Pink Floyd Mp3s
Pink Floyd
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Albums
Piper at the Gates of Dawn
A Saucerful of Secrets
More
Ummagumma
Atom Heart Mother
Meddle
Obscured By Clouds
Dark Side of the Moon
Wish You Were Here
Animals
The Wall
The Final Cut


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Pink Floyd
Formed in 1965

Pink FloydThe members of the band Pink Floyd are some of the best Musicians -- in any type of music, not just 'rock' -- throughout history. With lyrics, album reviews, a band history, and mp3s, this site is an excellent Floyd resource. Please note that mp3s only serve the purpose of giving fans a taste of something great. To get the full taste you need to own the album. It's like trying to get the experience of seeing The Starry Night by looking at a Van Gough postage stamp. The true experience comes from looking at the real thing. Get the Hint? Good. Buy the CD. Also note that some songs are not linked yet, the albums Darkside of the Moon, Animals, and Wish You Were Here are fully linked. Also, there are a few scattered mp3s on each album. Every album will be linked with mp3s soon -- hold tight.



AlbumsAlbums
Piper at the Gates of Dawn A Saucerful Of Secrets More Ummagumma
Piper at the Gates of Dawn
"Astronomy Domine"
"Lucifer Sam"
"Matilda Mother"
"Flaming"
"Pow R. Toc H."
"Take Up Thy Stethescope And Walk"
"Interstellar Overdrive"
"The Gnome"
"Chapter 24"
"Scarecrow"
"Bike"
*"See Emily Play"
*"Arnold Layne"
A Saucerful Of Secrets
"Let There Be More Light"
"Remember A Day"
"Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun"
"Corporal Clegg"
"A Saucerful Of Secrets"
"See Saw"
"Jugband Blues"
Soundtrack to More
"Cirrus Minor"
"The Nile Song"
"Crying Song"
"Up The Khyber"
"Green Is The Colour"
"Cymbaline"
"Party Sequence"
"Main Theme"
"Ibiza Bar"
"More Blues"
"Quicksilver"
"A Spanish Piece"
"Dramatic Theme"
Ummagumma
"Astronomy Domine"
"Careful With That Axe, Eugene"
"Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun"
"A Saucerful Of Secrets"
"Sysyphus"
"Grantchester Meadows"
"Several Species Of Small Furry Animals Gathered
Together In A Cave And Grooving With A Pict"
"The Narrow Way"
"The Grand Vizier's Garden Party"
Atom Heart Mother Meddle Obscured By Clouds Dark Side Of The Moon
Atom Heart Mother
"Atom Heart Mother"
"If"
"Summer '68"
"Fat Old Sun"
"Alan's Pyschedelic Breakfast"
Meddle
"One Of These Days"
"A Pillow Of Winds"
"Fearless"
"San Tropez"
"Seamus"
"Echoes"
Obscured By Clouds
"Obscured By Clouds"
"When You're In"
"Burning Bridges"
"The Gold It's In The..."
"Wots...Uh The Deal"
"Mudmen"
"Childhood's End"
"Free Four"
"Stay"
"Absolutely Curtains"
Dark Side Of The Moon
"Speak To Me"
"Breathe" (meshed with "Speak To Me")
"On The Run"
"Time"
"The Great Gig In The Sky"
"Money"
"Us And Them"
"Any Colour You Like"
"Brain Damage"
"Eclipse"
Wish You Were Here Animals The Wall The Final Cut
Wish You Were Here
"Shine On You Crazy Diamond"
"Welcome To The Machine"
"Have A Cigar"
"Wish You Were Here"
"Shine On You Crazy Diamond"
Animals
"Pigs On The Wing (Part One)"
"Dogs"
"Pigs (Three Different Ones)"
"Sheep"
"Pigs On The Wing (Part Two)"
The Wall
"In The Flesh?"
"The Thin Ice"
"Another Brick in the Wall, Part I"
"The Happiest Days of Our Lives"
"Another Brick in the Wall, Part II"
"Mother"
"Goodbye Blue Sky"
"Empty Spaces"
"Young Lust"
"One of My Turns"
"Don't Leave Me Now"
"Another Brick in the Wall, Part III"
"Goodbye Cruel World"
"Hey You"
"Is There Anybody Out There?"
"Nobody Home"
"Vera"
"Bring the Boys Back Home"
"Comfortably Numb"
"The Show Must Go On"
"In the Flesh"
"Run Like Hell"
"Waiting for the Worms"
"Stop"
"The Trial"
"Outside the Wall"
The Final Cut
"The Post War Dream"
"Your Possible Pasts"
"One of the Few"
"The Hero's Return"
"The Gunner's Dream"
"Paranoid Eyes"
"Get Your Filthy Hands Off My Desert"
"The Fletcher Memorial Home"
"Southampton Dock"
"The Final Cut"
"Not Now John"
"Two Suns in the Sunset"


The BandBand
Syd Barrett (b. Roger Keith Barrett, Jan. 6, 1946, Cambridge, Eng.) gtr., voc. ...in 1969 Barrett left(went crazy);
Richard Wright (b. July 28, 1945, London), kybds., voc.;
Roger Waters (b. Sep. 6, 1944, Surrey, Eng.), bass, voc.;
Nick Mason (b. Jan. 27, 1945, Birmingham, Eng.), drums.
in 1968...David Gilmour [b. Mar. 6, 1944, Cambridge, Eng.], gtr., voc.


Band HistoryBand History

Exploding on to the Swinging London scene at the height of flower power, the original Pink Floyd walked a tightrope between the chart action of their psychedelic singles and the superhip credibility of their free-form electronic freakouts. Then, almost as soon as they'd arrived, Syd Barrett, their charismatic singer, lead guitarist and songwriter, suffered an LSD-induced total burnout. Most bands would have called it a day, but with the substitution of steady hand Dave Gilmour on guitar and vocals, and the subsequent disappearance of Barrett into deep space, the Floyd carried on to become one of the biggest bands on the planet, endlessly recycling their private mythology of madness and loss. Despite a second crisis with the departure of Roger Waters, the lyricist and chief architect of Dark Side Of The Moon and Wish You Were Here, the band continues with Gilmour at the helm.

The Floyd story begins in early 1966 when Peter Jenner, a manager in search of a band, checked out an embryonic Pink Floyd performance at The Marquee Club in London. Impressed by the weird instrumental passages between their psychedelic versions of "Louie Louie" and "Road Runner", he swiftly introduced himself and offered to make them 'bigger than The Beatles'. It was an offer they could hardly refuse, and they quickly progressed from experimental freakouts in Notting Hill to playing an International Times benefit at the Roundhouse in December 1966, as the house band of London's burgeoning underground scene.

The early Floyd were very much the brainchild of Syd Barrett. He was the frontman on vocals and lead guitar, he wrote all the songs, and he even invented their name, a compound of two of his favourite blues artists, Pink Anderson and Floyd Council. Barrett was an art-school student - Waters (bass), Rick Wright (keyboards) and Nick Mason (drums) had studied architecture - and was keen on exploring the idea of 'music in colour'. As a result, Floyd were way ahead of their time in integrating music with visuals, as well as in their introduction of avant-garde free-jazz elements into a rock context. They forged a legend with their residency at the UFO Club in London's Tottenham Court Road, where, cloaked by a dizzying lightshow, the Floyd stunned audiences with extended versions of their psychedelic anthems, "Interstellar Overdrive" and "Astronomy Domine". But as well as entertaining the acidheads of the UFO, Syd also nursed ambitions to make it on to Top Of The Pops.

Early in 1967, Pink Floyd signed to EMI and released a debut single, "Arnold Layne". Compressing all their hip weirdness into a crisp three-minute cut, it reached #20 in the UK charts, not bad for an experimental 'art' group. Meanwhile, back in Underground London, Pink Floyd were chosen to top the bill at the 14 Hour Technicolour Dream, an all-nighter held on April 29 at Alexandra Palace. Having already played in Holland the same day, it is unlikely that the Floyd were at their most inspired, but with most of the 20,000 audience out of their heads on acid, nobody was disappointed. The real breakthrough, however, came the following month at the Games For May concert at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, where punters were promised 'space-age relaxation for the climax of spring, with electronic compositions, colour and image projections, girls and the Pink Floyd'. It was their first major solo presentation, and the first concert to feature 'sound in the round' by using an extra pair of speakers at the back of the hall.

"Games For May" was also the title of a piece specially written for the event. With a new title and a bit of nip and tuck, this emerged as their second single "See Emily Play". A UK Top 5 hit, it was one of the best British singles from the Summer Of Love and a superb taster for Pink Floyd's debut album, The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, released in August 1967. One of the most original LPs of the 60s, it combined the innovative soundscapes of the group's avant-garde experimentation with the cream of Barrett's eccentric but brilliant songcraft.

Sadly though, the pressures of writing and recording, constant touring and wanton experimentation with LSD were taking their toll on Syd's eggshell psyche. Dave Gilmour had noticed him acting strangely as early as the recording of "See Emily Play" in May. By autumn, he was freaking out with a vengeance: his long awaited third single turned out to be the shambolic "Apples & Oranges", his contributions to the second album (including the often bootlegged "Vegetable Man") were too disturbing to be used and his on-stage performance declined to playing the same note all evening. Worst of all was an abortive American tour which had to be pulled after only a few dates due to Barrett's worsening condition. His last major gig with the group was at Olympia that December; early in the New Year, David Gilmour was asked to join as second guitarist. There was a five-piece Floyd for a brief interval until the inevitable parting of the ways, when Barrett began his bizarre solo non-career.

As an old friend, Gilmour was the perfect choice to keep the group together, though at first his role was merely to play all Barrett's parts and to help salvage the recording sessions for what was to become the Floyd's second album. Despite the odds, A Saucerful of Secrets (1968) turned out to be a surprisingly successful collection and, along with a confident performance at the Hyde Park Free Concert in June 1968, it did much to silence the critics who claimed that the Floyd were dead without Barrett.

After a couple of flop singles, the group decided to concentrate on weighty album material that would more accurately reflect the extended improvisations of their stage act. Perversely though, their first completely Barrettless work was More, a much underrated 1969 soundtrack album for French film director Barbet Schroeder. Banged out in only a week, it consisted of relaxed instrumentals, intercut with simple but atmospheric gems such as "Cirrus Minor". That year's magnum opus, however, was Ummagumma, a double album whose mystical-sounding title turned out to be a Cambridgeshire fenland euphemism for sex. One album was live, the other featured 'avant-garde' solo compositions from each member of the group. The latter were not a great success, and from this point on the band started moving away from their underground pretensions towards a more conventional rock sound. The next three albums, Atom Heart Mother, Meddle and Obscured By Clouds (another Schroeder soundtrack), chart this progression clearly, though none has aged particularly well. Of the three, Meddle has the most to offer, with the "Echoes" suite boasting some moments of real power, but unfortunately quite a few longueurs.

However, in 1973, all the searching for new directions finally came together with the release of Dark Side Of The Moon, one of the best-selling albums of all time. With its dominant themes of ageing, madness and death, the band had finally come up with something meaningful to hang their musical ideas on. It was an album so well integrated that it was hard to imagine any of the songs from "Speak To Me" to "Eclipse" being played without the context of the others. But, despite the gloomy subject matter, it retains a strangely comforting quality, perhaps because it makes everyone's private concerns seem universal.

There was a two-year wait for Wish You Were Here. Recording it was sheer torture and the band almost split under the pressure, but their efforts produced some of their strongest music, their most affecting lyrics and undoubtedly one of the most intriguing album sleeves ever. The key piece was the superb "Shine On You Crazy Diamond", a lengthy tribute to Syd Barrett, whose spirit still seemed to haunt the band. Inspired by Gilmour's melancholic guitar theme, Waters came up with some of his most poignant lines. The album's title said it all.

Once again, Pink Floyd lapsed into a creative torpor, only to re-emerge in 1977 with Animals, perhaps best known for its sleeve picture of a flying pig over Battersea power station. Two of the tracks, "Sheep" and "Dogs", were over three years old, being rewrites of songs rejected from Wish You Were Here, and although the album featured some stinging guitar work from Gilmour, it lacked the thoroughgoing excellence of the previous two.

Animals came out at the height of punk, when Pink Floyd were generally reviled as dinosaur rockers, yet many of Waters' lyrics expressed a bitterness and cynicism that should have been recognized by self-proclaimed nihilist punk groups. These strands were prominent in The Wall (1979), a hopelessly ambitious album, concert tour and film project (starring Bob Geldof as the alienated central character), first inspired by Waters' hatred of the whole stadium-rock concept. Megalomania is the word here, but the conceit of literally walling off the audience during the live performance was surprisingly effective.

During this period Roger Waters began to withdraw behind a wall of his own. He took over more and more control of the creative process, treating the others as little better than glorified session musicians and allegedly engineering the departure of founder member Rick Wright. The next album, The Final Cut, was subtitled, 'By Roger Waters, Performed By Pink Floyd'. Like Animals, it was largely made from reheated leftovers (in this case spare bricks from The Wall), but this time the result was decidedly half-baked and brought about the band's fragmentation.

In 1986, Roger Waters announced that he had left the band, assuming that the Pink Floyd would be finished without him. He had reckoned without the determination of Dave Gilmour, who decided to press ahead with Mason, a newly rehabilitated Rick Wright and an army of session musicians. Waters was furious and commenced a campaign of legal actions and slanging matches in the press, all to no avail. He had forgotten that, just like Barrett before him, he might have been the leader of the band, but to the public he was a distant, faceless figure on stage, half-hidden behind the dry ice, lights and inflatable pig.

The new Gilmour-led Floyd sounds infinitely more 'Floydian' than Roger Waters' dirge-like solo albums. But their first effort, A Momentary Lapse Of Reason, showed that without Waters' lyrical input, the new Floyd were pretty toothless. They followed this up in 1988 with The Delicate Sound Of Thunder, a rather uninspired live album, though a copy was taken by cosmonauts up to the Soviet Mir space station in 1988, thus justifying the Pink Floyd's 'first in space' T-shirt claim. Most disappointing of all was Shine On, an expensively priced box-set that merely repackaged seven Floyd favourites plus a bonus CD of the early singles, which annoyingly remains unavailable separately.

In 1994, Floyd mark 3 finally hit their stride with a new studio album, The Division Bell. Almost a concept album, it had a general motif of poor communications and it featured significant musical contributions from Wright and Mason, amidst the session men. The accompanying world tour boasted an astonishingly elaborate light show and complete performances of Dark Side Of The Moon, all captured on the recent live CD, P.U.L.S.E., with its flashing box. However good their live son et lumière, though, the new material still lacks the emotional punch of the old, and unless Gilmour can find another songwriting partner of Roger Waters' calibre, Pink Floyd seem destined to trade off past glories.



Thanks to Iain Smith


Pink Floyd Mp3s
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