Songs from "Ummagumma" era, "Moonhead", rare Italian single "In Concerto", "One Of These Days" demos, promo single, Roger The Hat interview and a whole CD4 dedicated to "Dark Side Of The Moon. the unreleased single, rare promo versions. the ultra rare stuff of Nick Mason and Richard Wright.
#Pink floyd delicate sound of thunder full#
Pink Floyd - A Tree Full Of Secrets (STU/FLAC) 17CDs.FILE "Pink Floyd - 1979 - The Wall - 103 - Another Brick in the Wall (Part I).flac" FLAC REM FILE-DECODED-SIZE 03:11:56 TRACK 03 AUDIO TITLE "Another Brick in the Wall (Part I)" PERFORMER "Pink Floyd" SONGWRITER “Roger Waters” ISRC GBN9Y1100097 INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "Pink Floyd - 1979 - The Wall - 104 - The Happiest Days of Our Lives.flac.God knows why.”Īctually, there is no music video on “Comfortably Numb” but an excerpt from “Pink Floyd – The Wall” film is often counted as an official music video for this song.
A lot of people think those lines are about masturbation. It wasn’t like the hands looked like balloons, but they looked way too big, frightening. “I remember having the flu or something, an infection with a temperature of 105 and being delirious. While many people thought the song was about drugs, Waters insists it is not. So, while the music is widely considered to be Gilmour’s work, it is likely that Waters wrote the chords for that line, as well as changed the verses key from E minor to B minor. It was that we had made a rhythm track and I loved it and he thought it wasn’t precise enough rhythmically so re-cut the drum track and said ‘that’s better‘ so I went ‘no it’s not, I hate that‘.” He went on to add: “It’s probably one story where his memory and my memory are almost exactly the same. Speaking with Absolute Radio back in 2011, Waters vividly recounted the fight that would provide us with a masterpiece of the highest calibre: “Dave and I, when we were in the South of France where we did most of the recording for The Wall, we had quite a serious disagreement about the recording of ‘Comfortably Numb’.” However, the track really came to life once Waters had sprinkled his lyrics onto the instrumental track which, incidentally, all came from a huge argument he had with Gilmour.
The song was initially created during the recording sessions for Gilmour’s self-titled debut solo album in 1978, a project that showed some insight into the relationship between the bandmates at the time, suggesting that he required another creative output for his music because he wasn’t feeling fulfilled from Floyd. Roger Waters and David Gilmour argument that created Pink Floyd’s ‘Comfortably Numb’ Released in September 1987, A Momentary Lapse Of Reason was quickly embraced by fans worldwide, who flocked to attend the live tour dates, which started within days of the album’s release. The tour played to more than 4.25 million fans over more than two years, and, as a celebration of the enduring talent and global appeal of David, Nick and Richard (supported by eight other stellar musicians on stage), was unsurpassed at the time. From the then-new A Momentary Lapse of Reason there’s Signs of Life, Learning to Fly, and On The Turning Away. The setlist spans the band’s old and new material, including four songs from The Dark Side Of The Moon (Time, On the Run, The Great Gig In The Sky and Us And Them), the track of Wish You Were Here, Comfortably Numb and Run Like Hell. The songs and footage were captured during Floyd’s A Momentary Lapse of Reason tour, and the setlist included songs from The Dark Side Of The Moon (including “Time” and “Us And Them”), the title track of Wish You Were Here, The Wall’s “Comfortably Numb” and “Run Like Hell.”ĭelicate Sound of Thunder was the first entirely live album by the band and was recorded over five nights at the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island, New York, in August 1988 and mixed at Abbey Road Studios in September 1988. The three-LP 180-gram vinyl set includes nine songs that weren’t included on the 1988 release of the album, while the two-CD release includes eight tracks more than its original release.