HDPinkFloyd
Pink Floyd - at Pompeii Echoes
updated
Of course Syd Barrett never played Echoes
its a Dream
Tracks
1. Shine On You Crazy Diamond 00:00:00
2. Signs of Life 00:12:23
3. Learning to Fly 00:15:46
4. Sorrow 00:21:03
5. Dogs of War 00:31:36
6. On The Turning Away 00:39:32
7. One of These Days 00:48:37
8. Time 00:54:50
9. On The Run 01:00:00
10. The Great Gig in the Sky 01:02:58
11. Wish You Were Here 01:07:49
12. US and Them 01:12:38
13. Money 01:20:18
14. Comfortably Numb 01:28:33
15. One Slip 01:38:30
16. Run Like Hell 01:44:36
The source audio (Flac ) is very important factor for a higher sound quality ,
before uploading ...Flac is compressed without any loss in quality or loss of any original audio data
Even compressed by youtube , the quality will remain much higher than say an mp3 file
Enjoy !
3 D - David ...David.....David.... Graham
a film by David Gilmour from his 1984 tour from the album About Face for Europe.
Tracks
"Until We Sleep" (David Gilmour)
"All Lovers Are Deranged" (Gilmour, Pete Townshend)
"There's No Way Out of Here" (Ken Baker)
"Short and Sweet" (Gilmour, Roy Harper)
"Run Like Hell" (Gilmour, Roger Waters)
"Out of the Blue" (Gilmour)
"Blue Light" (Gilmour)
"Murder" (Gilmour)
"Comfortably Numb" (Gilmour, Waters)
Personnel
David Gilmour: Guitars, vocals.
Mick Ralphs: Guitars, vocals.
Mickey Feat: Bass Guitar, vocals.
Raff Ravenscroft: Saxophones, keyboards, percussion.
Gregg Dechert: Keyboards, vocals.
Chris Slade: Drums, Percussion.
Jody Linscott: Percussion.
Roy Harper: Vocals on "Short and Sweet" and percussion on "Comfortably Numb".
Nick Mason: Drums on "Comfortably Numb"
Tracks
Speak to Me - 0:00
Breathe (In the Air) - 1:10
Time - 4:00
Castellorizon - 10:58
On An Island - 15:03
The Blue - 22:43
Red Sky At Night - 28:45
This Heaven - 31:59
Then I Close My Eyes - 36:11
Smile - 46:06
Take a Breath - 50:19
A Pocket Full of Stones - 56:38
Where We Start - 1:02:41
Shine On You Crazy Diamond, Pts. 1-5 - 1:11:28
Fat Old Sun - 1:22:40
Coming Back to Life - 1:28:49
High Hopes - 1:35:46
Echoes - 1:45:14
Wish You Were Here - 2:07:31
Find the Cost of Freedom - 2:12:59
Arnold Layne - 2:15:10
Comfortably Numb - 2:19:03
Personnel
David Gilmour – lead and backing vocals, guitars, console steel guitar, acoustic lap steel guitar, cümbüs, alto saxophone on "Red Sky at Night"
Richard Wright – lead and backing vocals, Hammond organ, Farfisa organ, piano
Dick Parry – baritone & alto saxophones, electronic organ
Phil Manzanera – guitars, backing vocals
Guy Pratt – bass guitar, double bass, backing vocals, guitar on "Then I Close My Eyes"
Jon Carin – synthesiser, piano, keyboards, programming, lap steel guitar, backing vocals, co-lead vocals on "Breathe", "The Blue", "Take A Breath" and "Echoes"
Steve DiStanislao – drums, percussion, backing vocals
Guests
David Bowie – lead vocals on "Arnold Layne" and "Comfortably Numb"
David Crosby and Graham Nash – backing vocals on "Shine On You Crazy Diamond", "On An Island", and "The Blue"; harmonised lead vocals on "Find the Cost of Freedom".
Robert Wyatt – cornet on "Then I Close My Eyes"
Gilmour played the entire On an Island album during this concert.
It's the final Pink Floyd-related recording to feature Richard Wright, who died on 15 September 2008, one week before the album's official release. Also notably, this concert took place approximately one month following the death of Syd Barrett. Gilmour and his band were backed by the Polish Baltic Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Zbigniew Preisner. Leszek Możdżer was featured on piano as a special guest
Tracks
"Castellorizon"
"On an Island"
"The Blue"
"Red Sky at Night"
"This Heaven"
"Then I Close My Eyes"
"Smile"
"Take a Breath"
"A Pocketful of Stones"
"Where We Start"
"Astronomy Domine"
"High Hopes"
"Echoes"
"A Great Day for Freedom"
"Comfortably Numb"
"Wot's... Uh the Deal?" (end credits)
Tour Personnel
Musicians
David Gilmour – guitars, lead and backing vocals, console steel guitar, acoustic lap steel guitar, alto saxophone on "Red Sky at Night"
Richard Wright – piano, Hammond organ, Farfisa organ, lead and backing vocals
Jon Carin – keyboards, synthesiser, backing vocals, lap steel guitar, programming
Guy Pratt – bass guitars, backing vocals, double bass, guitar on "Then I Close My Eyes"
Phil Manzanera – guitars, backing vocals,
Dick Parry – tenor and baritone saxophones, electronic organ
Steve DiStanislao – drums, percussion, backing vocals
Zbigniew Preisner – conductor
Leszek Możdżer – piano
Polish Baltic Philharmonic orchestra –
It also features footage filmed during three concerts at the same venue in January 2002.
Guest appearances are made by Floyd colleague Richard Wright, as well as Robert Wyatt and Bob Geldof It includes the first performance of "Smile", a track that would appear almost five years later on Gilmour's third solo album, On an Island. Gilmour
Track listing
The Meltdown Concert from June 2001
"Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts I–V)" (David Gilmour, Roger Waters, Richard Wright)
"Terrapin" (Syd Barrett)
"Fat Old Sun" (Gilmour)
"Coming Back to Life" (Gilmour)
"High Hopes" (Gilmour, Polly Samson)
"Je crois entendre encore" (Georges Bizet)
"Smile" (Gilmour, Samson)
"Wish You Were Here" (Gilmour, Waters)
"Comfortably Numb" (with Robert Wyatt) (Gilmour, Waters)
"Dimming of the Day" (Richard Thompson)
"Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts VI–VIII)" (Gilmour, Waters, Wright)
"A Great Day for Freedom" (Gilmour, Samson)
"Hushabye Mountain" (Robert B. Sherman, Richard M. Sherman)
Royal Festival Hall Concert 2002
"Dominoes" (Barrett)
"Breakthrough" (with Richard Wright) (Wright, Anthony Moore)
"Comfortably Numb" (with Bob Geldof) (Gilmour, Waters)
Personnel
David Gilmour – guitars, vocals
Neill MacColl – guitars, backing vocals
Michael Kamen – piano, English horn
Chucho Merchán – double bass
Caroline Dale – cello
Dick Parry – baritone and tenor saxophones
Nic France – drums & percussion
Gospel Choir – Sam Brown (choir leader), Chris Ballin, Pete Brown, Margo Buchanan, Claudia Fontaine, Michelle John Douglas, Sonia Jones, Carol Kenyon, David Laudat, Durga McBroom, Aitch McRobbie (solo on Smile), Beverly Skeete
with
Bob Geldof – vocals on "Comfortably Numb" (January 2002 footage)
Robert Wyatt – vocals on "Comfortably Numb" (June 2001 footage)
Richard Wright – vocals on "Breakthrough", keyboards on "Breakthrough" and "Comfortably Numb"
The maker is unknown, possibly a bootlegger
Looks to be bits and pieces from different shows near the
time period when The Dark Side of The Moon was released
and played .
Whoever made this, very nice work, thanks from myself and from over 1 million of us in Floyd city
Tracks
00:01 - Speak To Me.
02:14 - Breathe.
05:14 - On The Run.
10:10 - Time.
17:24 - The Great Gig In The Sky.
23:00 - Money.
29:17 - Us And Them.
37:00 - Any Colour You Like.
45:28 - Brain Damage.
49:10 - Eclipse.
Gilmour completed short tours of Europe in September and October 2015 and South America in December 2015 to support the album, with a similar tour of the United States and Canada following in March and April 2016
The tour became a commercial success, grossing $47 million
Most of the venues on the first European leg of the tour were at Roman amphitheatres.
Gilmour also played the Royal Albert Hall as his only UK venue of the tour. He also played the historic Auditorium Theatre in Chicago, having last performed there with Pink Floyd in 1972
Great Big Thanks to Producer / Film Photographer Gavin Elder , wonderful work !
EMI released the band's first single, "Arnold Layne", with the B-side "Candy and a Currant Bun", on 10 March 1967 on its Columbia label. Both tracks were recorded on 29 January 1967.
"Arnold Layne"'s references to cross-dressing led to a ban by several radio stations; however, creative manipulation by the retailers who supplied sales figures to the music business meant that the single peaked in the UK at number 20.
EMI-Columbia released Pink Floyd's second single, "See Emily Play", on 16 June 1967. It fared slightly better than "Arnold Layne", peaking at number 6 in the UK.[ The band performed on the BBC's Look of the Week, where Waters and Barrett, erudite and engaging, faced tough questioning from Hans Keller. They appeared on the BBC's Top of the Pops, a popular programme that controversially required artists to mime their singing and playing. Though Pink Floyd returned for two more performances, by the third, Barrett had begun to unravel, and around this time the band first noticed significant changes in his behaviour. By early 1967, he was regularly using LSD, and Mason described him as "completely distanced from everything going on".
EMI-Columbia released The Piper at the Gates of Dawn in August 1967. The album peaked at number 6, spending 14 weeks on the UK charts. One month later, it was released under the Tower Records label. Pink Floyd continued to draw large crowds at the UFO Club; however, Barrett's mental breakdown was by then causing serious concern. The group initially hoped that his erratic behaviour would be a passing phase, but some were less optimistic, including Jenner and his assistant, June Child, who commented: "I found [Barrett] in the dressing room and he was so ... gone. Roger Waters and I got him on his feet, [and] we got him out to the stage ... The band started to play and Syd just stood there. He had his guitar around his neck and his arms just hanging down".
In December 1967, reaching a crisis point with Barrett, Pink Floyd added guitarist David Gilmour as the fifth member. Gilmour already knew Barrett, having studied with him at Cambridge Tech in the early 1960s. The two had performed at lunchtimes together with guitars and harmonicas, and later hitch-hiked and busked their way around the south of France.
Steve O'Rourke, set Gilmour up in a room at O'Rourke's house with a salary of £30 per week , and in January 1968, Blackhill Enterprises announced Gilmour as the band's newest member, intending to continue with Barrett as a nonperforming songwriter.
According to Jenner, the group planned that Gilmour would "cover for [Barrett's] eccentricities". When this proved unworkable, "Syd was just going to write. Just to try to keep him involved
Working with Barrett eventually proved too difficult, and matters came to a conclusion in January while en route to a performance in Southampton when a band member asked if they should collect Barrett. According to Gilmour, the answer was "Nah, let's not bother", signalling the end of Barrett's tenure with Pink Floyd.
In 1968, Pink Floyd returned to Abbey Road Studios to record their second album, A Saucerful of Secrets. The album included Barrett's final contribution to their discography, "Jugband Blues". Waters began to develop his own songwriting, contributing "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun", "Let There Be More Light" and "Corporal Clegg".
Pink Floyd toured extensively across America and Europe in 1970.
Track List:
1. Shine on You Crazy Diamond 00:00:00
2.Sorrow 00:11:34
3. On The Turning Away 00: 21:57
4. US and THEM 00:31:05
5. Money 00:38:40
6. Comfortably Numb 00:47:00
7.One of These Days 00:56:46
8. Run Like Hell 01:02:45
9. Yet Another Movie /Round And Round 01:10:42
Personnel
David Gilmour - guitars, console steel guitar, vocals
Nick Mason - drums
Richard Wright – keyboards, piano, Hammond organ, vocals
with:
Tim Renwick – guitars, vocals
Jon Carin – keyboards, piano, programming, vocals
Scott Page – saxophones, oboe, guitar
Guy Pratt – bass, vocals
Gary Wallis – percussion, additional keyboards on "Comfortably Numb"
Margret Taylor – backing vocals
Rachel Fury – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals
Tracks
1. 00:00 Astronomy Domine BBC TV Look of the Week 1967
2. 04:22 Jugband Blues 1968
3. 07:20 Paint Box French TV 1968
4. 10:59 The Sound of Change 1968
5. 14:36 Roger Water interview Belgium TV 1968
6. 14:57 Flaming French TV 1968
7. 17:58 Let There Be More Light French TV 1968
8. 24:34 Set the Controls for The Heart of The Sun French TV 1969
9. 29:57 Careful With That Axe Eugene German TV 1969
10. 35:58 Green is the Color KQED TV San Francisco 1970
11. 39.32 Atom Heart Mother German TV 1971
12. 42:44 Atom Heart Mother ST Tropez 1970
13. 50:20 Inprovisations the Pink Room Roland Petit French TV 1970
14. 53:51 Wot's ...Uh The Deal France 1972
Happier Days for The Floyd !
3 D - David ...David.....David.... Graham
Live at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York 1988
Live at Earls Court London PULSE 1994
Tracks
1. 00:00:00 " High Hopes " Live at Earls Court London PULSE 1994
2. 00:08:05 " Sorrow" Live at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York 1988
3. 00:18:30 " Coming Back to Life " Live at Earls Court London PULSE 1994
4. 00:25:10 " On The Turning Away " Live at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York 1988
5. 00:34:02 " Another Brick in The Wall " Live at Earls Court London PULSE 1994
6. 00:40:33 " "One of These Days" Live at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York 1988
7. 00:46:28 " TIME " Live at Earls Court London PULSE 1994
8. 00:53:03 " US and Them " Live at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York 1988
9. 01:00:36 "Brain Damage" / "Eclipse" Live at Earls Court London PULSE 1994
10. 01:06:08 " Money " Live at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York 1988
11. 01:14:30 " Comfortably Numb " Live at Earls Court London PULSE 1994
12. 01:23:45 " Run Like Hell " Live at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York 1988
Delicate Sound of Thunder
David Gilmour - guitars, console steel guitar, vocals
Nick Mason - drums
Richard Wright – keyboards, piano, Hammond organ, vocals
with:
Tim Renwick – guitars, vocals
Jon Carin – keyboards, piano, programming, vocals
Scott Page – saxophones, guitar
Guy Pratt – bass, vocals
Gary Wallis – percussion,
Margret Taylor – backing vocals
Rachel Fury – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals
Earls Court London PULSE
David Gilmour – lead vocals, guitars, lap steel guitar, talk box
Richard Wright – keyboards, backing vocals, lead vocals on "Time" and "Comfortably Numb" (verses)
Nick Mason – drums, gong, roto-toms
Additional personnel
Guy Pratt – bass guitar, backing vocals, lead vocals on "Comfortably Numb"
Jon Carin – keyboards, programming, backing vocals, lead vocals on "Comfortably Numb"
Sam Brown – backing vocals, first lead vocalist on "The Great Gig in the Sky"
Durga McBroom – backing vocals, second lead vocalist on "The Great Gig in the Sky"
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals, third lead vocalist on "The Great Gig in the Sky"
Tim Renwick – guitars, backing vocals
Dick Parry – saxophones
Gary Wallis – percussion, additional drums (played and programmed)
Flac Lossless Audio
The main footage in and around the ancient Roman amphitheater in Pompeii, Italy It was filmed over four days in October 1971, using the band's regular touring equipment
Adrian Maben had become interested in combining art with Pink Floyd's music, and during 1971, he attempted to contact the band's manager, Steve O'Rourke, to discuss the possibilities of making a film to achieve this aim. After his original plan of mixing the band with assorted paintings had been rejected, Maben went on holiday to Naples in the early summer
During a visit to Pompeii, he lost his passport, and went back to the amphitheater he had visited earlier in the day in order to find it. Walking around the deserted ruins, he thought the silence and natural ambient sounds present would make a good backdrop for the music. The local authorities to close the amphitheater for six days that October for filming
Tracks
1. 00:00 Breathe
2. 00:02:32 On The Run
3. 00:06:10 Time
4. 00:12:52 The Great Gig in The Sky
5. 00:18:08 Money
6. 00:26:56 US and THEM
7. 00:34:00 Any Color You Like
8. 00:37:16 Brain Damage /Eclipse
Personnel
Pink Floyd
David Gilmour – lead vocals, guitar
Nick Mason – drums
Richard Wright – keyboards, backing vocals, lead vocals
Additional personnel
Guy Pratt – bass, backing vocals
Jon Carin – keyboards, backing vocals,
Sam Brown – backing vocals, first vocalist on "The Great Gig in the Sky"
Durga McBroom – backing vocals, second vocalist on "The Great Gig in the Sky"
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals, third vocalist on "The Great Gig in the Sky"
Tim Renwick – guitar, backing vocals
Dick Parry – saxophone
Gary Wallis – percussion
These special songs are a tribute to The Heart of Pink Floyd Richard Wright
Tracks
1. 00:00 Paint Box
2. 03:40 Wearing The Inside Out - On an Island Tour Royal Albert Hall 2006
3. 11:05 The Great Gig in The Sky - Live at Earls Court London 1994
4. 16:21 US and Them - Live at Earls Court London 1994
5. 23:31 Any Color You Like - Live at Earls Court London 1994
6. 26:48 Breakthrough David Gilmour in Concert 202
7. 34:19 Echoes - Live in Gdansk 2008
8. 59:19 Shine On You Crazy Diamond part 9
Richard William Wright (28 July 1943 – 15 September 2008) was an English musician, composer, singer, and songwriter. He was a founding member, keyboardist, and vocalist of Pink Floyd, performing on all but one of their albums and playing on all of their tours.
Wright grew up in Hatch End, Middlesex and met future Pink Floyd bandmates Roger Waters and Nick Mason while studying architecture at the Regent Street Polytechnic. After being joined by frontman and songwriter Syd Barrett, the group found commercial success in 1967. Barrett's instability led to him being replaced by David Gilmour and Wright taking over songwriting duties with Waters. Initially a straightforward singer/songwriter, Wright later acted as an arranger to Waters and Gilmour's compositions. He began to contribute less towards the end of the 1970s and left the band after touring The Wall in 1981.
He rejoined the band as a session player in 1987 for A Momentary Lapse of Reason, and became a full-time member again for The Division Bell in 1994. Sessions with Wright during this period were later released on the album The Endless River. Away from Pink Floyd, Wright recorded two solo albums, including a collaboration with Anthony Moore on Broken China, and briefly formed the duo Zee. After rejoining Waters, Mason and Gilmour as Pink Floyd for Live 8 in 2005, he became part of Gilmour's regular solo touring band, singing occasional lead on songs such as "Arnold Layne", before his death in September 2008.
Pink Floyd Live in New York 1988
Tracks
1. Shine On You Crazy Diamond 00:00:00
2. Signs of Life 00:12:23
3. Learning to Fly 00:15:46
4. Sorrow 00:21:03
5. Dogs of War 00:31:36
6. On The Turning Away 00:39:32
7. One of These Days 00:48:37
8. Time 00:54:50
9. On The Run 01:00:00
10. The Great Gig in the Sky 01:02:58
11. Wish You Were Here 01:07:49
12. US and Them 01:12:38
13. Money 01:20:18
14. Comfortably Numb 01:28:33
15. One Slip 01:38:30
16. Run Like Hell 01:44:36
The source audio (Flac ) is very important factor for a higher sound quality ,
before uploading ...Flac is compressed without any loss in quality or loss of any original audio data
Even compressed by youtube , the quality will remain much higher than say an mp3 file
Stay Safe enjoy Pink Floyd
Tracks
1. 00:00:00 Astronomy Domine..................Allianz Parque, São Paulo, Brazil DEC 12/2015 South America
2. 00:05:17 Shine on You Crazy Diamond .......Knebworth England Concert 1990
3. 00:16:00 Time ............................ Earls Court London 1994 Pulse
4. 00:22:21 On The Turning Away ............. NY 1988 A Momentary Lapse of Reason tour
5. 00:31:12 One of These Days............ Earls Court London 1994 Pulse
6. 00:37:50 Anouther Brick in the Wall .......Earls Court London Pulse 1994
7. 00:44:15 Run Like Hell ....................Knebworth England Concert 1990
8. 00:50:51 Comfortably Numb .................Earls Court London 1994 Pulse
9. 01:00:13 Sorrow ...........................NY 1988 A Momentary Lapse of Reason tour
10. 01:10:38 Echoes ...........................Royale Albert Hall 2006
Pink Floyd concert video taken from the 20 October 1994 concert at Earls Court, London, England in The Division Bell Tour. It was originally released on VHS and Laserdisc in 1995.
Seconded part of this concert is on my channel, Pink Floyd The Dark Side of the Moon
youtube.com/watch?v=ImlFp6QOZRU&t=1968s
There was considerable delay in the release of the DVD edition of Pulse, with new features announced with each setback. The cause of the delays was reputed to be the continued modifications and additions to produce a high-quality release. The previous planned release date of 22 September 2005 for the two-disc DVD set was changed to 10 July 2006 for the UK and Europe, and 11 July 2006 everywhere else.
Tracks
"Shine On You Crazy Diamond" (Concert version) 00:00
"Learning to Fly" 13:24
"High Hopes" 19:00
"Take It Back" 27:16
"Coming Back to Life" 33:16
"Sorrow" 40:05
"Keep Talking" 51:18
"Another Brick in the Wall 58:55
"One of These Days " 01:05:25
Part 2
youtube.com/watch?v=ImlFp6QOZRU&t=1258s
This was one of the few times I'd ever been to South America, and I was quite excited," says Gilmour "The venues were vast — we were playing 50,000 a night."
tracks
00:10 - Astronomy Domine
5:17 - Us and Them
13:09 - Today
19:59 - Time / Breathe (Reprise)
26:41- Comfortably Numb
David Gilmour – electric guitars, lead vocals
Phil Manzanera – electric guitars, acoustic guitars, backing vocals, high-strung acoustic guitar on "Comfortably Numb"
Guy Pratt – bass guitars, backing vocals
Jon Carin – piano, keyboards, electric guitars, backing vocals, lead vocals on "Time" and "Comfortably Numb"
Kevin McAlea – keyboards
Steve DiStanislao – drums, percussion, backing vocals
João Mello – saxophones
Bryan Chambers – backing vocals
Lucita Jules – backing vocals
Tracklist
1 There’s No Way Out Of Here 00:00
2 So Far Away 00:04:27
3 No Way 00:11:47
4 I Can’t Breathe Anymore 00:17:04
5 Mihalis* (*taken from the Italian broadcast 00:21:21
David Gilmour Guitar vocals
Bass Guitar – Rick Wills
Drums – Willie Wilson
Guitar – Mark Gilmour
Guitar, Vocals – David Gilmour
Keyboards – Ian McLagan
Backing Vocials :
Debbie Doss
Shirley Roden
Carlena Williams
filmed during their A Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour from 19 August 1988 to 23 August 1988 at the Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York,
Personnel your included enjoy !
Pink Floyd
David Gilmour – guitars, console steel guitar, lead vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion
Richard Wright – keyboards, backing vocals, lead vocals on "Time" & "Comfortably Numb"
Additional musicians
Jon Carin – keyboards, programming, backing vocals,
Rachel Fury – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals
Scott Page – saxophones, guitar, oboe on "Terminal Frost" (2019 version only)
Guy Pratt – bass guitar, backing vocals,
Tim Renwick – guitars, backing vocals
Margaret Taylor – backing vocals
Gary Wallis – percussion, additional keyboards
A New Machine pt 1 /2
They serve as bookends to the instrumental track "Terminal Frost", and feature David Gilmour's voice, electrically distorted, through a vocoder and a rising synth note. The narrator seems to express weariness with a lifetime spent in one body, waiting for the moment of death, but seeks consolation in the fact that this "waiting" will eventually end.
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Richard Wright – piano, synthesizer
Nick Mason – drums, tambourine
with:
Jon Carin - Prophet V synthesizer
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Michael Kamen – orchestral arrangement
The Division Bell Tour, 1994
David Gilmour – electric guitar, lead vocals
Richard Wright – piano
Nick Mason – drums
with:
Guy Pratt – bass
Jon Carin – keyboards, vocals
Gary Wallis – percussion
Tim Renwick – acoustic guitar
Scott Page - SAX
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals
Track List:
1. Shine on You Crazy Diamond 00:00:00
2.Sorrow 00:11:34
3. On The Turning Away 00: 21:57
4. US and THEM 00:31:05
5. Money 00:38:40
6. Comfortably Numb 00:47:00
7.One of These Days 00:56:46
8. Run Like Hell 01:02:45
9. Yet Another Movie /Round And Round 01:10:42
Personnel
David Gilmour - guitars, console steel guitar, vocals
Nick Mason - drums
Richard Wright – keyboards, piano, Hammond organ, vocals
with:
Tim Renwick – guitars, vocals
Jon Carin – keyboards, piano, programming, vocals
Scott Page – saxophones, oboe, guitar
Guy Pratt – bass, vocals
Gary Wallis – percussion, additional keyboards on "Comfortably Numb"
Margret Taylor – backing vocals
Rachel Fury – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals
In 1995 the band released the live album Pulse to commemorate the tour.
The Division Bell Tour in 1994 was promoted by Canadian concert impresario Michael Cohl and became the highest-grossing tour in rock music history to that date, with the band playing the entirety of The Dark Side of the Moon in some shows. The first show they played the whole The Dark Side of the Moon was on July 15th, 1994 at the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan, which was the first time since 1975 it was played. While preparing for the tour, Pink Floyd spent most of March rehearsing in a hangar at Norton Air Force Base in California.
The final concert of the tour on 29 October 1994 turned out to be the final full-length Pink Floyd performance, and the last time Pink Floyd played live before their one-off 18-minute reunion with Roger Waters at Live 8 on 2 July 2005. Their performance at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on July 18, 1994 would also go on to be the last ever Pink Floyd concert in North America. This would also be Nick Mason's last concert tour before commencing his Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets tour in 2018 - twenty-four years later.
The song, originally titled "In Shades of Grey", addresses the great hopes following the fall of the Berlin Wall and the disappointment that followed. David Gilmour stated:
Despite Gilmour's statements to the contrary, the lyrics have often been read as a reflection on the bitter and estranged partnership Gilmour had with former bandmate Roger Waters, who was the driving force behind the band's album The Wall. By this interpretation, the "Great Day for Freedom" would be the day Waters left the band, giving the other members freedom to determine the band's future direction. Gilmour commented on this reading: "I'm quite happy for people to interpret The Division Bell any way they like. But maybe a note of caution should be sounded because you can read too much into it. 'A Great Day for Freedom', for example, has got nothing to do with Roger or his 'wall'. It just doesn't. What else can I say?"
Live
The song was performed by the band on selected dates of The Division Bell tour, and is available on the Pulse (1995) live album, but was omitted from the Pulse VHS and DVD. Gilmour performed it at his solo semi-acoustic concerts in 2002 which can be seen on the David Gilmour in Concert (2002) DVD. The song also made just one appearance during Gilmour's 2006 On an Island Tour, at the final show in Gdańsk, Poland; this performance can be found on the live album/DVD Live in Gdańsk (2008).
Personnel
The Division Bell
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Richard Wright – piano, synthesizer
Nick Mason – drums, tambourine
with:
Jon Carin - Prophet V synthesizer
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Michael Kamen – orchestral arrangement
The Division Bell Tour, 1994
David Gilmour – electric guitar, lead vocals
Richard Wright – piano
Nick Mason – drums
with:
Guy Pratt – bass
Jon Carin – keyboards, vocals
Gary Wallis – percussion
Tim Renwick – acoustic guitar
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
Dick Perry - Saxophone
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
Track listing
"Speak to Me" removed due to copyright / otherwise Blocked
1. "Breathe" 00:00
2. "On the Run" 02:44
3. "Time" 06:18
4. "The Great Gig in the Sky" 00:12:58
5. "Money" 00:18:18
6 "Us and Them" 00:27:01
7. "Any Colour You Like" 00:34:06
8. Brain Damage"/"Eclipse" 00:37:22
Some background :
The Dark Side of the Moon is the eighth studio album by Pink Floyd, released on 1 March 1973
The Dark Side of the Moon received critical acclaim upon release, and has since been hailed by critics as one of the greatest albums of all time
Following Meddle in 1971, Pink Floyd assembled for a tour of Britain, Japan and the United States in December of that year. In a band meeting at drummer Nick Mason's home in Camden, bassist Roger Waters proposed that a new album could form part of the tour. Waters' idea was for an album that dealt with things that "make people mad", focusing on the pressures faced by the band during their arduous lifestyle, and dealing with the apparent mental problems suffered by former band member Syd Barrett
All four members agreed that Waters' album concept unified by a single theme was a good idea. Waters, Gilmour, Mason and keyboardist Richard Wright participated in the writing and production of the new material, and Waters created the early demo tracks at his Islington home in a small studio built in his garden shed. Parts of the new album were taken from previously unused material; the opening line of "Breathe" came from an earlier work by Waters and Ron Geesin, written for the soundtrack of The Body, and the basic structure of "Us and Them" borrowed from an original composition by Wright for Zabriskie Point.
The band rehearsed at a warehouse in London owned by the Rolling Stones, and then at the Rainbow Theatre in Finsbury Park, London. They also purchased extra equipment, which included new speakers, a PA system, a 28-track mixing desk with a four channel quadraphonic output, and a custom-built lighting rig. Nine tonnes of kit was transported in three lorries; this would be the first time the band had taken an entire album on tour.
The album had been given the provisional title of Dark Side of the Moon (an allusion to lunacy, rather than astronomy). However, after discovering that that title had already been used by another band, Medicine Head, it was temporarily changed to Eclipse. The new material premiered at The Dome in Brighton, on 20 January 1972, and after the commercial failure of Medicine Head's album the title was changed back to the band's original preference The Dark Side of The Moon
Pink Floyd concert video taken from the 20 October 1994 concert at Earls Court, London, England in The Division Bell Tour. It was originally released on VHS and Laserdisc in 1995. Remastered 2019
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
Dick Perry - Sax
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
These songs were chosen from the view count of each Pulse song posted, these were the most popular.
Yes, i could of had any one of the 18 songs listed from the Full Concert ...these are the ones Unfortunately the Full Concert i posted was removed.
1. Shine on You Crazy Diamond
2. Keep Talking 12:45
3. Time 00:20:24
4. High Hopes 00:27:05
5. Sorrow 00:35:06
6. The Great Gig in The Sky 00:46:11
7. One of These Days 00:51:27
8. Comfortably Numb 00:58:07
9. Run Like Hell 01:07
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
"Another Brick in the Wall" is a three-part composition on Pink Floyd's 1979 The Wall, written by bassist Roger Waters. "Part 2", a protest song against rigid schooling,
At the suggestion of producer Bob Ezrin, Pink Floyd added elements of disco, which was popular at the time.
According to guitarist David Gilmour:
[Ezrin] said to me, "Go to a couple of clubs and listen to what's happening with disco music," so I forced myself out and listened to loud, four-to-the-bar bass drums and stuff and thought, Gawd, awful! Then we went back and tried to turn one of the parts into one of those so it would be catchy.
Gilmour recorded his guitar solo in one take, with no editing or mixing, using a 1955 Gibson Les Paul Gold Top guitar equipped with P-90 pick-ups. Despite his reservations about Ezrin's additions, Gilmour felt the final song still sounded like Pink Floyd. When Ezrin heard the song with a disco beat, he was convinced it could become a hit, but felt it needed to be longer, with two verses and two choruses. The band resisted, saying they did not release singles; Waters told him: "Go ahead and waste your time doing silly stuff."
While the band members were away, Ezrin edited the takes into an extended version, and had engineer Nick Griffiths record children singing the verse at Islington Green School, close to Pink Floyd's studio. Alun Renshaw, head of music at the school, was enthusiastic, and said later: "I wanted to make music relevant to the kids – not just sitting around listening to Tchaikovsky. I thought the lyrics were great – 'We don't need no education, we don't need no thought control' ... I just thought it would be a wonderful experience for the kids."
Some of the edits for this remix are what i would call poor, bad decision making IMO
as one of you stated The songs and solos have been snipped and edited as if the real fans wouldn’t notice. Literally no reason to do it....example 1:01
Other than those bad edits, shortened solos.....the sound and quality of video is good.
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
Written by David Gilmour, Richard Wright and Polly Samson, it was sung by Gilmour and also features samples of Stephen Hawking's electronic voice, taken from a BT television advertisement
Gilmour chose to use the speech after seeing commercial, which he described as "the most powerful piece of television advertising that I’ve ever seen in my life. The song also makes some use of the talk box guitar effect
performed every night during the 1994 The Division Bell Tour and live versions, taken from different shows, were included in both the album Pulse and the video of the same name.
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David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
"Sorrow" Written by singer and guitarist David Gilmour, it is the closing track on their thirteenth studio album, A Momentary Lapse of Reason, released in 1987
Drummer Nick Mason has since stated that the song was almost entirely written by David Gilmour alone over the space of one weekend on his houseboat Astoria. When he returned from the weekend, only "some spit and polish", according to Mason, was needed. Gilmour has also mentioned that the solo at the end of "Sorrow" was done on the boat, his guitar going through a small Gallien-Krueger amplifier.
Sorrow was a poem I'd written as a lyric before I wrote music to it, which is rare for me.
— David Gilmour
" Gilmour's Anthem dedicated to the Late great Jimi Hendrix "
HDPinkFloyd
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
"Coming Back to Life" from Pink Floyd's 1994 album The Division Bell, and is credited solely to David Gilmour.
David Gilmour stated that "this song is dedicated to my lovely wife Polly."
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
"Take It Back" is a song, released as the seventh track on their 1994 album The Division Bell. It was also released as a single on 16 May 1994, the first from the album, and Pink Floyd's first for seven years. The music for the song was written by guitarist David Gilmour and album co-producer Bob Ezrin, with lyrics by Gilmour, his wife Polly Samson and Nick Laird-Clowes.
This is a song about Mother Earth, and how sooner or later, sick of the way we humans treat her, she will go into self protection mode and extinct (take back) the human race like was done in the Atlantean days
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
"High Hopes" is a song , composed by guitarist David Gilmour with lyrics by Gilmour and Polly Samson. It was released as the second single from their eleventh studio album, The Division Bell (1994), on 17 October 1994.
The lyrics refer to the band's early days in Cambridge, specifically before they started making music and it also references ex-bandmate Syd Barrett. Its lyrics speak of the things one may have gained and lost in life, written from Gilmour's autobiographic perspective. Gilmour has said that the song is more about his early days, and leaving his hometown behind, than about the seeds of division supposedly planted in Pink Floyd's early days
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
"Learning to Fly" is a song by written by David Gilmour, Anthony Moore, Bob Ezrin, and Jon Carin. It was the first single from the band's thirteenth studio album A Momentary Lapse of Reason.
The lyrics describe Gilmour's thoughts on flying, for which he has a passion (being a licensed pilot with multiple ratings),[citation needed] though it has also been interpreted as a metaphor for beginning something new, experiencing a radical change in life, or, more specifically, Gilmour's feelings about striking out as the new leader of Pink Floyd after the departure of Roger Waters.
The track was regularly performed live on the band's two post-Roger Waters tours, with touring guitarist Tim Renwick playing the song's guitar solos (although David Gilmour played the solos on the studio version of the track).
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
and a special thanks to Dick Parry and his saxophone !
wonderful
"Shine On You Crazy Diamond" is a nine-part Pink Floyd composition written by David Gilmour, Roger Waters, and Rick Wright. It appeared on Pink Floyd's 1975 album Wish You Were Here.
The song was conceived and written as a tribute and remembrance to their former band member Syd Barrett, a founding member of Pink Floyd.
Barrett was ousted from the band by the other members in 1968 due to his drug use and (partly-related) troubled mental health, which had affected his ability to integrate with the rest of the band and perform and create as a musician. He was replaced by David Gilmour, Barrett's former school friend who had initially been brought in as second guitar. The remaining band members felt guilty for removing him, but they viewed it as necessary, admiring Barrett's creativity and being concerned about his severe mental decline.
Barrett incident
Syd Barrett, visiting Abbey Road Studios on 5 June 1975
One day during recording, Barrett (now heavyset, with a completely shaved head and eyebrows) wandered into the studio (although Mason has since stated that he is not entirely certain whether "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" was the particular work being recorded when Barrett was there). Because of his drastically changed appearance, the band did not recognize him for some time. When they eventually determined the withdrawn man in the corner was Barrett, Roger Waters became so distressed about Barrett's appearance he was reduced to tears.[6] Someone asked to play the suite again for Barrett and he said a second playback was not needed when they had just heard it. When asked what he thought of the song, Barrett said it sounded a "bit old".
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
"Speak to Me" is the first track on 1973 album, The Dark Side of the Moon, on which it forms an overture. Nick Mason receives a rare solo writing credit for the track, though recollections differ as to the reasons for this. Mason states that he created the track himself, whereas Richard Wright and Roger Waters stated the credit was a "gift" to Mason to give him some publishing income (subsequently regretted by the latter, following his acrimonious departure from the band
Breathe
The authorship and composition of this song is credited to David Gilmour, Richard Wright and Roger Waters for the music, and Waters for the lyrics.Dark Side, admitted the latter, "is a little adolescent and naïve in its preoccupations, but I'm not belittling it. It's like a rather wonderful, naïve painting. 'Breathe in the air / Don't be afraid to care' – that's the opening couplet. Well, yeah, I can cop that, but it's kind of simplistic stuff."
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
fourth track on The Dark Side of the Moon (1973) and was released as a single in the United States. Bassist Roger Waters wrote the lyrics and the music is credited to all four band members. Keyboardist Richard Wright shares lead vocals
The lyrics deal with the passage of time – time can slip by, but many people do not realise it until it is too late. Waters got the idea when he realised he was no longer preparing for anything in life, but was right in the middle of it.
its long introductory passage of clocks chiming and alarms ringing, recorded as a quadrophonic test by Alan Parsons, not specifically for the album
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
"The Great Gig in the Sky" is the fifth track on The Dark Side of the Moon, the 1973 album
The song began life as a Richard Wright chord progression.
During 1972 it was performed live as a simple organ instrumental, accompanied by spoken-word samples from the Bible and snippets of speeches by Malcolm Muggeridge, a British writer known for his conservative religious views. When the band came to record Dark Side in 1973, the lead instrument had been switched to a piano.
a couple of weeks before the album was due to be finished, the band thought of having a female singer "wail" over the music.
As the band began casting around for a singer, album engineer Alan Parsons suggested Clare Torry, a 25-year-old songwriter and session vocalist.
The 1994 live album P•U•L•S•E features a version sung by Sam Brown, Durga McBroom and Claudia Fontaine. When the Floyd's manager, Steve O'Rourke, died in 2003, Gilmour, Wright, and Mason played "Fat Old Sun" and "The Great Gig in the Sky" at O'Rourke's funeral.
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
From 1972 to 1975, "Money" was a regular feature of the band's Dark Side of the Moon set, and it was routinely performed as an encore during the band's 1977 tour. These later performances would typically last as long as twelve minutes. From 1987 to 1990, the band performed the song during tours supporting A Momentary Lapse of Reason, their first album without Waters, who had left the band in December 1985. In 1994 the band performed the song during tours supporting The Division Bell, their second album without Waters.
Pink Floyd concert video taken from the 20 October 1994 concert at Earls Court, London, England in The Division Bell Tour. It was originally released on VHS and Laserdisc in 1995.
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
insanity-themed lyrics are based on former Floyd frontman Syd Barrett's mental instability, with the line "I'll see you on the dark side of the moon" indicating that he felt related to him in terms of mental idiosyncrasies. The line "And if the band you're in starts playing different tunes..." references Barrett's behaviour near the end of his tenure with the band; because of his mental problems, there were more than a few occasions where Barrett would play a different song than the rest of the band in the middle of a concert.
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
must not forget the ladies backing up Floyd !
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
It was recorded over five nights at the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island, New York, in August 1988
Pink Floyd
David Gilmour – guitars, console steel guitar, lead vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion
Richard Wright – keyboards, backing vocals, lead vocals on "Time" & "Comfortably Numb"
Additional musicians
Jon Carin – keyboards, programming, backing vocals,
Rachel Fury – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals
Scott Page – saxophones, guitar, oboe on "Terminal Frost" (2019 version only)
Guy Pratt – bass guitar, backing vocals, co-lead vocals on "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" and "Run Like Hell"
Tim Renwick – guitars, backing vocals
Margaret Taylor – backing vocals
Gary Wallis – percussion,
One of These Days" is the opening track from Pink Floyd's 1971 album Meddle. The composition is instrumental except for the only spoken (or sung) line from drummer Nick Mason, "One of these days I'm going to cut you into little pieces." It features double-tracked bass guitars played by David Gilmour and Roger Waters,[3] with each bass hard panned into one channel of stereo, but one bass sound is quite muted and dull. According to Gilmour, this is because that particular instrument had old strings on it, and the roadie they had sent to get new strings for it wandered off to see his girlfriend instead.
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,
Sam Brown – backing vocals
Durga McBroom – backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine – backing vocals
David Gilmour – guitar, vocals
Nick Mason – drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright – Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt – bass guitar
Gary Wallis – percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick – rhythm guitar
Jon Carin – synthesiser,