Pink Floyd drummer and founder member Nick Mason made a rare public appearance when he returned to Battersea Power Station last night.
Mason came back to the scene of the band’s ‘Animals’ album that was released 40 years ago in 1977.
The event commemorated the anniversary of the band’s popular album, which featured an inflatable pig, as he was joined on stage by broadcaster and journalist Penny Smith on November 7.
The 73-year-old spoke about the moment the giant inflatable object, tethered to one of the station’s chimneys for the photoshoot, broke free from its moorings.
It was later spotted by airline pilots at 30,000 feet before making it back to the ground after help from police helicopters in Kent.
The musician also spoke about seeing the newly rebuilt and repainted four chimneys that have remained in the regeneration project.
Mason said: “It was one of those moments you just can’t predict. Needless to say, I’m pleased the pig made it back to earth in one piece! ’m delighted to be back at Battersea Power Station 40 years after that photoshoot and it’s great to see the place coming to life with restaurants, shops and venues like this one. I’m pleased to have been a part of its history and can’t wait to see what its future holds.”
Mason was a guest of honour at the event held at Battersea Power Station’s new multi-use arts venue that was in collaboration with the Battersea Arts Centre, The Village Hall, where a photography exhibition will be held from Friday, November 10, to Sunday, November 12.
‘Visions of Battersea Power Station’ is an exhibition by British photographer Adrian Houston, who has photographed figures such as the Princess of Wales, the Dalai Lama and Luciano Pavarotti.
Mr Houston said: “It was back in 2000 that I was commissioned by Guy Laliberté, co-founder of Cirque du Soleil, to photograph Battersea Power Station.The resulting images have always been very special to me, with one of the very first, ‘Through the Wall’, selected for the Royal Academy’s Summer Exhibition. To host this retrospective in the building itself, now being restored to its former glory, is very poignant. I hope this celebration of one of the nation’s most iconic and beloved structures will be equally embraced by the public.”
‘Visions of Battersea Power Station’ is open from 12 noon to 6pm on November 10 and 11, before it opens from 11am to 5pm on November 12.
It is free to attend and The Village Hall is located in Arches Lane, Circus West Village.
Rob Tincknell, chief executive of Battersea Power Station Development Company, said: “It’s great to welcome Nick Mason back to Battersea Power Station. Battersea has over the years become a huge cultural icon, not only appearing on the ‘Animals’ album cover, but featuring in all sorts of popular culture from ‘The King’s Speech’ to Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘Sabotage’ in the 1930s. We hope lots of people will come down and check out the free exhibition and also visit the new restaurants and shops that have opened at Circus West Village.”
As the title suggests we have managed to secure an exclusive interview by email with Durga McBroom
For those not familiar with her work, Durga McBroom has worked with Pink Floyd as a backing vocalist consistently on all of their shows since the 1987 “A Momentary Lapse of Reason” Tour up to the final concert of “The Division Bell” in 1994.
In 1989, She formed the band Blue Pearl and had several hit songs including “Naked in the Rain” and “Alive” which featured guest appearances by David Gilmour and Rick Wright.
In 2014 she came back together with Pink Floyd to record on their last album “The Endless River” which sold over 2.5 million copies worldwide.
AFG : Hi Durga, First of all i want to thank you for making some time in your busy schedule for us it really is appreciated. At what age did you start getting into music and when was the first moment you realized you wanted to be a singer?
DM: I actually was an actress first. I knew I enjoyed performing by about the age of 8. I played guitar in a school performance even though I had the stomach flu. I refused to miss it (I even vomited in a trash can before the show, went on, played my part perfectly, then went home). Then I was asked to play Alice in a film production of Alice In Wonderland. I loved it. Singing came later. In fact, Pink Floyd was my first tour.
AFG : Were there any artists growing up that you aspired to be like?
DM: I idolized Joni Mitchell. And I still try to write like her. I also loved Barbara Streisand as a singer. And Chaka Khan also Prince, Elvis Costello and Sting were huge songwriting influences.
AFG: Can you remember your first time infront of an audience ?
DM: Singing at school. We had a very artistic school. Every Friday we would have a “sing”, and I enjoyed it very much.
AFG: Were you a fan of Pink Floyd growing up and what are your views on the musical directions of the band from Syd, Roger, David?
DM : Yes, I loved Dark Side Of The Moon. Syd was psychedelic, Roger was emotional, David more cerebral. But the musical influences of Richard and Nick can’t be forgotten as well. Richard in particular helped to shape the signature sound of the band.
AFG : You have worked with a lot of great artists over the years, what are some of your career highlights?
DM : Pink Floyd of course, also doing backing vocals for Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys, Carole King, Michael Bolton, the band James, Billy Idol (we even sang a duet on “Mother Dawn”, a song I co-wrote). Boy George sang on my single, then I sang on the most recent Culture Club album. And I am singing on the upcoming English Beat album. I’m very lucky.
AFG: In 1987 you became a permanent part of the touring band for Pink Floyd can you tell us how that came about?
DM: I was in New York doing backing vocals on my sister Lorelei’s album for Capitol Records, being produced by Nile Rogers. The Momentary Lapse Of Reason tour had started. David wanted to shoot some live footage, and they only had two singers. David wanted to “add some color” as he said. The man who ran the production company knew my sister. He recommended her, she recommended me and a friend of ours, and after hearing our recordings they flew us down and shot the videos. Since they needed someone to sing bottom, they subsequently asked me to join the tour.
AFG: With the band coming out with a new album and touring the world for the first time without Roger, Being on stage did you ever feel like the audience were judging the band for carrying on ?
DM: No, I was having too much fun. And the audiences were wildly receptive.
AFG : There were a lot of rumors going around on the internet which stated that Pink Floyd had rehearsed Sheep for the 1987 Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour, We know that echoes was played on one or two of the concerts but was anything else ever rehearsed that never made the cut?
DM: I joined after the primary rehearsals, so I don’t really know what may have been rehearsed and scrapped.
Pink Floyd Live " The Great Gig in The Sky "
(Video Above Of Durga Singing The Great Gig In The Sky From 1994 Pulse Tour)
AFG: When singing The Great Gig In The Sky do you have a place you think of mentally, one can imagine that there is a sense of pressure to be faithful to the record.
DM: We started out learning it note for note. Then as we became more comfortable with it we made it our own a bit. But I am definitely cognizant of being respectful of the original. However, at this point I think I’ve sung it more than anyone.
Blue Pearl (Durga McBroom-Hudson&Martin Glover) with David Gilmour & Rick Wright - Alive
(Video Above Of Blue Pearl’s 1990 Single “Alive” Featuring David Gilmour & Rick Wright)AFG: In 1990 between tours with Pink Floyd you formed Blue Pearl with British musician Youth (Martin Glover) and went on to release a fantastic debut album Naked, One of the tracks titled Alive and featured a guest appearance from Rick Wright and David Gilmour, Was it different working with them on your own music rather than with Pink Floyd.
DM: Of course! I was THEIR boss for a change! Richard was particularly excited to be playing on “a pop record”. I love their addition to the song (which was co-written by Guy Pratt). Storm Thorgerson directed the video.
AFG: Do you have any plans to reunite with Youth to make another Blue Pearl record ?
DM: We’ve been working on a new Blue Pearl album for the last couple of years. We just have limited time to record because I’m not in London often.
AFG: Since the end of Touring with Pink Floyd and David Gilmour on his 2001 stripped down acoustic shows you have done various performances with The Australian Pink Floyd & The End, and recently reuniting with Scott Page & Gary Wallis for the first time in nearly 20 years, How does it feel to be performing the songs 20 years on ?
DM: I perform this music all over the world with many, many bands, and have done so regularly for the last 8 years. Starting to perform with the old band members is like having a family reunion. I have upcoming shows with Gary Wallis, Claudia Fontaine, and my sister Lorelei. Expect even more, with even more of us, in 2018!
AFG: You featured on the last Pink Floyd record released in 2014 called The Endless River which was based on left over material from the 1994 Division Bell album as a tribute to the late Rick Wright, How did it feel to be back working with David after 14 years, Did you feel like this time was definitely going to be the end ?
DM: Yes. There is no Pink Floyd without Richard. But I do dream of singing with David, Nick and Roger someday.
From all of us here at A Fleeting Glimpse i want to once again thank you dearly for taking the time out of your busy schedule to answer these questions for us and look forward to hearing about your upcoming shows.
In The Pink (Not A Hunting Memoir) by Nick Sedgwick Review by AFG correspondent Natalie Lyons
Here it is, with little fanfare, no ISBN number and in limited numbers – the near-mythical “official” Pink Floyd book that was never meant to see the light of day. It’s only available (for the moment) from Roger Waters’ US online store, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London or the merchandise stands at Roger’s gigs. Why was the late Nick Sedgwick’s book mothballed for decades after he was granted unprecedented access to the band during the chaotic post-Dark Side of the Moon UK tour of 1974? Legend has it that factions within the band and the management curtailed its release after balking at the portrayal of certain members. So what juicy titbits do the pages hold that warrant its release being delayed for over forty years? Tales of debauchery and hedonism? Grievous bias towards one camp or another? An abundance of golf? Actually, it does feature rather more golf than I’d prefer, though I’m sure Roger Waters would beg to differ.
In The Pink is, at face value, rather appealing in aesthetic terms. It has an understated matte cover, lovely thick paper, oodles of 70s holiday snaps of Roger cavorting in Greece, and is heavily annotated by Roger himself. Roger, it emerges, has handwriting so appalling that it’s no wonder his teachers despaired of him. Nevertheless, if you can penetrate his near-illegible scrawl you will find his nostalgic insights and wry commentary compelling. He’s also quite good at drawing dogs.
Sedgwick is an endearing narrator – self-effacing, contemplative, and with an eye for details of both the technological and the human. Some might complain that his writing style errs on the side of wordy, but hell, you’ve all heard Roger’s solo albums. This is positively Hemingway-esque in comparison.
This version of the band’s history is very much from Sedgwick’s perspective, and so begins in Cambridge, where he was familiar with Roger, Syd and Storm. This gives some interesting socio-economic context to the band’s history. We get some insight into the burgeoning drug culture in late ‘50s provincial British towns, and how proximity to US air bases influenced teen culture. We’re also treated to some delightful photos of teenaged Syd and Roger, fresh-faced and dapper. Sedgwick recounts his impressions of Syd as charismatic, charming, funny, dashingly handsome and all that, before concluding that he didn’t like him very much. It’s refreshing to get this down-to-earth view of Syd that doesn’t seek to deify him as some mystical genius or romanticise mental illness.
Nick Sedgwick’s life takes a more mundane path, until he ends up booking Floyd for student union gigs. Later, he reconnects with Roger on the golf course. This is where the second phase of the book begins. It’s here that In The Pink feels somewhat disjointed, with a huge chunk dissecting the breakdown of Roger’s first marriage sandwiched awkwardly between Pink Floyd’s early days and post-Dark Side superstardom. Sedgwick relates the tale of how he had a stupendously uncomfortable Greek holiday with Roger and wife numero uno Judy. Apparently he’d toyed with the idea of changing names and turning it into a novel. It would have made a very depressing novel. For Pink Floyd fans, the level of interest would depend on how much you want to know about Roger’s personal life. We get a lot of insight into Roger as a husband, as well as his reaction to the success of Dark Side. To Roger’s credit, in the face of unimaginable wealth and fame, when he could easily have become an entitled tool, he remains grounded and good-humoured. He’s not averse to engaging with the common folk, displays balls of steel when robbed at gunpoint, and when he knocks out a few chords on the guitar he deadpans, “That’s another ten thousand quid.”
Problems arise when it emerges that – quelle surprise! – obscene wealth and communist ideals don’t mix well. While Roger reconciles with his new status as one of the bourgeois, Judy is incensed at the disparity between their bank balances and those of the Greek villagers they holiday amongst. On one hand her mortification at Roger buying a small boat is a bit irritating, but on the other you’ve got to admire her resolute determination to stick by her principles. Things get ugly pretty quickly, and Roger is not always painted in the best of lights. Poor Sedgwick has a mare of a time, playing third wheel and offering a shoulder to cry on for both parties.
You’d think that after such a tension-filled holiday he would have a much more relaxing time on tour with Pink Floyd. Ah…
Which brings us to the final, and most enjoyable, third of the book. Pink Floyd’s Autumn ’74 UK tour should have been a triumphant return to their home stomping ground, but from Sedgwick’s account it sounds like a chaotic shambles, rife with bad equipment, inexperienced crew members, ramshackle concert venues and long-distance drives across the bleak and rainy Britain of the early 70s.
It’s surprising that a technologically savvy bunch of chaps like Pink Floyd would have cocked up so monumentally when they hired a snazzy new mixing desk and a guy who didn’t know how to operate it. What’s more surprising is the lack of suitable concert venues around the country. Pink Floyd play Cardiff (one of our largest cities) and it’s as though they’re playing in a one-horse town that’s never before heard the astounding sounds of the electric guitar. The mayor of Cardiff gets onstage to make a speech and declares with excellent prescience that one day Cardiff’s football stadium would host concerts. But right then, to a band growing disgruntled with shoddy electrics and brazen indifference to fire safety, it’s nothing more than a bonkers pipe dream.
Sedgwick’s original mission objective was to cover this tour, so his recollections are impeccably detailed, and will doubtless be riveting for Floydheads. However, if you’re hoping for sex and drugs and other fun stuff, you’ll be disappointed. The roadies get into some scrapes, the odd joint is smoked, and that’s about it.
There’s the sense that the band was having difficulties with how giddying success radically altered the types of audiences they were playing to. In place of the reverence of their hardcore pre-Dark Side crowds, they found themselves a group of 30-something men playing to crowds of provincial teens, and struggling to make a connection. But at the same time there’s an indication of how their newfound status as superstars could potentially enable them to strike forth into new innovative territory. What seems a marvel in hindsight is their decision to play material from Wish You Were Here and Animals, ages before either album would be recorded. It’s hard to imagine Coldplay being so bold. It’s also a testament to the open-mindedness of the kids who witnessed the ’74 tour that they were so receptive to the unfamiliar material.
The real meat of the piece is the power struggles between the band, manager Steve O’Rourke, apocalyptic-tempered lighting designer Arthur Max, and assorted other senior crew members. Steve O’Rourke seems terrified that his sacking is imminent, when in fact he would remain their manager until his death in 2003. Max is a volatile genius, in turn working miracles and throwing hissy fits of such epic proportion that he seems universally despised by the tour personnel. The personalities of the band members are… as you’d expect them to be. There are no big surprises here. Roger can be scathing and confrontational, but also smart and ambitious. He’s certainly portrayed as the most ideas-driven and visionary band member. Nick Mason is the lovable, jocular drummer that you know and love. David Gilmour is laid back. Rick Wright is mild-mannered and lovely but… not really in it very much, until near the end, where he appears uncharacteristically furious about Sedgwick’s manuscript. And there’s a distinct lack of communication between band, management and crew, which comes as absolutely no surprise since this is a band that wrote a whole concept album about lack of communication.
I suppose the portrayal of the band members and what they contributed in those days is probably the crux of the issue of why the book was withdrawn. Nick Sedgwick was Roger’s buddy after all, so it was inevitable that there would be a degree of bias. It’s not even as though Roger is portrayed in a better light than the rest of the band. Often he’s shown being an obnoxious dickhead. But he’s a dickhead who gets shit done, who comes up with grand schemes, who has integrity and who drives the band towards a collective purpose. Aside from the Roger-centric approach to the narrative, there really isn’t anything obviously contentious here.
What we do have here is an in-depth look at a pivotal moment in Pink Floyd’s career, offering a (fleeting) glimpse of a band at a creative crossroads. And we are treated to two revelations. One, that during the course of the tour the band signed a contract for an eye-watering seven albums. It must have been unimaginable to them at the time that the seventh and final album of their post-Dark Side output would be released forty years, almost to the day, after the start of that tour.
The second revelation is that Arthur Max shot a film of a November gig in a freezing cold dilapidated ballroom in Stoke. A ballroom so dejected looking that it prompts Roger to contemplate that in the future they should play a series of gigs in one venue in order to stage more elaborate shows.
Will that footage ever see the light of day? If In The Pink has, then anything is possible.
Review courtesy of AFG Correspondant Natalie Lyons
To Start off 2018 Rowman & Littlefield is proud to be publishing Bill Kopp’s new book Reinventing Pink Floyd: From Syd Barrett to the Dark Side of the Moon.
In celebration of the 45th anniversary of The Dark Side of the Moon, Bill Kopp explores ingenuity with which Pink Floyd rebranded themselves following the 1968 departure of Syd Barrett. Not only did the band survive Barrett’s departure, but it went on to release landmark albums that continue to influence generations of musicians and fans.
Reinventing Pink Floyd follows the path taken by the remaining band members to establish a musical identity, develop a songwriting style, and create a new template for the manner in which albums are made and even enjoyed by listeners. As veteran music journalist Bill Kopp illustrates, that path was filled with failed experiments, creative blind alleys, one-off musical excursions, abortive collaborations, a general restlessness and—most importantly—a dedicated search for a distinctive musical personality.
This exciting volume guides readers through the works of 1968 through 1973, highlighting key innovations and musical breakthroughs of lasting influence. Kopp places Pink Floyd into their historical, cultural, and musical contexts while celebrating the test of fire that took the band from the brink of demise to enduring superstardom.
Bill Kopp is a lifelong music enthusiast, musician, collector, and music journalist. His writing has been featured in music magazines including Bass Guitar, Record Collector, Prog and Shindig! (all in Great Britain), as well as Billboard, Electronic Musician, Goldmine, Trouser Press, Ugly Things and more than a dozen alternative weekly newspapers. He is the Jazz Desk Editor and Prog Editor at BLURT online, and has written liner note essays for nearly 20 albums, including titles by Julian “Cannonball” Adderley, Larry Coryell, Edgar Winter, Rick Wakeman, The Ventures, Dave Mason and Iron Butterfly.
Roger Waters 'Wait For Her/Oceans Apart/Part of Me Died' Vancouver Oct 29, 2017
On Sunday 28th October 2017 it marked the end of the first leg of Roger Waters Us & Them world tour, The tour which started in April of this year finished at the very appropriately named Rogers Arena in Vancouver.
Surprisingly for the last show Roger introduced a change to the set list, Which included the songs Wait for Her, Oceans Apart, and Part of Me Died from Roger’s Is This The Life We Really Want ? album released in June of this year.
With a break until the tour picks up again to take to Europe, One does wonder if there will be any more surprises in store.