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'This programme contains some strong language.'
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The Pink FLoyd - you're going to hear them in a minute.
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# Money
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# Get away... #
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In 2005, four distinguished rock musicians
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performed together for the first time in 25 years at Live 8.
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For a precious 20 minutes, they were all once again the legendary Pink Floyd,
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a band that has spanned 40 years, pioneering everything
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from underground rock to the stadium extravaganza.
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A band that has survived tragedy, shunned celebrity
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and wrestled publicly with both its success and its audience.
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There have been five men in Pink Floyd and three of them have led the band in different decades.
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That's why the question still remains - which one's Pink?
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London, 1965.
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British pop music rules the world.
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Clubs are throbbing with electric guitars, pounding drums and would-be rock'n'roll stars.
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Three middle-class students, Rick Wright, Roger Waters and Nick Mason,
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were studying architecture at the Regent Street Polytechnic.
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They formed a band and dreamed of escaping the profession they seemed destined to inhabit.
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The group went through several permutations and names, including The Tea Set and Sigma 6,
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performing standard cover versions of American and British rhythm and blues.
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They were going nowhere.
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A childhood friend of Roger Waters since their schooldays together in Cambridge
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drifted down to London to study painting.
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His name was Syd Barrett.
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He joined Sigma 6, renamed the band The Pink Floyd Sound, and promptly became its front man.
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Syd sort of lived like he walked. He walked with a bounce.
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He came up on his toes so every step he took was like a pop.
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He had a lot of sort of Tigger in him.
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He was, as everyone says, bubbly, very attractive,
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everyone wanted to be his friend.
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Barrett was a highly original writer and musician.
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His songs had a quirky, British, pastoral edge
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and his guitar playing led the band into extended sonic explorations.
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He would do things on the guitar that no-one would ever dream of doing.
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which influenced me and made me do things on the keyboards I wouldn't... people hadn't done before.
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Technically, no, not so brilliant, but, for me, the technique is not important.
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It's the originality, and he was one of the originals.
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It is a curious thing that people can go into the music business
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with little technical ability,
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but absolute determination to show off at all costs.
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If you can actually play, it's very hard not to copy other things that you hear...
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..but we couldn't copy anything because we couldn't, you know.
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Rick was the only one who went to music school.
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Rick was the one who would always help out in arrangements.
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He was the one who used to tune Roger's bass.
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MUSIC: "Interstellar Overdrive" by Pink Floyd
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Now simply called Pink Floyd, the band found itself at the epicentre of London's underground explosion,
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playing a unique mix of original, melodic pop and freak-out music at clubs such as UFO and Middle Earth.
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Overnight, they became the house band of the underground movement, taking their audiences on a trip.
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One of the things that sets them apart is,
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so many other bands are based around blues.
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They had this avant-garde approach to...
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the long instrumental passages,
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but they always started from a brilliant pop song by Syd.
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Tinkling and bashing and scraping and making the instruments make whatever noises they would.
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After we'd be doing that for, like, ten minutes, we'd play the riff twice more and that was the end.
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You still had a tune, a song, and then you'd have an improvised bit, then you'd have a tune and a song.
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It was radical. It was very radical.
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MUSIC: "Arnold Layne" by Pink Floyd
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# Arnold Layne had a strange hobby
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# Collecting clothes
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# Moonshine, washing line
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# They suit him fine... #
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Arnold Layne, an everyday tale of a man stealing women's underwear from washing lines,
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was the first of Barrett's original songs to be recorded as a demo.
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Produced by Joe Boyd, it was touted around several companies
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before The Beatles' label, EMI, signed the band in February 1967.
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From the start, the Floyd were determined to do things their way.
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As college boys, they were already wary of the pop business and its old-school managers.
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We were always very distrustful of that whole scene.
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It was very kind of East End, camel-hair coats, you know.
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"Stick with me, son, you'll be all right,"
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and we were very wary of all that.
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I think what was so different then to now is they'd sign almost anything with long hair.
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If it turned out to be a golden retriever, so what?
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"We've signed you as a pop band. Now make albums. Lots of three-minute singles,"
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and we said, "No way!"
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We're talking about a world where Sergeant Pepper hadn't been released.
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Almost overnight, it switched from being hit singles to being albums.
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MUSIC: "Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite" by The Beatles
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In early '67, The Beatles were recording Sergeant Pepper at London's Abbey Road Studios.
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In February, the Floyd arrived at the same studios
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to record their equally momentous first album, The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn.
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# Alone in the clouds all blue... #
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This was the Summer of Love. Everything was possible.
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EMI appointed The Beatles' engineer, Norman Smith, as the Floyd's producer.
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I know he had a struggle with Syd
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because Syd would come in with his extraordinary songs and Norman would say, "That's great,
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"but we've got to put some form to it. We've got to get it into time." Syd would say, "Yes, OK,"
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and then go out and play it a different way.
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The Floyd were determined to exploit everything Smith and Abbey Road could offer,
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experimenting with new sounds and recording techniques.
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We had a tape running around microphone stands
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all the way around the control room,
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so we could get a very slow delay. It ran through three tape recorders.
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One of the advantages of Abbey Road was that there was a lot of old sort of stuff lying around.
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They probably had a spinet or a clavichord or things like that.
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While the Floyd tinkered away recording Syd's fairy-tale songs
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and the studio version of the sonic improvisations they were playing in the underground clubs,
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producer Norman Smith struggled to get another single out of Barrett.
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The band eventually decamped here, Sound Techniques in west London
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where Joe Boyd had produced Arnold Layne, to record what would become their first big hit.
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MUSIC: "See Emily Play" by Pink Floyd
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# Emily tries but misunderstands
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# She's often inclined to borrow somebody's dreams till tomorrow
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# Till tomorrow, till tomorrow... #
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Barrett invited an old friend and musician from Cambridge to come to the recording sessions.
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Guitarist and singer David Gilmour was shocked by what he found.
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In the flesh, he was a little bit strange, glazed eyes.
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For me, having not seen him for a while, it was quite alarming to see him like that.
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I didn't know how alarming, or how alarmed I should be,
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or how permanent that sort of thing was or whether that was just a moment.
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You don't really think about it.
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Barrett was becoming increasingly erratic.
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He was taking too many drugs and didn't like the limelight.
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When his song See Emily Play climbed into the Top Ten, the cracks began to appear.
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I think we did a lot more pop shows and ballrooms,
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and I think that was probably a bit more difficult for them. That was probably difficult for Syd.
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Syd didn't want to play.
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I was particularly feeling quite the same. I didn't want to really play it.
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I don't think any of the band wanted to play it. So it pissed the audiences off a lot.
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We had a few beer bottles and stuff thrown at us.
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These shows were a million miles away from Pink Floyd's underground home base
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where the band, like its audience, was lost in the light show.
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They were deliberately devoid of personality.
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They didn't talk much.
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You know, the fact they were covered with these lights all the time.
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They'd all study their instruments. Nobody looked out.
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"Are you having a good time? Yeah! Clap your hands!" All that stuff. We'd never done that.
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In fact, we did like to hide behind the lights.
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And it became a kind of, "Who are these people?"
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My memory of seeing them is walking round the stage trying to work out where the noise came from.
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What Rick and Syd played were very well blended together.
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When Barrett emerged from the shadows and into the studio lights of Top Of The Pops,
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he went into meltdown.
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The second week that we went in, Syd was very disgruntled and he started saying,
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"Why should I have to do this? John Lennon doesn't have to do this."
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I was looking at him, going, "What the fuck are you talking about?
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"This is it! This is what we've worked all these years to achieve.
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"This is the sort of pinnacle of success. And you don't want to do it? You're mad!"
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Of course, he WAS mad, but that wasn't the point.
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It was a really clear indication... I was really shocked.
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Syd was suddenly starting to get recognised,
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and he would be a scrumptious pop idol.
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Maybe he thought, "Do I really want this life? Is this what I want?"
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Maybe that's what was coming out unconsciously then in all the wacky behaviour.
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Was all the wacky behaviour a rejection of becoming a pop star?
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One day we were going off to do a gig and we went to pick him up
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and he jumped into the car and he was wearing a frock, you know.
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I said, "What are you doing, Syd?" He said, "I'm a homosexual,"
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and he went through this whole thing where he pretended to be gay for days on end.
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The Floyd was losing not only its leader,
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but also the writer responsible for much of its original material and hit singles.
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So we took a very positive view and we all went, "Agh!
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"Don't show me!"
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You know, it was denial at the ultimate level, really.
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I mean, Roger had a theory he was a schizophrenic. I don't think he was.
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But I'm still convinced he took a huge overdose of acid and destroyed his brain cells.
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He went to see Ronnie Lang and he said, "There's nothing we can do for him."
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Physically, the brain has actually been destroyed.
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So, very sad.
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No amount of English reserve could mask the fact that Barrett was now an acid casualty,
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virtually unable to perform.
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The other band members called a crisis meeting
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with managers Peter Jenner, Andrew King and Bryan Morrison.
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Peter Jenner and Andrew King were convinced that without Syd, there was no Pink Floyd.
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"You know, you solve this problem or you go back to being an architect.
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"If you don't solve this problem, it's over!"
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Panic! Panic!
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And terrible concern
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because it was also... It was a mixture of a business panic because we needed another single -
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"Syd, please, can you write another single?"
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Syd didn't know what he thought. "No, Syd's got an idea." "Really? What is it?"
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"Syd thinks you should hire two girl saxophone players,"
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and that was it, I think.
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"Oh! Well... No!"
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You know. No.
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Bryan Morrison, who was a barrow boy, said, "The name's Pink Floyd.
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"As long as we put out the Pink Floyd, no-one's going to know the difference. Which one of you is Syd?"
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It was Barratt's old Cambridge friend, David Gilmour, who was asked by the band to join Pink Floyd.
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When you're all young, thrusting, ambitious people in your early 20s,
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you have a brutality about the things you do
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that...
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you know, your ambition is driving you forward without much care for other people's feelings, to be frank.
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And you have plenty of time to feel guilty later.
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As 1967 gave way to 1968,
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Syd Barrett gave way to David Gilmour as Pink Floyd passed through a brief five-member transition.
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I think it was odd for David, it was odd for Syd, and the rest of us were a bit embarrassed about it.
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We nearly said something, that's how bad it was(!)
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I think it was difficult for David
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because when he came into the band,
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I think his role was to try and play Syd's guitar parts.
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# Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh,
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# Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
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# Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
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# Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh... #
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It was his band. It was him and about him.
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I think I coped with it OK. There were moments of feeling lost on stage,
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and not knowing what the hell was going on around me.
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I did spend some of my time with my back to the audience...
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sort of sliding mic-stand legs up the guitar,
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making weird noises,
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feeling rather embarrassed.
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That's not all the time.
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Quite a bit of the time it really worked and gelled
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and you started thinking, "Yeah, I'm getting what we're on about here."
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The band was now recording that difficult second album, A Saucerful Of Secrets.
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Some of the tracks were already recorded -
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I think, Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun, which was
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Roger's first real moment of glory,
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was already pretty well done.
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I think there's a guitar on there that Syd did and a bit of guitar that I did.
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I think that's the only moment we share on the track.
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# Little by little the night turns around... #
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One of the things that worked quite well was very rhythmic moments.
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# Counting the leaves which tremble at dawn
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# Lotuses lean on each other in yearning... #
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We did break some new ground by allowing the music to drop down,
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drop away and become this more... ethereal spacey music.
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It was deep space that now attracted the Floyd's attention,
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as it did countless millions of other hopefuls worldwide in 1969.
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'The world's TV audience, 600 million people this afternoon watched the Apollo 11 spacecraft
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'launched into a perfect blue sky above Cape Kennedy in Florida.'
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As the first men walked on the moon, Pink Floyd played along with the TV pictures for the BBC.
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We were there in the studio playing live while people were walking on the moon.
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I can't quite imagine it today,
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that behind a programme they'd have a pop group making up a jam live in the studio
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while that was going on.
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00:19:54,520 --> 00:19:56,560
Ha! Those were the days!
231
00:20:07,040 --> 00:20:10,760
'Aircraft reports a visual with three chutes...'
232
00:20:10,760 --> 00:20:12,960
When the Floyd returned to Earth,
233
00:20:12,960 --> 00:20:18,240
they discovered that producing singles without Barrett was Mission Impossible.
234
00:20:20,760 --> 00:20:23,600
We all tried to write singles.
235
00:20:23,600 --> 00:20:25,840
Point Me At The Sky was one notable failure.
236
00:20:25,840 --> 00:20:30,640
MUSIC: "Point Me At The Sky"
237
00:20:36,080 --> 00:20:38,720
We couldn't do it.
238
00:20:38,720 --> 00:20:43,720
Eventually we just gave up and went, "We can't do that - what can we do?"
239
00:20:43,720 --> 00:20:46,600
"We'll do long things, then."
240
00:20:52,280 --> 00:20:56,760
MUSIC: "Careful With That Axe, Eugene"
241
00:21:02,560 --> 00:21:05,880
Careful With That Axe, Eugene announced a Floyd of extended,
242
00:21:05,880 --> 00:21:12,640
rock-driven soundscapes and implied narratives. A kind of space rock made by an unidentified crew,
243
00:21:12,640 --> 00:21:16,560
now journeying without a captain.
244
00:21:23,120 --> 00:21:26,040
We were fantastically insular.
245
00:21:26,040 --> 00:21:32,520
We didn't really want to be influenced by other people and things that were going on.
246
00:21:32,520 --> 00:21:36,520
We were fiercely independent of what we were doing.
247
00:21:40,560 --> 00:21:45,440
We did learn a lot about improvising and about listening to what other people were doing,
248
00:21:45,440 --> 00:21:49,560
and picking up an idea and developing it.
249
00:21:49,560 --> 00:21:52,720
ETHEREAL INSTRUMENTAL
250
00:22:13,720 --> 00:22:15,000
CRASHING
251
00:22:16,360 --> 00:22:19,480
This was the age of experimentation
252
00:22:19,480 --> 00:22:23,880
and difficult music of prepared pianos and classical pretensions,
253
00:22:23,880 --> 00:22:28,840
saucepans full of secrets, all of which the Floyd embraced.
254
00:22:28,840 --> 00:22:33,680
A lot of the time it would just be like plonky noises.
255
00:22:33,680 --> 00:22:36,120
CLUNKING
256
00:22:36,120 --> 00:22:38,720
We'd be searching for something and it didn't work.
257
00:22:38,720 --> 00:22:43,920
Ultimately, to me personally, it became rather unsatisfying.
258
00:22:43,920 --> 00:22:49,160
I think it was Roger who said, "Let's make an album without using any of our instruments."
259
00:22:49,160 --> 00:22:51,440
"Use household objects."
260
00:22:51,440 --> 00:22:56,640
So we spent days getting a pencil and a rubber band till it sounded like a bass.
261
00:22:56,640 --> 00:22:59,800
We spent weeks doing this.
262
00:22:59,800 --> 00:23:07,600
Nick would find saucepans and stuff, then deaden them to make them sound like a snare drum.
263
00:23:07,600 --> 00:23:11,480
I remember saying to Roger, "This is insane."
264
00:23:11,480 --> 00:23:14,680
MUSIC: "Atom Heart Mother"
265
00:23:22,680 --> 00:23:27,840
Atom Heart Mother was the Floyd's most ambitious experiment yet,
266
00:23:27,840 --> 00:23:31,720
a rock suite incorporating a brass band and choir.
267
00:23:34,040 --> 00:23:37,560
MUSIC: "Atom Heart Mother"
268
00:23:41,960 --> 00:23:46,200
The musicians didn't give a shit. It was basically a brass band.
269
00:23:46,200 --> 00:23:51,040
They didn't give a shit. They just wanted to have their beer and get pissed. It was very weird.
270
00:23:51,040 --> 00:23:54,280
Atom Heart Mother was like a movie soundtrack.
271
00:23:54,280 --> 00:23:58,960
It was meant to be the soundtrack to an epic movie that didn't exist.
272
00:24:04,520 --> 00:24:10,600
It was an interesting exercise but it doesn't hold an enormous amount of Pink Floyd development.
273
00:24:10,600 --> 00:24:13,920
Their fans disagreed.
274
00:24:13,920 --> 00:24:18,640
The record went to number one in the album chart in October 1970.
275
00:24:23,760 --> 00:24:27,160
But as the members sharpened their song-writing skills,
276
00:24:27,160 --> 00:24:32,440
strengthened their musical partnership and focused their experimental ambitions,
277
00:24:32,440 --> 00:24:36,360
they hit a creative peak on their next album, Meddle,
278
00:24:36,360 --> 00:24:38,280
with a little help from Seamus the dog.
279
00:24:38,280 --> 00:24:39,880
MUSIC: "Seamus"
280
00:24:39,880 --> 00:24:42,240
DOG HOWLS
281
00:25:12,080 --> 00:25:16,800
It took a while before any of us turned up songs we thought were good.
282
00:25:16,800 --> 00:25:18,920
I suppose our confidence to move
283
00:25:18,920 --> 00:25:25,680
slightly away from being quite so out there, came with time.
284
00:25:26,680 --> 00:25:29,560
MUSIC: "One Of These Days"
285
00:25:43,240 --> 00:25:47,120
The Floyd had fathered British prog rock and unwittingly,
286
00:25:47,120 --> 00:25:49,120
its self-indulgent excesses.
287
00:25:49,120 --> 00:25:53,440
But they showed exactly how it should be done with Echoes -
288
00:25:53,440 --> 00:25:58,880
a 23-minute track that made up the entire second side of the Meddle album.
289
00:25:59,960 --> 00:26:03,480
# Overhead the albatross
290
00:26:03,480 --> 00:26:07,160
# Hangs motionless upon the air... #
291
00:26:07,160 --> 00:26:09,600
The whole band worked on it together.
292
00:26:09,600 --> 00:26:14,560
# ..the rolling waves In labyrinths of coral caves... #
293
00:26:14,560 --> 00:26:18,680
Everyone would be throwing things in, seeing what worked
294
00:26:18,680 --> 00:26:20,880
and what didn't.
295
00:26:20,880 --> 00:26:24,800
# Willowing across the sands And everything... #
296
00:26:24,800 --> 00:26:30,240
All encouraging each other, all getting inspired by other people's ideas.
297
00:26:30,240 --> 00:26:32,440
It was a really collective piece of music.
298
00:26:36,240 --> 00:26:37,560
I think we found our feet.
299
00:26:37,560 --> 00:26:41,720
I think we found we can do this without Syd.
300
00:26:41,720 --> 00:26:44,760
MUSIC: "Echoes"
301
00:26:51,040 --> 00:26:56,280
Roger would be driving it more than anyone else, in its dynamic range.
302
00:27:00,640 --> 00:27:07,600
All of that work, everything we did there I look upon as serving our apprenticeship,
303
00:27:07,600 --> 00:27:11,680
before we could actually say, "Right, now we're ready.
304
00:27:11,680 --> 00:27:14,280
"Put on your apron, we're gonna make Dark Side Of The Moon."
305
00:27:20,280 --> 00:27:25,120
We'd learned how to use our chisels. And we'll do it properly this time.
306
00:27:26,480 --> 00:27:30,040
MUSIC: "Money"
307
00:27:35,600 --> 00:27:38,400
In 1973 the Floyd returned to the moon -
308
00:27:38,400 --> 00:27:41,200
but this time to its dark side.
309
00:27:41,200 --> 00:27:43,600
# Money
310
00:27:43,600 --> 00:27:45,640
# Get away
311
00:27:47,120 --> 00:27:49,080
# Get a good job with... #
312
00:27:49,080 --> 00:27:54,040
Times had changed. Sixties optimism had given way to the troubled Seventies.
313
00:27:56,520 --> 00:28:01,200
This was a world in eclipse, materialistic and authoritarian.
314
00:28:01,200 --> 00:28:04,560
'Anything is possible' had become 'nothing is possible'.
315
00:28:04,560 --> 00:28:10,000
Roger Waters' lyrics spat back at a world now peopled by us and them.
316
00:28:11,640 --> 00:28:17,080
The record sold millions and gave them their first number one album in the States.
317
00:28:17,080 --> 00:28:20,680
They had become conflated, in my mind
318
00:28:20,680 --> 00:28:24,520
with this thing which I really thought was the death of music,
319
00:28:24,520 --> 00:28:27,840
prog rock and stuff like that.
320
00:28:27,840 --> 00:28:29,560
It was over-considered,
321
00:28:29,560 --> 00:28:32,040
middle class, intellectual,
322
00:28:32,040 --> 00:28:36,000
English stuff.
323
00:28:36,000 --> 00:28:39,400
I didn't have it, uniquely amongst the planet, I have to say.
324
00:28:39,400 --> 00:28:44,520
But it's only much later I realised the scale of their achievement.
325
00:28:44,520 --> 00:28:48,960
What it is is a great record. That's what it is.
326
00:28:48,960 --> 00:28:55,040
It's absolutely one of the cardinal pillars of rock'n'roll, in my view, now.
327
00:28:55,040 --> 00:28:58,080
MUSIC: "Us And Them"
328
00:29:02,760 --> 00:29:08,480
I certainly knew, as we were making this album, that something magical is happening.
329
00:29:17,000 --> 00:29:20,160
I remember sitting at the final listening...
330
00:29:20,160 --> 00:29:22,480
all of us saying, "That is good...
331
00:29:22,480 --> 00:29:24,320
"That is very good."
332
00:29:24,320 --> 00:29:29,040
MUSIC: "On The Run"
333
00:29:33,080 --> 00:29:37,760
One of the elements that made it so successful was that the bloody record company
334
00:29:37,760 --> 00:29:40,600
pulled their finger out and got on with it.
335
00:29:40,600 --> 00:29:45,920
That initial surge and that number one in America was very important.
336
00:29:45,920 --> 00:29:51,800
It was certainly, apart from the enormously talented drumming on it, was to do with the record company
337
00:29:51,800 --> 00:29:54,080
doing their job.
338
00:29:54,080 --> 00:29:59,360
This album just shot up
339
00:29:59,360 --> 00:30:04,840
and was so enormous, we leapt into a different stratosphere.
340
00:30:04,840 --> 00:30:08,600
Part of you wants it. You want that success.
341
00:30:08,600 --> 00:30:10,600
You love it, you know.
342
00:30:10,600 --> 00:30:14,320
You want people to love you or to pretend they love you.
343
00:30:14,320 --> 00:30:16,560
It's a drug.
344
00:30:16,560 --> 00:30:21,600
Dark Side represents not only the band's biggest commercial hit,
345
00:30:21,600 --> 00:30:24,840
but also their most successful artistic collaboration.
346
00:30:24,840 --> 00:30:30,160
Four men, one band - it would never be quite the same again.
347
00:30:30,680 --> 00:30:34,320
- Are there some difficult moments? Yes.
- How do you get round them?
348
00:30:34,320 --> 00:30:36,240
We pretend they're not there.
349
00:30:36,240 --> 00:30:41,240
We certainly don't face up to them in an adult way, if that's what you mean.
350
00:30:41,240 --> 00:30:44,800
We understand each other very well, we're very tolerant of each other.
351
00:30:44,800 --> 00:30:47,200
But a lot of things are unsaid as well.
352
00:30:47,200 --> 00:30:51,000
We're all from the British aristocracy, with the exception of David Gilmour.
353
00:30:51,000 --> 00:30:54,720
- And all our mothers are countesses in England.
- Dukes and duchesses...
354
00:30:54,720 --> 00:30:59,760
I mean, obviously they're a gang of idiots but live and let live.
355
00:31:02,440 --> 00:31:07,760
In America a record executive puffed on his cigar and asked the group,
356
00:31:07,760 --> 00:31:10,080
"Oh, by the way, which one's Pink?"
357
00:31:12,000 --> 00:31:14,640
Roger had, by this time, become the lyricist.
358
00:31:14,640 --> 00:31:22,040
And it really was team work because David and me would write music,
359
00:31:22,040 --> 00:31:29,280
Roger would go home and write some lyrics and come back. That was how the writing was working then.
360
00:31:33,840 --> 00:31:36,840
MUSIC: "Brain Damage"
361
00:31:36,840 --> 00:31:40,320
# The lunatic is on the grass... #
362
00:31:45,000 --> 00:31:49,640
But this Pink Floyd seemed regretful and sometimes angry.
363
00:31:50,240 --> 00:31:54,640
This wasn't pop music as we'd known it but a new and surprisingly
364
00:31:54,640 --> 00:31:57,640
commercial strain of English melancholy.
365
00:31:59,920 --> 00:32:03,000
If I'm at home and I go on the piano,
366
00:32:03,000 --> 00:32:05,080
it's all very melancholic, what I play.
367
00:32:05,080 --> 00:32:08,960
I keep saying to myself I have to get out of this,
368
00:32:08,960 --> 00:32:12,480
do something more upbeat.
369
00:32:12,480 --> 00:32:14,760
David's melancholic too,
370
00:32:14,760 --> 00:32:17,400
in his guitar playing.
371
00:32:17,400 --> 00:32:23,120
Against Roger's rather flowery and political and angry lyrics. It's quite an interesting combination.
372
00:32:23,120 --> 00:32:27,760
People naturally experience unease
373
00:32:27,760 --> 00:32:30,280
about all of this.
374
00:32:30,280 --> 00:32:34,720
I think most human beings experience and think,
375
00:32:34,720 --> 00:32:39,560
"Well, on the surface all of this seems to be working,
376
00:32:39,560 --> 00:32:42,680
"but it just doesn't sit right with me."
377
00:32:44,200 --> 00:32:46,240
That's why people attach to it.
378
00:32:46,240 --> 00:32:52,080
They're attached to this work because there's a sense of relief, even if it's melancholic,
379
00:32:52,080 --> 00:32:54,880
when you go, "Oh, my God, somebody else gets it too.
380
00:32:54,880 --> 00:32:57,480
"Somebody else feels this sense of unease."
381
00:32:57,480 --> 00:33:03,440
It's Roger's phrase "quiet desperation", isn't that what he says, "it's the English way"?
382
00:33:03,440 --> 00:33:05,280
Something like that.
383
00:33:07,640 --> 00:33:11,560
Dave is quintessentially English.
384
00:33:11,560 --> 00:33:15,720
There's a reserve. And it's hard...
385
00:33:15,720 --> 00:33:19,120
to break out of it. So he doesn't. He just plays it.
386
00:33:19,120 --> 00:33:22,160
HAUNTING GUITAR
387
00:33:46,160 --> 00:33:49,840
The daunting task of following Dark Side Of The Moon
388
00:33:49,840 --> 00:33:53,880
was finally clinched back at Abbey Road Studios in 1975.
389
00:33:53,880 --> 00:34:00,200
The spectre of Syd Barrett was celebrated, if not fully laid to rest, on what would become
390
00:34:00,200 --> 00:34:03,640
their second most successful album, Wish You Were Here.
391
00:34:06,400 --> 00:34:12,120
They paid tribute to their mercurial founder in an emotionally charged anthem
392
00:34:12,120 --> 00:34:16,640
that would become an essential part of any Pink Floyd concert.
393
00:34:16,640 --> 00:34:18,600
# Remember when you were young
394
00:34:21,240 --> 00:34:23,800
# You shone like the sun
395
00:34:25,400 --> 00:34:31,400
# Shine on you crazy diamond
396
00:34:35,240 --> 00:34:38,760
# Now there's a look in your eyes
397
00:34:40,680 --> 00:34:43,960
# Like black holes in the sky
398
00:34:45,400 --> 00:34:47,320
# Shine on
399
00:34:47,320 --> 00:34:51,920
# You crazy diamond
400
00:34:54,080 --> 00:34:57,520
# You were caught in the crossfire
401
00:34:57,520 --> 00:34:59,720
# Of childhood and stardom
402
00:34:59,720 --> 00:35:03,160
# Blown on the steel breeze
403
00:35:04,720 --> 00:35:06,720
# Come on, you target
404
00:35:06,720 --> 00:35:09,640
# For faraway laughter
405
00:35:09,640 --> 00:35:11,920
# Come on, you stranger
406
00:35:11,920 --> 00:35:14,880
# You legend, you martyr
407
00:35:14,880 --> 00:35:17,400
# And shine... #
408
00:35:21,720 --> 00:35:24,720
The way in which Syd left
409
00:35:24,720 --> 00:35:30,200
and their consistent determination to link themselves to Syd,
410
00:35:30,200 --> 00:35:34,360
to talk about him, to sing about him, write songs about him
411
00:35:34,360 --> 00:35:36,760
I think it's been good karma for them.
412
00:35:39,280 --> 00:35:41,640
He's there because we all know that
413
00:35:41,640 --> 00:35:46,280
the band wouldn't have existed without him kicking it off.
414
00:35:47,560 --> 00:35:52,160
I think we also felt that, having dropped him out of the band,
415
00:35:52,160 --> 00:35:54,680
perhaps we have a bit of guilt,
416
00:35:54,680 --> 00:35:59,280
of course we should've done something better for him.
417
00:36:03,440 --> 00:36:07,320
It's funny, when Syd died last year, I realised that
418
00:36:07,320 --> 00:36:11,680
by and large, I'd already done all my grieving.
419
00:36:11,680 --> 00:36:15,720
I'd done it 20 years before, I'd been doing it.
420
00:36:18,400 --> 00:36:21,440
The Floyd had always been a multimedia band
421
00:36:21,440 --> 00:36:25,640
but the innocent DIY days of the late Sixties were long gone.
422
00:36:25,640 --> 00:36:29,240
The band now commanded huge stadiums
423
00:36:29,240 --> 00:36:35,720
and pioneered a form of rock theatre that amazed and delighted their ever-expanding audience.
424
00:36:35,720 --> 00:36:40,120
But they continued to hide behind the pyrotechnics.
425
00:36:43,240 --> 00:36:46,000
We don't exist, we're just a brand. Here we are.
426
00:36:46,000 --> 00:36:50,240
Don't put any lights on us, be distracted by these fucking flying pigs and aeroplanes.
427
00:36:50,240 --> 00:36:53,680
Just keep away from us, you're not getting near us.
428
00:36:53,680 --> 00:36:57,600
Our cosy rapport with the audience that were there,
429
00:36:57,600 --> 00:37:00,080
entirely for us, and would be quiet.
430
00:37:00,080 --> 00:37:03,360
In the quiet bits you could hear a pin drop.
431
00:37:03,360 --> 00:37:08,680
That whole thing where we felt at one with our audience changed rather.
432
00:37:08,680 --> 00:37:13,480
Rather than focusing on the individuals, what did they want to focus on? The music.
433
00:37:13,480 --> 00:37:16,200
But how do you do that to punters without boring them?
434
00:37:16,200 --> 00:37:20,600
Quite a lot of people were playing Frisbee at the back
435
00:37:20,600 --> 00:37:24,320
and you've got to try and get them to join in.
436
00:37:24,320 --> 00:37:31,200
That's the real reason for doing big things - you want everyone to enjoy the show.
437
00:37:31,200 --> 00:37:36,920
It's impossible to think or imagine that in every largish town
438
00:37:36,920 --> 00:37:41,360
there are 50,000 people who know and love your music.
439
00:37:41,360 --> 00:37:44,600
It's just not realistic to believe that.
440
00:37:44,600 --> 00:37:51,080
Dave particularly was very against doing anything. "Why can't we just stand on stage and play the songs?"
441
00:37:51,080 --> 00:37:55,400
"It'll be boring."
442
00:37:59,240 --> 00:38:04,240
Waters, the most organised, motivated and ambitious member of the group, pushed ahead
443
00:38:04,240 --> 00:38:07,480
planning ever-higher concepts and bigger extravaganzas,
444
00:38:07,480 --> 00:38:11,920
making pigs fly and Pink Floyd THE show in town.
445
00:38:14,680 --> 00:38:18,960
But his increasing disgust with society and authority
446
00:38:18,960 --> 00:38:23,560
now put him and the band in conflict with the very audiences that flocked
447
00:38:23,560 --> 00:38:28,200
to their stadium shows, which were becoming an increasingly empty spectacle.
448
00:38:28,200 --> 00:38:33,440
# Big man, pig man, ha ha... #
449
00:38:33,440 --> 00:38:38,240
You know, that was a lot of show, that Animals was really a big show.
450
00:38:38,240 --> 00:38:41,960
I became rather disenchanted with it.
451
00:38:41,960 --> 00:38:44,760
And thought that too much was lost.
452
00:38:44,760 --> 00:38:49,680
What was gained from having a large congregation of people communing together
453
00:38:49,680 --> 00:38:52,040
which is what a stadium at its best is,
454
00:38:52,040 --> 00:38:58,520
was being lost in a watering down of the way the message got across to the audience.
455
00:38:58,520 --> 00:39:02,680
I thought it was inhuman and only about money.
456
00:39:02,680 --> 00:39:05,920
# Ha ha, charade you are... #
457
00:39:05,920 --> 00:39:11,200
On the 1977 Animals tour, Waters himself conceded defeat by stadium,
458
00:39:11,200 --> 00:39:16,920
when he spat, like an older, angrier Johnny Rotten at a member of the audience.
459
00:39:16,920 --> 00:39:20,640
# You well-heeled big wheel... #
460
00:39:20,640 --> 00:39:25,240
One of the very irritating things about being
461
00:39:25,240 --> 00:39:31,120
post-show is, when it's been a bad one, and someone says,
462
00:39:31,120 --> 00:39:33,000
"That was fucking great."
463
00:39:33,000 --> 00:39:37,960
You resent them. You think, "What the fuck do you know?
464
00:39:37,960 --> 00:39:39,560
"It was crap."
465
00:39:39,560 --> 00:39:44,840
# We don't need no education... #
466
00:39:44,840 --> 00:39:51,640
Waters' personal response to the Animals incident and the dead-end of the stadium experience
467
00:39:51,640 --> 00:39:54,280
was to make physical and mental barriers,
468
00:39:54,280 --> 00:39:58,560
and his sense of alienation the subject of the Floyd's next project.
469
00:39:58,560 --> 00:40:03,080
He would rewrite the book of rock theatre on The Wall.
470
00:40:04,640 --> 00:40:06,720
If you show yourself, it's a risk.
471
00:40:06,720 --> 00:40:10,240
You take the risk of being rejected.
472
00:40:10,240 --> 00:40:13,960
If you have pretensions to being an artist of any kind,
473
00:40:13,960 --> 00:40:19,200
you have to take the risk of people rejecting you, thinking you're an arsehole.
474
00:40:19,200 --> 00:40:25,120
"That's crap." So, you may think it is, but it's me.
475
00:40:25,120 --> 00:40:31,120
# All in all, you're just a...nother brick in the wall... #
476
00:40:31,120 --> 00:40:36,200
Waters approached The Wall as a one-man construction crew.
477
00:40:36,200 --> 00:40:40,680
but his determined vision and combative leadership marginalised the other members.
478
00:40:40,680 --> 00:40:46,880
My confidence in my own lyric writing has not always been that high.
479
00:40:46,880 --> 00:40:50,360
And Roger showed a very strong desire to be the lyricist.
480
00:40:50,360 --> 00:40:54,680
We all...lazily allowed that to happen.
481
00:40:56,760 --> 00:41:00,640
I didn't have any material to offer and David didn't really, either.
482
00:41:00,640 --> 00:41:05,480
And Roger had begun to think, "I'm the writer of this band.
483
00:41:05,480 --> 00:41:10,280
"And I don't want anyone else to write. I'm going to become..."
484
00:41:10,280 --> 00:41:12,720
It was the start of that whole thing.
485
00:41:12,720 --> 00:41:19,200
So, I'm to blame for not having anything and he's to blame for not encouraging anything to come.
486
00:41:19,200 --> 00:41:24,720
"Oh, he wouldn't let us write." What?! That's just so stupid.
487
00:41:24,720 --> 00:41:28,720
I'm desperate for people to write, always,
488
00:41:28,720 --> 00:41:30,600
always, always, always.
489
00:41:30,600 --> 00:41:34,280
# Is there anybody out there? #
490
00:41:34,280 --> 00:41:38,160
The fact is Roger arrived with The Wall more or less pre-written.
491
00:41:38,160 --> 00:41:41,440
That was a hell of a different thing to Dark Side.
492
00:41:42,880 --> 00:41:45,320
# Is there anybody out there? #
493
00:41:50,040 --> 00:41:55,160
Now the indisputable leader of the band, Waters, frustrated by a lack of support,
494
00:41:55,160 --> 00:41:58,840
sacked one of its co-founding original members,
495
00:41:58,840 --> 00:42:00,840
keyboard player, Rick Wright.
496
00:42:00,840 --> 00:42:04,440
Our personal relationship broke down completely by The Wall.
497
00:42:04,440 --> 00:42:06,560
That's when I left.
498
00:42:06,560 --> 00:42:10,760
But, the interesting thing is, when I was asked to leave, I said,
499
00:42:10,760 --> 00:42:15,120
"I will but I want to finish this and I want to play live,
500
00:42:15,120 --> 00:42:19,040
"play the performances." And Roger was totally happy for me to play.
501
00:42:19,040 --> 00:42:22,120
I think the personality clash had a lot to do with it.
502
00:42:22,120 --> 00:42:28,760
And his...his belief that he was the band...
503
00:42:32,880 --> 00:42:38,200
And that the other musicians... The story goes that Nick was the next one to be thrown out by him.
504
00:42:39,560 --> 00:42:44,600
We'd reached the point where Roger questioned why he was working with these other people,
505
00:42:44,600 --> 00:42:49,480
who he felt were not really helping him do what he wanted to do.
506
00:42:49,480 --> 00:42:53,280
In fact they were criticising him, "That's not quite right, Roger."
507
00:43:01,600 --> 00:43:03,720
Regime change was in the air.
508
00:43:06,960 --> 00:43:10,520
My musical taste and abilities
509
00:43:10,520 --> 00:43:14,800
had just as much, if not more,
510
00:43:14,800 --> 00:43:17,480
to do with it all than Roger's.
511
00:43:17,480 --> 00:43:25,480
And if I allowed this dictatorship to become real and total,
512
00:43:25,480 --> 00:43:28,960
then our music would suffer.
513
00:43:28,960 --> 00:43:32,920
Because I didn't think, still don't,
514
00:43:32,920 --> 00:43:37,200
that is really Roger's main forte.
515
00:43:38,680 --> 00:43:41,920
When I was that very young guy in that band all those years ago
516
00:43:41,920 --> 00:43:48,280
I would stand in the corner, smoke cigarettes endlessly and snarl.
517
00:43:48,280 --> 00:43:53,680
I'm not as reactionary in the literal sense, as I was when I was as a young man.
518
00:43:53,680 --> 00:43:59,080
I don't immediately feel I've got to, you know,
519
00:43:59,080 --> 00:44:02,200
hurt you before you hurt me.
520
00:44:08,120 --> 00:44:11,840
The band made one more record together, The Final Cut.
521
00:44:11,840 --> 00:44:15,440
But in most respects it was a solo album from Waters.
522
00:44:15,440 --> 00:44:20,960
Soon after, he informed their record company that he was leaving,
523
00:44:20,960 --> 00:44:24,160
and declared that Pink Floyd was no more.
524
00:44:24,160 --> 00:44:27,520
# Or make 'em me
525
00:44:27,520 --> 00:44:31,040
# Or make 'em you
526
00:44:31,040 --> 00:44:36,400
# Make 'em do what you want them to... #
527
00:44:36,400 --> 00:44:40,760
This was something David Gilmour in particular refused to accept.
528
00:44:47,880 --> 00:44:51,960
I think he was very surprised when David and Nick said "OK,
529
00:44:51,960 --> 00:44:56,880
"you can leave the band, fine." He didn't expect them to say,
530
00:44:56,880 --> 00:45:01,360
"Now we'll make a Pink Floyd album, go on tour without you."
531
00:45:05,680 --> 00:45:10,520
It seemed important to me to just get on and do the best you can do.
532
00:45:10,520 --> 00:45:13,040
And...you know,
533
00:45:13,040 --> 00:45:15,600
Syd Barrett's Pink Floyd had been one Pink Floyd.
534
00:45:15,600 --> 00:45:23,080
The Pink Floyd with the four of us, Roger, Rick, Nick and I, had been another one.
535
00:45:23,080 --> 00:45:26,320
And this would be another version.
536
00:45:28,120 --> 00:45:29,760
That, I think, shocked him a bit.
537
00:45:29,760 --> 00:45:32,200
Well, not shocked him... and made him angry.
538
00:45:32,200 --> 00:45:35,560
Well, we know it made him angry because he tried to stop it.
539
00:45:36,920 --> 00:45:43,360
The argument was me, rather pompously, and I admit now, erroneously,
540
00:45:43,360 --> 00:45:48,440
suggesting that because I wasn't in the band any more
541
00:45:48,440 --> 00:45:52,960
that the brand and band name should be retired.
542
00:45:54,400 --> 00:45:57,600
So, it wasn't up to me.
543
00:45:58,760 --> 00:46:05,640
Well, it's a battle about using a name. It's a name that all of us had spent our adult lives working on,
544
00:46:05,640 --> 00:46:11,520
as anonymous as we all have been throughout that Pink Floyd history.
545
00:46:11,520 --> 00:46:14,920
I mean, after all, who's Nick Mason?
546
00:46:14,920 --> 00:46:17,120
He's the drummer with Pink Floyd.
547
00:46:17,120 --> 00:46:19,480
Um...
548
00:46:19,480 --> 00:46:21,520
Who's Rick? He's the keyboard player.
549
00:46:21,520 --> 00:46:26,120
Who's Roger? Oh, he's the guy who was in the Pink Floyd.
550
00:46:26,120 --> 00:46:28,320
You know...
551
00:46:28,320 --> 00:46:30,080
That's who they are.
552
00:46:30,080 --> 00:46:34,280
MUSIC: "Learning To Fly"
553
00:46:34,280 --> 00:46:39,320
Spurred into action, Gilmour wrote and recorded a new Floyd album,
554
00:46:39,320 --> 00:46:42,520
A Momentary Lapse Of Reason, with new collaborators.
555
00:46:42,520 --> 00:46:47,040
Released in 1987, it went on to sell 9 million copies.
556
00:46:47,040 --> 00:46:54,280
And encouraged Gilmour to tour the Floyd with Rick Wright and Nick Mason fully reinstated.
557
00:46:54,280 --> 00:46:59,680
# Into the distance A ribbon of black
558
00:46:59,680 --> 00:47:03,800
# Stretched to the point of no turning back
559
00:47:05,000 --> 00:47:08,160
# A flight of fancy... #
560
00:47:08,160 --> 00:47:11,880
When the band played live in Venice in July 1989,
561
00:47:11,880 --> 00:47:15,200
the televised event was watched around the globe.
562
00:47:15,200 --> 00:47:19,200
Pink Floyd were back, bigger than ever and with a new leader.
563
00:47:19,200 --> 00:47:20,960
# Holding me fast
564
00:47:20,960 --> 00:47:24,400
# How can I escape
565
00:47:24,400 --> 00:47:28,560
# This irresistible grasp?
566
00:47:28,560 --> 00:47:32,600
# Can't keep my eyes from the circling sky
567
00:47:32,600 --> 00:47:36,080
# Tongue-tied and twisted
568
00:47:36,080 --> 00:47:39,760
# Just an earthbound misfit, I...
569
00:47:51,000 --> 00:47:54,560
# Ice is forming on the tips... #
570
00:47:54,560 --> 00:47:57,440
Pink Floyd toured the world, as did a solo Roger Waters.
571
00:47:57,440 --> 00:48:01,840
He performed his version of The Wall in Berlin in 1990.
572
00:48:06,360 --> 00:48:11,840
Both played the band's most popular numbers while lawsuits and bad blood flowed between them.
573
00:48:14,360 --> 00:48:21,280
I remember one night playing in Cincinnati to about 2,000 people in a 6,000-seat arena.
574
00:48:21,280 --> 00:48:25,040
And they were playing to 60,000 people in a football stadium next door.
575
00:48:25,040 --> 00:48:28,360
Playing all my songs!
576
00:48:28,360 --> 00:48:30,200
You know, but...
577
00:48:33,320 --> 00:48:36,840
Erm...it was hard to take.
578
00:48:40,160 --> 00:48:46,600
The Momentary Lapse Of Reason tour restored the confidence of both Rick Wright and Nick Mason.
579
00:48:46,600 --> 00:48:50,480
Under Gilmour's leadership, the band now worked together again as a team
580
00:48:50,480 --> 00:48:53,320
for what would be the last original Pink Floyd album.
581
00:48:53,320 --> 00:48:57,040
The Division Bell began life here in 1993
582
00:48:57,040 --> 00:49:02,000
in Gilmour's floating studio, moored at Hampton Court.
583
00:49:10,720 --> 00:49:17,240
We decided to start this one, we'd all go and jam, for a week or so.
584
00:49:17,240 --> 00:49:22,280
Just start playing together and out of that came Division Bell.
585
00:49:22,280 --> 00:49:27,200
So, it was a true Floyd writing partnership again.
586
00:49:29,160 --> 00:49:33,800
Well, that sounds to me like something that needs development but it could almost be...
587
00:49:33,800 --> 00:49:35,720
I have nothing to say.
588
00:49:40,160 --> 00:49:44,520
It was a happier Pink Floyd that continued recording The Division Bell throughout 1993.
589
00:49:44,520 --> 00:49:49,800
Happy together, but nonetheless compelled to gaze once again back into their past,
590
00:49:49,800 --> 00:49:52,480
with the closing track High Hopes.
591
00:49:54,520 --> 00:49:58,000
# The grass was greener
592
00:50:01,480 --> 00:50:04,480
# The light was brighter
593
00:50:08,360 --> 00:50:10,680
# The days were sweeter
594
00:50:13,920 --> 00:50:16,280
# The nights of wonder
595
00:50:20,520 --> 00:50:24,160
# With friends surrounded... #
596
00:50:26,520 --> 00:50:30,440
When you think about how many different versions,
597
00:50:30,440 --> 00:50:33,800
different lead songwriters they've had.
598
00:50:33,800 --> 00:50:37,440
And yet...
599
00:50:37,440 --> 00:50:42,200
there's something that links it all.
600
00:50:42,200 --> 00:50:47,320
Certainly they managed to make the changes evolutionary, gradual...
601
00:50:47,320 --> 00:50:53,240
and always maintaining a certain kind of sound.
602
00:51:02,520 --> 00:51:05,800
More than a decade after The Division Bell was released,
603
00:51:05,800 --> 00:51:09,440
the Pink Floyd lawsuits had subsided and the band had been put on ice,
604
00:51:09,440 --> 00:51:14,120
Bob Geldof wanted the four surviving members of the group to reunite
605
00:51:14,120 --> 00:51:16,640
as the climax of his Live 8 event.
606
00:51:18,120 --> 00:51:20,960
A task akin to making poverty history.
607
00:51:24,400 --> 00:51:27,800
He opened negotiations with David Gilmour.
608
00:51:29,600 --> 00:51:34,000
I really don't do the hard sell cos I don't want to do it to him.
609
00:51:36,120 --> 00:51:40,200
He's desperate not to do this. I can see it, he's not gonna do it.
610
00:51:40,200 --> 00:51:46,000
And I just have to say, one, no-one in Pink Floyd's world feels
611
00:51:46,000 --> 00:51:50,000
that you guys ever said goodbye properly.
612
00:51:50,000 --> 00:51:52,000
And that's true.
613
00:51:52,000 --> 00:51:54,920
Two, it's 20 minutes.
614
00:51:54,920 --> 00:51:57,800
It's 20 minutes.
615
00:51:57,800 --> 00:52:00,840
"Ah, we're going on tour..." Spare me.
616
00:52:00,840 --> 00:52:06,960
Don't tell me that the Pink Floyd getting back together again will not seize
617
00:52:06,960 --> 00:52:11,920
the entire... That's the thing that makes this totally different.
618
00:52:14,320 --> 00:52:16,440
Gilmour said no.
619
00:52:16,440 --> 00:52:21,160
So, Geldof contacted Waters who called Gilmour,
620
00:52:21,160 --> 00:52:23,680
who called Geldof and so on.
621
00:52:23,680 --> 00:52:26,920
Eventually the four men buried the axe
622
00:52:26,920 --> 00:52:31,800
and agreed to play together just one more time as Pink Floyd.
623
00:52:35,560 --> 00:52:39,720
We had a meeting with Roger and he wanted to do other songs.
624
00:52:39,720 --> 00:52:45,440
Basically David said, "Look, they've asked Pink Floyd to play.
625
00:52:45,440 --> 00:52:50,880
"We're Pink Floyd so we're gonna do these songs, and if you'd like to play with us, that'd be great."
626
00:52:50,880 --> 00:52:53,320
So he was very humble, actually.
627
00:52:53,320 --> 00:52:55,720
He knew that, he realised that.
628
00:52:55,720 --> 00:52:57,600
But he loved it.
629
00:52:57,600 --> 00:53:02,240
# I cannot put my finger on it now
630
00:53:02,240 --> 00:53:08,480
# The child is grown The dream is gone... #
631
00:53:08,480 --> 00:53:12,440
To me, it was also very good to get back on to speaking terms,
632
00:53:12,440 --> 00:53:16,120
after all the bickering with Roger over the years,
633
00:53:16,120 --> 00:53:20,760
and us to maybe grow up a little bit...
634
00:53:20,760 --> 00:53:28,600
Become adult human beings in some sort of reasonable relationship...
635
00:53:28,600 --> 00:53:30,760
For that moment.
636
00:53:37,720 --> 00:53:39,280
Mummy! Um...
637
00:53:39,280 --> 00:53:42,880
It was, er...it was terrific.
638
00:53:42,880 --> 00:53:48,960
From the playing point of view, it was really easy and really nice,
639
00:53:48,960 --> 00:53:51,600
and fun to play together.
640
00:53:51,600 --> 00:53:56,640
For me playing with Roger...the relationship between the bass player and the drummer is special,
641
00:53:56,640 --> 00:54:03,120
you just intuitively know which mistakes we're gonna make next.
642
00:54:06,440 --> 00:54:10,880
Great to have Roger standing next to me...playing the bass.
643
00:54:10,880 --> 00:54:15,480
It did bring back memories, and a little bit of emotion.
644
00:54:19,480 --> 00:54:23,960
I think it's great that happened. I really think it was great.
645
00:54:23,960 --> 00:54:28,760
If that's the only time we get to draw a line under it, well, so be it.
646
00:54:28,760 --> 00:54:33,800
I'd like to do more of it. I thought it was really cool. It was very interesting, musically
647
00:54:33,800 --> 00:54:36,360
and emotionally and philosophically.
648
00:54:42,400 --> 00:54:48,600
This vast, numberless constituency gathered about because these four men said,
649
00:54:48,600 --> 00:54:53,000
"Enough's enough, this single thing is important enough to put aside
650
00:54:53,000 --> 00:54:57,240
"these pathetic misgivings of the past."
651
00:55:08,760 --> 00:55:12,320
There was nothing more potent or symbolic on that night than
652
00:55:12,320 --> 00:55:15,000
these four old geezers
653
00:55:15,000 --> 00:55:20,360
playing...so beautifully,
654
00:55:20,360 --> 00:55:23,880
laying their own ghosts to rest,
655
00:55:23,880 --> 00:55:27,000
and the thing is, it worked.
656
00:55:27,000 --> 00:55:29,200
There are 20 million children in school,
657
00:55:29,200 --> 00:55:34,640
now - cos of what went on all during that week.
658
00:55:34,640 --> 00:55:38,760
And emblematic of that week,
659
00:55:38,760 --> 00:55:43,280
was this signature group
660
00:55:43,280 --> 00:55:46,640
and this great moment in their lives.
661
00:55:46,640 --> 00:55:49,360
I think.
662
00:55:49,360 --> 00:55:52,320
CHEERING
663
00:55:52,320 --> 00:55:55,240
The body language was funny...
664
00:55:58,400 --> 00:56:01,480
Roger seemed, "Yeah, I'm back!"
665
00:56:01,480 --> 00:56:04,600
Sort of very pleased. And the others were kind of...
666
00:56:04,600 --> 00:56:07,760
like that a bit.
667
00:56:07,760 --> 00:56:09,920
HE LAUGHS
668
00:56:24,680 --> 00:56:28,200
We were a family, you know, and we went through a divorce.
669
00:56:28,200 --> 00:56:32,160
A marriage and we went through a divorce. And erm...
670
00:56:34,240 --> 00:56:37,080
I don't know who divorced who, but anyway...
671
00:56:37,080 --> 00:56:40,560
It didn't feel like a family.
672
00:56:44,400 --> 00:56:48,400
There are connections I feel with my mother and my brother
673
00:56:48,400 --> 00:56:52,400
that I don't feel for anybody that I was in Pink Floyd with.
674
00:56:52,400 --> 00:56:57,160
It's very like a family. You get sick of each other, the way you do in families.
675
00:56:57,160 --> 00:56:59,400
And you get this wonderful honesty...
676
00:56:59,400 --> 00:57:06,880
you know, shouting at people, telling them how useless they are and what they've done wrong.
677
00:57:06,880 --> 00:57:10,480
It's a bit like the Munsters, if you know what I mean.
678
00:57:10,480 --> 00:57:14,840
Well, there it is. You can pass your verdict as well as I can.
679
00:57:14,840 --> 00:57:21,080
My verdict is that it is a regression to childhood but after all, why not?
680
00:57:21,080 --> 00:57:24,120
MUSIC: "Eclipse"
681
00:58:05,560 --> 00:58:08,520
I would love to go out and play Floyd music again.
682
00:58:10,520 --> 00:58:15,560
Stubborn isn't the word, talking about leading a horse to water but you can't make it drink.
683
00:58:15,560 --> 00:58:18,120
Well, these horses can't even be led to the water.
684
00:58:18,120 --> 00:58:22,680
I don't think it will happen but I think... Well, you can ask Dave when you speak to him.
685
00:58:22,680 --> 00:58:25,520
I think it happens.
686
00:58:26,480 --> 00:58:28,680
# And all that is gone
687
00:58:28,680 --> 00:58:31,840
# And all that's to come
688
00:58:31,840 --> 00:58:36,520
# And everything under the sun is in tune
689
00:58:36,520 --> 00:58:43,560
# And the sun is eclipsed by the moon. #
690
00:58:50,440 --> 00:58:53,000
Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd
691
00:58:53,000 --> 00:58:56,520
E-mail subtitling@bbc.co.uk
60984
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