"PINK FLOYD: THE EARLY YEARS" BOOK
A superb new book focusing on the formative years of the Floyd is being published at the end of November this year (2006).
"Pink Floyd: The Early Years" has
been written by Barry Miles, which will be a familiar name to many
Floyd fans, having penned "The Visual Documentary" - a book which for
many years was a standard reference to the group. Miles saw the band
play when they were still called "The Pink Floyd Sound" and he wrote
the first ever article about them for a New York underground newspaper
in 1966.
He also knew the band members
socially, witnessed the rapid decline of Syd Barrett and became
actively involved in setting up some of Floyd's major gigs.
In the publicity for the book,
the reader is promised an "authentic and compelling story of the group
that gave alternative London its first real soundtrack and launched on
the rock world a radical combination of music, light shows and
pyrotechnic stage effects, a revealing diary of Pink Floyd's daily
routine, from their roots in Cambridge to cult status in Sixties
London."
It is often said that you if you
remember the sixties, you weren't really there. If that's the case,
Miles must be the exception that proves the rule. With an incredible
depth of information, the text transforms the reader back to that
decade, with rich, illuminating atmosphere. His friendship with the
band members results in the sort of detail that hasn't been uncovered
elsewhere, with revelations that have come from them, or their
families, even back to schooldays:
"Cross-country
running was a good lesson for [Syd] to sneak away from; he would start
the run with the rest of the boys, drop back, then go home, get in an
hour of painting, return to the route and join the run somewhere
towards the end, huffing and puffing as if he had run the entire
distance..."
With his knowledge of the Cambridge
crowd, he paints a detailed picture of how the different people, and
bands, intermingled, and how their paths would inexorably cross.
There is a lot of detail on the
events of the so called "underground" scene - the publications, the
clubs, and the people involved. Some of this will be familiar, but not
drawn in such sharp relief. With Miles closely involved with a lot of
the early, band-related events (or happenings), you get a really good
"insiders" view of the staging and problems involved. No rose-tinted
spectacles here, Miles reveals the basic (and distinctly dangerous at
times) nature of the early shows:
"[The Roundhouse] floor was thick
with a century of dirt; in fact, there may not even have been a proper
floor, just equipment housings. Twisted iron jutted up from bits of
broken concrete. People formed an enormous line outside; the only way
in was up a very long narrow single-file staircase. It was so narrow
that no-one could leave while other people were coming up, it was
impossible to squeeze past...
Then the Pink Floyd climbed onto
the rickety old cart [which was used as a stage] and their fans from
the All Saints Hall gigs pushed the loon dancers out of the way to
stand at the front..."
It makes a very nice change to read
about the various events from someone who was very closely involved
with each of them - there is such a difference to the normal coverage
of the shows, using second or even third hand information.
The book covers the band's story
in impressive, and intimate, detail - from the birth of each musician,
right up until Dark Side Of The Moon, when they had self-confessedly
achieved all that they had set out to do - the big album, success,
fame, money, etc.. Leaving no stone unturned, it covers all their
important early concerts, the problems that beset Syd, and how various
personnel got involved with the band.
Whilst we've not seen the final,
printed version of the book itself (having read the author's manuscript
for the book), we've been assured that it is going to be lavishly
illustrated with a large number of unusual, early shots of the band.
Irrespective of this, the text itself is totally absorbing, and will
keep your attention wrapt from beginning to end. The addition of these
pictures should be like icing on the cake!
With luck, Miles will be
encouraged to turn his attention to the later period of their story,
and cover that with a similar level of detail and substance.
This book, a true essential for
the Floydian bookshelves, can be ordered through the following special
links, for delivery upon release: Amazon US/International, Canada, UK/Europe, France, or Germany.
Any item bought through these links at Amazon (not just Floyd items)
helps with the running costs of the site, and we really appreciate it.
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