Ex-Pink Floyd guitarist enjoys semi-retirement, says music a 'hobby'
He's helped create some of the
most ambitious ventures in rock history with Pink Floyd. These days
David Gilmour is deeply under way on a new project: Semi-retirement.
"I view it as another phase in my
career, but I also view music as a hobby," the articulate and genial
Gilmour, 56, says over the phone from his home in rural Britain
recently.
"I'm downsizing. I love making music, but I'm not going to be chasing record sales or anything very much."
With Pink Floyd on ice
indefinitely, the guitarist has been devoting his time to family - he
has eight children, aged six months, five, seven, 12, 16, 21, 22, and
26 - and casual music-making. He's sworn off extensive touring and any
Floyd-scale undertakings.
That said, there is a commercial
basis for our conversation. Gilmour is set to release David Gilmour In
Concert Oct. 22, a DVD and VHS concert film captured at a series of
low-key but critically-acclaimed performances he did at London's Royal
Festival Hall last year.
The antithesis of a Floyd
production, the concerts were based around gentle rethinks of classic
material (Shine On You Crazy Diamond, Wish You Were Here, Comfortably
Numb) as well as more obscure selections, new material and cover tunes.
The presentation was acoustic-based and featured strings, sax and a
gospel choir.
Tastefully done and humble in
tone, it's a late-entry change of gears for a man whose persona has
been submerged, along with his bandmates, in a larger entity since the
late '60s.
"I just want to enjoy the freedom
that I get from not doing it within Pink Floyd," Gilmour says. "I don't
have to compromise, I don't have to use the same lineup more than once
if I don't want to. I'm afraid it's a very selfish thing where I'm just
doing things for my own pleasure and hoping that a few people will
enjoy it too."
Gilmour's Festival Hall
dates stemmed from a spur-of-the-moment invite to play Britain's
esteemed Meltdown Festival, which was being curated by British
cult-rock luminary Robert Wyatt. Gilmour muses that he was
panic-stricken as to what to do with the stage time after agreeing to
the gig.
"I had three months to prepare
from when Robert asked me to do Meltdown," he says. "It may sound like
a long time, but it's not. I spent a lot of nervous time in my home
studio trying out songs. I'd started with the Pink Floyd songs because
they're my safety net. I just went through the backs of albums and
chose songs I thought would work. Most of them were quite easy. Songs
like Wish You Were Here and Fat Old Sun are fairly acoustic songs
anyway. Some things, for example A Great Day For Freedom from our last
album, worked better
in this setting than they did originally.
"Exposing the parts a bit more, opening it all up that way, gives it a different sort of intimacy and a different feeling."
'SLOWLY DOES IT'
The resulting shows - the
Meltdown appearance which led to three more dates early this year -
include guest appearances from Wyatt, Floyd keyboardist Richard Wright
and Bob Geldof.
Gilmour laughs as he admits that he had to keep the arrangements in check, lest they take on Floydian proportions again.
"I had a string bass and a cello,
but there were moments where I thought, 'Hmm, maybe I'll get 20 strings
in...,'" he says. "But, slowly does it. I'll see how I feel in a year
or so - the next time I do some shows."
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