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Division Bell alternate take released

Posted September 27, 2019 by Floydian Slip

Legacy Recordings/Pink Floyd Records has released its second preview of this fall’s upcoming “The Later Years” boxset. An early version of “High Hopes” dropped today.

The previously unreleased recording is a pared-down version with little or no orchestration of the song that ends 1995’s “The Division Bell.”

The label’s first taste of the upcoming boxset was a recording of “Wish You Were Here” from 1990’s Knebworth concert released Aug. 30. Floyd’s contribution to the original release of that show — Knebworth: The Album (1990) — was limited to two songs, “Run Like Hell” and “Comfortably Numb,” both originally from The Wall (1979). “The Later Years will include the band’s enter 7-song set from that day.

“The Later Years” will be released Nov. 29. Read more about the boxset (“The Later Years” boxset coming Nov. 29”).


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Bryan Morrison memoir published

Posted September 21, 2019 by Floydian Slip

Quiller has published “Have a Cigar!: The Memoir of the Man Behind Pink Floyd, T. Rex, The Jam and George Michael” by Bryan Morrison.

In the 1960s, Morrison founded the Bryan Morrison Agency, a music management and publishing company. The firm served as music publisher and booking agent for Pink Floyd in the group’s early years.

Morrison started his music career managing The Pretty Things. He would eventually do work with Marc Bolan, T. Rex; Robin Gibb, The Bee Gees; Paul Weller, The Jam; George Michael, Wham! and others.

Floyd would eventually be managed by one-time Bryan Morrison Agency employee Steve O’Rourke.

Morrison suffered a brain injury as the result of a polo accident in 2006. After two years in a coma, he died in ’08.

“Have a Cigar!” is a 224-page hardcover edition, including color photos.


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Review: Roger Waters Us + Them

Posted September 13, 2019 by Floydian Slip

Intrepid Floydian Slip correspondent Ed Lopez-Reyes attended a private advance screening of the film “Roger Waters Us + Them” yesterday, three weeks ahead of its Oct. 2 release. His report follows:

Roger Waters Us + Them Review
Thursday, September 12, 2019
Special to Floydian Slip
by Ed Lopez-Reyes

The intersection of beautifully crafted sound and footage combined with director Sean Evans‘ ability to turn an action-packed, live performance into an atmospheric, ethereal experience raises the bar for concert video.

Recorded during a series of June 2018, Amsterdam performances, “Roger Waters: Us + Them” is so exquisitely constructed it emancipates the film from traditional and repetitive templates employed in comparable efforts: the music takes center stage as the expression of ideas Waters and the audience wish to converse about unfold in an exchange between the twain: it takes a talent of Evans’ caliber to capture that. This film documents that dynamic with great cinematic power.

Within the film’s first couple of minutes, the crisp and brutally visceral sound of clapping thunder blends seamlessly into the sound of artillery, garnishing footage of a child sitting on a shore (part of the storylines that run on the background screens during the live performance). This brief introduction segues into the visual of Roger Waters taking the stage. In that brief convergence of audiovisual elements Evans manages to bewitch the audience, realigning their senses for an unusually gripping concert documentary.

The audience plays a central role in this film. It is never veiled in a sea of black. Instead, its interaction with the artist is central to the story and its voice is accentuated by the colors that flood the arena as this emotive call and response transpires.

Evans has gifted the viewer with a full set of perspectives: from the panoramic shots originating in the most remote points of the arena to the great and abundant shots taken from behind drummer Joey Waronker‘s viewpoint on stage. Even with all these perspectives, the approach never breaches the viewer’s commitment to the plot: the intentions of the live production (the track order, the visual effects, the lighting choices, and the background screen storylines) are all served well by Evans’ cinematic choices — and the viewer remains engaged while imbibing the performance from a diverse set of vantage points.

The audience and Waters are the crucial co-stars in this film — but if there is anything you should take away from this production it should be a realization that Evans has earned his stripes and a key place in the creative tradition of Storm Thorgerson: not because his work resembles Thorgerson’s but because it shares an important trait, namely, ambition that is successfully met by equal and greater ability. Evans has created a style of his own that flows naturally from within the historical context and style that spawns the intersection of his creative life with Waters’.

There is something striking about Evans’ sense of photographic cadence. The close-up shots of the musicians working their craft, the panoramic shots of an audience bathed in a cornucopia of lights and the powerful attention to sound details make “Roger Waters: Us + Them” a mesmerizing experience. Although these may all sound like common elements in any concert film, they are particularly striking in this work and converge robustly into an experience from beginning to end. It is a sustained audio-visual journey all the way through.

The first third of the film delivers some of Pink Floyd’s most prominent material, launching with tracks like “Time” and “The Great Gig in the Sky.” The set makes a steep ascent with “Welcome to the Machine,” its aggressive swagger elevating the band’s performance into perfect cohesion while creating space for each musician to shine on their own: Waronker’s drumming is particularly impressive, reminding listeners of Nick Mason‘s crucial role in shaping Pink Floyd’s sound; judgments that Mason’s drumming is too simple have always been over-simplistic themselves — the way Waronker (and Graham Broad before him in Waters’ band) plays and weaves all these tracks together is a great reminder of the texture Mason added to Pink Floyd’s music.

As the live performance (and the film) shift toward Waters’ most recent studio material during the second third of the film, it is the integrity, cohesiveness, and great musicianship of this band that helps sustain interest past the Pink Floyd classics: not for lack of enthusiasm for the new material (it is quite incredible watching audience members sing along, word for word, to the new tracks) but because it requires sustaining momentum after these “classic” tracks have been played back-to-back. The band succeeds in cultivating an appetite for this material and in bridging from it to another set of classics toward the conclusion of the show.

“Wish You Were Here” and “Another Brick in the Wall” (parts two and three) set the stage for some of the material that fans had been imploring Waters to play live in the years preceding the Us + Them tour. The last third of the show consists of epic Pink Floyd classics, the most intense use of stage production and effects, and the strongest political statements in the film.

Evans may have faced one of his biggest challenges here: capturing the magic of the production that unfolds during this part of the set may be an insurmountable task for many — but Evans delivers. Even if you are someone who has experienced the performance more than once in person, you owe it to yourself to take it in through Evans’ directorial eyes: the mix of angles and the bird’s eye perspective, used interchangeably during the film, really fleshes something additional.

Of course, this part of the performance and the film presents what some might perceive as an additional layer of challenges: this is the part of the concert that gets into the heaviest political discourse.

Evans, who shares many of Waters’ politics, is disciplined about balancing his personal passion for the message with its presentation to the broader public and in balance with the attention the music and stage production deserve. It is a careful balance to strike over the course of a handful of tracks and through its performance of “Money” (which, it must be noted, boasts some of the wildest surround sound details in the entire film).

What is most striking about the political content is how much of it is fueled by populism – on both sides of the spectrum.

So where do the rest find refuge? Despite the ironies, “Us and Them” seems to be the poetic force that ultimately helps bind us all together: “Me and you, God only knows it’s not what we would choose to do.” It’s the moment the anger simmers and you get the sense that there is hope and that, perhaps, somewhere deep inside we might all care for the same fundamental goals: “Black and blue… And who knows which is which, and who is who.”

The film closes with “Brain Damage” and “Eclipse” — both performances will give you goosebumps. Though you might ask yourself what happens to “Comfortably Numb,” Waters and Evans’ choice to close with “Eclipse” is the right one, especially when you take into account Waters’ last words as the film closes. Despite all the anger that drives the politics in our world today, ultimately we all want to reach the same goals — even if some have to search more profoundly for these basic human desires.

Those who have followed Waters’ work owe it to themselves to see this in a large movie theater before it becomes exclusive domain of DVD and streaming media. The work Evans and Waters have done on the sound is mind-blowing and the way they elevate the audience’s presence in the performance is superb. The shots are so vast you feel like an audience member taking the performance in from various points — even from the stage.

There is an interesting dynamic between the pace of the show (fast) and the pace of the film (a slow burn): somehow, Evans manages to serve us a moving picture of great detail — even as the live performance moves at an intense pace. This is an artistic accomplishment in its own right: you will find yourself assimilating the pace at which a camera moves from one side of the stage to the other realizing how much detail, on so many things, you have just taken in. There is a certain magic in that — and that is hard to capture live. It certainly does not diminish the live experience but is a statement about what you get from a cinematic experience when there is a good director at the helm. This is magnified on a large screen and the opportunity to experience it this way is limited.

You better run.

“Roger Waters Us + Them” will be playing in cinemas across the United States on October 2nd and 6th. Please visit rogerwatersusandthem.com for details. Enter to win tickets at the theater of your choice, courtesy of “Floydian Slip” and Trafalgar Releasing.


Posted in Events, Films, Merchandise | 2 comments

Win: Tickets to “Roger Waters Us + Them”

Posted September 2, 2019 by Floydian Slip

Floydian Slip is partnering with Trafalgar Releasing to give you tickets to “Roger Waters Us + Them,” the new concert film coming in October.

A document of Waters’s 2017/18 tour of “Is This the Life We Really Want?,” “Us + Them” plays theaters two nights only: Wednesday, Oct. 2 and Sunday, Oct. 6.

Register now to win a pair of tickets good at the participating theater of your choice.


Posted in Contests, Events, Films, Merchandise | 1 comment

“The Later Years” boxset coming Nov. 29

Posted August 29, 2019 by Floydian Slip


On Nov. 29, Pink Floyd Records will release a massive 16-disc boxset of material representing the band’s output beginning in 1987.

“Pink Floyd The Later Years” will include more than six hours of previously-unheard audio and more than seven hours of previously-unseen audiovisuals collected on five CDs, six Blu-Ray discs and five DVDs.

Highlights include full previously-unreleased audio and remastered films from 1989’s Venice concert and 1990’s Knebworth show; the first-ever release of the band’s last live performance at the 2007 Syd Barrett Tribute Concert including David Gilmour, Nick Mason and Richard Wright; a remixed version of “A Momentary Lapse of Reason” updated by Gilmour and Andy Jackson; and a variety of replica memorabilia.

The box would appear to be a companion to the band’s “The Early Years” collection that covers the years 1965-1972 and was released in 2016.

This 16-page press release (PDF) explains the full contents of “Pink Floyd The Later Years” in excruciating detail.

You can pre-order the set from the official Pink Floyd store for $455.


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Roger Waters “Us + Them” tour to become film

Posted April 3, 2019 by Floydian Slip

Variety reports Trafalgar Releasing will turn “Us + Them,” the 2017-18 tour of Pink Floyd founder Roger Waters, into a feature film.

The tour included more than 150 performances, mostly in North American and Europe, playing to a total audience of 2.3 million.

The film, yet to be named, will hit theaters this fall. It’ll be composed from a number of performances along the tour.

Trafalgar released “Roger Waters – The Wall” in 2015.


Posted in Events, Films, Merchandise, Personnel, Roger Waters | 3 comments

Glasgow man makes music from Syd Barrett’s garden detritus

Posted March 11, 2019 by Floydian Slip

Drew Mulholland, a lecturer and composer-in-residence at Glasgow University, has turned a handful of debris collected from the garden of Pink Floyd co-founder Syd Barrett into a 8-minute audio recording.

Mulholland, who boasts of being labelled a “groovy academic” and “weirdy,” started producing avant-garde recordings as a teenager in the 1970s. In the ’90s, the Ghost Box label released an album of this work titled “The Séance at Hobs Lane” under his moniker the Mount Vernon Arts Lab.

His Barrett-inspired piece, “Mandy Rakes Up the Leaves Again,” was created with a collection of leaves, moss and twigs Mullholland found alongside the garden of Barrett’s former home in Cambridge. After arranging and gluing it to a 7-inch cardboard disc (pictured) and playing it through a record-player, he cut up the output and reassembled it into a collage of ghostly pops and snaps lasted just under eight minutes.

Barrett left Pink Floyd shortly after the band’s star began to rise in the ’60s, and famously retreated to his family home in Cambridge where we lived out the rest of his life.

Listen to “Mandy Rakes Up the Leaves Again” at Bandcamp


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“Saucerful” reissue coming for Record Store Day

Posted March 4, 2019 by Floydian Slip

Pink Floyd Records will reissue the band’s 1968 album “A Saucerful of Secrets” in its original mono mix for Record Store Day April 13.

James Guthrie, Joel Plante and Bernie Grundman worked from the original 1968 mono mix for this reissue. Pressed onto 180-gram vinyl, it’ll come with a faithful reproduction of the LP’s original artwork, including the Columbia logo. (Early Floyd albums were released in the U.K. sporting the Columbia logo, via EMI.)

The “Saucerful” reissue will be limited to 6,500 albums.

Last year, the band offered a reissue of “The Piper at the Gates of Dawn” (1969) for Record Store Day.

Record Store Day was conceived in 2007 as a way to celebrate and support independently-owned record stores.


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Mojo: The Collectors Series: Pink Floyd Series

Posted February 18, 2019 by Floydian Slip

Mojo magazine has published the first part of its two-part collectors series devoted to Pink Floyd.

The 132- page issue is on UK newsstands now. It covers the band’s early days in Cambridge and rise to fame within London’s swinging ’60s scene.

Part 2 will cover the band’s later years from the early-’70s through drummer Nick Mason‘s current project, Saucerful of Secrets. Part 2 is scheduled to ship in early April.

Both issues can be purchased online now.


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Alan Parsons to release new album

Posted February 9, 2019 by Floydian Slip

Alan Parsons will release his first studio album in 14 years this spring.

“The Secret,” comprised of 11 new tracks, will arrive April 26 on the Frontiers Music label.

Parsons engineered Pink Floyd‘s “The Dark Side of the Moon” (1973). His last album, 2004’s “A Valid Path,” featured David Gilmour.

The first single from “The Secret” will drop later this month, with pre-order details to follow.

Here’s the songlist:

  1. The Sorcerer’s Apprentice
  2. Miracle
  3. As Lights Fall
  4. One Note Symphony
  5. Sometimes
  6. Soirée Fantastique
  7. Fly To Me
  8. Requiem
  9. Years Of Glory
  10. The Limelight Fades Away
  11. I Can’t Get There From Here

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