+ Changed since last version
* New since last version
This Document Copyright 1994, 1995 by the Echoes Mailing List and its Members. For questions on distribution, contact: echoes-faq@fawnya.tcs.com
That's Peter Jenner (the Floyd's manager) listing a bunch of stars, galaxies, and other stuff through a megaphone. Exactly what's being said is real hard to decipher, but here's what Mark Brown and I have managed:
"Moon in both [houses]..."
"...Scorpio, [Arabian Skies],
Libra..."
"...Pluto was not discovered until 1930..."
And then a bit that seems to be a pre-flight countdown:
"...[two/ten] seconds to [ignition]..."
"...all systems satisfied..."
Then, in the middle section of the song, you can hear something like:
"...just completed orbital..."
Well, most people seem to feel it means "Power Toke" or "Power Tokage" or something along those lines. Another suggestion is "Power Touch," but the problem with that is that the space is between C and H, not between O and C.
Then again, my thought, "Power Torch," has the same problem. Anyway, this next bit clears up half the mystery, courtesy of Steve South and the Longmans Encyclopaedia:
Toc H, an interdenominational Christian fellowship of men and women of every social background, with branches throughout the world, which seeks to promote an understanding of the meaning and purpose of life through unreserved involvement in the community. Founded in 1915, it started its work in a soldiers' club at Talbot House (Toc H was the army signallers' designation of the initials TH) at Poperingtie, Flanders. Incorporated by royal charter in 1922, it is organized in groups and maintains residential houses called 'marks'.
The flip side to Pink Floyd's first single, "Arnold Layne," was originally a song called "Let's Roll Another One." Now, the Floyd were already known to be heavily connected with the drug-influenced psychedelic underground, but their record company wasn't about to release anything with such a blatent drug reference. So, they had Floyd change the song.
The extent of the changes made are purely a matter of speculation, as no one I've talked to has ever heard the original. Waters has said they "had to change all the lyrics" (emphasis added). However, a line of the original song, as quoted by Mason, was "tastes right if you eat it right." This is awfully similar to a lyric ("tastes good if you eat it soon") in the revised version of the song, "Candy and a Currant Bun." So most probably, the changes were in detail; and not a total reworking.
There are some RoIOs that claim to include this song, but to the best of my knowledge, none of these are actually the original song. Mostly, they're just bad recordings of disconnected guitar phrases, with a lot of noise, wow, flutter, and general garbage all about. And no lyrics whatsoever.
[From a posting by Gerhard:]
Well, since we've been discussing this a lot,
I have found the answer. As I was going to my local bookstore I found a book
called I Ching (the book of changes) in an English translation, and I did look
up Chapter 24 and guess what ??
It's called "Fu" meaning Change/success (like in "Change become success" and is a very nearly transcript of this song. It contains lines like: "A movement is accomplished in 6 stages, and the 7th brings return," only paraphrased.
Also from the same chapter: "The 7 is the number of the Young wise, it forms when darkness [.. == 6 ..] is increased by 1."
The US release of Piper was a bit different than the UK release. Here are the track lists for both of them [from a posting by bear]:
U.S. release of Piper at the Gates of Dawn
U.K. release of Piper at the Gates of Dawn
Note also that the double-album A Nice Pair is almost, but not quite, "Piper." The version of "Astronomy Domine" that appears on the original US Capitol pressings of ANP is not the original studio version, but was instead the live version that appears on Ummagumma. Other than that, it is identical to the original UK Piper.
In addition to making the Madcap Laughs and Barrett albums, doing a set on the Top Gear Show (released on The Peel Session EP), and recording the songs that were used to make up Opel, Syd was also involved in the following musical activities in his post-Floyd days:
When the group sang the song on their 01/14/69 Top Gear performance, (found on many RoIOs) they used a slightly different second verse. While the original goes
If you survive 'til two thousand and five
I hope you're exceedingly
thin
Because if you are stout
you will have to breathe out
> to let
the people around you breathe in
on the Top Gear performance they sang
> so the man next to you can breathe in
Not too big a difference, really, but it tends to surprise people when they first hear it...
Well, there used to be an interesting story that explained both the identity of the protagonist and how Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead lost his right-hand ring finger. However, it turns out that the story isn't exactly true (Garcia is missing the finger, but his brother's name is not Eugene, it's Tiff.)
Here are two more possibilities:
"Careful With That Axe, Eugene" was the flip side of "Point Me at the Sky." Some people believe that PMatS starts off with the line "Hey, Eugene/This is Henry McClean/And I've finished my beautiful flying machine." [which, BTW, is another debate, for another time]. Anyway, Chris Coffman mentioned this:
I really don't want to add more fuel to this thread, but I just played "Point Me at the Sky" (my roomate's first ever exposure to this song). My roomate seems to remember a book from his childhood calledEugene and His Flying Machine,or something like that. He thinks it may have had another kid in it named Henry. I don't want anyone thinking I'm setting this forth as fact, but does anyone know of such a book?
Well, this rings a bell for me, and so I've been trying to track it down, if it indeed exists. The closest I've come so far is a book called "Wizzard McBean [ryhmes with McClean] and his Flying Machine," which is out of print.
Also, R. Brigham Lampert came up with the following:
In the early 1960's there was a small serial killing spree in the area of London near the river Thames. After three or four murders, a suspect was caught. That suspect's name was Eugene Craft. He was tried and found guilty. Hence, "Careful" might be referring to that incident.
On the album ASoS, the title track is simply called "A Saucerful of Secrets." On some pressings of Ummagumma, however, the piece is broken down into four sections. These sections are called:
Something Else 00:00 (ominous opening noises) Syncopated Pandemonium 03:57 (with the drum tape-loop and such) Storm Signals 07:16 (organ-based section) Celestial Voices 10:14 (the closing spacey part with the voices)(...with times courtesy Charles Saeger)
Gilmour said (in Guitar World, Feb. '93):
He's on three or four...tracks on the album, including "Remember A Day" and "Jug Band [Blues]". He's also on a tiny bit of "Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun."
A February 1992 article in Record Collector also suggests he may have been on "Corporal Clegg," which is echoed in Schaffner's book. The "Crazy Diamond" book notes "See Saw" as another possibility.
During some live versions on "Cymbaline," there's a pause of several minutes in the middle of the song, where you can hear all sorts of strange noises. This was in fact the Floyd showing off their sound system -- the famous Azimuth Co-ordinator.
In addition to their normal quadraphonic setup, they would (location permitting) also set up speakers on multiple levels -- on balconies and such. They would then, using a joystick control, send sounds up and down stairs, around the audience, and all about the concert hall. This is what you're hearing.
First off, what is a Pict?
Pict : A member of a possbly non-Celtic people who once occupied Great Britain, carried on continual border wars with the Romans, and about the ninth century became amalgamated with the Scots.
As to what's being said, that's hard to say. But I think it's been accepted that it's somebody (probably Waters) imitating a Scottish accent. The following are two interpretations, the first by Brian Tompsett, and the second by Mike Merriam.
Brian Tompsett:
Aye an' a bit of Mackeral settler rack and ruin
ran it doon by the haim,
'ma place
well I slapped me and I slapped it doon in the side
and I cried,
cried, cried.
The fear a fallen down taken never back the raize
and then Craig Marion,
get out wi' ye Claymore out mi pocket
a' ran doon, doon the middin
stain
picking the fiery horde that was fallen around ma feet.
Never he cried, never shall it ye get me alive
ye rotten hound of the
burnie crew.
Well I snatched fer the blade O my Claymore
cut and thrust
and I fell doon before him round his feet.
Aye!
A roar he cried
frae the bottom of his heart that I would nay fall but as
dead,
dead as 'a can be by his feet; de ya ken?
...and the wind cried back.
Mike Merriam:
Aye an' a bit of Mackeral (Fagger, wreck'n) fear
Ran it doon by the
(haim)
And I (flew).
When I (slapped) me,
And I flopped it doon in the
shade,
And I cried, cried, 'n cried.
The fear o' fallen down 'a taken, ne'er back t' raise.
And then cried Mary,
And I took that weighted claymore right out of
(---),
And ran doon, doon the mountain side,
And back unt' the fiery horde
that was fall'n round y' feet.
Never, I cried,
Never shall ye take me alive,
Y' rotten hound and the
(----- --rew).
Well I (snapped fore) the blade o' my claymore,
Cut and thrust,
And I
fell down before him.
Right at his feet. Aye!
A roar, he cried,
Fr' the bottom of his heart,
That I would nay fall
But as dead,
Dead as I can, by feat
(D' ya ken?)
And the wind cried Mary.
There has been much discussion on Echoes as to whether he is saying "and the wind cried back" or "and the wind cried Mary" in that last line. Personally, I plan on waiting for the MFSL/remastered version before taking a stand.
[from Adam Winstanley:]
Regarding Several Species...the most recent
edition of the Amazing Pudding has a short piece on that. Waters does most of it
but if you have one of those old record players that can do 16rpm you can hear
Gilmour in the middle somewhere ["This is pretty avant-garde isn't it..."] and
if you speed it up to 78rpm you can hear "bring back my guitar." Ron Geesin
isn't on the track although he parodied it on a track called "To Roger Waters,
Where-ever you are."
[With much help from Adam Winstanley and others]: In fact several concert recordings exist of The Man and The Journey and many people probably possess RoIOs of these pieces without realising it. The Man and The Journey were two parts of "More Furious Madness From The Massed Gadgets of Auximenies" and consisted of several well-known Floyd tunes linked into a concept piece as follows:
More Furious Madness From The Massed Gadgets Of Auximenies
The complete piece lasted about 70 minutes.
This information comes from the 1969 Pink Floyd tour programme, parts of which were reproduced in an early Amazing Pudding (No. 13 I think) and also from listening to RoIOs and tapes from this period:
The "Atom Heart Mother Suite" is a side-long instrumental split into six different parts. Most of the divisions are marked by a return of the main theme of the piece, played by everybody (group and orchestra).
Beyond this, there is some controversy over where each section starts and ends. The EMI and MFSL versions of the disc have index markers; they are essentially the same on both discs (give or take a few seconds), and are given below. Many echoesians, however, are somewhat unsatisfied with these divisions, and so have developed an alternative indexing scheme. This is also given below, along with an explanation...
Section Title EMI/MFSL Index echoes ---------------------------------+----------------+---------------- a. "Father's Shout" | 05:20 | 02:59 b. "Breast Milky" | 10:09 | 05:22 c. "Mother Fore" | 15:26 | 10:11 d. "Funky Dung" | 17:44 | 15:25 e. "Mind Your Throats Please" | 19:49 | 17:44 f. "Remergence" | ..end | ..end
The first part, naturally, is Father's Shout, with all the weird sounds, horses, and ends with the motorcycle.
The second part, Breast Milky, starts off as a duet for organ and viola, and gradually includes drums, guitar, and the rest of the orchestra. (2:59)
Then Mother Fore begins, this section is a quiet choral section, with mostly chorus and organ. (5:22)
Funky Dung has a lot of guitar, strong bass, and that weird choir singing things that sound vaguely like "toast....coffee...yeah...." or "saa saa saa saa saaa.....brrrrrrrrrroooooooooonnnn." (10:11)
Mind Your Throats Please is the strange (like it's not all strange?) part that begins with alternating organ notes. After the slower beginning with organ & such, a section that Echoes has been calling the "Overload" section begins, with lots of out-of-sync voices and sounds & such, sounding a bit like the Beatles' "Revolution 9." This is either part of "Mind Your Throats" or "Remergence," depending on whose opinion you ask. (15:25)
"Remergence," then, is the climactic final section, where the main theme gradually "re-emerges." (17:44)
As you can see, the main argument lies in the question of the lengths of "Father's Shout" versus "Remergence." I guess this just goes to show how subjective some of these things can be...
It's named for Alan Stiles, a roadie of Floyd's back then. The band was never very happy with this piece, even though it was played in several concerts. Early British pressings of the album had the sound of the water dripping from the tap continue into the trail-off groove in the record, allowing some turntables to play dripping water forever (or until someone turns it off, whichever came first).
The song is divided into three named sections:
Yes. Relics is avaliable on a 1995 Digital Re-master.
The chanting you hear at the end of "Fearless" is from a football (or soccer, if you're American) game in Liverpool. It's "You'll Never Walk Alone," originally from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical "Carousel." A really popular cover of "You'll Never Walk..." was done by Gerry and The Pacemakers, and it was this version which was "adopted" as the sort of anthem for the Liverpool team, and is even engraved over the gate at their home stadium. The recording on Meddle is sung by Liverpool's loyal fans, and includes:
And you'll never walk/alone/in the dark/alone
Followed by some screaming, whistling, then
LIVERPOOL LIVERPOOL LIVERPOOL!
For "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" fans, part of "You'll Never Walk Alone" is sung by Eddie, the ship's computer, at the end of Chapter 17.
The voice in the middle of "One of These Days" is Nick Mason, and he says "One of these days I'm going to cut you into little pieces."
At about 3:00 or so, there's a faint organ riff that sounds a lot like the Dr. Who theme to a lot of people.
Also, from Scott Eberline (with help from Gerhard): In the Westwood One broadcast of Waters' Quebec performance of Radio KAOS, a member of the audience asked Waters who it was he wanted to cut into little pieces. Apparently this brought back fond memories for Waters, who replied that it was an English disk jockey named Jimmy Young. The song was meant as a personal attack. The band used to play bits and pieces of Jimmy Young's radio show spliced together in a completely nonsensical manner, immediately before playing "One of These Days".
[example--on the RoIO "Lost in the Corridors," during "Alan's Psychedelic Breakfast," you can hear things like "Georgia, lovely greenwood" and "And here's for you, Monkey doo."]
The Floyd, in their pre-Animals days, often performed as-yet unrecorded tracks in concert ("Murderistic Woman," "Raving and Drooling", etc.) These would often undergo significant changes before appearing on albums, and Echoes is such a case.
The opening verse of Echoes originally had a "space" theme, and several RoIOs exist with these lyrics. One is called "Mauerspecte" (which, BTW, has been known to be defective many times, so try before you buy). It comes from Berlin on 5 June, 1971. Another recording of the same show is available on "Lost in the Corridors."
Here are a few attempts at deciphering the lyrics, the first by Jonathan Baumgartner, the next two by bear & Gerhard den Hollander, and finally a bit from P.C. de Bondt:
??? sitting face to face
Onto the ??? now sweep
If ever swinging light
???
A path in union deep in space
Ever might this monster land(?)
And fearlessly, two shadows watch
???
(can't understand this whole line)
And if that volume(?) to be won
the parting song sound is gone
I'll see
you got to travel on
and on and on around the sun
Then comes the "Strangers passing in the street" verse.
(bear) (Gerhard) Planets sitting face to face Planets sitting face to face Sun to the air and land how sweet bound to the air of life, how sweet In every single lighting place in ever single fighting pace The planet here in dreaming space the planet here is deep in space Perfect night this was so grand Echoes might this once were land And give us leave to share as one And give us leave to share as one Our two lights in the land Our two lights in the land For one light can For one light can And in that coming to the one And in that coming to the one The parting sighs sound as one The parting sighs sound as one I see you've got to travel on I see you've got to travel on And on and on around the sun. And on and on around the sun
and P.C. de Bondt's 2 cents worth.
This one is rather interesting--if anyone finds a boot from a different date, or with a clearer recording & can make out more lyrics, please post and let us know!
These shows include some of the best "live" performances of early Floyd material. Here's some information (from "Journey Through Time & Space..." (as posted by Adam Stanley)):
Note: "The John Peel Shows" was only 55 minutes long. "Embryo" and "Blues" were never broadcast in the UK. They were only aired on WNEW-FM, New York City, USA (sometime in 1971?) This WNEW portion was broadcast only once, unfortunately. The 5 October 1971 and 16 September 1971 shows are re-broadcast nearly every year in the USA on the "King Biscuit Flour Hour." However, it is a combination version of the two shows and is incomplete.
This is some additional information that I have figured out on my own. The version of Embryo that most people have is from the 1970 show. It is easily identified by the Echoes-like section in the middle. The version of Embryo from 1971 is much different. It is available on the Wavelengths RoIO. Almost all of the CD RoIOs of these shows are combination, except for the Swinging Pigs discs, and one called Early Tour Years, which is a double disc with each show on its own disc. And as a side note: When the BBC recorded the Dark Side show at Wembley in 1974 for a broadcast, they also recorded Echoes, but it has never been aired. So as a result, we are missing a great version of Echoes, with a sax solo!
Well, maybe they are, and maybe they aren't. This has been discussed to death (and then some) on the list, and what you see on the server represents about the best compromise that we have been able to achieve.
Okay. We'll get into one particular about this song, and hopefully that'll help keep the noise level down. Does the line say "Everything is green and submarine" or "Everything is green and summery?"
Proposition: It says "submarine."
Supporting evidence: [thank you, Dean Herbert]
And, of course, in the Shine On lyrics, it's "submarine", and one would think that DG knows what he was singing.
[Thanks to Geoff Rimmer (grimmer@nyx.cs.du.edu) for this one.] I don't remember seeing this in the FAQ or on the mailing list, so for those who haven't rushed out and bought the video of "The Valley Obscured By Clouds" (Warner Home Video. Cost me $69.95 + POSTAGE!), here are the lyrics of Free Four in the film version:
(fades in ...)
Are the deeds of a man in his prime
You shuffle in the
gloom of a sick room
And talk to yourself as you die
And life is a short warm moment
And death is a long cold rest*
You get
your chance to try
In the twinkling of an eye
In eighty years with
luck
Or even less
So take my advice
And cut yourself a slice
And try not to make it too
big
'Cos things are hard to grow
And I can tell you
'Cos I know
It's better not to make yourself sick.
This is roughly the same tune as "So all aboard for the American
tour... you may find it hard to get off"
(jumps horribly to the following...)
He was buried like a
mole in a foxhole
And everyone's still on the run
And who is the master of
foxhounds
And who says the hunt has begun?*
And who calls the tune in the
courtroom*
And who beats the funeral drum?*
The memories of a man in his old age
Are the deeds of a man in his
prime
You shuffle in the gloom of a sick room
... (fades
out)
* are sung differently from the OBC album.
[Note that the film has dialogue over the top of the music, and this version isn't available w/out the dialogue, at least not that we know of.]
Yup. Not sure why that was done. Sometimes the order of songs is changed for cassettes, in order to make it all fit on a shorter amount of tape (without wasting extra tape at the end of one side because of a longer opposite side). That's probably what's happened here.
NOTE: A similar discrepency has been noted for the tape of Ummagumma, which apparently excluded about half the album in some releases (for a one-tape release).
Scroll to see the answers.
The World's Hardest Pink Floyd Quiz
part 1
1. Name all six musicians who have ever been official members of the band.
2. From where did the name Pink Floyd derive?
3. What famous album was being recorded down the hall during the Piper at the Gates of Dawn sessions?
4. What company produced most of the band's album covers?
5. What was the title of Roger Waters' first solo album?
6. Why were the Television Personalities fired as the opening act of David Gilmour's solo tour?
7. Who is the only member to appear on every album?
8. How did the band ire the French government when they played outside Versailles?
9. How did the Animals album cover almost cause an international panic?
10. What movie shows actual footage of the Dark Side of the Moon recording sessions?
11. Where did Eric Fletcher Waters die?
12. What art form does Syd Barrett still practice?
13. What has always been the most popular guitar among the Floyd?
14. What never released track was to be the band's third single?
15. How many cover versions has the band ever recorded?
Answers to Part 1
1. Syd Barrett, Bob Close, David Gilmour, Nick Mason, Roger Waters, Richard Wright
2. From the blues men Pink Anderson and Floyd Council
3. The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
4. Hipgnosis
5. Music from the Body
6. for giving out Syd's address to the audience
7. Nick Mason
8. by flying a giant pig over the palace.
9. The flying pig broke loose and headed toward communist air space.
10. Pink Floyd: Live at Pompeii
11. Anzio
12. painting
13. Fender Stratocaster (By the way, David Gilmour owns the one with serial number 001.)
14. "Scream Thy Last Scream, Old Woman with a Casket"
15. None!
back to the top
The World's Hardest Pink Floyd Quiz
Part 2
1. Which member of the Floyd worked as a male model?
2. How many guitar lessons did Roger Waters take at London's Spanish Guitar Centre?
3. What other instrument does Richard Wright play (besides any form of keyboards)?
4. What place did Nick Mason win in the Carrera Panamericana road race?
5. Which Floyd's given name is Roger?
6. What was the only single recorded by Jokers Wild?
7. What now famous band covered Syd's "Two of a Kind" on Beyond the Wildwood?
8. What Floyd member has made the most guest appearances on other artists' albums?
9. Who co-wrote "Love on the Air" and "All Lovers Are Deranged" for David Gilmour's About Face album?
10. What was the name of Syd's only post-Floyd band?
11. Which Floyd member has never released a solo album?
12. Why was the album cover for A Nice Pair changed?
13. Who did the Damned want to produce Music for Pleasure?
14. Who actually did produce it?
15. What was significant about the June 5, 1975 Pink Floyd recording session?
Answers to Part II
1. David Gilmour
2. 2
3. Cello
4. 5th
5. Roger Keith "Syd' Barrett--Waters' given name is "George"
6. a cover version of Sam and Dave's "You Don't Know What I Know"
7. The Soup Dragons
8. David Gilmour, by a large margin
9. Pete Townsend of the Who
10. Stars
11. Bob Close, who also never appeared on any Floyd album
12. It showed a picture of a dentist's office, and dentists were not allowed to advertise in England
13. Syd Barrett
14. Nick Mason
15. Syd Barrett unexpectedly showed up at Abbey Road
back to the top
The World's Hardest Pink Floyd Quiz Part III
1. Who is the only Yardbirds guitarist to never play on a Roger Waters solo album?
2. What was the last Pink Floyd album released on vinyl?
3. Why did Roger Waters quit his weekend apprenticeship as a naval cadet?
4. Who won the shortest skirt contest at the first Roundhouse concert?
5. What was significant about the sugar cubes handed out at the door that night?
6. To what recreational aid did Janis Joplin introduce Roger Waters and Nick Mason back stage at the Winterland?
7. What was Pink Floyd's only number one single to date?
8. Whose solo album is Nick Mason's Fictitious Sports really?
9. What was the last song Pink Floyd recorded specifically to be a single?
10. Who directed the film More?
11. Name the six non-members who have co-written songs for Pink Floyd.
12. What band member's name is misspelled in the credits to A Saucerful of Secrets?
13. What was the only solo album by a Floyd member to feature the entire band as backing musicians on a song?
14. What was the working title of Atom Heart Mother?
15. What was Pink Floyd's only commercial endorsement?
Answers to Part III
1. Jimmy Page (Clapton did Pros and Cons of Hitch-Hiking and Beck did Amused to Death)
2. The Division Bell followed by PULSE (in a 4 elpee-box with acontains One of these Days (not on the CeeDee)(thanks Obi Wan/ Frank))
3. the kids serving under him mutinied and beat him up
4. Marianne Faithfull
5. They were not spiked
6. Southern Comfort
7. "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2" (in the US and UK both)
8. Carla Bley
9. "Point Me at the Sky"
10. Barbet Schroeder
11. Ron Geesin, Bob Ezrin, Anthony Moore, Jon Carin, Phil Manzaera, Pat Leonard, plus (on The Division Bell) Polly Samson, and Nick Laird-Clowes (from The Dream Academy)
12. David Gilmour (misspelled "Gilmore")
13. Music from the Body
14. The Amazing Pudding
15. a 1972 ad for a French soft drink named "Gini" (and since I published the original question, they also did an endorsement for a car by Volkswagon.
back to the top
The World's Hardest Pink Floyd Quiz Part IV
1. For whom did Roger Daltry of the Who once mistake Rick Wright?
2. What unfortunate side effect accrued during the 1971 "Garden Party" concert at London's Crystal Palace?
3. What was Nick Mason's only lead vocal in the etire Floyd canon?
4. What was Rick Wright's?
On wich songs sings Rick lead?
5. How did the Floyd schedule the cities on their '74 British tour?
6. What did the members of the band think of Gini Bitter Lemon (the only product they ever endorced)?
7. What instrument did Roger Waters originally play with the Pink Floyd?
8. Why did David Gilmour say he chose the cover art for A Collection of Great Dance Songs?
9. Who were the Architectural Abdabs?
10. Who released an album titled Dark Side of the Moon before the Floyd masterpiece was recorded?
11. Who received the only Grammy for Dark Side?
12. What Pink Floyd albums were released in quadrophonic mixes?
13. When did Dark Side finally drop off the charts?
14. Who was the guitarist for The Act?
15. Where was the name The Bleeding Hearts Band first used?
Answers to Part IV
1. Eric Clapton
2. The music volume killed all the fish in a small lake between the stage and audience.
3. "One of These Days'
4. "Wearing the Inside Out"
'Matilda Mother',
"Paint Box',
'Remeber A Day',
'It Would Be So Nice',
'Astonomy Domine' (Piper version),
'Summer of 68',
'See Saw',
'Echoes',
'Time' DSOTM-version and of course 'Wearing the inside out'
5. around the local football (soccer) schedules
6. They never even tried the stuff.
7. rhythm guitar
8. He thought it would be cheap.
9. an early name for the Pink Floyd
10. Medicine Head
11. Alan Parsons (later of the Allan Parsons Project) received a nomination for Best Engineering (Non-Classical) in 1973 for DSOTM. The winner of the Grammy was Robert Margouleff and Malcom Cecil for engineering "Innervisions" by Stevie Wonder.
12. Atom Heart Mother, Dark Side of the Moon, and Wish You Were Here
13. July 23, 1988 (after 736 weeks)
14. David Gilmour's brother Mark
15. When the Wind Blows
back to the top
The World's Hardest Pink Floyd Quiz Part V
1. How many cardboard bricks were used to build the Wall?
2. Why was the filming of the Wall's pool of blood scene so difficult?
3. What Pink Floyd song did Bob Geldof use in his Boomtown Rats live show?
4. Who is Charlie?
5. What is the building on the cover of The Division Bell?
6. Who is widely believed to be responsible for the Trance Remix series?
7. Who played the guitar solos on the Orchestral Maneuvers tribute album?
8. Where was the only (to date) live performance of "Marooned"?
9. How many Grammies has Pink Floyd won?
10. Who were the members of the surrogate band?
11. What song from More appears in the movie, but was not on the soundtrack album?
12. How many different covers has Relics had (legitimate copies only)?
13. What David Bowie song was an attempt to imitate Syd Barrett?
14. For what movie did Nick Mason and Rick Fenn write the soundtrack?
15. From what Allen Ginsberg poem did the title Tonite Let's All Make Love in London derive?
Answers to Part V
1. 340
2. In addition to having hemophobia, Bob Geldof couldn't swim
3. "Arnold Layne"
4. Polly Sampson's son (now Gilmour's step-son)
5. Ely Cathedral
6. Guy Pratt of The Orb (also the bass player on last year's Floyd tour)
7. Steve Hackett
8. Oslo, Norway (according to rumoured sources)
9. 1: Best Rock Instrumental: "Marooned" (Allan Parsons one a techie award for Dark Side of the Moon.)
10. Andy Bown (bass), Snowy White (guitar), Willie Wilson (drums), Peter Wood (keyboards)
11. "Seabirds
12. 4: the Mason drawing with clear lettering, the same with pink lettering, the masks, coins on a map
13. "Space Oddity"
14. White of the Eye
15. "Who Be Kind To"
back to the top
The World's Hardest Pink Floyd Quiz Part VI
1. Who played violin on "Wish You Were Here"? Stephan Grappely
2. What is the title of the movie Pink is watching in The Wall movie?
3. Who played the groupie in the Berlin concert? Jerry Hall
4. What Rocky Horror Picture Show star played one of the groupie's friends in the movie?
5. Who said Pink Floyd were a con on Juke Box Jury in 1967?
6. What happened to the gig money in Copenhagen in 1967?
7. What Sunday paper called the Pink Floyd "social deviants"?
8. Who ate David Gilmour's avocado in the Lancaster Grill?
9. Where was the Pink Floyd Vs. North London Marxist's football match played?
10. What was the score?
11. Why was there a cow on the cover of Atom Heart Mother?
12. Which band member actually showed up at the planetarium for the Dark Side reception?
13. Which Italian film director tore the Floyd's film score to pieces?
14. In the '75 comic book/program, what did David Gilmour list as his favorite movie?
15. What did Roger Waters list as his political leanings?
From;
Three Shades of Pink
Newsletter of the Pink Floyd SIG
Albums: Fanzines:
PATGOD: Piper At The Gates Of Dawn TAP : The Amazing Pudding
ASOS : A Saucerful Of Secrets BD : Brain Damage
AHM : Atom Heart Mother
OBC : Obscured By Clouds
ANP : A Nice Pair
DSOTM : Dark Side Of The Moon
WYWH : Wish You Were Here
TFC : The Final Cut
TPCOHH: The Pros And Cons Of HitchHiking
+-oHH : The Pros And Cons Of HitchHiking
AMLOR : A Momentary Lapse Of Reason (sometimes MLOR)
DSOT : Delicate Sound of Thunder
ATD : Amused to Death
TDB : The Division Bell
Songs:
ABitW : Another Brick in the Wall TIB : Take It Back
OoTD : One of These Days CBtL : Coming Back to Life
TGGITS: The Great Gig in the Sky LFW : Lost for Words
WDYWFM: What Do You Want From Me
SOYCD : Shine On you Crazy Diamond (Note: SOYCD --> SoYcD --> SYD
General Stuff:
BTW : by the way
IMHO : In my humble opinion (IMNSHO = "...not so humble opinion")