Something snapped in Montreal. It
was partly the strain of a long tour coming to a close - the
accumulated jet lag, hotel; food, pre- and post-show ennui and
oppressive stadium squeeze of faceless but demanding flesh of the 1977
Animals tour. It was partly the strain of that lifestyle accumulated
over ten exhausting years ("How about the time at Dunstable in '67 when
the audience poured beer on us from the balcony?") and knowing it had
already sucked the heart and soul out of one bandmate and friend early
on. It was also partly - actually a big part - the knowledge that they
were playing a bad show their last night out. What's more, the very
vocal majority of people in that blackhole of steel and concrete were
less concerned with what they had to play and say than with who they
were. "They" were Pink Floyd and that was enough.
Roger Waters spit on a kid in the
front rows that night. Pink Floyd's singer-bassist-songwriter also
spent a lot of time afterward brooding on what his fame had done to him
and how he came to such a scary pass. He later spent a lot of time
writing it all down in a series of brutally confessional emotionally
graphic songs that eventually became Pink Floyd's multi-platinum seller
The Wall.
Guitarist David Gilmour had no
idea at the time that the Montreal concert had struck such a
devastating chord in Waters. "None of us," he explains, meaning Floyd
drummer Nick Mason and keyboard player Richard Wright, "were aware of
it at the time. I just thought it was a great shame to end up a six
month tour with a rotten show. In fact, I remember going offstage for
the encore and going back to the sound mixing board in the middle of
the audience to watch the encore while Snowy (White), the guitar player
who was with us at the time, played guitar on the encore."
But if The Wall is very much
Waters' acutely autobiographical examination of the way not just rock
'n' roll but society as a whole feasts at the expense of its creative
spirit, its roots and lessons are hardly unfamiliar to the rest of the
Floyd. Gilmour remembers, with a hint of bitter resignation, the point
at which Pink Floyd's audience changed from an attentive, devoted
mega-cult hanging on Ummagumma's every last resonating echo to an
awesome often unmanageable mob that responded mostly to spectacle. It
was, ironically, the Floyd's 1973 hit single "Money," Waters'
contemptible assessment of wealth and itself part of a fantastically
successful album, The Dark Side Of The Moon - at this writing, 433
weeks on the Billboard top 200 LPs, with a bullet no less - that was a
life-death-and-reincarnation cycle in song. Pink Floyd have, in one
sense, only themselves to blame. They compensated for each leap in
popularity and concert hall size from Dark Side Of The Moon on with
expansive stage productions shooting very real, introspective (and in
the case of the savagely misanthropic Animals, almost paranoiac)
lyrical concerns into the realm of the visually surreal, like Floyd's
reflection seen in some sinister funhouse mirror.
What do you remember most about
the Animals tour - Gilmour's singing solo stretch on Dogs and the
vengeful gallop of Sheep, or that inflatable pig with electric eyes
zipping across the top of the arena like some giant fat out of hell? As
an album, The Wall is a direct rebuke of that rock arena psychology and
its bigger social parallel. As a film, The Wall is an all-too-literal
translation by director Alan Parker of Waters' screen- and album-play,
a dazzling series of reality nightmares - a bit like one enormous
Hipgnosis album cover with Gerald Scarfe's Fantasia-in-hell animation
from the concert - heavy on the fascist implications of rock's mob
complex. But as a concert, seen by an exclusive club of a few hundred
thousand in New York, Los Angeles, Germany, and London, The Wall was an
ingenious manipulation of that complex to make Waters' point. The
gradual building and subsequent demolition of the wall, the overhead
buzzing of the plane, the grotesque inflated dolls and duplicate Floyd
band were all calculated, not just to illustrate the album, but to get
the same roaring Pavlovian response that first pulled Waters
hair-trigger in Montreal. The Wall audience was the metaphor.
The capping irony of Pink Floyd's
staggering success From Dark Side to The Wall is the media and the
public's insistence on categorizing the group as the last living truly
psychedelic band, a "space band." Their early recordings (with and
without founding member Syd Barrett) like Interstellar Overdrive and
Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun, aimed at the outer limits.
Yet since the Dark Side Of The Moon, Pink Floyd and Waters in
particular have concerned themselves more with a murky inner space, the
battered passages of the body and soul through a perilous lifetime.
Where Peter Townshend is obsessed with growing old in rock 'n' roll,
Roger Waters is worried more about surviving long enough to enjoy old
age.
The Floyd have also become
fanatical about another inner space, the recording studio. Longtime
sound and soundprocessing freaks (they debuted a rudimentary
quadraphonic sound system at a 1967 London concert), they are
meticulous recorders and go as long as two years between albums. Their
imminent release, The Final Cut, a collection of Wall recordings and
new tracks designed as a soundtrack companion to the film, was supposed
to be finished in time for the movie's premiere in August of The Wall
(with Boomtown Rat Bob Geldof as "Pink") gave Gilmour a good
promotional excuse to sit with me in the airy comfort of his plush New
York hotel suite and talk of all things Floyd.
Relaxing in a summery
shirt-and-pants outfit with a day-old beard, Gilmour is a willing,
lively conversationalist, often amused by the serious, almost academic
way Floyd fans treat some of the band's casual studio accidents. He
maintains a strong interest in music outside the Floyd, producing a
number of records for the mid-70's U.K. band Unicorn, discovering
British pop thrush Kate Bush and recording the first - aside from Syd
Barrett's - of the Floyd's solo albums (1978's David Gilmour).
According to Alan Parsons, who engineered Atom Heart Mother and Dark
Side Of The Moon, he is also, "the most technically minded of the
four." For the 1980 Wall concerts, he played conductor as well as
guitarist, cueing not only the band but the stage hands throughout the
show. "I didn't dare even have a beer before the show," he cracks. "A
concentration lapse for a second and the whole thing could fall apart."
Considering Pink Floyd's stony
ten-year silence, this interview is quite an event. It may not be the
last word on Pink Floyd, but at least it's one less brick in the wall.
Musician: From a musical
standpoint, The Wall is a very unique Pink Floyd record. In comparison
to the other post Dark Side albums like Wish You Were Here and Animals,
it seems to be almost conventional in its execution and songs. Where
the other albums featured long, expanded pieces undergoing subtle
changes, The Wall features relatively uncomplicated songs and often
simple guitar-based arrangements.
David Gilmour: The idea of
The Wall was so big and there was such a lot of stuff that Roger wanted
to get across lyrically that there was no other way to do it, really.
As it was, we had to struggle to get it on a double album. And also,
none of the stuff had ever been out on the road before. The Dark Side
Of The Moon was toured before the album was made. That determined
things - they worked onstage before they ever got to record. And I
suppose that's the big difference on this thing. It was purely made in
the studio.
Musician: What was the process by which the songs and the arrangements developed?
David Gilmour: Roger had
done a demo, at home, of the entire piece and then we got it into the
studio with Bob Ezrin (producer of The Wall album with Waters and
Gilmour) and the rest of us. We went through it and started with the
tracks we liked best, discussed a lot of what was not so good, and
kicked out a lot of stuff. Roger and Bob spent a lot of time trying to
get the story line straighter, more linear conceptually. Ezrin is the
sort of guy who's thinking about all the angles all the time, about how
to make a shorter story line that's told properly, constantly worried
about moving rhythms up and down, all that stuff which we've never
really thought about.
Musician: Were the arrangement of the songs developed during this demo process?
David Gilmour: Some of the
arrangements are very close to how Roger originally had them. Most of
them are just changed, perhaps, a bit. That's just the normal process
we use. Bash things on and try 'em...move things around if you don't
like it.
Musician: Did you feel a
need to telescope instrumental or musical ideas you would normally have
expanded on in Animals or even Dark Side?
David Gilmour: I don't
think it was a matter of telescoping. It was a matter of being
economical and making things say what they're trying to say, quite
snappily and not waste the time. That was the mood we were in and
certainly Bob Ezrin helped. Very snappy and to the point.
Musician: Another Brick In
The Wall, Part 2 is an interesting case in point because it is a very
simple song, actually just one verse and a chorus. Yet you built it up
into a powerful top-forty single with quite a radical treatment.
David Gilmour: It was
originally a very short song. There was going to be a quick guitar solo
and that was it. There was only one verse ever recorded and we put the
solo stuff on the end. Roger and myself sang the verse and then we
thought we'd try getting some kids to sing on it. I made up a backing
track with a sync pulse up on it so we could later sneak it back in
with the original track. We were in L.A. at the time, so I sent the
tape to England and got an engineer to summon some kids. I gave him a
whole set of instructions - ten-to-fifteen-year-olds from North London,
mostly boys - and I said get them to sing this song in as many ways as
you like. And he filled up all the tracks on a 24-track machine with
stereo pairs of all the different combinations and ways of singing with
all these kids. We got the tape back to L.A., played it, and it was
terrific.
Originally, we were going to put
them in the background, behind Roger and me singing on the same verse.
But it was so good we decided to do them on their own. But we didn't
want to lose our vocal. So we wound up copying the tape and mixing it
twice, one with me and Roger singing and one with the kids. The backing
is the same. And we edited them together.
Musician: What about the other extreme, something like The Trial, which is very Brech-Weilian with the violins and orchestra?
David Gilmour: That's
largely Roger and Bob Ezrin collaborating. I think it was written by
Bob with the immediate intention to do that with an orchestra, although
we did demos of it with synthesizers and stuff.
Musician: It's ironic that
Pink Floyd has this reputation for being a "space band," making weird
music, mainly because I find Pink Floyd is not so much about weird
sounds but about sound processing. You take a basic sound, even a nice
piano or acoustic guitar as on the Animals bits Pigs On The Wing, and
process it, giving it a certain dramatic air.
David Gilmour: I like our
music to feel three-dimensional. It's about trying to invoke emotions
in people, I suppose. You feel larger than life in some sort of way.
Let's face it - none of us in Pink Floyd are technically brilliant
musicians, with great chops who can change rhythms, fifteen or sixteen
bars here, there, and everywhere. And we're not terribly good at
complicated chord structures. A lot of it is just very simple stuff
dressed up. We stopped trying to make overtly "spacey" music and trip
people out in that way in the 60's. But that image hangs on and we
can't seem to get short of it.
Crazy Diamond in the Rough
The child loved the spot,
and Otter thinks if he came wandering back from wherever he is - if he
is anywhere by this time, poor little chap - he might...stop there and
play, perhaps. So Otter goes there every night and watches - on the
chance, you know, just on the chance.
-- "The Piper at the Gates of Dawn" chapter seven of "The Wind in the Willows"
In the beginning, there was Syd
Barrett. To this day, certain Floyd freaks insist he was Pink. It is
certainly true that even now the spirit of Syd Barrett - for a brief
meteoric period in 1966 and '67 the band's main songwriter, lead
guitarist and truly psychedelic adventurer - hangs over Pink Floyd.
David Gilmour remembers that Syd - born Roger Keith Barrett in
Cambridge, England on January 6, 1946 - could turn heads even at an
early age with his arrestingly handsome manlike looks, dark tousled air
and enigmatic smile. "He was a truly magnetic personality. When he was
very young, he was a figure in his hometown. People would look at him
in the street and say, 'There's Syd Barrett,' and he would be only
fourteen years old," recalls Gilmour, a teenage pal of Syd's. Barrett
also had these deep laser eyes that shot out from early Floyd publicity
photos and record covers. But that, says Gilmour with a tinge of
sadness, came later.
George Roger Waters was also a
Cambridge boy and a school chum of Syd's, although two years older.
When a band he was playing with in London found itself in need of a
guitarist, he brought in Syd who had since moved to the city and was
staying in the same flat. This was 1965. The other members of the group
were drummer Nick Mason and organist Richard Wright, fellow
architecture students of Waters. Barrett came up with the name Pink
Floyd, borrowing it from two Georgia bluesmen named Pink Anderson and
Floyd Council.
Given the times and the
town, it was only natural that Pink Floyd would soon fall in with the
inevitable exploding underground. But if Pink Floyd, through their
pioneering use of light shows and psychedelic theatrics, came to
represent the scene, Syd Barrett surely represented its soul. His
songwriting was at once whimsical and poignant - Pink Floyd's debut '67
album single Arnold Layne was a typically Sydian compassionate portrait
of a transvestite who pinched women's clothes from neighborhood
washlines; the follow-up See Emily Play, the Floyd's only only hit
single for the next six years, captured in the paisley pop pastels of
Rick Wright's spooky organ and Barrett's underground fuzz guitar the
free spirit and second childhood of the New Acid Age. Syd played his
guitar as if he were furiously digging a hole to China, building
extended improvisational rave-ups like Interstellar Overdrive on
vicious scratching solos and stuttering guitar monologues while the
band wailed maniacally behind him. To help get wherever he was going in
his mind and music, Barrett took acid, lots of it. (Ironically, Gilmour
notes, the rest of the band were purely drinkers.)
It got him as far as The Piper At
The Gates Of Dawn, the Floyd's brilliant, breathtaking '67 debut album
with its psychotic instrumental rampages and blowout rockers,
meditative ballads and altered pop fairy tales. He wrote or co-wrote
all but one of the songs. But even then, Syd started seriously freaking
out.
On a brief, disastrous sojourn to
America to promote See Emily Play, the Floyd did a lip-sync appearance
on American Bandstand, only Syd "was not into moving his lips that
day." When Mr. Clean, Pat Boone, tried interviewing Syd on another TV
show, Syd's only reply was a completely blank stare. Gilmour remembers
seeing the band perform in England in the Fall of '67 and thinking,
"They were a piece of crap. Syd was thrashing about on his guitar
terribly and everyone thinking it was wonderful."
The rest of the Floyd didn't.
After enlisting Gilmour to shore up the guitar end the next January,
they eased Barrett out entirely by the Spring of '68. But out of a
mixture of pity and genuine respect for his native talents, they never
entirely gave up on him. Gilmour, with help from Waters and Wright,
produced two Barrett solo albums - The Madcap Laughs in 1969, and
Barrett a year later. Shine On You Crazy Diamond, the centerpiece of
Wish You Were Here, seemed less a tribute to Syd than a pleading to
return, particularly at a time when the group was desperately
floundering on a sequel to Dark Side.
Fifteen years after Syd
Barrett came to his brief fame, he is nothing more than one of rock's
great MIA's, a tragic casualty of his own daring. Yet to hear David
Gilmour talk about him, it's as if Pink Floyd still holds on to a thin
thread of hope that Syd will someday come back from wherever he went.
Musician: Do you feel Syd's mental breakdown was directly attributable to the psychedelic experience?
David Gilmour: In my
opinion, it would have happened anyway. It was a deep-rooted thing. But
I'll say the psychedelic experience might well have acted as a
catalyst. Still, I just don't think he could deal with the vision of
success and all the things that went with it. And there were other
problems he had. I think the whole swimming pool thing in The Wall
movie comes from one of Syd's episodes.
Musician: How far gone was Syd when you produced those two solo albums for him? How did you deal with him?
David Gilmour: With
extreme difficulty. EMI understood Syd's potential at the time. They
knew he was very talented and they wanted him to carry on. So they got
an EMI producer (Malcolm Jones) who started recording this album and he
spent ages on it. I think it was over six months. Eventually, EMI
thought that too much money had been spent and nothing had been
achieved. So Syd came and asked if we could help him. We went to EMI
and said, "Let us have a crack at finishing it up." And they gave us
two days to do it - and one of those days we had a Pink Floyd gig, so
we had to leave the studio at four in the afternoon to get on a train
and go to the show.
But basically, Roger and I sat
down with him - after listening to all his songs at home - and said,
"Syd, play this one. Syd, play that one." We sat him on a chair with a
couple of mikes in front of him and got him to sing the song. On some
of them, we just put a little bit of effect on the track with echo and
double-tracking. On one or two others, we dubbed a bit of drums and a
little bass and organ. But it was like one side of the album was six
month's work and we did the other tracks in two and a half days. And
the potential of some of those songs... they could have really been
fantastic.
Musician: The second solo record, Barrett, has much more instrumentation on it.
David Gilmour: We had more
time to do that. But trying to find a technique of working with Syd was
so difficult. You had to pre-record tracks without him, working from
one version of the song he had done, and then sit Syd down afterwards
and try to get him to play and sing along, with a lot of dropping in.
Or you could do it the other way around, where you'd get him to do a
performance of it on his own and then try to dub everything else on top
of it. The concept of him performing with another bunch of musicians
was clearly impossible because he'd change the song every time. He'd
never do a song the same twice. I think quite deliberately.
Musician: There is a
popular Syd story that he actually turned up unannounced at the mixing
session for Shine On You Crazy Diamond and said he was ready to "do my
bit."
David Gilmour: He did show up, yeah.
Musician: Did he say anything?
David Gilmour: He showed
up at the studio. He was very fat and he had a shaved head and shaved
eyebrows [note Bob Geldof's eyebrow-shaving scene in The Wall] and no
one recognized him at all first off. There was just this strange person
walking around the studio, sitting in the control room with us for
hours. If anyone else told me this story, I'd find it hard to believe,
that you could sit there with someone in a small room for hours, with a
close friend of yours for years and years, and not recognize him. And I
guarantee, no one in the band recognized him. Eventually, I had guessed
it. And even knowing, you couldn't recognize him. He came two or three
days and then he didn't come anymore.
Musician: How do you feel
about the cult lionization of Syd Barrett, with things like the Syd
Barrett Appreciation Society (an English fan club of sorts that
actually published a newsletter, Terrapin, after one of his songs)?
David Gilmour: It's sad
that these people think he's such a wonderful subject, that he's a
living legend when, in fact, there is this poor sad man who can't deal
with life or himself. He's got uncontrollable things in him that he
can't deal with and people think it's a marvelous, wonderful, romantic
thing. It's just a sad, sad thing, a very nice and talented person
who's just disintegrated.
Musician: That feeling comes through on Shine On You Crazy Diamond. It seems a very sad song, almost pleading.
David Gilmour: It is sad.
Syd's story is a sad story romanticized by people who don't know
anything about it. They've made it fashionable but it's just not that
way.
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