Friday, 8 August 2008

Pink Floyd

Pink Floyd   
Artist: Pink Floyd

   Genre(s): 
Trance
   Trance: Psychedelic
   Rock
   Other
   Rock: Hard-Rock
   Electronic
   Rock: Electronic
   Avantgarde
   Rock: Progressive
   



Discography:


A Momentary Lapse Of Reason  (Ltd Edition Trance Remix)   
 A Momentary Lapse Of Reason (Ltd Edition Trance Remix)

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 8


Delicate Sound Of Thunder (CD 2)   
 Delicate Sound Of Thunder (CD 2)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 8


Delicate Sound Of Thunder (CD 1)   
 Delicate Sound Of Thunder (CD 1)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 7


Atom Heart Mother   
 Atom Heart Mother

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 5


The Pearl Of Pink Floyd   
 The Pearl Of Pink Floyd

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 8


Pink Floyd Remixes   
 Pink Floyd Remixes

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 10


Pigs and Pyramids   
 Pigs and Pyramids

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 11


The Wall (Cd1)   
 The Wall (Cd1)

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 13


Echoes: The Best Of Pink Floyd (CD 2)   
 Echoes: The Best Of Pink Floyd (CD 2)

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 13


Echoes: The Best Of Pink Floyd (CD 1)   
 Echoes: The Best Of Pink Floyd (CD 1)

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 13


Echoes: The Best of Pink Floyd   
 Echoes: The Best of Pink Floyd

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 26


Animals   
 Animals

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 5


A Saucerful Of Secrets   
 A Saucerful Of Secrets

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 7


Wish You Were Here - Mixed   
 Wish You Were Here - Mixed

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 5


Is There Anybody Out There (CD 2)   
 Is There Anybody Out There (CD 2)

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 14


Is There Anybody Out There (CD 1)   
 Is There Anybody Out There (CD 1)

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 16


Pulse (Cd2)   
 Pulse (Cd2)

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 13


Pulse (Cd1)   
 Pulse (Cd1)

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 11


The Division Bell   
 The Division Bell

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 11


The Early Singles (1967-1968)   
 The Early Singles (1967-1968)

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 10


Ummagumma   
 Ummagumma

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 2


The Delicate Sound Of Thunder (Cd2)   
 The Delicate Sound Of Thunder (Cd2)

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 8


The Delicate Sound Of Thunder (Cd1)   
 The Delicate Sound Of Thunder (Cd1)

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 7


Delicate Sound of Thunder (Live)   
 Delicate Sound of Thunder (Live)

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 14


Delicate Sound Of Thunder   
 Delicate Sound Of Thunder

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 26


A Momentary Lapse Of Reason   
 A Momentary Lapse Of Reason

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 10


Works (1968-1973)   
 Works (1968-1973)

   Year: 1983   
Tracks: 10


Works   
 Works

   Year: 1983   
Tracks: 10


The Final Cut   
 The Final Cut

   Year: 1983   
Tracks: 12


The Final Cutting   
 The Final Cutting

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 13


Collection Of Great Dance Songs   
 Collection Of Great Dance Songs

   Year: 1981   
Tracks: 6


A Collection Of Great Dance Songs   
 A Collection Of Great Dance Songs

   Year: 1981   
Tracks: 6


A Collection Of Great Dance So   
 A Collection Of Great Dance So

   Year: 1981   
Tracks: 6


Wallpower (28 Feb 1980, Nassau)   
 Wallpower (28 Feb 1980, Nassau)

   Year: 1980   
Tracks: 26


The Wall (cd2)   
 The Wall (cd2)

   Year: 1979   
Tracks: 13


Under Construction   
 Under Construction

   Year: 1978   
Tracks: 28


Madison Square Garden   
 Madison Square Garden

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 2


In The Flesh - CD2   
 In The Flesh - CD2

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 7


In The Flesh - CD1   
 In The Flesh - CD1

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 6


Azimuth Coordinator 2 - CD2   
 Azimuth Coordinator 2 - CD2

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 6


Azimuth Coordinator 2 - CD1   
 Azimuth Coordinator 2 - CD1

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 7


Animals (Live)   
 Animals (Live)

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 5


Wish You Were Here   
 Wish You Were Here

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 5


The Late Great Millard Tapes - CD3   
 The Late Great Millard Tapes - CD3

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 2


The Late Great Millard Tapes - CD2 - DARK SIDE OF THE MOON   
 The Late Great Millard Tapes - CD2 - DARK SIDE OF THE MOON

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 10


The Late Great Millard Tapes - CD1   
 The Late Great Millard Tapes - CD1

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 9


Dark Side Of The Moon (Live for BBC)   
 Dark Side Of The Moon (Live for BBC)

   Year: 1974   
Tracks: 10


Brain Damage (1974-11-16)   
 Brain Damage (1974-11-16)

   Year: 1974   
Tracks: 10


Remergence   
 Remergence

   Year: 1973   
Tracks: 6


Dark Side Of The Moon   
 Dark Side Of The Moon

   Year: 1973   
Tracks: 10


Winterland 1972 - CD3   
 Winterland 1972 - CD3

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 3


Winterland 1972 - CD2   
 Winterland 1972 - CD2

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 11


Winterland 1972 - CD1   
 Winterland 1972 - CD1

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 13


The Dome, Brighton, Uk Dsom Rehearsals (1972-01-20)   
 The Dome, Brighton, Uk Dsom Rehearsals (1972-01-20)

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 12


Staying Home To Watch The Rain  CD1   
 Staying Home To Watch The Rain CD1

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 9


Obscured By Clouds   
 Obscured By Clouds

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 10


Eclipse - A Piece For Assorted Lunatics Rev A CD1   
 Eclipse - A Piece For Assorted Lunatics Rev A CD1

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 13


Relics   
 Relics

   Year: 1971   
Tracks: 11


Meddle   
 Meddle

   Year: 1971   
Tracks: 6


Bytes Of The Talisman   
 Bytes Of The Talisman

   Year: 1971   
Tracks: 6


Zabriskie Point  Cd2   
 Zabriskie Point Cd2

   Year: 1970   
Tracks: 8


Zabriskie Point  CD1   
 Zabriskie Point CD1

   Year: 1970   
Tracks: 11


Interstellar Encore (1970-04-29)   
 Interstellar Encore (1970-04-29)

   Year: 1970   
Tracks: 5


Zabriskie Point - The Sessions CD1   
 Zabriskie Point - The Sessions CD1

   Year: 1969   
Tracks: 16


Zabriskie Point - The Sessio..   
 Zabriskie Point - The Sessio..

   Year: 1969   
Tracks: 11


Unmamaqumma   
 Unmamaqumma

   Year: 1969   
Tracks: 12


Ummagumma (Studio)   
 Ummagumma (Studio)

   Year: 1969   
Tracks: 12


Ummagumma (Live)   
 Ummagumma (Live)

   Year: 1969   
Tracks: 4


The Massed Gadgets Of Auximenes   
 The Massed Gadgets Of Auximenes

   Year: 1969   
Tracks: 11


More   
 More

   Year: 1969   
Tracks: 13


Complete Concertgebouw 1969 CD1   
 Complete Concertgebouw 1969 CD1

   Year: 1969   
Tracks: 9


Early Singles   
 Early Singles

   Year: 1968   
Tracks: 10


The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn   
 The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn

   Year: 1967   
Tracks: 11


Unknown Live Bootleg   
 Unknown Live Bootleg

   Year:    
Tracks: 9


Mixes   
 Mixes

   Year:    
Tracks: 25


Meddle (Trance Remix)   
 Meddle (Trance Remix)

   Year:    
Tracks: 6


Live and Rare, CD2   
 Live and Rare, CD2

   Year:    
Tracks: 17


Live and Rare, CD1   
 Live and Rare, CD1

   Year:    
Tracks: 19


BBC Concert Classic 1970-1971   
 BBC Concert Classic 1970-1971

   Year:    
Tracks: 7


Atom Heart Mother - Limited Edition Trance Remix   
 Atom Heart Mother - Limited Edition Trance Remix

   Year:    
Tracks: 5


Animals (Limited Edition Trance Remix)   
 Animals (Limited Edition Trance Remix)

   Year:    
Tracks: 5


A Clear View (live )   
 A Clear View (live )

   Year:    
Tracks: 8




Pink Floyd is the pM space tilt dance band. Since the mid-'60s, their medicine unrelentingly tinkered with electronics and all personal manner of exceptional effects to push pop formats to their outer limits. At the same time they wrestled with lyric themes and concepts of such massive scale leaf that their music has taken on almost classical, operatic role, in both well-grounded and words. Despite their astral effigy, the grouping was brought depressed to earthly concern in the eighties by in spades routine power struggles over leading and, in the remnant, possession of the band's very appoint. After that time, they were small more than than a dinosaur map, capable of filling stadiums and topping the charts, but offering niggling more than a spectacular diversion of their nearly successful formulas. Their latter-day staleness cannot camouflage the fact that, for the first class honours level decade or so of their creation, they were one of the to the highest degree advanced groups around, in concert and (peculiarly) in the studio flat.


Patch Pink Floyd ar largely known for their grandiose construct albums of the 1970s, they started as a selfsame different sorting of psychedelic band. Soon later they start began playing unitedly in the mid-'60s, they felled seam firmly under the leadership of track guitar player Syd Barrett, the gifted genius wHO would write and sing to the highest degree of their early material. The Cambridge aboriginal shared the stage with Roger Waters (bass), Rick Wright (keyboards), and Nick Mason (drums). The name Pink Floyd, on the face of it so far-out, was really derived from the first-class honours degree names of deuce ancient bluesmen (Pink Anderson and Floyd Council). And at first-class honours degree, Pink Floyd were a great deal more than conventional than the act into which they would evolve, concentrating on the john Rock and R&B material that were so common to the repertoires of mid-'60s British bands.


Garden pink Floyd quickly began to experiment, still, stretching out songs with barbaric instrumental disorientation passages incorporating feedback; electronic screeches; and strange, eery sounds created by garish amplification, reverb, and such tricks as sliding clump bearings up and down guitar strings. In 1966, they began to clean up a following in the London metro; onstage, they began to incorporate light shows to add together to the psychedelic effect. Most importantly, Syd Barrett began to draw up pop-psychedelic gems that combined unusual psychedelic arrangements (specially in the persistent guitar and celestial organ licks) with catchy melodies and sharp lyrics that viewed the macrocosm with a good sense of poetic, wide-eyed marvel.


The mathematical group landed a recording squeeze with EMI in early 1967 and made the Top 20 with a bright debut single, "Arnold Layne," a harmonic, amusing vignette about a cross-dresser. The follow-up, the kaleidoscopical "See Emily Play," made the Top Ten. The debut record album, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, besides released in 1967, may hold been the sterling British psychedelic record album other than Sgt. Pepper's. Dominated about wholly by Barrett's songs, the album was a charming fun family of driving, mystifying rockers ("Devil Sam"); left part sketches ("The Gnome"); childhood flashbacks ("Bike," "Matilda Mother"); and freakier pieces with drawn-out instrumental passages ("Uranology Domine," "Interstellar Overdrive," "Prisoner of war R Toch") that mapped extinct their captivation with blank travel. The record was non only when like no other at the time; it was wish no other that Pink Floyd would make, one-sided as it was by a visual modality that was far more humourous, pop-friendly, and lighthearted than those of their subsequent epics.


The reasonableness Pink Floyd never made a like album was that Genus Piper was the just i to be recorded under Barrett's leadership. Around mid-1967, the prodigy began viewing more and more alarming signs of mental unbalance. Barrett would go catatonic onstage, playing music that had slight to do with the material, or not playing at all. An American term of enlistment had to be cut myopic when he was scantily capable to single-valued function at all, permit unequalled play the pop star secret plan. Dependent upon Barrett for about of their visual sensation and material, the pillow of the grouping was all the same finding him impossible to work with, live or in the studio apartment.


Around the source of 1968, guitar player Dave Gilmour, a ally of the band wHO was besides from Cambridge, was brought in as a fifth member. The mind was that Gilmour would enable the Floyd to continue as a live turnout; Barrett would still be able to write and chip in to the records. That couldn't work either, and within a few months Barrett was extinct of the grouping. Pink Floyd's management, looking at at the wreckage of a band that was now without its lead guitarist, lead vocalizer, and primary ballad maker, decided to give up the radical and wield Barrett as a solo represent.


Such calamities would have proven unsurmountable for 99 out of hundred bands in like predicaments. Incredibly, Pink Floyd would regroup and non only when maintain their popularity, just finally get even more successful. It was early in the biz yet, after all; the starting time album had made the British Top Ten, merely the grouping was noneffervescent virtually unknown in America, where the red of Syd Barrett meant nix to the media. Gilmour was an first-class guitar player, and the band proved subject of written material enough original material to generate further ambitious albums, Waters eventually emerging as the dominant composer. The 1968 followup to Genus Piper at the Gates of Dawn, A Saucerful of Secrets, made the British Top Ten, victimization Barrett's imagination as an obvious blueprint, only taking a more formal, sombre, and quasi-classical whole step, especially in the long instrumental parts. Barrett, for his constituent, would go on to do a couple of interesting solo records earlier his mental problems instigated a retreat into limbo.


Over the following quadruplet long time, Pink Floyd would cover to polish their make of experimental careen, which married psychedelia with ever-grander arrangements on a Wagnerian operatic musical scale. Hidden underneath the impulse, reverberant variety meat and guitars and insistently restated themes were pernicious blues and pop influences that kept the material accessible to a broad consultation. Abandoning the singles marketplace, they concentrated on album-length works, and reinforced a huge following in the progressive john Rock subway with invariant touring in both Europe and North America. While LPs like Ummagumma (shared out into live recordings and experimental outings by each member of the band), Molecule Heart Mother (a coaction with composer Ron Geesin), and More than... (a film soundtrack) were erratic, each contained some passing effective euphony.


By the early '70s, Syd Barrett was a fading or nonexistent memory for most of Pink Floyd's fans, although the grouping, one could fence, never did match the brilliance of that more or less anomalous 1967 debut. Tamper (1971) sharpened the band's sprawling epics into something more accessible, and polished the science fiction ambience that the group had been exploring ever since 1968. Nothing, however, prepared Pink Floyd or their audience for the massive mainstream s of their 1973 album, Dark Side of the Moon, which made their steel of cosmic rock fifty-fifty more accessible with state of the art output; more focused songwriting; an army of well-time stereophonic heavy personal effects; and touches of saxophone and soulful female backing vocals.


Dark Side of the Moon eventually bust Pink Floyd as superstars in the United States, where it made number one. More amazingly, it made them one of the biggest-selling acts of the Apostles of all clock time. Dark Side of the Moon spent an uncomprehensible 741 weeks on the Billboard record album chart. Additionally, the in the main instrumental textures of the songs helped make Dark Side of the Moon easy transmutable on an international grade, and the record became (and smooth is) one of the to the highest degree popular rock albums worldwide.


It was also an exceedingly grueling act to follow, although the follow-up, Wish You Were Here (1975), as well made number one and only, highlighted by a tribute of sorts to the long-departed Barrett, "Beam On You Crazy Diamond." Black Side of the Moon had been dominated by lyrical themes of insecurity, fear, and the stale asepsis of modern life; Wish You Were Here and Animals (1977) developed these moody themes fifty-fifty more explicitly. By this meter Waters was taking a steady hand over Pink Floyd's lyrical and melodic vision, which was consolidated by The Wall (1979).


The black, overambitious double concept album implicated itself with the corporeal and worked up walls modern humans build around themselves for survival of the fittest. The Wall was a immense succeeder (fifty-fifty by Pink Floyd's standards), in constituent because the music was losing some of its heavy-duty electronic textures in favor of more approachable pop elements. Although Pink Floyd had rarely even released singles since the late '60s, one of the tracks, "Another Brick in the Wall," became a transatlantic number one. The band had been launching more and more elaborate point shows throughout the '70s, simply the touring production of The Wall, featuring a construction of an actual wall during the band's functioning, was the nearly undue yet.


In the 1980s, the radical began to unknot. Each of the four-spot had done some position and solo projects in the past; more troublingly, Waters was declaratory control of the band's musical and lyrical identity. That wouldn't take been such a trouble had The Final Cut (1983) been such an unimpressive crusade, with slight of the electronic foundation so typical of their old work. Shortly after, the ring split up -- for a patch. In 1986, Waters was suing Gilmour and Mason to dissolve the group's partnership (Wright had preoccupied total membership condition all); Waters mixed-up, going away a Roger-less Pink Floyd to get a Top Five album with Momentaneous Lapse of Reason in 1987. In an irony that was null less than cosmic, nearly 20 days after Pink Floyd moult their original leader to take up their life history with great commercial success, they would do the like once again to his replacement. Waters released ambitious solo albums to null more than temper sales and attention, patch he watched his late colleagues (with Wright back in tow) rescale the charts.


Pink Floyd soundless had a vast winnow alkali, but there's little that's noteworthy close to their post-Waters yield. They knew their rule, could do it on a distinguished scale, and could count on millions of customers -- many of them unborn when Non-white Side of the Moon came out, and unaware that Syd Barrett was ever a member -- to buy their records and see to it their sporadic tours. The Division Bell, their number one studio album in seven years, topped the charts in 1994 without fashioning whatsoever encroachment on the electric current john Rock scene, exclude in a marketing sense. Ditto for the alive Heartbeat album, recorded during a typically in an elaborate way arranged 1994 circuit, which included a concert version of The Dark Side of the Moon in its integrality. Waters' solo career sputtered along, highlighted by a solo recreation of The Wall, performed at the site of the one-time Berlin Wall in 1990, and released as an album. Syd Barrett continued to be completely removed from the public eye demur as a sort of pilot for the fallen genius.





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