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Any informed discussion of Pink Floyd's long and influential career is
in fact a discussion of four dramatically different bands and eras,
three of which produced some of the greatest psychedelic rock ever
recorded.
Pink Floyd Mark I started in London in late 1965. Keyboardist Rick
Wright, bassist Roger Waters and drummer Nick Mason met while studying
architecture at Regent Street Polytechnic. They played together in a
succession of bad R&B bands (the T-Set, the Meggadeaths and the
Architectural Abdabs) before linking up with Roger "Syd" Barrett, a
Cambridge-born painter and poet and the primary songwriter for the early
Floyd. Swept up in the psychedelic fervor of Swinging London, Pink Floyd
was essentially the house band of the new Day-Glo underground, providing
the soundtrack for many a journey toward the white light, and even
broaching the British pop charts with the single "Arnold Layne," the
catchiest song ever about a transvestite kleptomaniac.
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Unfortunately, Barrett was a bit too enthusiastic in his embrace of
psychedelic drugs, and his near-constant tripping combined with an
existing manic-depressive condition and the pressures of sudden fame
sent him over the edge. (He would sometimes stand on stage and refuse to
play; in one classic incident, he crushed a jar of pills and put the
mess on his head with an entire tube of hair cream, appearing to "melt"
under the hot lights.) The band hoped to ease Barrett into a role as
stay-at-home songwriter, bringing his old Cambridge chum Dave Gilmour in
to play guitar at gigs. But the five-piece Floyd was short-lived, and
Barrett was officially ousted midway through recording the second album.
Pink Floyd Mark II was a trippy, experimental and mostly instrumental
combo that specialized in long, evocative soundtracks for interstellar
overdrives. (And sometimes for art films, as in the cases of More and
Obscured By Clouds.) This is the era that earns the band the tag of
progressive or art rock, but those descriptions never really fit; even
the longest and most indulgent compositions had hooks to draw you in,
and the musicians were always more interested in setting a mood than
showing off their virtuosity. Albums such as Meddle and Atom Heart
Mother also saw the Floyd trying out some of the more succinct songs and
headphone gimmickry that would come to fruition on its most successful
album. Dark Side Of The Moon was released in March 1973, ushering in
Pink Floyd Mark III, superstar rock band and staple of FM radio.
Waters moved into the role of primary lyricist, charting some of the
pressures of everyday life ("Time," "Money"), while the band displayed
more of its R&B roots and perfected all manner of studio trickery, to
the delight of stereo salesmen everywhere. But though it's one of the
best-selling albums of all time, Wish You Were Here and Animals, the
discs that followed, are actually stronger and more subtle works, and
they are the discs that stand as Pink Floyd's finest accomplishments.
Released in 1979, The Wall is a bloated double-album rock opera that
features the group taking a back seat to the increasingly self-important
Waters, and it is the transition between Pink Floyd Mark III and Pink
Floyd Mark IV. Following the all-Waters snoozefest The Final Cut, the
auteur quit the band and set off on a solo career that went nowhere
fast. Waters assumed the Floyd could never continue without him, but
Gilmour, Mason, and (eventually) Wright regrouped without the old
windbag and promptly began recording boring sludgefests of their own.
If the new music didn't exactly slay anyone, the group's live shows
continued to wow audiences with more lights, lasers and floating pigs
than any other shindig in rock, thereby guaranteeing that the lucrative
franchise known as Floyd would continue past the millennium--regardless
of whether it ever matched earlier moments of recorded brilliance.
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