Due to popular demand the Official Pink Floyd : Their Mortal Remains Exhibition Montreal has been extended for a third time, In a statement released
” We are delighted to announce that, by popular demand, Pink Floyd: Their Mortal Remains Exhibition has been extend until April 2nd 2023. This will allow more visitors to discover this great retrospective of Pink Floyd, their music, and the band’s major impact on art and music! ”
The popularity of this exhibition has made it a must-have experience in the cultural scene this season.
Roger Waters - The Dark Side Of The Moon Re-Recording Preview
It has been known for a few months that Roger Waters has indeed been rerecording the 1973 Pink Floyd classic album The Dark Side Of The Moon around the time of its 50th anniversary.
In a new statement on social media, Roger shared a preview of Us & Them and had this to say
“When we recorded the stripped down songs for the Lockdown Sessions, the 50th anniversary of the release of Dark Side of The Moon was looming on the horizon. It occurred to to me that Dark Side of the Moon could well be a suitable candidate for a similar re-working, partly as a tribute to the original work, but also to re-address the political and emotional message of the whole album. I discussed it with Gus and Sean, and when we’d stopped giggling and shouting ‘You must be fucking mad’ at one another we decided to take it on. We are now in the process of finishing the final mix. It’s turned out really great and I’m excited for everyone to hear it. It’s not a replacement for the original which, obviously, is irreplaceable. But it is a way for the seventy nine year old man to look back across the intervening fifty years into the eyes of the twenty nine year old and say, to quote a poem of mine about my Father, “We did our best, we kept his trust, our Dad would have been proud of us”. And also it is a way for me to honor a recording that Nick and Rick and Dave and I have every right to be very proud of.
Happy 50th to Dark Side of the Moon.” – Roger Waters
As part of the monumental 50th celebration of Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side Of The Moon, the band has released a preview of the newly remastered live album, which has been done by the band’s longtime engineer, James Guthrie.
Breathe and Us and Them live from Wembley 1974 is now available on all streaming platforms.
Released 50 years ago today is Pink Floyd’s seminar album The Dark Side of the Moon. The album is among the most critically acclaimed and often appears in professional listings of the greatest albums. It brought Pink Floyd international fame, bringing wealth and plaudits to all four band members. A blockbuster release of the album era, it also propelled record sales throughout the music industry during the 1970s. The Dark Side of the Moon is certified 14 times platinum in the United Kingdom, and topped the US Billboard Top LPs & Tape chart, where it has charted for 972 weeks. As of 2013, The Dark Side of the Moon has sold over 45 million copies worldwide, making it the best-selling album of the 1970s and the third-best-selling album in history. In 2012, it was selected for preservation in the US National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress as “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”.
To celebrate this monumental release, Abbey Road Studios has redecorated the exterior wall of the grounds, which are usually covered in personal messages and graffiti from the public, which has become very iconic, with brand new graphics depicting the recent Abbey Road x Dark Side of the Moon merchandise collaboration.
With the release of The Dark Side of the Moon, Pink Floyd’s penetrating exploration of madness and excess, the influential English rockers were catapulted from a revered psychedelic act to an international phenomenon. In an era of elaborately grandiose sonic experimentation pioneered by the likes of Phil Spector, Brian Wilson, and The Beatles a decade prior, Pink Floyd’s groundbreaking eighth studio album and mainstream breakthrough, about which all worth writing has perhaps already been written, managed to set yet another standard of musical innovation in the 1970s, placing the band at the forefront of the blossoming rock revolution. Dark Side’s impeccable polish—courtesy of the band and then-EMI engineer Alan Parsons—enshrouds the album in a certain glacial chill, permeating even its heaviest cuts and contributing to a consistent sense of atmosphere throughout, effectively wedding the manic technical ambition of the decade’s prog movement with the fluid dreamscapes of the art school psychedelia Pink Floyd began developing in the 1960s.
Even now, The Dark Side of the Moon, when heard in its entirety, remains a distinctly vivid work of art, its signature “quiet desperation” and “dark forebodings” having emerged from a personal place: the group’s anguished separation from founding member and early psychedelic rock figurehead Syd Barrett, whose descent into mental illness and drug abuse in the late 1960s had resulted in his eventual ousting from the group and virtual resignation from society. Bassist, co-vocalist, and primary lyricist Roger Waters, who steered the album’s creative direction, had, however, not yet finished lamenting his former bandmate’s undoing, which he had been referencing for several years by then, namely on such earlier tracks as 1970’s softly devastating “If”—“If I go insane/Please don’t put your wires in my brain.” Indeed, themes of madness, paranoia, and disassociation occasionally surfaced in Waters’ lyrics, but it seems as though, after years of rehearsal, he finally brought the band’s collective trauma to the forefront on The Dark Side of the Moon, crafting a cohesive narrative that pays tribute to the mythology surrounding Barrett’s manic brilliance while simultaneously reflecting on the group’s experience of losing him.
Famously, The Dark Side of the Moon opens with the sound of a beating heart, juxtaposed with the sounds of clocks ticking and paper tearing, and fittingly, the album’s first utterance is the nonchalant declaration: “I’ve been mad for fucking years. Absolutely years.” Such dialogue— excerpted from recordings of Waters asking individuals around Abbey Road Studios, where the album was recorded, questions such as, “Do you think you’re going mad?” and “Are you frightened of dying?”—appears throughout the album, and initially included responses given by Paul McCartney, whom Waters had encountered while in the studio. This overture, entitled “Speak to Me,” sets the mood with its disembodied laughter and fragmentary references to madness, a sonic premonition of what is to come, before bleeding into “Breathe (In the Air),” one of Dark Side’s key tracks. The album’s first proper “song,” “Breathe” is a trippy yet chilly meditation on work, reality, and mortal existence, with guitarist/co-lead vocalist David Gilmour proclaiming: “All you touch and all you see/Is all your life will ever be.” The track, in its airily stoned beauty, serves as a desperate lament for the value of human life in a society focused on hedonistic consumption and piteously misguided competition for success, with Gilmour concluding: “Long you live and high you fly/But only if you ride the tide/Balanced on the biggest wave/You race towards an early grave.” This is followed by “On the Run,” the album’s first instrumental cut, which finds the group’s late keyboardist Richard Wright seemingly attempting to outrace death itself to the sound of a frantic EMS synthesizer. Wright later revealed the song to be an ode to the chaos of air travel and the resulting fear of death he experienced in such moments. Thanatophobia and the inevitability of death remain among Dark Side’s central themes, and “On the Run” introduces their impact in a frenzied rush.
The notions of shaping one’s own destiny and acceptance of one’s mortality are explored in greater depth on the poignant “Time,” the first of Dark Side’s three epic cuts. Here, the listener is bombarded by a now-iconic barrage of chiming clocks—courtesy of Parsons, who recorded them separately in various antique shops—before being treated to the sonic bliss of the group’s union, though Gilmour’s funky guitar licks distinguish themselves. Lyrically, the track remains among the album’s boldest, as the listener experiences the summery lull of youth giving way to the frantic pace of age. “No one told you when to run,” sings Gilmour, reflecting on the moments as they pass. “You missed the starting gun.” Whereas “Time” explores the ephemeral nature of mortal existence, Wright’s stunning “The Great Gig in the Sky” addresses transcendence: the transcendence of commodity, fear, and ego. “And I’m not afraid of dying,” proclaims Abbey Road studios janitorial “browncoat” Gerry O’Driscoll against Wright’s gliding piano melody. “Any time will do, I don’t mind. Why should I be afraid of dying? There’s no reason for it—you’ve got to go some time.” Though perhaps less appreciated than other, more popular Dark Side cuts, “The Great Gig in the Sky” is no less a masterpiece of psychedelic rock and remains oddly comforting in both O’Driscoll’s frank wisdom and singer Clare Torry’s impassioned vocal performance, which stands among rock’s most intense. The gentle insistence that “I never said I was frightened of dying…,” as murmured by Patricia “Puddle” Watts (wife of roadie Peter Watts), near the track’s conclusion brings the experience full circle, its entire progression representing death, one’s passage into the vast abyss, senseless and no longer sentient. Or perhaps it represents madness, the threshold of a strained psyche since crossed, at which point perceptions splinter and the self disintegrates.
The mania continues with gritty blues rocker “Money”—the group’s indictment of consumer capitalism and perhaps the album’s signature cut—and culminates on the album’s sprawling centerpiece “Us and Them.” Arguably Dark Side’s most splendidly affecting cut, this ode to disassociation showcases the best of Pink Floyd’s abilities as a group, as well as Parsons’ inimitable studio wizardry. Though Waters later claimed the song to be a critique of rampant consumerism, unjust war, prejudice and racism, and lack of interpersonal communication in the modern world, it is difficult not to interpret “Us and Them” as being, in some sense, about Barrett’s decline and descent, given its dreamlike imagery and deeply paranoid undertones. “Us and them/And after all/We’re only ordinary men,” Gilmour insists, his spacey vocal delivery reverberating against the track’s icy backdrop. Dick Parry’s melancholy jazz saxophone accentuates the track’s atmospheric bleakness with a sense of romanticism, casting the soundscape in various shades of blue as Gilmour delivers such penetrating lines as, “‘Listen, son,’ said the man with the gun/‘There’s room for you inside.’”
“Us and Them” represents a seminal moment for Pink Floyd, its grand explosiveness forever rendering it a staple of classic prog, as well as one of the band’s major artistic achievements. The cut segues into the album’s second—and finest—instrumental track “Any Colour You Like,” a rich piece of synthesized space rock on which Wright and drummer Nick Mason shine. This is followed by the Waters-sung “Brain Damage”—perhaps the album’s most frank discussion of insanity and chaos. Here, against the track’s menacing sway, Waters documents the various stages of a nervous breakdown, insisting, “The lunatic is in the hall/The lunatics are in my hall.” Such lines as, “The paper holds their folded faces to the floor” and “You raise the blade/You make the change/You rearrange me till I’m sane” impart an eerie eloquence and mark the beginning of Waters’ maturation as a lyricist. It is during this track’s explosive chorus that he sings Dark Side’s key lines, and perhaps two of rock’s greatest: “And if your head explodes with dark forebodings too/I’ll see you on the dark side of the moon.” The proclamation, made amid a psychotic episode, is oddly consoling, a declaration of unity among the mad. Soon, Waters and the lunatic merge to the sounds of disembodied laughter, with the former confessing, “There’s someone in my head, but it’s not me.” The listener, however, suspects that Waters and the Lunatic have been one all along. Dark Side closes with the apocalyptic “Eclipse,” which sums up the album’s aim, Waters concluding: “And everything under the sun is in tune/But the sun is eclipsed by the moon.” The album closes with the same heartbeat with which it opens, suggesting the cyclical passage of humanity and its maddening nature—dark, delirious, enchanting, eternal, or perhaps revealing that the entire album is just one, in an unending stream of the protagonist’s intermittent lunatic hallucinations.
Upon its release, The Dark Side of the Moon was greeted with critical acclaim and transformed Pink Floyd into international superstars. It became one of the top-selling albums of the 1970s, and the now-iconic prism on its front cover—designed by Aubrey Powell and Storm Thorgerson of Hipgnosis, frequent Pink Floyd collaborators—quickly imprinted itself as a significant, easily recognized symbol of popular culture. Though Pink Floyd would produce two slightly stronger efforts—1975’s Wish You Were Here and 1977’s Animals—The Dark Side of the Moon eclipses either in terms of mainstream popularity, remaining the group’s top-selling and perhaps most frequently cited album, and a seminal release of the progressive and psychedelic rock genres. Fifty years ago, Pink Floyd united at Abbey Road to process, at long last, the collective loss the group had experienced with Syd Barrett’s departure and his replacement by David Gilmour, emerging with a groundbreaking masterwork—the group’s first—that would quickly transform the lives of each member, bringing them fame and fortune, as well as paving the way for future musical innovations. Despite the notoriety garnered by the band’s often volatile internal relationships and acrimonious split from Waters, many of Pink Floyd’s 1970s gems retain their charms, and The Dark Side of the Moon holds up, its prism refracting the luminous vision of its collaborators for all to see.
Today we are celebrating the life of the late Storm Thorgerson on what would have been his 79th Birthday.
Storm was very supportive of A Fleeting Glimpse and was a personal friend to site founder Col Turner. His contributions to the Floyd legacy and his visions within the artwork are simply put “timeless and invaluable”.
Abbey Road Studios is proud to collaborate with Pink Floyd on this unique replica print of the session sheet created for the recording of what would become the band’s seminal album, The Dark Side of The Moon, recorded at Abbey Road between May 30 May 1972 – 9 February 1973. This sheet is an exact replica of the original, which has been held within the Abbey Road archives for 50 years unseen by the public and indeed, Pink Floyd, until now.
This session sheet is dated 30 May 1972 “onwards”, highlighting the set-up that was used on the very first studio session for the album, a set-up that would remain as the default for much of the album’s subsequent Studio Three sessions with recording engineer Alan Parsons.
Each replica sheet comes with a certificate of authenticity and an annotation giving insight into personnel, effects and equipment used during the sessions.
Abbey Road Studios is home to a host of celebrated and much sought-after recording equipment, much of which was used on the sessions for The Dark Side of The Moon. Microphones including AKG D20s, Neumann KM86s, KM84s, U87s, and a U48, together with a Studer A80 16-track tape machine feature on this session sheet, alongside the iconic EMT plate reverb at 3.5 and 4 seconds, two Gain Brain compressors and five pairs of brand-new cans (headphones).
Each replica is Giclee printed on 300gsm Monte Carlo textured watercolour paper, hand torn and cradled with transparent corner holders onto black card.
The city of Frankfurt on Friday announced that it was canceling the forthcoming concert of former Pink Floyd vocalist Roger Waters scheduled for May 28th 2023
A statement from the Central Council of German further urged venues in Hamburg, Berlin, Munich and Cologne hosting Waters’ “This is Not A Drill 2023” tour to reconsider however at the moment of writing no further German dates have been cancelled.