.
Hidden underneath the pulsing,
reverberant organs and guitars
and insistently restated themes
were subtle blues and pop
influences that kept the
material accessible to a wide
audience. Abandoning the singles
market, they concentrated on
album-length works, and built a
huge following in the
progressive rock underground
with constant touring in both
Europe and North America. While
LPs like Ummagumma (divided into
live recordings and experimental
outings by each member of the
band), Atom Heart Mother (a
collaboration with composer Ron
Geesin), and More... (a film
soundtrack) were erratic, each
contained some extremely
effective music.
By the early '70s, Syd Barrett
was a fading or nonexistent
memory for most of Pink Floyd's
fans, although the group, one
could argue, never did match the
brilliance of that somewhat
anomalous 1967 debut. Meddle
(1971) sharpened the band's
sprawling epics into something
more accessible, and polished
the science fiction ambience
that the group had been
exploring ever since 1968.
Nothing, however, prepared Pink
Floyd or their audience for the
massive mainstream success of
their 1973 album, Dark Side of
the Moon, which made their brand
of cosmic rock even more
approachable with
state-of-the-art production;
more focused songwriting; an
army of well-time stereophonic
sound effects; and touches of
saxophone and soulful female
backup vocals.
Dark Side of the Moon finally
broke Pink Floyd as superstars
in the United States, where it
made number one. More
astonishingly, it made them one
of the biggest-selling acts of
all time. Dark Side of the Moon
spent an incomprehensible 741
weeks on the Billboard album
chart. Additionally, the
primarily instrumental textures
of the songs helped make Dark
Side of the Moon easily
translatable on an international
level, and the record became
(and still is) one of the most
popular rock albums worldwide.
It was also an extremely hard
act to follow, although the
follow-up, Wish You Were Here
(1975), also made number one,
highlighted by a tribute of
sorts to the long-departed
Barrett, "Shine On You Crazy
Diamond." Dark Side of the Moon
had been dominated by lyrical
themes of insecurity, fear, and
the cold sterility of modern
life; Wish You Were Here and
Animals (1977) developed these
morose themes even more
explicitly. By this time Waters
was taking a firm hand over Pink
Floyd's lyrical and musical
vision, which was consolidated
by The Wall (1979).
The bleak, overambitious double
concept album concerned itself
with the material and emotional
walls modern humans build around
themselves for survival. The
Wall was a huge success (even by
Pink Floyd's standards), in part
because the music was losing
some of its heavy-duty
electronic textures in favor of
more approachable pop elements.
Although Pink Floyd had rarely
even released singles since the
late '60s, one of the tracks,
"Another Brick in the Wall,"
became a transatlantic number
one. The band had been launching
increasingly elaborate stage
shows throughout the '70s, but
the touring production of The
Wall, featuring a construction
of an actual wall during the
band's performance, was the most
excessive yet.
In the 1980s, the group began to
unravel. Each of the four had
done some side and solo projects
in the past; more troublingly,
Waters was asserting control of
the band's musical and lyrical
identity. That wouldn't have
been such a problem had The
Final Cut (1983) been such an
unimpressive effort, with little
of the electronic innovation so
typical of their previous work.
Shortly afterward, the band
split up — for a while. In 1986,
Waters was suing Gilmour and
Mason to dissolve the group's
partnership (Wright had lost
full membership status
entirely); Waters lost, leaving
a Roger-less Pink Floyd to get a
Top Five album with Momentary
Lapse of Reason in 1987. In an
irony that was nothing less than
cosmic, about 20 years after
Pink Floyd shed their original
leader to resume their career
with great commercial success,
they would do the same again to
his successor. Waters released
ambitious solo albums to nothing
more than moderate sales and
attention, while he watched his
former colleagues (with Wright
back in tow) rescale the charts.
Pink Floyd still had a huge fan
base, but there's little that's
noteworthy about their
post-Waters output. They knew
their formula, could execute it
on a grand scale, and could
count on millions of customers —
many of them unborn when Dark
Side of the Moon came out, and
unaware that Syd Barrett was
ever a member — to buy their
records and see their sporadic
tours. The Division Bell, their
first studio album in seven
years, topped the charts in 1994
without making any impact on the
current rock scene, except in a
marketing sense. Ditto for the
live Pulse album, recorded
during a typically elaborately
staged 1994 tour, which included
a concert version of The Dark
Side of the Moon in its
entirety. Waters' solo career
sputtered along, highlighted by
a solo recreation of The Wall,
performed at the site of the
former Berlin Wall in 1990, and
released as an album. Syd
Barrett continued to be
completely removed from the
public eye except as a sort of
archetype for the fallen
genius.

Syd
Barrett
Roger Waters
Nick Mason
Rick Wright
David Gilmour

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have any contribution to make to
this band or something to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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