Monday, July 28, 2025

Pink Floyd Retrospective: Album 06- Meddle

 





Pink Floyd starts rounding into their peak form...

Album:  Meddle

Year Released:    1971

Lineup:

Pink Floyd

Additional personnel



Track Listing:


Side one
No. Title                                                                           Length
1. "One of These Days"                                           5:57
2.     "A Pillow of Winds"                                                    5:13
3.     "Fearless"                                                                  6:08
4.     "San Tropez"                                                             3:44
5.     "Seamus"                                                                  2:15

Total length: 23:17

Side two
No. Title                                                                          Length
6. "Echoes"                                                                  23:30

Total length: 23:30

Album Length:  46:47



Overall Thoughts:

The sixth album by Pink Floyd, Meddle, shows the group growing from their pure Psychedlic Rock roots from Syd Barrett.  There's more energy in the songs, and more focus, while still keeping their roots.  The group is levelling up, and while they haven't hit their peak yet, you can see the direction.

They start off with 'One Of Those Days', an instrumental that evokes anger and violence.  It's well done, and clocking in under 6 minutes, short for an instrumental.  'A Pillow of Winds' is softer and folkier, a strong contrast to their first song (a theme that resonantes throughout Pink Floyd as they move away from Syd Barrett's influence).  "Fearless" is an excellent song about being yourself even in the face of society (and ends with Liverpool fans singing "You'll Never Walk Alone").  "San Tropez" is a timeless jaunt and could have been a hit 30 years earlier. 

The album finishes with "Echoes", a 23 minute epic.  It's like most Progressive Rock epics- a decent song that is too long.  If it stopped at the 11 minute mark the song would be better.  

On an unrelated side note- this is truly a hideous album cover.  It manages to be ugly and not really look like anything (the idea was supposedly 'An ear underwater'.

Overall, it's an excellent album- the best one the band had created to date.  




Ranking of Pink Floyd Albums (adding as more albums are reviewed):
  1. Meddle
  2. A Saucerful of Secrets
  3. Ummagumma
  4. More
  5. Piper at the Gates of Dawn
  6. Atom Heart Mother

Top 10 Pink Floyd Songs (changing as more albums are reviewed):

  1. "Fearless", Meddle
  2. "Let There Be More Light", A Saucerful of Secrets
  3. "Set The Controls For the Heart of the Sun", A Saucerful of Secrets
  4. "San Tropez", Meddle
  5. "Remember A Day", A Saucerful of Secrets
  6. "Cirrus Minor", More
  7. "Flaming", A Piper At the Gates of Dawn
  8. "One of Those Days", Meddle
  9. "Astronomy Dominé", A Piper At the Gates of Dawn
  10. "A Saucerful of Secrets", A Saucerful of Secrets

Monday, July 21, 2025

Pink Floyd Retrospective: Album 05- Atom Heart Mother

 




Pink Floyd is a very experimental band.  Sometimes, the experiment blows up...

Album:  Atom Heart Mother

Year Released:    1970

Lineup:

Pink Floyd

Additional musicians

Production


Track Listing:


Side one
No. Title                                                                           Length
1. "Atom Heart Mother"                                          23:44

Total length: 23:44

Side two
No. Title                                                                          Length
2. "If"                                                                          4:31
3. "Summer '68"                                                    5:29
4.     "Fat Old Sun"                                                           5:22
5.     "Alan's Psychedelic Breakfast"                                13:00
Total length: 28:22

Album Length:  52:06



Overall Thoughts:

The fifth album by Pink Floyd is broken into two halves.  The first half, the title track 'Atom Heart Mother', is a single song taking up the entire side of the record.  It has an 'everything and the kitchen sink' feeling about it- it's a progressive rock instrumental with orchestral backing.  You do hear the journey that Pink Floyd is making from mere meandering music, but they still haven't found their focus yet.  It's not tedious- musically, the group remains excellent.  But it's a 23 minute instrumental that would be better if it was half the time.

The second half of the album is four songs.  The first three are written by different members of the group.  Waters composed "If", Wright wrote "Summer '68", and Gilmour was behind "Fat Old Sun".  "If" is the first (of many) song Waters writes about mental illness.  "Summer '68" is about a one night stand with a groupie (and makes the protagonist out to be an ass).  "Fat Old Sun" is a song about the countryside, and might have been cleaner if it was just an acoustic guitar song without any other instruments.

The final song is "Alan's Psychedelic Breakfast"- and the album falls off a cliff here.  Pink Floyd has always added unusuaul sound effects to their music- but hearing close up of someone eating breakfast and drinking coffee is nauseating and unpleasant.  I hate hate HATE it.  The rest of the album is mediocre- but the final song is such utter shit that it makes it the worst album that the band has created.





Ranking of Pink Floyd Albums (adding as more albums are reviewed):
  1. A Saucerful of Secrets
  2. Ummagumma
  3. More
  4. Piper at the Gates of Dawn
  5. Atom Heart Mother

Top 10 Pink Floyd Songs (changing as more albums are reviewed):

  1. "Let There Be More Light", A Saucerful of Secrets
  2. "Set The Controls For the Heart of the Sun", A Saucerful of Secrets
  3. "Remember A Day", A Saucerful of Secrets
  4. "Cirrus Minor", More
  5. "Flaming", A Piper At the Gates of Dawn
  6. "Astronomy Dominé", A Piper At the Gates of Dawn
  7. "A Saucerful of Secrets", A Saucerful of Secrets
  8. "The Narrow Way", Ummagumma
  9. "Crying Song", More
  10. "If", Atom Heart Mother

Monday, July 14, 2025

Pink Floyd Retrospective: Album 04- Ummagumma

 


 


Ummagumma is both a live album and a showcase for each of the individual members.  In trying to be everything, it misses being anything great...

Album:  Ummagumma

Year Released:    1969

Lineup:

Pink Floyd

  • David Gilmour – lead guitar, vocals (live album); voices on "Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict";[46] acoustic and electric guitars, bass guitar, keyboards, drums and vocals on "The Narrow Way"
  • Nick Mason – drums (live album); percussion, effects on "The Grand Vizier's Garden Party" parts 1 & 2
  • Roger Waters – bass guitar, vocals (live album); acoustic guitars and vocals on "Grantchester Meadows", voices on "Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict"
  • Richard Wright – keyboards, vocals (live album); organ, piano, Mellotron and percussion on "Sysyphus"

Additional personnel

  • Lindy Mason – flutes on "The Grand Vizier's Garden Party" Parts 1 & 3 (uncredited)[18]
  • Brian Humphries – engineering (live album)
  • Pink Floyd – production (live album)
  • Peter Mew – engineering (studio album)
  • Norman Smith – production (studio album)
  • Hipgnosis – sleeve design and photographs

Track Listing:

Live Album
Side one
No. Title                                                                           Length
1. "Astronomy Domine"                                          8:25
2. "Careful with That Axe, Eugene"                          8:47
Total length: 17:12

Side two
No. Title                                                                          Length
1. "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun"         9:21
2. "A Saucerful of Secrets"                                   12:51
Total length: 22:12

Album Length:  39:24

Studio Album
Side three
No. Title                                                                           Length
1. "Sisyphus"                                                          13:32
2. "Grantchester Meadows"                                  7:23
3.     "Several Species of Small Furry Animals                 4:47
          Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict"
Total length: 25:42

Side four
No. Title                                                                          Length
1. "The Narrow Way"                                                 12:14
2. "The Grand Vizier's Garden Party"                         8:55
Total length: 21:09

Album Length:  46:51
Total Length:     86:32

Overall Thoughts:

The fourth album by Pink Floyd is "Ummagumma", a double album.  The first album is a live recording of their previous songs, and the second album is a studio recording of new material- but with each member of the band writing a track without the others.

The live album is... fine.  There doesn't seem to be anything added to the music by performing live- the audience is barely heard, and the songs don't seem to be significantly different than the studio versions.  There is one unreleased song ("Careful With That Axe, Eugene") that sounds like the spiritual sequel to "The End" by the Doors- long bits of organ music punctuated by screaming and yelling.  The other songs are just longer versions of the songs already released on other albums.

The studio album is more interesting, but it's not a group project- rather, it's each member tackling their own song (Waters has two 'shorter' songs instead of one long song).  

Richard Wright has the first song of the studio album, "Sisyphus".  It's New Age music-instrumental, fine, far too long and forgettable.

Roger Waters wrote a pair of songs- "Grantchester Meadows" and "Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict".  "Granchester Meadows" is a nice, sweet song that Waters ruins by ending with the sound of a fly being swatted.  "Several Species..." is as pretentious and obnoxious as the endless title suggests.  It's not even a song- just a bunch of sounds put together.  

David Gilmour composed "The Narrow Way", a guitar- focussed song.  It plays to his strengths, and the song works- especially the opening shuffle.  It's the best song on the studio tracks.

Nick Mason wrote "The Grand Vizier's Garden Party"- a strange combination of Folk music, New Age music, and vocal effects.  Mason's drumming holds it together.
 
In a way, "Ummagumma" is Pink Floyd, deconstructed.  Roger Waters had a ton of ideas but needed the other members of the band to pull them off musically and reign in his worst impulses.  Richard Wright is an excellent keyboardest who meanders without a good direction.  Mason and Gilmour are fine but incomplete.  Pink Floyd is defnitely a case where the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.  



Ranking of Pink Floyd Albums (adding as more albums are reviewed):
  1. A Saucerful of Secrets
  2. Ummagumma
  3. More
  4. Piper at the Gates of Dawn

Top 10 Pink Floyd Songs (changing as more albums are reviewed):

  1. "Let There Be More Light", A Saucerful of Secrets
  2. "Set The Controls For the Heart of the Sun", A Saucerful of Secrets
  3. "Remember A Day", A Saucerful of Secrets
  4. "Cirrus Minor", More
  5. "Flaming", A Piper At the Gates of Dawn
  6. "Astronomy Dominé", A Piper At the Gates of Dawn
  7. "A Saucerful of Secrets", A Saucerful of Secrets
  8. "The Narrow Way", Ummagumma
  9. "Crying Song", More
  10. "The Nile Song", More

Friday, July 11, 2025

Thoughts with Whiskey: 2025-07-11

Tonight's beverage:  Weller Special Reserve.  For the price and availability, probably the best value in my opinion.


Currently reading:  The Innovators.  Walter Isaacson is a great writer, and the history that led to the computer- from the theories of Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace through the invention of the transistor, microchip, and computer- is a powerful story.  I'm learning a lot.


Currently playing:  Nothing.  I have an issue where computer games with first person perspective usually gives me vertigo.  Could use a good new PC game (preferences are for mystery/puzzle/RPG games).  Recommendations are welcomed.


Current recommendation:  Game Changer, from Dropout.  It's a simple formula- take a bunch of comedians, put them in a game where they don't know the rules, and run with it (Taskmaster operates on the same principle, and the episodes are free on youtube).  This year's games have been utterly chaotic and brilliant, and Game Changer alone is worth getting Dropout.


The Pink Floyd retrospective continues next week.  I've known the band's most famous albums, but almost nothing of their earlier stuff.  It's a fascinating group- musically talented, with a lot of ideas- but with their early albums they are still trying to put it all together.  It's not until their eighth album that it finally comes together.  The journey is long but it's worth it.



Monday, July 7, 2025

Pink Floyd Retrospective: Album 03- Soundtrack from the film 'More'

 









For the third album, Pink Floyd makes a soundtrack...

Album:  More (Film Soundtrack)

Year Released:    1969

Lineup:

 Pink Floyd

Additional personnel

Track Listing:

Side one
No. Title                                                           Length
1. "Cirrus Minor"                                          5:18
2. "The Nile Song"                                  3:26
3. "Crying Song" Waters                          3:33
4. "Up the Khyber" (instrumental)                 2:12
5. "Green Is the Colour"                               2:58
6. "Cymbaline"                                             4:50
7. "Party Sequence" (instrumental)  1:07
Total length: 23:24

Side two
No. Title Length
1. "Main Theme" (instrumental)         5:27
2. "Ibiza Bar"                                 3:19
3. "More Blues" (instrumental)         2:12
4. "Quicksilver" (instrumental)         7:13
5. "A Spanish Piece"                                 1:05
6. "Dramatic Theme" (instrumental) 2:15
Total length: 21:32



Overall Thoughts:

The year after releasing "A Saucerful of Secrets", Pink Floyd created the soundtrack for a movie called More.  The movie itself sounds horrible and unpleasant- a pair of young adults meet, fall for each other, go to Ibiza, and destroy each other with drugs.  Umm, yay?  

But this is about the soundtrack.  Pink Floyd is a good band for soundtracks- the music works in the background.

Pink Floyd continued to be experminetal, adding non-musical sounds into their music.  They lead off the album with the bird chirps right off the bat on the first song, "Cirrus Minor".  "The Nile Song" is the hardest song the group had recorded, venturing into heavy metal.

The music is good.  Nick Mason does great at drums on "Up the Khyber", and Wright's piano and keyboards are excellent.  Half the songs are instrumentals.  

The album isn't bad (Okay, "A Spanish Piece" is awful, but it stands out for being so annoying)... but it's forgettable.  Much like "A Piper At The Gates of Dawn", it's fine to put on in the background, but it's not an album you go out of your way to listen to.  Pink Floyd would be a few more albums away from putting everything together.



Ranking of Pink Floyd Albums (adding as more albums are reviewed):
  1. A Saucerful of Secrets
  2. More
  3. Piper at the Gates of Dawn

Top 10 Pink Floyd Songs (changing as more albums are reviewed):

  1. "Let There Be More Light", A Saucerful of Secrets
  2. "Set The Controls For the Heart of the Sun", A Saucerful of Secrets
  3. "Remember A Day", A Saucerful of Secrets
  4. "Cirrus Minor", More
  5. "Flaming", A Piper At the Gates of Dawn
  6. "Astronomy Dominé", A Piper At the Gates of Dawn
  7. "A Saucerful of Secrets", A Saucerful of Secrets
  8. "Crying Song", More
  9. "The Nile Song", More
  10. "Matilda Mother", A Piper At the Gates of Dawn