Roger Waters and his French Revolution
Roger Waters had little trouble
getting Pink Floyd to re-form. But asking the French to stage his opera
about 1789 was a tall order, he tells Pierre Perrone.
"It was ever thus. If you look at
literature and take the redemption of Ebenezer Scrooge at the end of A
Christmas Carol, for instance, he's just a character who suddenly
discovers that the secret of happiness is in sharing with others."
Roger Waters, the composer and
multi-instrumentalist, is speaking in a London club about recurring
themes in his work, from Pink Floyd's album masterpiece Dark Side of
the Moon to Ça Ira, the opera about the French revolution he has just
finished, via The Wall, the concept album to end all concept albums.
But he might as well be talking
about himself. Waters is often cast as the musician who started the
longest feud in rock when he unilaterally declared Pink Floyd finished
in 1983. Four years later, Waters sued guitarist David Gilmour, drummer
Nick Mason and returning keyboard-player Rick Wright when they decided
to carry on as Pink Floyd. He lost the case, despite having contributed
the most creatively after the departure of Syd Barrett, the original
front-man, in 1968.
Waters, the bassist, went off in
a huff, punctuated by the odd solo tour and album and a spectacular
production of The Wall in 1990 after the fall of the Berlin Wall.
When fans heard that the classic
Floyd line-up would reunite for Live8, many didn't believe it would
happen. Waters, who recorded a song called "The Tide Is Turning (After
Live Aid)" on his 1987 album Radio K.A.O.S., was keen on the idea. In
2002, Mason had twice joined him on stage to play the epic "Set the
Controls for the Heart of the Sun" at Wembley Arena, London.
"Those were good nights," Waters
says. "It was sort of a precursor to the rapprochement. Nick and I were
always friends when we were in the band. After we sort of broke up I
said a few harsh words, but we became friends again a few years ago.
"But Nick didn't have the power
to mediate," Waters says about Live8. "Bob Geldof asked Dave, who said
no. Then Bob saw Nick at a party, he sent me an e-mail, and I called
Bob. A couple of weeks later, Geldof got me Dave's number and I called
him. He was very surprised when he answered, but we had a good
conversation, and 24 hours later he called back and said, 'Let's do
it.'"
Waters approached rehearsals in a
positive frame of mind. "There was a certain edge at the beginning, but
I decided I wasn't going to have a confrontation. If there was any
problem, I would just roll over. It worked very well.
"I was quite open about wanting
to do 'In the Flesh' from The Wall because I sing it, but Dave wanted
to open with 'Breathe' from Dark Side of the Moon. I went, 'OK, I don't
care that much.' Anyway, I sang a bit of 'Wish You Were Here' and I
sing on 'Comfortably Numb', and we did 'Money', which seemed
appropriate for the occasion. I mean, I wrote the songs, these are my
words and a lot of my music. We all made different contributions to
something we did together all those years ago, and it was really good,
so why not celebrate it?"
Three months on, Waters can't
help enthusing about the Floyd reunion, soon to be available on the
Live8 DVD. "It was terrific. It was really good fun and the music
sounded great. Dave sang and played beautifully, I managed to croak out
my bits all right, we all played in tune, so it was good. I've seen a
rough cut of the performance and I'm really happy because the DVD is
going to raise tons of money.
"It was a great weight off my
back to have a rapprochement with the three guys after all the enmity.
Constantly, in my work, I am exhorting people to let go of entrenched
positions, and that could be seen as hypocritical in view of the fact
that, for all those years, I held an entrenched position in terms of
the history and the internal politics of Pink Floyd.
"So to be able to relinquish that
enmity was very important to me. If that's the only time we play
together for the rest of our lives, I will reap the benefits of those
few days for the rest of my life."
For now, Waters's attention is
focused on Ça Ira, an operatic history of the French Revolution in
three acts. The bass-baritone Bryn Terfel takes on three roles,
including Louis Capet, the King of France; the soprano Ying Huang sings
the iconic Marianne role and Marie Antoinette.
The grand projet began in 1988
when France's leading lyricist Etienne Roda-Gil and his wife Nadine
showed Waters a libretto and some striking illustrations. "They had the
whole thing in a box, about 50 pages. Every page had a painting by
Nadine. They pitched me and I was hooked.
"The original idea was for Ça Ira
to be part of the bicentennial celebration of the French Revolution in
1989. I set the libretto to music. In six weeks I had a demo of the
whole thing mapped out on a cassette, a mix of what I'd recorded with
me singing all the parts and playing all the instruments. François
Mitterrand was keen and suggested the new Opéra de la Bastille should
put it on, but Daniel Barenboim was fired and this thing written by an
English bass-player foundered on French chauvinism.
"I resisted pressure to write an
English version, but I kept going back to it and eventually I
relented," Waters says. "I did a concert for the Countryside Alliance
in 2002, and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra performed the overture
from Ça Ira. Etienne came over and it was very moving. He said to me,
'It's much better in English.'"
Waters admits that "some Floyd
fans will get it and some will be disappointed," but stresses the
relevance of Ça Ira. " France in the 1780s is a microcosm of what's
going on in the world. At the top, there is a monarch, or somebody very
powerful like George Bush or Tony Blair, and a small political
hierarchy, and then the rest basically have fuck all, live on a dollar
a day. The conditions are ripe for a bloodbath.
"The only realistic option is to
divide the cake differently. After Live8 and the G8 summit, at least
people are beginning to make noises about changing the deep imbalance
in the world," says Waters, who lives in Manhattan. "I come back to the
UK quite often. I didn't leave as a protest against the hunting ban; I
was following a child in the wake of a divorce."
Waters remains passionately
anti-war. The death of his father at Anzio during the Second World War
has been a theme in his work, especially on The Wall and The Final Cut.
Waters released two new tracks, " To Kill the Child" and "Leaving
Beirut", on the internet as a protest against the war in Iraq last year.
Waters winces when I mention the
offers - $150m! - the reunited Pink Floyd have been made to play US
dates. "Whether we'll play together again, I have no idea," he says
diplomatically.
Interview presented here for archiving purposes only; not all sites retain all their content for future reference.
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