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Pink Floyd
#11
RE: Pink Floyd
(December 20, 2022 at 11:11 pm)Thumpalumpacus Wrote: Right, The Wall suffered the same fate of most doubles, being overstuffed with filler (not to mention Waters's self-pity, which makes me nauseous). WYWH is actually my favorite Floyd, with Animals a close second. Both feature long instrumental segments that are musically very interesting to me. "Dogs" can still torque me out of shape at times, though that whole album is great commentary on the human condition, to me.

Dogs is the last Pink Floyd song to be of such epic length, and it is the direct descendant of Shine On You Crazy Diamond from the preceding album, which in turn can trace its lineage back through the side-long Echoes on MeddleAtom Heart Mother on the album of the same name, and the progenitor of them all, A Saucerful of Secrets. Structurally, Dogs resembles Echoes the most, with a slow lead-in, a furious main section, a contemplative "night" section, which then gives way to a reprise of the main section, but far more furious.  

Pigs (Three Different Ones) is my least favorite track, because Roger Waters snarls some very nasty lyrics about some very nasty characters. I suppose that is the point of the piece. David Gilmore uses the same device made famous by Peter Frampton which lets him make his guitar sound like a pig talking. To me the highlight is Waters' ascending and descending bassline in the long outro.

It gives way to Wright playing an expressive solo with the Rhodes electric piano as Waters rumbles in the background on bass, a pastoral setting that soon gives way to a storm of sound very much resembling Run Like Hell on The Wall. Not to be missed (you get it twice): Roger Waters' trademark maniacal scream giving way seamlessly to a shimmering synthesizer howl with exactly the same pitch, which then crashes along with the drums and guitars in a virtual rock explosion.  They called this one "Punk Floyd" but there was just as much synth as on WYWH.
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#12
RE: Pink Floyd
It's not Boston without Bradley Delp.  It's not Earth, Wind, and Fire without Maurice White.  Chicago, sigh.  

I've listened to all Floyd and consider DSOTM my favorite, but am not the knowledgeable, experienced fan to say which missing member(s) makes Floyd name only.  All the same, I would want to see and hear Gilmore play and sing and wouldn't mind if Rogers sat out, but if he's up for it, bring it. 

There's too music to catch up on for one born between big band, bee bop music and the electric kool aid aftermath.  Maybe I'll catch up on Pink Floyd after this Irving Berlin phase.
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#13
RE: Pink Floyd
(December 20, 2022 at 11:22 pm)LinuxGal Wrote:
(December 20, 2022 at 11:11 pm)Thumpalumpacus Wrote: Right, The Wall suffered the same fate of most doubles, being overstuffed with filler (not to mention Waters's self-pity, which makes me nauseous). WYWH is actually my favorite Floyd, with Animals a close second. Both feature long instrumental segments that are musically very interesting to me. "Dogs" can still torque me out of shape at times, though that whole album is great commentary on the human condition, to me.

Dogs is the last Pink Floyd song to be of such epic length, and it is the direct descendant of Shine On You Crazy Diamond from the preceding album, which in turn can trace its lineage back through the side-long Echoes on MeddleAtom Heart Mother on the album of the same name, and the progenitor of them all, A Saucerful of Secrets. Structurally, Dogs resembles Echoes the most, with a slow lead-in, a furious main section, a contemplative "night" section, which then gives way to a reprise of the main section, but far more furious.  

Pigs (Three Different Ones) is my least favorite track, because Roger Waters snarls some very nasty lyrics about some very nasty characters. I suppose that is the point of the piece. David Gilmore uses the same device made famous by Peter Frampton which lets him make his guitar sound like a pig talking. To me the highlight is Waters' ascending and descending bassline in the long outro.

It gives way to Wright playing an expressive solo with the Rhodes electric piano as Waters rumbles in the background on bass, a pastoral setting that soon gives way to a storm of sound very much resembling Run Like Hell on The Wall. Not to be missed (you get it twice): Roger Waters' trademark maniacal scream giving way seamlessly to a shimmering synthesizer howl with exactly the same pitch, which then crashes along with the drums and guitars in a virtual rock explosion.  They called this one "Punk Floyd" but there was just as much synth as on WYWH.

Musically you're in the ballpark about "Dogs" apposed to SOYCD. But lyrically is how "Dogs" gets me gripped, because of how it addresses the master/servant relationship. SOYCD is short (but deep) on the lyrics, but the music is very emotive, to me, it covers a wide range of feeling. I wish PF had put SOYCD into one piece not broken up by the other songs, it would have helped with the continuity, but I guess the guys with cigars -- or more likely, the limitations of one side of a vinyl record -- demanded otherwise.

Agreed that "Pigs" is overwrought. The effect is called the "talkbox", and involves a plastic tube stuck on a mc stand that allows the guitarist to shape the envelope of his notes by blowing or sucking on it. Drop a middle-school joke here. You can still buy these today. You can see it here in this pic of Joe Walsh, who used it on "Rocky Mountain Way":

[Image: hgmiyeBv7n7JEyF8dxuok9.jpg]

The outro to "Sheep", where Gilmour lays into the descending diads, is a lovely echo of the theme in that song, where "we're going to be happy no matter what it takes" even as the sheep are going full-ninja. Sometimes you gotta get angry to be happy.

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#14
RE: Pink Floyd
(December 20, 2022 at 9:44 pm)Rev. Rye Wrote: So, where does Syd's solo material lie in this little opening inequality?

Waters without Pink Floyd > Syd without Pink Floyd
Save a life. Adopt a greyhound.
[Image: JUkLw58.gif]
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#15
RE: Pink Floyd
The Wall on massive amounts of shrooms still haunts me.

Will probably need a shaman for the cure.

Do we have any here? Levitate
I don't have an anger problem, I have an idiot problem.
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#16
RE: Pink Floyd
(December 21, 2022 at 2:38 am)Thumpalumpacus Wrote:
(December 20, 2022 at 11:22 pm)LinuxGal Wrote: Dogs is the last Pink Floyd song to be of such epic length, and it is the direct descendant of Shine On You Crazy Diamond from the preceding album, which in turn can trace its lineage back through the side-long Echoes on MeddleAtom Heart Mother on the album of the same name, and the progenitor of them all, A Saucerful of Secrets. Structurally, Dogs resembles Echoes the most, with a slow lead-in, a furious main section, a contemplative "night" section, which then gives way to a reprise of the main section, but far more furious.  

Pigs (Three Different Ones) is my least favorite track, because Roger Waters snarls some very nasty lyrics about some very nasty characters. I suppose that is the point of the piece. David Gilmore uses the same device made famous by Peter Frampton which lets him make his guitar sound like a pig talking. To me the highlight is Waters' ascending and descending bassline in the long outro.

It gives way to Wright playing an expressive solo with the Rhodes electric piano as Waters rumbles in the background on bass, a pastoral setting that soon gives way to a storm of sound very much resembling Run Like Hell on The Wall. Not to be missed (you get it twice): Roger Waters' trademark maniacal scream giving way seamlessly to a shimmering synthesizer howl with exactly the same pitch, which then crashes along with the drums and guitars in a virtual rock explosion.  They called this one "Punk Floyd" but there was just as much synth as on WYWH.

Musically you're in the ballpark about "Dogs" apposed to SOYCD. But lyrically is how "Dogs" gets me gripped, because of how it addresses the master/servant relationship. SOYCD is short (but deep) on the lyrics, but the music is very emotive, to me, it covers a wide range of feeling. I wish PF had put SOYCD into one piece not broken up by the other songs, it would have helped with the continuity, but I guess the guys with cigars -- or more likely, the limitations of one side of a vinyl record -- demanded otherwise.

Agreed that "Pigs" is overwrought. The effect is called the "talkbox", and involves a plastic tube stuck on a mc stand that allows the guitarist to shape the envelope of his notes by blowing or sucking on it. Drop a middle-school joke here. You can still buy these today. You can see it here in this pic of Joe Walsh, who used it on "Rocky Mountain Way":

[Image: hgmiyeBv7n7JEyF8dxuok9.jpg]

The outro to "Sheep", where Gilmour lays into the descending diads, is a lovely echo of the theme in that song, where "we're going to be happy no matter what it takes" even as the sheep are going full-ninja. Sometimes you gotta get angry to be happy.
I love Joe Walsh and oddly think he is much more attractive now than when he was young.

Peter Frampton also brought the talkbox to fame; but I like Rocky Mountain Way better though there was time you couldn't escape Do You Feel Like I Do...Frampton Comes Alive.
  
“If you are the smartest person in the room, then you are in the wrong room.” — Confucius
                                      
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#17
RE: Pink Floyd
(December 26, 2022 at 2:02 pm)arewethereyet Wrote: Peter Frampton also brought the talkbox to fame; but I like Rocky Mountain Way better though there was time you couldn't escape Do You Feel Like I Do...Frampton Comes Alive.

i'm not a big fan of the effect, but I like Frampton's use better, probably because he's playing jazzier lines and that give it a more saxophone vibe to my ears.

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#18
RE: Pink Floyd
(December 26, 2022 at 6:49 pm)Thumpalumpacus Wrote:
(December 26, 2022 at 2:02 pm)arewethereyet Wrote: Peter Frampton also brought the talkbox to fame; but I like Rocky Mountain Way better though there was time you couldn't escape Do You Feel Like I Do...Frampton Comes Alive.

i'm not a big fan of the effect, but I like Frampton's use better, probably because he's playing jazzier lines and that give it a more saxophone vibe to my ears.

It was one of those songs that was overplayed IMO.  Loved it at first but heard it too often.  Partly my fault because I wore the grooves off the album.
  
“If you are the smartest person in the room, then you are in the wrong room.” — Confucius
                                      
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#19
RE: Pink Floyd
Overrated band.

Never saw the appeal.
Dying to live, living to die.
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