Together they ignite all the funky dung from those Atom Heart Mother sessions that never managed to catch fire. In fact, according to Nicholas Schaffer, the initial opening words were “Planets meeting face to face,” but they were later changed to “Overhead the albatross.” This is a paradigm shift for Roger Waters and his lyric writing.īut, that said, the real heroes here are Dave Gilmore and Rick Wright.
Apparently, space was no longer the place. To be blunt: this song has a beautifully languid vocal melody (not unlike the tune “Time” on Dark Side) and its lengthy (and brilliant) instrumental workout is the unabridged version of Dark Side’s “Any Colour You Like.” The epic starts with Rick Wright’s pings, which are signals from strange aqueous depths. Although Floyd’s take on the side-long epic is quite different from “Close to the Edge,” Supper’s Ready,” “Tarkus,” or “Nine Feet Underground,” it serves the progressive gonfalon well, even after all these years. And of course, the canine idea that will resurface in the great song “Dogs” much later in Floyd’s career.Īnd then there is “Echoes,” the side long conceptual piece that was a necessary and somewhat secret handshake into the card-carrying membership of the 70’s progressive rock pantheon. Well, blues or no blues, the tune has very little to do with any wolf that’s howlin’ but to its credit, my English setter pup Willamena likes the song and sometimes tries to sing along with it. In his book Saucerful of Secrets the Pink Floyd Odyssey, Nicholas Schaffner quotes David Gilmore as saying, “I guess it wasn’t as funny to everyone else, …as it was to us.” Its playful pace does, perhaps, recall the childlike melodies of Syd Barrett’s songs like “Waving My Arms in the Air,” “Effervescing Elephants, or (my favorite) “Gigolo Aunt.” It’s certainly a nice respite after being warned about being “Cut into Little Pieces.” And the same goes for “Seamus,” a little bluesy number that features Humble Pie’s Steve Marriott’s dog howling. “San Tropez” is a solo Roger Waters composition that is born on the winds of light jazz. Now, the final two songs change the pace of the record. And its lyric, which sings, “Fearlessly the idiot faces the crowd, smiling,” presages many words about madcap laughs. The end culminates with Liverpool’s Kop choir singing the club’s anthem “You’ll Never Walk Alone.” Odd, Nick Mason’s great book Inside Out A Personal History of Pink Floyd claims that Roger Waters “was a committed Arsenal fan.” Imagine that: Roger not asserting his own preference. “Fearless” continues the Waters/Gilmore yin/yang collaboration with a great chord progression and tune that, with an almost country-western vibe, really does set the controls for the heart of planet Earth. It’s quietly beautiful, very British, and really, it evokes the absolute serene pastures of (the before-mentioned) Roy Harper, especially with the lyric “Sleeping time when I lie with my love at my side.” This languid moment equals Led Zeppelin ‘s attempt to pay homage with “Hats Off (to Roy Harper).” My friend, Kilda Defnut, always says, “Strange bedfellows make great music.” And that is true with this song. Now, “A Pillow of Winds” is a Roger Waters and Dave Gilmore collaboration. “One of These Days” (which continues with the warning “I’m Going to Cut You into Little Pieces” spoken by the distorted voice of Nick Mason) is a distant cousin of “Eugene” who still, apparently, needs to “Be Careful with That Axe.” Let’s just say the song blisters with the Roger Waters and Dave Gilmore doubled bass (fed through a Binson Echoric unit) and conflates blues, psych, and space music.
Saucerful of Secrets kept the band suspended in the cosmos Ummagumma was live and solo songs and Atom Heart Mother (despite the lovely Lulubelle III on its cover) was a mixed bag of some rock but a lot of Ron Geesin orchestrations and the forgettable “Alan’s Psychedelic Breakfast.” Apparently, a quadraphonic ‘Azimuth Co-ordinator’ sound system, weird effects, and hitting big gongs really hard can only go so far.īut Meddle is the sound of Pink Floyd harmonizing its collective talents. To tell the truth, the post-Syd Floyd didn’t manage that much.
It’s hard to believe, but there was a post-Syd Pink Floyd history before all the feuding lawsuits, before the white blocks of the Wall, before the errant run-a-way inflatable pig, before the Moon revealed its Dark Side, and even before Roy Harper sang the immortal lines, “Oh by the way, which one’s Pink?”