The dark side of Rick Wright
By Jim Sullivan, Boston Globe
Pink Floyd, England's
quintessential art-rock group, will never be considered the
hardest-working band in show business. This is something charter member
keyboardist Rick Wright understands intimately.
Here they were - this behemoth of
a touring band, fronted by singer-guitarist David Gilmour - wrapping up
their 1994 stadium tour, promoting their "Division Bell" album, looking
forward to making financial investments and a nice long hibernation...
and Wright has got this fire in his belly. He's raring to go. To go
solo. At least with the Floyd on its inevitable hiatus, which is
ongoing.
"Invariably, as you know," says
Wright, "when we finish a tour there seems to be nothing heard of us
for a couple of years, maybe more, [sometimes] three years before an
album is actually being done again."
Wright's initial plan was to do
an instrumental album. By admission, he's never been much of a singer
or lyricist. He had made two albums previously, the first, 1978's "Wet
Dream," a minor gem. "Broken China," this new one, which features
Sinead O'Connor on two tracks, comes out January 14th on EMI.
"I hadn't any idea of a concept,
if you like, for the album," he says, on the phone from New York, "but
I had a lot of music inside me that I wanted to express outside the
context of the Floyd." Also, he adds, "I've often said I'm not that
comfortable with my voice, for many reasons. One, I didn't like the
tone of it and, two, Dave Gilmour, being the lead singer, that was his
role. I was very dubious about singing on this album."
But the idea of an instrumental
album fell by the wayside when Wright was steamrolled with a topic that
hit very close to home: clinical depression. His girlfriend (now his
wife), an American named Millie, suffered from it.
"I was very much involved,"
Wright says, "trying to help as much as possible. It was, of course, a
very frightening and very emotional time, to witness this happening.
When it came time to do the record, luckily, there was a subject I
could try and express my feelings about." Wright catches himself on the
word "luckily" - no, he does not mean it that way. It's just that he
had a subject that matched the melancholic character of the music.
"A lot of the things I write
would be melancholic," agrees Wright. "And melancholic is an emotion
that is certainly about sadness, but it's also about peace as well at
other times. The Pink Floyd, largely due to Roger's lyric input, has
been known to deal with the dark side of life, 'The Dark Side of the
Moon' and 'The Wall' particularly. But as a person, I'm not preoccupied
with it. Everyone says, 'Are you carrying on the Pink Floyd tradition
of writing about dark subjects?' and, actually, it's the first time in
my life that something did happen to me which was dark, which was sad,
which was frightening and therefore I needed to express that."
The music is, no surprise,
keyboard based. But it has not so much the bombastic qualities
associated with Pink Floyd - especially former leader Roger Waters - as
the plaintive piano tones and contemplative, rich textures of early
1970s Floyd. It has, if you will, echoes of "Echoes," the gorgeous,
meandering side-long suite from "Meddle."
"Certainly, tracks like 'Hidden
Fear' and 'Blue Room in Venice' do," says Wright. "This was a side of
me that I suspect may not be used in the Floyd so much. And 'Echoes' is
interesting because it is a very thematic piece of music, something
that I particularly enjoy creating. This album was really planned out
on a chart on a wall: writing down what sounds we wanted, what music we
wanted. It was actually mapped out completely from beginning to end,
rather than just writing a song, overdubbing and moving on."
Wright knew what he wanted to
express, but he also knew he needed a lyricist to help him do so. Enter
Anthony Moore, a longtime friend, lyricist, computer programmer and an
occasional Floyd contributor. "He knows my wife," says Wright; "we're
all very close." Moore gave shape to the feelings Wright and his future
wife shared.
"Broken China" is a relatively
sombre affair. It's broken up into four segments. "The first part is
childhood," says Wright, "where she had traumas, traumas that she hid
that actually caused the depression. The second part is my attempt to
express her adolescent escape. The third one, obviously, was the
depression. And the fourth one is the breakthrough. On the last song,
'Breakthrough,' with Sinead singing, well, the lyrics say what
happened."
The song carries a feeling of
triumph as O'Connor sings of being like a banner unfurled - "the self
you've never known." The last lines run: "They're never going to make
it easy/Of this you can be sure/You feel untied, beautiful/And loved
for evermore."
O'Connor, says Wright, was
attracted to the project because "when she heard the music she
obviously was sympathetic to the album and the ideas. She has often
stated out her problems in childhood. But the reason I asked was not
because of that - the reason was simply the quality of her voice:
tremendous, unique, different."
Was there ever a fear of Millie's feeling exploited by the work?
"It was a very difficult time,
for her and for me," says Wright. "But knowing what the result was,
which was a complete cure, I could therefore write about the bad times
knowing it ends up good."
Wright had been through his own
ups and downs. He'd been effectively fired in 1979 during Pink Floyd's
"The Wall" by Waters. "Awful," says Wright of the period. "I wasn't
suffering from clinical depression, but I was depressed. Roger's ego
was getting bigger and bigger. He said he wanted me out because I
hadn't produced any material: 'If he doesn't leave, I'm going to
withdraw "The Wall" and make it a solo project.' Dave and Nick [Mason,
the drummer] were very scared too. It was a nightmare for all of us."
Nevertheless, Wright played on
'The Wall' tour as, essentially, a contract worker. He did not appear
on the final Pink Floyd album with Waters, "The Final Cut." Wright
rejoined Floyd in concert in 1987 for the "Momentary Lapse of Reason"
tour and contributed to "The Division Bell" album.
He remains a member in good standing. "I don't hold any grudges," he says.
So, there is a Pink Floyd? "Pink
Floyd is not finished," says Wright. "I'm sure next year we'll be
getting together again, working on the new album. I'm sure of that.
I've heard rumors that Dave is getting itchy ..."
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