This post is rather special, as we are in fact celebrating two Pink Floyd anniversaries. Not only is it 40 years to the day that Pink Floyd’s album Wish You Were Here was released, but it is 50 years this year since the band formed. Despite going their separate ways in 1994 and only performing once together since then for Live 8 in 2005, Floyd still manage to bring in fans from all ages, and remain unmatched by any other band in creating such a distinctive psychedelic sound.
Despite forming in 1965, it’s probably their 1973 concept album Dark Side of The Moon that Pink Floyd are most famed for. Tracks like Money and its 7/8 rhythm, and Great Gig In The Sky and the astonishing improvised solo from Clare Torry are what make the record one of rock’s most commercially successful albums of all time. However, our focus today is on Floyd’s possibly lesser known next album, Wish You Were Here.
At first, recording this ninth album seemed difficult for the band, after the success of Dark Side and the tour they’d just finished had left them all emotionally drained. Roger Waters became lead writer of the album, although it could be argued that the album is more famous for Gilmour’s four note riff in the opening track than it is any of Waters’ lyrics. It is well-known that Shine On You Crazy Diamond, a track split into two 13-minute sections at the beginning and end of the album, is a tribute to the now late Syd Barrett, who at the time that the album was being composed had left the band, and was in a downward spiral of mental health. Each track is heavily instrumental, and one flows seamlessly into another, and the theme of Barrett’s condition with it. Just like Dark Side, any modern-day fan will know that Wish You Were Here is absolutely infuriating to listen to on a CD, iPod or other device that shuffles. You’ll be fully engrossed, about to launch into the opening chords of the next track and then BAM! You’re cut dead as if rudely awoken from a dream. The best way to listen to Floyd, I have found from experience, is in a darkened room with a vinyl copy.
I’ve always been fascinated by the album’s cover, and I in fact have a poster of it hanging on my bedroom wall. There is so much to read into with the cover design, which I have only realised myself whilst researching now. The image itself brings to life the album’s messages about the brutality of the music industry; the handshake, an often empty gesture, and a reflection on the phrase “getting burned”, used by musicians of the time when artists were denied royalty payments. A fun fact for you: When first taking the photograph, the wind was blowing in the wrong direction, so much so that one stuntman lost his moustache! They therefore changed positions and the image was later reversed. The overall theme of the album is “absence” which again was reflected in the the album being sold in a dark-coloured shrink-wrap, concealing the artwork. Like so many of Floyd’s albums, the cover was conceived by the great visionary Storm Thorgerson, who I had the pleasure of meeting shortly before he died in 2013.
It may not have the stand-alone hits like Dark Side does but as an album, Wish You Were Here was just as successful and impactful. It’s also said to be both David Gilmour and Richard Wright’s favourite Floyd album. The song I decided to cover, for practical reasons as much as anything, is the title track, a rare example of the balanced writing collaboration between Waters and Gilmour. It speaks not only of Barrett’s schizophrenia, but of human loneliness as a whole, and the image of "two lost souls swimming in a fishbowl" brings tears to my eyes nearly every time. Fading in from Have a Cigar, the track is supposed to sound like a radio tuning in from one station to another, the effect captured by Gilmour recording from his car radio. Unfortunately I am no multi-instrumentalist, so all the backing tracks that I use for this blog are downloaded. I have to hand it to the person who composed this backing, however, for their incredibly skilled playing. It was a delight to record with! So here it is, as it should be, instrumental and all. I hope you enjoy it...
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