"What is this Album!?" - 'The Dark Side Of The Moon' Reaction | Part 2

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 5K

  • @jsusky
    @jsusky Před měsícem +1458

    "Did this win any Awards?"
    It sold so well, it was in ithe BillBoard Top 200 for *ALMOST* TWO DECADES

    • @jackiegiannino6835
      @jackiegiannino6835 Před měsícem +186

      I laughed out loud when he said that…. No disrespect to you, but yeah … welcome to the machine!!✌🏻❤️

    • @jackiegiannino6835
      @jackiegiannino6835 Před měsícem +29

      I laughed out loud when he said that…. No disrespect to you, but yeah … welcome to the machine!!✌🏻❤️

    • @RoadDoug
      @RoadDoug Před měsícem +23

      Fabulous reaction.

    • @patrickgrant4804
      @patrickgrant4804 Před měsícem +78

      And still sells ~8k copies a week...

    • @michaelhoward900
      @michaelhoward900 Před měsícem +47

      This guy is so ignorant!

  • @Hrithik23
    @Hrithik23 Před měsícem +786

    Now listen to the whole album again, and pay attention to the lyrics!!

    • @willrichardson519
      @willrichardson519 Před měsícem +33

      There's so much to take in, a lifetime of listening scarce scratches the surface

    • @Hoeech
      @Hoeech Před měsícem +33

      I've been listening to it for 50 years and I still find something new every time

    • @petergarayt9634
      @petergarayt9634 Před měsícem +37

      THANK YOU. I am so disappointed in all the reviewers that completely ignore the lyrics of the song they're doing.

    • @gilnpj
      @gilnpj Před 28 dny +3

      someone said, ty

    • @dalesmith4669
      @dalesmith4669 Před 27 dny +1

      Way!!!!!

  • @mgaugy
    @mgaugy Před měsícem +752

    Many call this the best album in history. But few realise that this album is also a masterclass in mixing and editing. Alan Parsons did amazing work.

    • @toddcoolbaugh9978
      @toddcoolbaugh9978 Před měsícem +45

      If you want to continue a master class in mixing, you should check out some Alan Parsons Project. I Robot and Tales of Mystery and Imagination are killer.

    • @mgaugy
      @mgaugy Před měsícem +9

      @@toddcoolbaugh9978 Alan Parsons's solo work is great unto itself. And he's still touring from what I understand.

    • @d4mdcykey
      @d4mdcykey Před měsícem +6

      Absolutely, the mix on this album surpasses next level and goes into the stratosphere, all these decades later after thousands of listens and PF on quality headphones is even more surreal now.

    • @andyskiles9542
      @andyskiles9542 Před měsícem +8

      Few realize this?? Wrong. A LOT of people realize this.

    • @dstarling61
      @dstarling61 Před měsícem +15

      Just saw an interview with AP, and a very young AP was at The Beatles rooftop gig! He was working at Abbey Road Studios at the time. He was an engineer on Abbey Road and Let It Be. He learned from the best.

  • @thatssoironic
    @thatssoironic Před 23 dny +241

    Dude, I’ve just spent a long time hanging out with you listening to one of the greatest albums ever made, and I have some feedback. First of all, I really like you. You seem like a super nice dude and someone that I would definitely be friends with. That said, at the very end when you said that you hadn’t been listening to the lyrics, it broke my heart. I need you to re-listen to the entire album and pay attention to everything! The lyrics are essential! This is an album that will grow with you throughout your life. And you will realize that the album is literally about life. It’s also about death. The whole thing, our whole human experience is contained within this album. You need to listen to it again and pay very close attention to the lyrics because they are as majestic as every other part of the album. I think everyone should listen to this album once a year throughout their entire life to see how it changes for them over the years. Thanks for the listen dude!

    • @AntonArlund
      @AntonArlund Před 22 dny +9

      Don't you feel like we could use some of this these days? We (me Gen X) Had stuff like this to sit in our bedrooms and read lyrics with headphones on for hours before bed and then think about as we went to sleep. :)

    • @davesunhammer4218
      @davesunhammer4218 Před 20 dny +13

      Agree to a point. Just glossing over Pink Floyd lyrics is like putting bubble wrap over a famous painting to admire it.

    • @user-yl2ff8is2b
      @user-yl2ff8is2b Před 18 dny +4

      Absolutely correct. Well said

    • @dwalker6260
      @dwalker6260 Před 18 dny +10

      Lyrics are soooo important in Pink Floyd's music.

    • @MJP3055
      @MJP3055 Před 17 dny +5

      And listen to the album from beginning to end straight through. These Gen Zs are so unaware. It's all about eyeballs and likes.

  • @jodigreenwood5272
    @jodigreenwood5272 Před měsícem +1610

    This is one of the reason we oldies think a lot of today's music is crap. We grew up with Floyd and Queen and Led Zepplin. Killer guitar riffs and drum solos. Au natural.

    • @marklunn41
      @marklunn41 Před měsícem +74

      I may be old, but I saw the best bands :)

    • @DoisZvcar
      @DoisZvcar Před měsícem +47

      You might want to check out King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard

    • @kingbeauregard
      @kingbeauregard Před měsícem +41

      Not just the musical performances, but the lyrics. To be sure there are musicians today who write about a lot of interesting things - and seriously, much respect to Taylor Swift for speaking to topics to matter to people - but just all the things Pink and the boys are singing about on this album, it's staggering.
      I have to say, the 80s broke my heart, musically. We went from a decade where songs from "Dark Side of the Moon" were top 40 fare, to "Walk like an Egyptian". Just meaningless noise, and it sold.

    • @DazzleMonroe
      @DazzleMonroe Před měsícem +31

      I grew up with Floyd, Slade, Bolan, The Clash and The Damned, but I still think a lot of todays music is great, if you only look, listen and give it a chance.

    • @Jeremy-hx7zj
      @Jeremy-hx7zj Před měsícem +31

      If only you guys would stop beating us over the head with it, being endlessly smug about how superior your eras music was.
      People still make great music, it just doesn't hit you the same because you're not young anymore.

  • @angelagraves865
    @angelagraves865 Před měsícem +879

    Pink Floyd is its own genre.

    • @toddbintz9868
      @toddbintz9868 Před měsícem +31

      Damn straight
      There’s nobody like them. Greatest band of all time

    • @docdurdin
      @docdurdin Před měsícem +28

      Not a genre, an experience. Eh?

    • @gbsailing9436
      @gbsailing9436 Před měsícem +10

      I've ALWAYS said that since I started listening to them 50 years ago.!!!

    • @tfish1955
      @tfish1955 Před měsícem +7

      I enjoyed watching you slowly evolve into a true Pink Floyd fan.

    • @patrick3926
      @patrick3926 Před měsícem +2

      8:30 yes!!🎉

  • @grelch
    @grelch Před měsícem +348

    "How do you do this on tape?"
    Lots of mic stands, a tape player, razor blades, a lot of scotch tape, a stopwatch, an engineer or two, 3 or 4 sets of hands and a lot of patience.

    • @stevengifford7457
      @stevengifford7457 Před měsícem +5

      CHEERS

    • @chrissh9001
      @chrissh9001 Před měsícem +40

      Having Alan Parson as your engineer sure didn't hurt either! (Abbey Road, Let it Be, Year of the Cat, his own Project work, etc.) The man with the golden ear.

    • @troubleondemand7703
      @troubleondemand7703 Před měsícem +7

      Bingo. Although you don't really need more hands or the stop watch. Razor, tape and grease pencil is all you need. Stools with empty reels on them to guide the tape for the long loops works great.
      It's so easy and fast to do in a DAW nowdays (not to mention easily reversed), but I kinda miss making a good tape edit.

    • @CrashTestingAudio
      @CrashTestingAudio Před měsícem +11

      Don’t forget the acid and the whiskey.

    • @Docksidestudio1
      @Docksidestudio1 Před měsícem +6


      And a big budget….. something we don’t have these days

  • @markoer
    @markoer Před 9 dny +45

    “This song is long… like 7 minutes long” - Us and Them
    “Hold my beer” - Echoes

  • @robscott9414
    @robscott9414 Před měsícem +517

    "I think it's the first time I'm really listening to the lyrics on this album."
    Screeeeeeeeetch!!! Stop. Go back. Listen. From the beginning.

    • @patrickgrant4804
      @patrickgrant4804 Před měsícem +61

      That was apparent from the beginning. He was hearing, but not listening...

    • @willasacco9898
      @willasacco9898 Před měsícem +33

      I told him to go back and listen to it on his own and concentrate on the lyrics. He is a sound engineer so we could expect tha. It was a very informative analysis of the whole sound universe of PF and this album.

    • @splitimage137.
      @splitimage137. Před měsícem +5

      Hear hear!

    • @scottmarleneking6298
      @scottmarleneking6298 Před měsícem +19

      Agreed. The lyrics of "Time" and "Us and Them" are deep. Roger Waters was the primary lyricist, and he had a real gift for it.

    • @neiltheblaze
      @neiltheblaze Před měsícem +29

      He was listening like a music producer. He was listening to how the drums were recorded. He wasn't hearing the lyrics yet. Sometimes albums unfold gradually. First impressions are first impressions.

  • @terrybemis5695
    @terrybemis5695 Před měsícem +203

    It's called a concept album/progressive rock. It's one of the best album of all times

    • @rainerzufall42
      @rainerzufall42 Před měsícem +2

      But he was right, that they've started with psychedelic rock (esp. with Syd Barrett)

    • @todradmaker4297
      @todradmaker4297 Před 17 dny

      @@rainerzufall42 Sometimes referred to as Acid Rock as well.

  • @Ou81gi812
    @Ou81gi812 Před měsícem +325

    🎉You’re absolutely right…this isn’t a “genre”…it’s an experience‼️ Welcome to 1973.

    • @mary.e645
      @mary.e645 Před měsícem +4

      Nostalgic music memories. The year I left my 6th form to attend Polytechnic, this music was my life.

    • @lynby6231
      @lynby6231 Před měsícem +5

      He doesn’t know what the “conversations” are because he talks all over them.

    • @tommc3622
      @tommc3622 Před měsícem +3

      I disagree.
      It's a genre of one.
      Love them or hate them, NOBODY does music like Pink Floyd.

    • @verrigo
      @verrigo Před měsícem +9

      It's fucking wild that Pink Floyd, between 1973 and 1979 (SIX years) produced Dark Side, Wish You Were Here, Animals, and The Wall. Just one of those albums would make any band stand out and close to legend status, but 4 of them? In succession? Bro, GTFO :D

    • @harounel-poussah6936
      @harounel-poussah6936 Před měsícem

      @@verrigo And these albums are inferior to what PF did BEFORE DSOTM...

  • @philnaccarato
    @philnaccarato Před 25 dny +75

    Incredible to listen to this with someone who knows NOTHING ABOUT IT. Every little molecule of this musical journey is fully baked into my DNA now and this is wild to hear someone talk about it from a completely different generation. I'm 65 and I'm SO LUCKY to have grown up listening to all the music of MY time and learning guitar at the same time. Such an interesting perspective.

    • @MarcGuttman
      @MarcGuttman Před 25 dny +3

      Up until I was around 8, I listened to classical almost exclusively. Then came The Beatles, The Who and bit of Led Zepplin until early teens when I was introduced to Pink Floyd which changed me forever. It challenged me to listen to all music in an entirely new way. I’m 54 and a musician and the way I play music and sing was impacted by my love of classical music, and my love of bands like Pink Floyd.

    • @pdxgrl1
      @pdxgrl1 Před 24 dny +1

      I completely agree. I'm 56 and this album has always been part of the soundtrack of my life.

    • @amycunningham1830
      @amycunningham1830 Před 24 dny +3

      I’m 64, we listened to this with headphones, while high, tripping if possible, in my teens. It was revolutionary, inspiring, and I too am interested in hearing this young man being blown away by the album from his perspective

    • @paulmartin6296
      @paulmartin6296 Před 23 dny +2

      I'm 64 and have been listening to Pink Floyd since 1972. Love it.

    • @user-iz7we7en9j
      @user-iz7we7en9j Před 22 dny

      Agreed. We grew up listening to this at a friend's house, being cool and grooving to the tunes, not really realizing that we were living in a golden age of music. What a great time to grow up (mostly). Add to this a perspective 50 years removed from a young guy. Really interesting.

  • @jamied1579
    @jamied1579 Před měsícem +207

    If you're at all interested, the movie Pink Floyd Live At Pompeii has many sequences showing the guys in the studio recording Dark Side of the Moon, showing the equipment, the synths and sound machines they used and how they experimented with it all to come up with the final product.

    • @ethnoberg
      @ethnoberg Před měsícem +7

      They recently did a making of DSOM and I think they used some of the same footage as seen in Live at Pompeii

    • @jamied1579
      @jamied1579 Před měsícem +2

      @@ethnoberg Will have to check that out. Thanks :)

    • @JC_923
      @JC_923 Před měsícem +2

      And the snippets of conversations that were used in this album!

    • @SteveStevens-sp7ly
      @SteveStevens-sp7ly Před 29 dny +3

      live at pimpeii is another classic

    • @TheRaker1000
      @TheRaker1000 Před 27 dny +3

      I posted the same info about Live at Pompeii under the part 1 video. Keep in mind there are several different things released under the name "Live at Pompeii", one is only the amphitheater concert, another is a more modern David Gilmore only thing, another is the thing we are referring to here, which jumps back and forth between the concert and the studio (and a diner where they get breakfast). :)

  • @DiZastur
    @DiZastur Před 26 dny +145

    Clare Torry is the female vocalist and how did you get to your present age in the music industry without hearing about Pink Floyd. Mindblowing.

    • @DavidLindes
      @DavidLindes Před 22 dny +2

      Something like 10,000 people per day hear this album (or anything else "we all know") for the first time. (See xkcd 1053.) And he'd heard _about_ it, he just hadn't actually heard it.

    • @Doc_Possum
      @Doc_Possum Před 21 dnem +2

      @@DavidLindes How many of those 10,000 are actually in the music industry, I wonder?

    • @DavidLindes
      @DavidLindes Před 21 dnem

      @@Doc_Possum I don't know, but some non-zero number, clearly.

    • @eyetalic
      @eyetalic Před 20 dny +3

      It happens. He doesn’t realize DAWs were invented to make music with this many tracks and special effects easier.

    • @DavidLindes
      @DavidLindes Před 20 dny

      @@eyetalic uhh, yes he does, he talks about that. :P

  • @joeldf6859
    @joeldf6859 Před měsícem +253

    Recording engineering and mixing all done by Alan Parsons. He also did a quad mix at the time. The whole album was recorded at Abbey Road Studios. Parsons got his start as an assistant engineer on The Beatles "Abbey Road" album in '69. He got into producing on his own after this album even though he was asked to engineer the next Pink Floyd album "Wish You Were Here" (which I think should be the next one you experience). Parsons started recording and releasing his own music as The Alan Parsons Project and released 10 albums from 1976 to 1987.
    They did all this on 16-track machines. But there was a lot of pre-mix bouncing going on to clear some tracks out for new effects.
    No one has actually listed the members of this band yet...
    David Gilmour - Guitars, vocals, Synthi AKS.
    Roger Waters - Bass, vocals, VCS 3 (synth), tape loops (he did the tape loop effects at the start of "Money")
    Nick Mason - Drums, percussion, tape loops.
    Richard Wright - Organs (Hammond and Farfisa), piano, electric piano (Wurlitzer and Rhodes), EMS, VCS 3, Synthi AKS (all three different kinds of synths), vocals.
    While the band had been together since 1965, their first album was in '67 and very much psychedelic. Gilmour was not yet a member, instead Syd Barrett was on guitar and vocals and the primary song writer. Barrett had drug issues that caused him to spiral into a mental breakdown. Gilmour was brought in on their second album, but Barrett had to be kicked out by '68. Waters became the primary lyricist from that point on. The other members would contribute mostly to the music. The affect on the band that Barrett had influenced some of this album, mostly the ending. But the next one, "Wish You Were Here" (1975), is even more influenced by Barrett who was still alive at the time, but had totally cut himself off from the world. The '77 album, "Animals" is not at all about Barrett, but his influence is present on the album "The Wall" from 1979.
    Oh, and if you want to change your mind about slide guitars, or really, peddle steel guitars, listen to "One of These Days" from Pink Floyd's '71 album (the one before "DSotM"), "Meddle"

    • @Galadriel637
      @Galadriel637 Před měsícem +10

      👍👍👍 you said everything 👏👏👏

    • @majones501
      @majones501 Před měsícem +9

      Meddle is my favorite album!

    • @martymcnab2118
      @martymcnab2118 Před měsícem +8

      Hey Joel, nice input and info for Isaac. Definitely got into the Alan Parsons Projects after DSOTM. Great music. Just a side note, which please don't take the wrong way, as I always thought the same, but the album before DSOTM was Obscured By Clouds. Meddle was before that. I always got them mixed up as I reckon Meddle is more like DSOTM Than OBC, particularly the melodies in Echoes. Thanks again.

    • @WaterWalker16
      @WaterWalker16 Před měsícem +5

      Glad you took the time to educate this guy. Thanks.

    • @crazyfingers19
      @crazyfingers19 Před měsícem +1

      Nice. Thanks. Nice refresher.

  • @mikebentley6200
    @mikebentley6200 Před 10 dny +12

    Just read through the comments here, and suddenly feel that I'm not alone. There are so many people that have already voiced my previous comments. I want to reach out and shake the hand of so many 'musical friends' that obviously understand this album and know the true importance of it, Thank you.

  • @IanHillan
    @IanHillan Před měsícem +174

    51 years later and still sounds utterly original and ahead of its time. I cracked up when you finally started listening to the lyrics during Brain Damage. You should read the lyrics. The Pulse performance of Comfortably Numb is iconic but I'm also thinking you would seriously love the Wish You Were Here album. Might as well follow that up with Animals while you're diving down the rabbit hole, too. Thanks for a great reaction!

    • @MrGlastar1
      @MrGlastar1 Před měsícem

      SLOW DOWN COWBOY. this kid needs to sneak out back...and SMOKE A JOINT!!! UPTIGHT A BIT???? Arrogant? Ignorant. It's curable!

    • @munroborisenko7278
      @munroborisenko7278 Před měsícem +2

      I love Pink Floyd but could never get Animals; maybe something is wrong with me. I could not stand any of those songs.

    • @FineFlourishes
      @FineFlourishes Před měsícem +2

      And for some fun insight into the making of a few of the songs and a great snapshot of Pink Floyd performing in 1972 I suggest the video, "Pink Floyd - Live at Pompeii".

    • @rjlchristie
      @rjlchristie Před měsícem +3

      @@munroborisenko7278 I agree. I followed the Floyd from Syd's time. I was a big fan and I owned every LP they released until 1977. However Animals was the last album of theirs that I ever bought. It was clear with that album that the band were no longer working together. The disintegration was beginning to show in Wish you were Here in that, despite its compositional excellence, it was infected by a element of sterility in its recording and performance. Nothing they released post 1975 represented the Floyd to my ear. Barrett's Floyd and the following four: Meddle, Obscured by Clouds, Dark Side and Wish You Were Here best represent their most creative and cohesive material.

    • @davidscargil9145
      @davidscargil9145 Před měsícem +1

      Ian Hillan I had to fight my impulsive reaction, This fella was unaware of Dark Side,Wish You Were here,Animals and The Wall.I am a Punk,but a lover of music first. I love The Beatles. Animals is one of my faves,and this Dude is not aware of it`s existence. I play as well as listen,so i could concur with a lot of his observations,regarding structure and recording. This Man owes it to Himself,to gain a better knowledge of Music. What next,Mozart,i haven`t heard Him but i will offer a first reaction critique.

  • @leighhunt6331
    @leighhunt6331 Před měsícem +236

    The genre is Pink Floyd.

    • @johnnydev9318
      @johnnydev9318 Před měsícem +1

      Psychedelic Rock might be the closest it could be described in the usual terms

    • @KWC33
      @KWC33 Před měsícem +1

      Well said and I wish more young people knew what that meant

    • @gypsysteve3576
      @gypsysteve3576 Před měsícem

      Yes the whole idea is beyond the limits of category

    • @Freedom_Half_Off
      @Freedom_Half_Off Před měsícem

      Absolutely ... when he got to that point he was that much closer to understanding .

    • @PauloARod
      @PauloARod Před měsícem +2

      Psychedelic Prog Rock. They evolved as a band from Psychedelic into Progressive Rock

  • @valserrie2122
    @valserrie2122 Před měsícem +108

    I'm a musician myself, and PF is probably my favorite band. I've been listening to this since 1973 when I was 16, and I've also recorded a number of their songs in recent years, so I know them in depth. To hear an adult, a music professional at that, who is just now hearing Dark Side for the first time, is startling and sad, really. This should not ever be forgotten. This video makes the record sound like it's a rare archeological find. This should forever be the gold standard.
    This should be part of everyone's introduction to music. Period.

    • @alanwinnard9027
      @alanwinnard9027 Před měsícem +8

      Don't worry it's not an archeological find. Everyone knows that. I feel sorry for the poster of this video who seems to think he has discovered something. What he has discovered is that modern music is indeed, crap.

    • @JackChurchill101
      @JackChurchill101 Před měsícem +2

      "This album has no genre" - he says.
      We'll give it a few months before the penny drops. "Oh, modern industry shoehorns music in to product packages to make marketing more targeted"...

    • @cantymccantfuce2078
      @cantymccantfuce2078 Před měsícem +1

      This guy never registers a hit in the feelz. It's all intellectual and technical with this AH. Inappropriate laughter. I suspect Isaac is some kind of 'path.

    • @DirtRabbit
      @DirtRabbit Před měsícem +3

      Fear not. I was born in 1989 and this album has been in my life for as long as I can remember. I won’t have my own kids but I assure you I will make my niece and nephews listen to it with far more appreciation than this guy is giving it.
      Watching this guy so coldly analyze the soul straight out of this album makes my soul hurt. Talk about missing the point🤦‍♂️

    • @LoutTsu
      @LoutTsu Před 29 dny

      @@cantymccantfuce2078 Your feelz don't extend to basic manners and decency when talking to people?

  • @DaveF-dw6mb
    @DaveF-dw6mb Před 12 dny +7

    "I wonder what this sounds like live?"
    PULSE.

  • @ohnean1
    @ohnean1 Před měsícem +230

    I'm loving the way this bloke is a recording geek in the now, and is fighting with himself trying to figure out exactly how they did the things they did 50 odd years ago to get such a iconic and memorable product, am loving hearing his take on how he thinks they did it ... there's actually a vid out there that shows the why, how and who did what ... Huge up's to Alan Parsons and PF for this masterpiece !!!

    • @becauseisaac
      @becauseisaac  Před měsícem +24

      It’s pretty amazing

    • @apinkfloydsound
      @apinkfloydsound Před měsícem +20

      ⁠@@becauseisaacit’s “Classic Albums - The making of Dark Side of the Moon”

    • @algoner4421
      @algoner4421 Před měsícem +16

      ​@@becauseisaacI would recommend definitely paying attention to the lyrics. Pink Floyd are some of the best lyricist in music.

    • @ShroomKeppie
      @ShroomKeppie Před měsícem +6

      When "Money" started playing, he gradually got a puzzled look, and I knew he was trying to figure out that time signature. Kudos to him for quickly realizing it was in 7 time.

    • @fbastidac
      @fbastidac Před měsícem +3

      ​@@becauseisaacThe sound engineer Alan Parsons also had a great group "The Alan Parsons Project" with great songs as Sirius

  • @davidthompson59
    @davidthompson59 Před měsícem +96

    It's kinda weird watching someone who hasn't listened to DSOTM before when I have known it for 50 years plus. Your right about a lot of the production stuff. It was recorded with analogue equipment, years before digital was available and they managed some incredible results using, what to you must seem like stone-age equipment! I think you began to realize that DSOTM is more than just a bunch of songs while you were listening. It's a concept album, and the concept is life. I know it was your first time, that you were listening as a producer to the music, and you were trying to formulate a reaction in your head but I would urge you to listen again with the lyrics in front of you. These are some of the finest lyrics/poetry ever produced in the English language. Each song deals with different aspects of life. 'Breathe' and 'On the run' are about work, pressure and the stress of modern life. Time is obvious, but it is about how life seems endless when you are young until you realize life is finite and your time is slipping away. The older you get the quicker time seems to pass. On your recording 'Breathe Reprise' seems to have been lumped in with 'Time' but starting with the lyrics 'Home, home again' is actually a separate section. It is about being older and religion. 'The Great Gig in the Sky' is about an afterlife, heaven if you will. 'Money' again is obvious. The difference between rich and poor. The killer lines are right at the end. 'Money, so they say, is the root of all evil today, but if you ask for a rise it's no surprise that their giving none away.' 'Us and Them' is about division between people, be it rich and poor or armies going to war. It's not what ordinary people want but it's what they are stuck with. 'Any color you like' is instrumental but takes it's name from a quote by Henry Ford about his Model T Ford. You can have it in any color you like.....as long as it's black. 'Brain Damage' is often said to be about Syd Barrett, the original singer of Pink Floyd who literally fried his brains with LSD and they had to let him go. For me however it is about the media, about politicians, about advertising and what you would these days call influencers. It's about how they try to get into your head through the press and TV (there wasn't any social media then) and change the way you think. 'There's someone in my head, but it's not me'. The final track, 'Eclipse', is a kind of summary, but it is tinged. You should be aware that in many cultures, the Moon is a symbol of madness (think werewolves). Once again the killer lines are right at the end. 'Everything under the sun is in tune, but the sun is eclipsed by the moon'. You mention the little conversation/statements throughout the album. They are recordings of friends of the band, roadies etc, which add a light humor. Later in 'The Wall' Floyd used this idea to even better effect, using sound clips from TV and movies to link/introduce songs. Finally, to round things off, you have the cover. The Original vinyl cover was a gatefold. The white light entering the prism represents life in it's entirety and the colors coming out represent the different facets of life just as the music does. The inside of the gatefold had then lyrics and personnel involved. It also had the rainbow bars right across with the green bar becoming a heartbeat, like an ECG. Echoed at the start and finish of the album by the heartbeat rhythm.

    • @tonycook1624
      @tonycook1624 Před měsícem +4

      "You can have it in any color you like.....as long as it's black" - as Roger said its alluding to not really having any real choices in your life - there is a darkside to your existance and its black

    • @GregHopp
      @GregHopp Před měsícem +4

      Well said David. The song time haunts me as I'm about to turn 60 and you couldn't be more right.

    • @davidthompson59
      @davidthompson59 Před 28 dny +7

      @@GregHopp At the age of 13/14, just after DSOTM was released, I copied out the words of Time as a poem in an English class. The teacher, who had never heard of it, thought he had discovered a genius and made me read it out to the class. In the end, he was so excited that I had to confess where I had got it from. He was disappointed but said he must listen to that album.

    • @user-qb1sm3rk9r
      @user-qb1sm3rk9r Před 4 dny

      How can any guy with a pair of balls take this band seriously? The squeaky voiced whispery singing, the laid back pacing, languid guitar, airy fairy lyrics and limp drumming. They're lullabies for stoned people.

  • @CmdrTomalak
    @CmdrTomalak Před 29 dny +116

    22:25 "I think this is the first time I'm ever really listening to the lyrics in this album". Dude... you have failed the assignment. Start over and pay attention.

    • @cabanford
      @cabanford Před 25 dny +7

      That caught me out too. Listen to the album again (alone at night).

    • @Lukas_0422
      @Lukas_0422 Před 23 dny +6

      "Wrong! Do it again!"

    • @77kbr
      @77kbr Před 23 dny +3

      So cringe. He needs to stop talking and just listen.

    • @lukakerlen9862
      @lukakerlen9862 Před 23 dny +1

      @@SuperBluewatermelon Very true

    • @krabkrabkrab
      @krabkrabkrab Před 22 dny +1

      I know right? Up to that point I thought "Why does he totally ignore the lyrics?". But then he commented on "the lunatic is on the grass", and I realized he doesn't understand the lyrics because he's never heard a British accent.

  • @rubizc
    @rubizc Před 16 dny +13

    Pink Floyd's album "The Dark Side of the Moon" has won several awards and recognitions, including ¹:
    - 14x platinum certification in the UK
    - Inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999
    - Selected for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" in 2012
    - It has sold more than 45 million copies worldwide, making it the fourth best-selling album in history.
    Furthermore, the album has been critically acclaimed and is considered one of the best albums of all time, occupying a place on numerous lists and rankings of the best albums in history.

    • @t0ph4t1
      @t0ph4t1 Před 6 dny

      so yeah it was kinda popular in its heyday

  • @rff2552
    @rff2552 Před měsícem +229

    Greatest Album of all time. That is why it has been on the charts for 1000 weeks.

    • @edeledeledel5490
      @edeledeledel5490 Před měsícem +7

      2500 weeks

    • @junk_rig_sailor1698
      @junk_rig_sailor1698 Před měsícem +6

      I put Animals above Dark side, only just.

    • @gwilli9511
      @gwilli9511 Před měsícem +1

      Personally, I would rank Sgt. Pepper #1 and this one #2.

    • @PhilMasters
      @PhilMasters Před měsícem +4

      The only problem is that, while some of Pink Floyd's subsequent album's were pretty damn good, they probably never quite bottled the lightning like they did with this one.

    • @harounel-poussah6936
      @harounel-poussah6936 Před měsícem

      A Saucerful of Secrets is better... Sorry... And I also prefer Ummagumma, More, Pompeï or Meddle

  • @kevinb2720
    @kevinb2720 Před měsícem +107

    Money has a 7/4 time signature. Your surprise that musicians from the 60s and 70s were accomplished is astounding because by comparison with today where actual bands are a rarity and everything can be corrected and created digitally you had to be good to make good music at that time. Next up, as a composer and producer, check out the documentary on the making of 10cc’s I’m Not in Love. It’s the story of the most ambitious and creative sonic adventure that most people don’t understand just went into its production. **ADDITION- wow! This comment has received so many replies! Seems I touched on something that’s been talked about for a long time, and there are people of both camps. David says 7/8, composers and music theorists say 7/4, and it all boils down to interpretation. A trained composer will clap a 7/4 rhythm very much like how Money is played on the album and clap a 7/8 differently based on what convention states, but conventions aren’t absolute. I accept that. So, call it what you will, but be prepared to explain it both ways if ever asking someone who’s never heard it before and is playing it from the sheet music, so they can get it right.

    • @redadamearth
      @redadamearth Před 27 dny +14

      I'm literally bewildered by how little he knows and how little he's listened to music. I can't even wrap my head around how he could even be interested in music without having heard...anything.

    • @HasturT
      @HasturT Před 25 dny +6

      Except for the solo that's in 4/4. That's why it feels like it speeds up.

    • @davidmalarkey1302
      @davidmalarkey1302 Před 25 dny +2

      ​@@redadamearthagree

    • @majortom7038
      @majortom7038 Před 24 dny +2

      Yes, I was thinking he should look into 10cc i’m not in love when he made the layering comment in part 1. It’d blow his mind.

    • @adambrown2130
      @adambrown2130 Před 23 dny +3

      Is it 7/4? I always thought it was 7/8?

  • @squiddly-diddly
    @squiddly-diddly Před měsícem +129

    At the end of the party...you would always roll a joint, gently put on Dark Side of the Moon and lay on the floor in the candle light, between those big 3 way speakers and soak in the experience.

    • @harounel-poussah6936
      @harounel-poussah6936 Před měsícem +4

      We used to roll more than one and listened to this fully in the dark

    • @lindazee
      @lindazee Před měsícem +5

      Ahhh, yes, I remember that ritual so fondly.

    • @stevestacey5272
      @stevestacey5272 Před měsícem

      Yes yes and the incense, and the shag pile, and the magic mushrooms, it's coming back to me now

    • @PhilBather
      @PhilBather Před měsícem +3

      Great minds think alike 😊

    • @WaterFaucet24
      @WaterFaucet24 Před měsícem +3

      @@harounel-poussah6936 yes, though we had a bong or hookah

  • @lsbill27
    @lsbill27 Před 8 dny +9

    This is their 8th album. Their albums leading up to it show a fascinating progression. Their early leader, Syd Barrett, was their singer, songwriter, and lead vocalist. They stood out creatively under his guidance, but he developed mental issues and was out of the band for a few albums before this was recorded. This is their first album in which they settled on a 'style' of working and recording. One of the most interesting rock stories in music history.

  • @juliomendez8472
    @juliomendez8472 Před měsícem +179

    Isaac, Rick Beato just uploaded an interview with Alan Parsons, the engineer behind this album and many more. Much of your questions are answered there.
    Also search for the story behind the vocals on The great gig on the sky... which btw is about dying.

    • @FritsSpieker
      @FritsSpieker Před měsícem +8

      This! 👆

    • @ArriGaffer
      @ArriGaffer Před měsícem +11

      Brilliant interview it is too!

    • @InAverySilentWay
      @InAverySilentWay Před 29 dny +8

      Seriously, go check out the interview with Alan Parsons!

    • @PhilipPedro2112
      @PhilipPedro2112 Před 28 dny +9

      I saw he posted that interview. And there is an exceptional documentary, The Making of Dark Side of the Moon, that answers many questions, with Parson's commentaries accompanying isolated master tracks.

    • @andychips
      @andychips Před 28 dny +4

      Yeah, what a legend that guy is. You forget how many albums he was absolutely key on.

  • @Justin-mp2il
    @Justin-mp2il Před 28 dny +72

    Great Gig in the Sky always gets them. 2 takes and NO ONE has ever been able to do it live - not even the original singer! It was a moment in time that will never happen again. You can hear her sing with her SOUL!

    • @srsheepdog2671
      @srsheepdog2671 Před 26 dny +6

      I went to a Brit Floyd concert a couple weeks ago, and the soloist NAILED IT!! She got a standing ovation at the finish. Truly amazing talent.

    • @alrichardson1887
      @alrichardson1887 Před 26 dny +3

      Clare Torry is one-of-a-kind.

    •  Před 22 dny

      IIRC, she was very pregnant at the time, and got called in to the studio at something like 2 in the morning to do that part.

    • @DanFre40
      @DanFre40 Před 21 dnem +2

      When Roger Waters did his Radio KAOS shows in London, he brought Claire Torry on to sing this song. I was there, it was absolutely amazing.

    • @TheySuckFatLongDonkeyLogs
      @TheySuckFatLongDonkeyLogs Před 19 dny +1

      Lightening in a bottle, that is what it was, a moment frozen in time, never to be repeated again, and they caught it on tape, like lightening in a bottle.

  • @alt7244
    @alt7244 Před měsícem +86

    There is a reason music from back then is still amazingly popular. Quality never dies. Youve taken a step into a lifetime of awesomeness

    • @michaelkaster5058
      @michaelkaster5058 Před měsícem +1

      There was a LOT of crap produced then too. It is just the good stuff has stood the test of time. The cream has risen to the top, so-to-speak

    • @CyberDwarf1949
      @CyberDwarf1949 Před 27 dny

      There's always decent music around. You just have to work damned hard to find it...

  • @DaveLegalEagle
    @DaveLegalEagle Před 16 dny +9

    "What is this album". It's about the progression and misdirection of modern life. They deal with greed - "Money," time "Run" & "Time," death "Home again" & "Great gig in the sky," and mental illness.
    The band was dealing with the trauma of losing one of their founding members - Syd Barrett.
    I do hope you listen again, with the lyrics at hand. For some guys in their early to mid twenties, their writing is profound.
    Just one tiny example - they discuss a funeral and the futility of prayer ("far away, across the field, the tolling of the iron bell calls the faithful to their knees to hear the softly spoken magic spell"). Then Clare Torry comes in and vocalises the sensation and progression of death.
    It's a fascinating album by an even more fascinating band

  • @djnikkijax6475
    @djnikkijax6475 Před měsícem +94

    As an audio engineer, I've been using this album as a reference track for 36 years, especially to test speakers. It's so well engineered, thank you Alan Parsons 🙏🏼

    • @alrichardson1887
      @alrichardson1887 Před 26 dny +3

      Yep. I remember buying a component stereo setup at Federated in Phoenix, AZ in 1976. The salesman demo'd the system using the DSOTM album.
      Fast forward to San Jose, CA at a Circuit City in 1997 on a new component setup purchase. Guess what the employee used to demo the system?
      DSOTM is always the first played when testing new components. It stands the test of time. In fact, it defies time.

    • @brandonboucher7090
      @brandonboucher7090 Před 25 dny

      Rick Beato just interviewed Alan Parsons a few days ago the day after you dropped this comment czcams.com/video/xrS6LWHz-dk/video.htmlsi=Py6x7wzvV6MIfLfG

    • @davidcox4981
      @davidcox4981 Před 24 dny +2

      And only 16 tracks on tape for each song available to make this.

  • @NedKLee
    @NedKLee Před měsícem +124

    Lucky me, I've just found another channel featuring a guy who actually knows of which he speaks.
    I've only been listening to this album for for 50 years, still have the original LP.
    Your turn young fella, I wish you at least 50 years of listening to this album and having it punctuate unforgettable moments in your life, that you'll remember forever.

    • @kivvm
      @kivvm Před 29 dny +2

      Im not old enough, born -87. But i'm so happy my dad got me into Pink Floyd. Years and years after, I know own his old LPs. Dark side of the moon and the wall. They really created timeless music that alwats makes you feel something

    • @NedKLee
      @NedKLee Před 29 dny +2

      @@kivvm Mate, you could do worse than do a deep dive into some of the great Aussie bands from the 70's and 80's like Cold Chisel, Midnight Oil, The Angels etc.
      For me it's the music and the lyrics first, then the production.
      Maybe that's not your bag, but there's a lot of good tracks out there.
      For music production I'd look at The Moody Blues or the Alan Parsons Project.

    • @spearhead30
      @spearhead30 Před 27 dny

      Well put! ❤

    • @mjinba07
      @mjinba07 Před 27 dny +1

      Lucky lucky you to still have the vinyl.

    • @StCerberusEngel
      @StCerberusEngel Před 26 dny +1

      @@NedKLee Born in '84, and I didn't get into Pink Floyd until my late teens, since my parents were largely Elvis and 50s/60s country people. But I did have a car dealership demo tape with Alan Parsons on it when I was a kid. Mammagamma has been in my head ever since. Guess I have that to thank for my eventual gravitation toward Prog Rock and Industrial Metal among other genres. You came up in the best of musical eras, though, old-timer. ✌♥🤘

  • @stevedoredandyfunk3032
    @stevedoredandyfunk3032 Před měsícem +76

    As a younger producer, there is a lot to be learned from the old time innovators. A lot of the things they did the hard way have been forgotten in modern music. If producers like yourself get immersed in things like this, there is inspiration to innovate again today

  • @leonardfox2694
    @leonardfox2694 Před 24 dny +6

    I'm 67 years old. Heard this many times over the years. The times in between have been an intricate part of the journey of this album for me. Seeing your amazement today punctuated the brilliance of this timeless music. It's somehow always like a fresh coat of paint has always been added somehow that never detracts from the brilliance of the musical layers, which were originally crafted. Seeing your continual surprise as a new listener only reinforces my own, and I'm honored to witness the drying of your first coat as it was being layed down for you. I only hope to give you a small glimpse of your future delight as you continue to experience this wonderful album. I believe you will be amazed as you continue to explore Pink Floyd.
    I'm glad to know my grandchildren will be able experience this masterpiece as they grow up. Now, to state the obvious....God Bless You!😊

  • @kevinL5425
    @kevinL5425 Před měsícem +72

    The background conversations on Pink Floyd's *The Dark Side of the Moon* were created using a series of questions written on cards by Roger Waters. These questions were asked to various people at Abbey Road Studios, including roadies, studio staff, and even Paul and Linda McCartney, though their responses were not used. Some of the notable questions included:
    - "Are you afraid of dying?"
    - "When were you last violent?"
    - "Do you ever think you’re going mad?"
    - "What do you think of The Dark Side of the Moon?"
    These snippets were used to add a human touch and thematic depth to the album.

    • @michaeldransfield8775
      @michaeldransfield8775 Před měsícem +7

      They asked Paul McCartney to do one (he was around the studio), but he made a joke of it and answered al sing-song-y, so they didn't use it.

    • @juleswombat5309
      @juleswombat5309 Před měsícem +3

      And if you were in a fight , Where you in the Right ? - Hence one of the response "Yeah I was Definitely in the Right."

    • @hashtaghead9267
      @hashtaghead9267 Před měsícem +2

      "That geezer was cruising for a bruising" 😂

    • @stickman4131
      @stickman4131 Před 9 dny +2

      “When were you last violent?” “I don’t know, I was really drunk at the time.”

  • @NousSommesduSoleil
    @NousSommesduSoleil Před 26 dny +54

    There is a documentary entitled " The Making Of Dark Side Of The Moon " which details the splicing and patching of 3 " recording tape stretched the length of the studio and looped around a microphone stand during the mixing process . Probably a nerve-racking experience ...

  • @AlaskanGlitch
    @AlaskanGlitch Před měsícem +75

    The piece "Money" begins with a 7/8 time signature, then during the guitar solo changes to 4/4, and then returns to the 7/8 time signature again at the end. While "The Dark Side of the Moon" is one of Pink Floyd's most popular albums of all time, musically speaking their "Wish You Were Here" album was significantly more complex.

    • @thegreatdel
      @thegreatdel Před měsícem +1

      I love that time change into the guitar solo into 4/4 was because Gilmour couldn't solo in 7, then went and laid down that solo.

    • @sleepyburr
      @sleepyburr Před měsícem +14

      "It's like a 6/8 but with a beat added."
      Yes, otherwise known as 7/8.

    • @ranica47
      @ranica47 Před měsícem

      Wish is certainly a great album but I wouldn't say more complex.

    • @pantagruel5148
      @pantagruel5148 Před měsícem +9

      7/4 folks. It’s quarters. 😉

    • @harounel-poussah6936
      @harounel-poussah6936 Před měsícem +11

      It's 7/4, not 7/8

  • @danrieke9988
    @danrieke9988 Před 8 dny +4

    This album is not a genre. It is a lesson on Mankind. It is the culmination of 50,000 years of wisdom and history, and a lesson about viewing and estimating the future. That's what this album is.

  • @andrewg8791
    @andrewg8791 Před měsícem +56

    They toured the song-cycle, refining the arrangements, before they recorded it. Yes, they played this live before they went into the studio, the show was called 'Eclipse'. They planned the album to take advantage of the then-new quadrophonic systems, basically a precursor to 5.1 audio. This informed the pan controllers they used, that they called 'azimuth controllers'. These give a dramatically natural sounding 3d movement of sounds in the landscape. Huge kudos to Alan Parsons as the engineer.

    • @bilgegutrot3476
      @bilgegutrot3476 Před měsícem +6

      Alan Parsons was a force in his own right. The Alan Parsons Project was an underrated progressive rock monster.

  • @caronspeas2888
    @caronspeas2888 Před měsícem +76

    “Wish You Were Here” album is stunningly beautiful. “Animals” album is a complex masterpiece. You are in for a treat!!!

    • @meganrapchick8299
      @meganrapchick8299 Před měsícem +1

      yes and yes

    • @milchi_ruhe
      @milchi_ruhe Před měsícem +1

      This is, of course, subjective - as soon as Roger Waters took over, I stopped listening to it, wasn‘t as good as before (to me!).

    • @Hrithik23
      @Hrithik23 Před měsícem +2

      ​​@@milchi_ruheAnimals is very Waters dominant yet very good. Gilmour calls it his best guitar work. The Wall, yeah, i can agree but it's not weak by any means.

    • @harounel-poussah6936
      @harounel-poussah6936 Před měsícem +1

      Previous Pink Floyd records are the best!

    • @milchi_ruhe
      @milchi_ruhe Před měsícem +2

      @@Hrithik23 no, not weak or bad in any way, but as I said - to me, the albums after Wish you were here aren‘t as good as the ones before. But again, this is a matter of taste

  • @brucesorensen
    @brucesorensen Před měsícem +50

    As a retired studio musician, I had the pleasure of working with Doris Troy, one of the featured backup singers on the Dark side of the Moon. Just to be in the studio with her was a huge landmark for me. Thanks for spotlighting this great song.

    • @user-cz2pw4zv4e
      @user-cz2pw4zv4e Před měsícem +1

      I understand the female singer on the pink Floyd album was brought in to temporally fill in those spots, she improvised her parts. There was some dispute re her minimal pay for the key element the carried over to the final version. The touring version used 2 or 3 different women to cover her part.

    • @Sarconthewolf
      @Sarconthewolf Před měsícem +1

      @@user-cz2pw4zv4e I saw them in concert the women singing her part were not as good.

    • @ianhames2465
      @ianhames2465 Před 29 dny +3

      Claire Tory.

    • @billbones77
      @billbones77 Před 29 dny +1

      ​@@Sarconthewolfsam brown and co on the pulse tour did a fairly good job they have to put their own touch to it bcos of their personal vocal ranges and its a place to showcase what you have and a bit of fun every night you do the gig plus Dave Gilmour probably said to to them the same thing just go have a bit of fun follow the original melody of clare tory (if you can call it that) to a degree and bust ya balls out there 😂

    • @Sarconthewolf
      @Sarconthewolf Před 29 dny

      @@billbones77 I think that's the way to go. The women in 1975, I believe, tried to copy exactly what Claire Tory did on the album. I believe that was a mistake at the time. She would have been better off doing her own version, avoiding the boos of the audience.

  • @strogers1000
    @strogers1000 Před 10 dny +2

    Dude, of all Floyd reaction vids out there, you did it right. Floyd is to be consumed album at a time not song. Saw them in concert in Germany when stationed there. One of the best live shows ever!!!
    Great job.

  • @robrobbey
    @robrobbey Před měsícem +153

    Check out Comfortably Numb, Pulse Concert if you want to see them live.

    • @robrobbey
      @robrobbey Před měsícem +7

      Pulse concert 1994.

    • @scottnorvell2955
      @scottnorvell2955 Před měsícem +5

      Yes. What he said!

    • @RyanWehr
      @RyanWehr Před měsícem +2

      THIS!!!!!!

    • @Firefoxy-rz1nw
      @Firefoxy-rz1nw Před měsícem +4

      Pulse is not Pink Floyd. It's David Gilmour who owns the brand name with his own new band.

    • @melvinroebuck1160
      @melvinroebuck1160 Před měsícem +6

      @@Firefoxy-rz1nwit’s three of the four members….yes it’s not the same without Roger but it’s still Floyd to me.

  • @IamClapham
    @IamClapham Před měsícem +196

    Everyone wants you to move on to their next favourite album. Do yourself a favour and listen to Dark Side of the Moon a few more times and give yourself a chance to hear how the sound collage stuff all makes sense, how the order of tracks matters, how musical ideas are reused and drawn together, not to mention the terrific solos, the use of space... I could go on.

    • @TheRealAko
      @TheRealAko Před měsícem +32

      I totally agree with this, spend some time with Dark side, after which I'd recommend spending some time with the next two albums chronologically. Wish you were here and Animals.

    • @KiltedGreen
      @KiltedGreen Před měsícem +22

      And listen to the lyrics!!

    • @TripleBerg
      @TripleBerg Před měsícem +9

      One listen is certainly not enough. I find new things in PF music almost every time I listen to them.

    • @norton750commando
      @norton750commando Před měsícem +9

      @@TripleBerg Ha! Listen to this one time! I`m on my 9,453rd time.

    • @davidl.7317
      @davidl.7317 Před měsícem +3

      ​@@TheRealAko Add Meddle to that list.

  • @jacobpaulson23
    @jacobpaulson23 Před měsícem +102

    It's not a genre, it's Pink Floyd!

  • @MrDottorzeta
    @MrDottorzeta Před 16 dny +8

    You are a car manufacturer that has never seen before a Lancia, a Ferrari, a Porsche, an Alfa Romeo, an Auto Union, a Lamborghini, an Isotta Fraschini. You are a painter that has never seen before a Canaletto, a Michelangelo, a Caravaggio, a Donatello, a Rubens, a Velasquez, a Picasso. You are an architect that has never seen before Athens, Rome, Milan, Paris, London, New York. What kind of music producer are you?

    • @theguywhoisaustralian1465
      @theguywhoisaustralian1465 Před 12 dny +1

      A director who has never seen The Godfather

    • @phant0157
      @phant0157 Před 5 dny +1

      just a kid with technology at his disposal, lots of time to appreciate good music, trying to listen more, saying A LOT less and know more about the world. At least with his channel, he's trying to educate himself and getting shit by angry old guys will do the trick

  • @johndemoss6064
    @johndemoss6064 Před měsícem +63

    There’s a band called 10cc that you might want to check out. One of their songs is “I’m Not In Love” and there is a video on “the making of I’m Not In Love” that will blow you away.

    • @timspencer1
      @timspencer1 Před měsícem +6

      Thanks. I'll check that out!

    • @CapnBlackJackHonour
      @CapnBlackJackHonour Před měsícem

      @@timspencer1can vouch, this one will blow your digital mind.

    • @TimJacksonOriginal
      @TimJacksonOriginal Před měsícem +1

      I bought a snare drum off former drummer Paul Burgess. Nice bloke - was really interested in chatting about music.

  • @mycl6539
    @mycl6539 Před měsícem +70

    No choir was used to record this album. Only 4 male and 4 female voices were used with many many multitracks of each voice to produce a choir like sound. The exception was Clare Torry's fantastic singing in Great Gig in the Sky.

    • @jgingras2615
      @jgingras2615 Před měsícem +3

      Fantastic doesn't even start to describe Clare's singing... JUST SAYING!

    • @harounel-poussah6936
      @harounel-poussah6936 Před měsícem +1

      It was a 16 tracks reel tape recorder so forget about many many many multitracks. There are 3 male voices and 5 females : Barry St. John was a woman...
      Clare only sung on TGGITS... With 7 voices and reverb, I can guarantee you that you have a choir

  • @brlyjo
    @brlyjo Před měsícem +39

    You're like a genius blank slate. The perfect reviewer/reactor. And I second that you check out "Wish You Were Here".

  • @specgrav1
    @specgrav1 Před 24 dny +4

    "How do you do this on tape?"
    You set up a bunch of mic stands in the studio, record and cut your loop into a literal loop by stringing the tape around and through those stand poles - a literal *actual tape loop

  • @Seabee_Camper
    @Seabee_Camper Před měsícem +75

    It's hard not to get lost in the sauce of the music, but I wish you would listen again, concentrating on the lyrics this time.

    • @SpaceCattttt
      @SpaceCattttt Před měsícem +4

      He's Gen Z. Don't count on it. He's most likely forgotten about it already...

    • @zephead64
      @zephead64 Před měsícem +1

      I would not count on that.. He seems genuinely interested and into the music. He's going to listen again. ​@@SpaceCattttt

    • @Watchman70
      @Watchman70 Před měsícem +1

      So true. It's like looking at a pretty sports car and not driving it.

    • @Watchman70
      @Watchman70 Před měsícem +2

      They won the award of one of the greatest continuing selling albums of all time.

  • @Harani66
    @Harani66 Před měsícem +37

    This album was engineered by Alan Parsons ( also worked on the Beatles' Abbey road and Let it be) who is an amazing musical artist in his own right.

    • @MarkMcghee-e8h
      @MarkMcghee-e8h Před 19 dny

      Alan Parsons’s project was also a great album

  • @Artfrg4
    @Artfrg4 Před měsícem +52

    Thank you. I enjoyed your reaction to this. Their albums were meant to be heard in their entirety.
    Comfortably Numb! Yes! My dads Beach house was named Comfortably Numb! ❤️

    • @kathydurow6814
      @kathydurow6814 Před měsícem

      To me "comfortably numb" was a stage you got to when drinking when you'd had precisely enough to soften & blur all the edges, but not make you sick. If you then could manage to alternate a soft drink with a hard one, or eat something, you could stay there quite a while, roll down the hill to get home (metaphorically), then bed & wake up relatively okay the next day😅😅😅.

  • @Hippida
    @Hippida Před 9 dny +5

    These guys were Musicians when being a musician was not only a job, but an art form

  • @cindyp1033
    @cindyp1033 Před měsícem +52

    Definitely go down this rabbit hole!

  • @rpmfla
    @rpmfla Před měsícem +53

    Pink Floyd, Yes, Emerson Lake & Palmer, Genesis, Supertramp, King Crimson, Alan Parson's Project, and a few others are fantastic examples of Progressive Rock.

    • @user-jw6km4kz4y
      @user-jw6km4kz4y Před měsícem +3

      You missed Procul Harem, to this day Whiter Shade of Pale is the most played song in the UK

    • @abc456f
      @abc456f Před měsícem +5

      Jethro Tull. This guy needs to listen to Aqualung.

    • @rpmfla
      @rpmfla Před měsícem +2

      @@abc456f Funny you should mention Tull...they have been my favorite band for nearly 50 years! I guess I recommend them so often to CZcams reactors that I left them off this once.

    • @LinzDubNZ
      @LinzDubNZ Před měsícem +1

      Agree, all of the above.

    • @DJB99
      @DJB99 Před 26 dny +1

      Rush

  • @alexanderednie1205
    @alexanderednie1205 Před měsícem +82

    If you’re a “music producer “ and never heard Dark Side……what have you been doing. It’s one of the best recordings in history. It was on the charts for 40+ years. It’s a masterclass in musicianship and music production.

    • @raulcastro925
      @raulcastro925 Před měsícem +5

      These people live in an echo chamber.

    • @JackChurchill101
      @JackChurchill101 Před měsícem +4

      I would love to see the musical theatre director who has never heard of Andrew Lloyd Webber....
      Them: "Yeah, but have you seen Wicked!?"
      Me: "No, no I have not..."

    • @JC_923
      @JC_923 Před měsícem +6

      Honestly, artists of any discipline should know the history of their art. Unfortunately that's not the case. I've spoken to film students who complains that they have to study film history and just want to grab a camera and make movies. They have zero respect or appreciation for their own art and just want to be famous. I'm sure many musicians and producers have this attitude too. They just think old stuffs are outdated and not worth their time.

    • @alexanderednie1205
      @alexanderednie1205 Před 28 dny

      @@JackChurchill101 I had a friend who worked on wicked lol but I fully get your point

  • @TexasWpodApe
    @TexasWpodApe Před 7 dny +1

    My hippie brother brought by my parents house this album and told me to have a good listen. It was 1974 and I was 13 and had a hifi stereo, mood lights and a bean bag.
    I put the album on my turn table a relaxed on bean bag with a pair of Pioneer headphones own. I still own them and they work just as good today.
    My brother lived in a small house a neighborhood away and I showed up at his door on foot with his album a couple of hours later.
    "Dude, you can keep it for a couple of weeks if you want."
    I smiled and said, "I just went to the store and bought my own."
    Thank you Pink Floyd and thank you Big Brother,
    James Roscoe. 😊

  • @dobber684
    @dobber684 Před měsícem +32

    I remember getting this album 50 years ago, cracking it open and listening to it. The amazing lyrics are printed on the inside of the cover, so you could follow along as you listened. In fact, half the experience was reading the lyrics for the first time while you listened. Increases the enjoyment even more..

  • @geoffsnail3982
    @geoffsnail3982 Před měsícem +73

    Yes, they're British. And we are very proud of them.

  • @joehasenstein8843
    @joehasenstein8843 Před měsícem +60

    Watching someone enjoy something I've enjoyed my whole life will never not be a great thing

  • @patrickallensings_
    @patrickallensings_ Před 20 dny +3

    Incredible lyrics throughout. "Breathe" "Time" "Money" "Us and Them" It goes on and on.
    And you cut the album off just before the end. One of my favorite moments, listen to it again, and turn the volume up. "There is no dark side of the moon, really. Matter of fact, it's all dark."

  • @SuperChaoticus
    @SuperChaoticus Před 29 dny +31

    Now it's your time to take what you've learned and bring back some of the magic that's been lost over the decades.

  • @Curlybenji
    @Curlybenji Před 25 dny +49

    As an old music producer who has worked both in analogue and digital and was brought up with this music I really enjoyed your analysis and reaction. It was strange watching someone who is obviously knowledgeable experiencing this album for the first time. This album is so well known that it's hard to find a fresh reaction from someone properly into their music. I really appreciated these videos man thanks.

    • @russellsullivan5000
      @russellsullivan5000 Před 23 dny +5

      I concur

    •  Před 22 dny +4

      in the Classic Albums documentation, Dave Gilmour says he would've loved to have discovered the album like a 1st-time listener

    • @daviddwyer6824
      @daviddwyer6824 Před 16 dny

      He couldn't count to 7

    • @Curlybenji
      @Curlybenji Před 16 dny

      ​@@daviddwyer6824haha fair point

    • @jimbowardoable
      @jimbowardoable Před 7 dny

      ​@@Curlybenjihe gets there eventually! I think he was saying it wasn't quite 7/8, but it is obv

  • @jackruby64
    @jackruby64 Před měsícem +25

    972 weeks
    I appreciate the way you listened to it in one sitting, as a masterpiece is meant to be heard. Back in the days of vinyl, you'd have a brief pause as you flipped the record to play side two.
    It astounds me that many people these days in the biz or in general music lovers haven't heard some of the "classic rock" music that continues to define popular music to this day, not to mention groundbreaking recording and production techniques. A lot of the bands back then had played together for years and were super tight and intuitive, they were creating and at the cutting edge.
    I grew up as a teenager listening to this fabulous music in the late 70s, it really defined an era and it's called classic for a reason.
    The Dark Side of the Moon is a musical masterpiece by Pink Floyd that has spent a record-breaking number of weeks on the Billboard charts. The album was released in 1973 and reached No.1 for one week. It remained on the chart for 741 weeks from 1973 to 1988, and has since returned to the chart several times, reaching a total of 972 weeks as of 2021. It is one of the best-selling albums worldwide, with over 45 million copies sold.
    Peace

  • @silgen
    @silgen Před měsícem +135

    Yes, Comfortably Numb, live at Pulse, you'll not regret it. In fact, every single song in the Pulse concert is great.

    • @scottnorvell2955
      @scottnorvell2955 Před měsícem +4

      Yes! I agree.

    • @Firefoxy-rz1nw
      @Firefoxy-rz1nw Před měsícem

      No, pulse sucks donkey dick. It's not Pink Floyd. It's Gilmour who owns the corporate brand name Pink Floyd so is able to call his own band by that name. There's a reason why all the reviews are 2 out of 5 stars.
      The original from the actual band Pink Floyd is the one to listen to.
      If

    • @kentnottingham9635
      @kentnottingham9635 Před měsícem +9

      Great show but he should hear what ITS SUPPOSED TO SOUND LIKE first, dontcha think? I love all Floyd, don’t get me wrong but the “Roger parts” are lacking without him.

    • @Firefoxy-rz1nw
      @Firefoxy-rz1nw Před měsícem +6

      @@kentnottingham9635 Of course the album is better than Pulse. Of course you need Waters in Floyd. Those recommending Pulse are kids who didn't grow up with the albums.

    • @KimEllis-kt8ei
      @KimEllis-kt8ei Před měsícem +7

      @@Firefoxy-rz1nw Yeah, it's crazy people would recommend first listen as Pulse, before hearing from the album.
      With extremely rare exception, I'd almost 100% of the time recommend for any band, to hear the studio version of how it was intended, before any live.
      Then when you hear a live and there's any imperfections or sound issues, you are more forgiving and understanding, because you know how it's intended to sound, rather than first and only impression.

  • @thepragmatic6383
    @thepragmatic6383 Před měsícem +27

    Lunatic is a term referring to a person who is seen as mentally ill, dangerous, foolish, or crazy-conditions once attributed to "lunacy".
    The word derives from lunaticus meaning "of the moon" or "moonstruck", unable to think or act normally, brainsick.
    The album "Dark Side of the Moon" revolves around a central theme that binds each of the songs and which is: (What drives people crazy).
    (BREATHE); If the performance required in life can drive people crazy.
    (ON THE RUN); If the frantic rush of life can drive people crazy.
    (TIME); If the fleeting aspect of passing time can drive people crazy.
    (THE GREAT GIG IN THE SKY); If the thought of the inevitable end (death), can drive people crazy.
    (MONEY); If love, or lack of money can drive people crazy.
    (US AND THEM); If the abusive hierarchy between color, power or wealth between US AND THEM can drive people crazy.
    (ANY COLOR YOU LIKE); If the illusion of being able to choose can drive people crazy.
    (BRAIN DAMAGE); If the fear of losing their mind can drive people crazy.
    (ECLIPSE); If the fact that our life seems to be limited to, (All that you touch - And all that you see...) can drive people crazy.
    So be aware that even the brightness of the sun may be eclipsed by the Dark Side of the Moon.

  • @OCRay1
    @OCRay1 Před měsícem +45

    David Gilmour is a musical genius.

    • @LinzDubNZ
      @LinzDubNZ Před měsícem +4

      Richard Wright, keyboards, runs a close second.

    • @FritsSpieker
      @FritsSpieker Před měsícem +1

      ​@@LinzDubNZ the combination of Rick and David was insane. Real symbiotic music.

    • @MoreTEN
      @MoreTEN Před 29 dny +3

      Sorry to tell you, but without Waters there would have not been any of this album. Bye.

    • @OCRay1
      @OCRay1 Před 29 dny

      @@LinzDubNZ
      Won’t get an argument from me.

    • @roykliffen9674
      @roykliffen9674 Před 25 dny

      @@MoreTEN PF did fine without him. Not so much the other way around

  • @colinciolli1530
    @colinciolli1530 Před 9 dny +1

    "You lock the door, and throw away the key, and there's someone in my head but it's not me"
    YOU WINKED!!! YOU GET IT!

  • @alexgilbert4538
    @alexgilbert4538 Před měsícem +33

    The lyrics for Dark Side of the Moon and Wish You Were Here make more sense when you know these albums were written in part with Syd Barrett in mind. Barett was one of the founders of PF but his mental health gradually deteriorated to such an extent that he could no longer function in the band. Reference to mental illness is a thread on both records.

  • @Aggiemike1947
    @Aggiemike1947 Před měsícem +24

    I am so old I actually went to see them right after this album came out. It was in a theatre on the SMU campus and a fairly small venue in the early 1980's. The speakers were placed all about the theatre to recreate the total surround sound experience. One of the best concerts I have ever been to. It was stunning live. They were able to recreate the same background sounds as the album. True genius and perfectionism.

    • @AncientActivist
      @AncientActivist Před měsícem +1

      My boyfriend at the time was an in-town roadie. Pink Floyd had the hardest set-up and the most trailers. ❤ Phoenix, AZ.

  • @keymack2477
    @keymack2477 Před měsícem +29

    Isaac, I am so envious of you, getting to hear all the brilliance of the 60's and 70's for the first time!! You have so much greatness ahead of you that you truly have no idea!! Start with my Mount Rushmore of bands from this era, The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and Queen and then so much more from there!! Enjoy the trip!!

    • @The1Elcil
      @The1Elcil Před měsícem

      no love for the blues and jazz from America which influenced those bands?
      oh well.

  • @jnphdl
    @jnphdl Před 17 dny +1

    Thank you so much for this trip into the world of my musical memories, it made all kinds of little lights turn on in my brain 🌟✨🎇🎁🔆✴❇🚀🪐🙏

  • @Steve-G-Maine2
    @Steve-G-Maine2 Před měsícem +34

    22:05 - In an interview with Louder Sound, Roger Water revealed:
    I wrote Brain Damage at home. The grass [mentioned in the lyric] was the square in between the River Cam and King’s College chapel [in Cambridge]. The lunatic was Syd [Barrett], really. He was obviously in my mind.

    • @raulcastro925
      @raulcastro925 Před měsícem +3

      RIP Syd.

    • @LinzDubNZ
      @LinzDubNZ Před měsícem +2

      Sid Barret's eulogy is their album Wish You Were Here.

  • @needsomezzz
    @needsomezzz Před 27 dny +26

    It’s really so crazy to me that music producers today would have no idea how things were done before music became digital. I think it would be very interesting to see you not only continue to explore these older decades of music but to react to how music was actually done during this time.

    • @ponysong2006
      @ponysong2006 Před 26 dny +2

      It's the same in many fields involving technology. People who come in when everything is automated don't get the same root understanding of process

    • @Taliesin800
      @Taliesin800 Před 23 dny +1

      & maybe try to produce some of your music using ONLY what was available at the time of recording DOTM.

    • @nood1e236
      @nood1e236 Před 19 dny

      I'll bet there are some killer drum fills or something from the 20's to 40's that would be amazing if sampled today. Just a totally different sound.

    • @apollothegreatt
      @apollothegreatt Před 11 dny

      @@Taliesin800 This may be the most stupid comment i've seen in the past 6 months and i wanted you to know that. Do you have ANY idea how expensive it would be to acquire the technology they used back then? Tens of thousands, more even and for what? In the age of digital, why limit yourself to constraints of vintage gear that will cost you a fortune? Is the gear cool and good sounding? Yes. Should they be preserved? Yes. Used? Yes if you wish but if you don't make it in the industry, don't blame it on the modern technology, blame it on you not adopting the times. Sincerely, your hater.

    • @Taliesin800
      @Taliesin800 Před 11 dny

      @@apollothegreatt Thank you for your comments.

  • @BUZZDAGEN
    @BUZZDAGEN Před měsícem +18

    Not hearing this and making music is like being a carpenter without ever swinging a hammer.

  • @MattIon
    @MattIon Před 4 dny

    "Unbridled creativity" is a great description of Pink Floyd's entire existence.
    As a 50-something music lover and part-time engineer/producer in my younger days, I love your approach to this listen. Your closing comment about wanting to learn more about and draw inspiration from music like this is all it took to convince me to subscribe.

  • @georgerosenfeld
    @georgerosenfeld Před 29 dny +19

    the album before Dark Side was called Meddle, and it was the beginning of their exploration of 'the album as a journey'. One side of it is all one song (Echoes), which is like taking a submarine to the depths of the oceans and then waking up back in your room, from a dream. Not as slickly produced as Dark Side and the later stuff, but a real peak of cooperative creativity. Highly recommend that. There were many albums after Dark Side (which was their real commercial breakthrough success) which grew more commericial, and the very early albums were simplistic and overly psychedelic, but Echoes, and then Dark Star were their creative peak.

    • @chrisweidner4768
      @chrisweidner4768 Před 24 dny

      Meddle holds 2 of my favorite Floyd masterpieces; “Fearless” and “Echoes.” “I’ll climb that hill in my own way.” Indeed.

  • @estebanacosta3385
    @estebanacosta3385 Před měsícem +19

    Just been informed that young people think that in the 60s there were all a bunch of hippies doing drugs.
    Yes they were, and became one of the most inspired music movement in history.
    Classic rock from 1960 to 1992 is my favourite experience.

  • @redmackinnon7079
    @redmackinnon7079 Před měsícem +79

    Dark Side of the Moon is considered to be the biggest selling album ever with over 45 million copies sold. Almost everyone from that era and beyond has it in their record collection.

    • @FTamer-bk8jw
      @FTamer-bk8jw Před měsícem +5

      Yes. Two copies, one original vinyl and a CD for the car (yes I ripped it to MP3) for the present auto.

    • @Johannore
      @Johannore Před měsícem +2

      Second.. Thriller sold probably over a 100 million, numbers are a bit unsure though.
      But the fact it's second ever is a testament to peoples good understanding of music back then.

    • @taivo55
      @taivo55 Před měsícem +1

      Almost everyone from that era has worn out at least one vinyl copy and purchased another one (and another after that)

    • @Thelius42
      @Thelius42 Před měsícem

      @@taivo55 Yeah I've owned it on vinyl tape and CD over the years

    • @mbuh197
      @mbuh197 Před měsícem +3

      @@JohannoreThriller stayed on the Billboard charts for 626 non-consecutive weeks. DSOTM was on for 990 consecutive weeks.

  • @KDeCesare
    @KDeCesare Před 19 dny +4

    The musical ability and talent of the 60's and 70's crushes anything that came after

  • @p4tmchef
    @p4tmchef Před měsícem +22

    As of August 2, 2024, Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon has charted on the Billboard Top LPs & Tape chart for 990 weeks, making it the longest-charting album in Billboard 200 history.

    • @tristanblackmore9772
      @tristanblackmore9772 Před měsícem +3

      It also hold the Guinness world record...

    • @brendamiller5785
      @brendamiller5785 Před měsícem

      Congratulations Pink Floyd!
      ...fond memories from my high school days in Canada

  • @marklunn41
    @marklunn41 Před měsícem +21

    The entire PULSE concert is the top o’the mountain - you really can’t go wrong

  • @stevenpalmer8058
    @stevenpalmer8058 Před měsícem +17

    This album is an absolute masterpiece, it was recorded the year i was born and 51 years later it is still regarded as one of the best pieces of recorded music. I seriously doubt the generic music today will stand the test of time this has. The album as a whole is fantastic, but if you're listening for the first time pay particular attention to 'any colour you like ' the musicianship and production values should make any modern artists or producer shake in their shoes with envy.

  • @gorgeousninja7213
    @gorgeousninja7213 Před 23 dny +3

    One of the most accompliushed and famous music albums of all time, a landmark recording in every sense. "hey did this win any awards?"

  • @mentaldebris
    @mentaldebris Před měsícem +72

    You are listening to the fourth best selling album in history. 990 weeks on the Billboard Charts. Over 19 years. It was news when it fell off the charts.
    Waters and Gilmour have had about a fifty year or so feud that had its origins when they were making this album. But Dark Side probably was the last time they actually did have fun making music together. They still put out some excellent albums after this.

    • @robmcilheney1657
      @robmcilheney1657 Před měsícem +2

      Isn't it third? I thought it was behind only Thriller and Eagles greatest hits. Reminder that Hotel California by The Eagles is a rip-off of Pink Floyd's Time, and this is responsible for their greatest hits album being ranked ahead of Dark Side Of The Moon in all-time record sales. The Dude was always right about them.

    • @mentaldebris
      @mentaldebris Před měsícem

      @robmcilheney1657 AC/DC "Back in Black" had the second spot. The soundtrack for "The Bodyguard" kicked it out of the third spot. Fifth spot is currently"Bad" by Michael Jackson. Followed by The Eagles. Eventually, Metallica is going to pierce the top 10.

    • @marcodimaio6106
      @marcodimaio6106 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@robmcilheney1657In truth, Hotel California is a copy of Yethro Tull "We used to know" : almost equal!

    • @robmcilheney1657
      @robmcilheney1657 Před měsícem +1

      @@marcodimaio6106 Both are true.

    • @joefilter2923
      @joefilter2923 Před měsícem +3

      @@robmcilheney1657 I listened to Hotel California again recently and it’s very good. I actually don’t think I ever owned it though. People poo poo Fleetwood Mac ‘Rumors’ but that’s also very good.

  • @TheTheSnakeSteve
    @TheTheSnakeSteve Před měsícem +50

    You really need to check out Echos live in Pompeii. Recorded in the ancient amphitheatre. 17 minutes of greatness.

    • @gobkin123
      @gobkin123 Před měsícem +4

      This. So much this.

    • @nashkita77
      @nashkita77 Před měsícem +2

      Gdansk much better.imo

    • @nemo4907
      @nemo4907 Před měsícem +4

      My friend asked "where's the crowd?" I replied - DEAD, 2000 years!🤘

    • @godoggies1
      @godoggies1 Před měsícem +1

      Not sure he'e ready....lol

    • @tribaltalker1608
      @tribaltalker1608 Před měsícem

      The Live in Pompeii version of "Set the controls for the heart of the sun" is sublime. Run a bath, light some candles, grab some chilled wine and bliss out to one of their most amazing tracks.

  • @lloydwilliams4368
    @lloydwilliams4368 Před měsícem +65

    "Dark Side" is rock opera with it's songs perfectly melded together, at times, in an almost imperfect manner. It breathes. It inhales and exhales pure music.

  • @fredhills127
    @fredhills127 Před 14 dny +2

    This is the highest point in the evolution of music, it's like Van Gogh for painting, or Einstein for quantum physics, perfect in every detail. David Gilmour (the guitarist and one of the vocalists) said in a documentary that he would like to feel the sensation of listening to this album from beginning to end, without ever having heard any part of it, like he did in the recordings. He said the feeling must be incredible. We know he's completely right, lol. Pink Floyd is the best!!! Great video, greetings from Brazil.

  • @barbarjinx3802
    @barbarjinx3802 Před měsícem +33

    That “drum” at the opening and closing is a heart beat.

    • @lukepepper3949
      @lukepepper3949 Před 4 dny

      It's a synth note. Dave Gilmour joked, 'If that was your heart beat, you'd be pretty fucked wouldn't you? haha'.

  • @sandymcgrew6420
    @sandymcgrew6420 Před měsícem +19

    I saw Floyd play this album live in Pittsburgh. The venue was called the CIvic Arena it was a sports arena that was round, (from the outside it looked like a big space ship). And the crazy thing was the ROOF WOULD OPEN UP. You have to understand that back in the day, some bands (like Floyd) would position speakers so that the sound would literally ricochet around the venue. So in Floyd's case the sound would be going side to side, front, back and would move clockwise and counterclockwise around the venue. You really didn't need drugs to feel your head expanding. They didn't play the songs in order of the album. I was about 10 rows back center. It was near the end of the night, so by then the building, as big as it was, was filled with music-enhancing smoke. ha ha. I guess Floyd had never played this arena, they began to play the song Breathe...as soon as they started playing the roof slowly began moving. The smokey air was sucked out into the now slowly revealing starry night. The look of the band watching the crevice of the roof getting wider and wider, was so euphoric. On stage they were mouthing to each other, nodding and smiling, mesmerized with heads back and turning to watch the roof open. And you know, when the roof had got to the maximum expansion, there was the nearly full moon hanging low in the sky and the stars above. It was incredible.
    I miss music that is designed to open the doors to your mind and imagination. Keep opening up to old music it will serve your music journey well. I listen to new music, but I do understand my privilege of being born in one of the most prescient times in music. Yep I'm a boomer. Raised on my parents music, swing and jazz, and then on to all the variations of rock and roll, blues and country.

  • @ParduzTube
    @ParduzTube Před měsícem +24

    I'm late to comment here, as i just stumbled on this couple of videos. I'm a 54yo italian, meaning that i was 6 or 8 when my father was buying PinkFloyd albums, and this music not only grewed in me, but it's always been a ... reference point to what "perfection" is. As an hobbyst composer i've always looked at this album like a painter looks at Michelangelo paintings. I really can't imagine how you didn't ever know this one, 'cause this album, The Wall, Wish you were here changed history and are "cultural phenomenons".
    There's a other stuffs from my "kid / pre-teen" era that i think are mandatory to know, if you want to adventure in other "musical trips" like the one you had with this album, and these are some of them:
    - Crisis by Mike Oldfield
    - Seconds out by Genesis (it is a doulbe live, containing the bests songs, and some sounds better than the studio version)
    - 90125 by Yes (some may disagree)

    • @penponds
      @penponds Před měsícem +1

      Yes Seconds Out - Supper’s Ready will blow him out the window…

  • @randymaclean2707
    @randymaclean2707 Před 7 dny

    Thank you for the ride! You brought us a wonderful experience, feeling like we got to return to an high point in our lives, sharing it with you as you heard and considered it for the first time. You most certainly have new friends and admirers. 😊

  • @ryansteele2677
    @ryansteele2677 Před měsícem +23

    "People used to make records, as in a record of an event; the event of people playing music in a room." -Ani DiFranco ... when listening to the classic bands and songs, that line will often come to mind...

  • @xxrobcollinsxx
    @xxrobcollinsxx Před měsícem +45

    Echoes - Live at Pompeii, absolute peak Pink Floyd

    • @theblueacorn
      @theblueacorn Před měsícem +3

      Although if this young haircut thinks slide guitars are 'lazy', Live at Pompeii might not be for him.

    • @mattmotorola8589
      @mattmotorola8589 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@theblueacornpretty sure Derek Trucks could turn him.

  • @pathfollower
    @pathfollower Před měsícem +44

    My roommate had this on a real quad album. So, instead of stereo, it had 4 distinct channels. The mix on this album was epic. A speaker in each corner of the room and you in a chair in the center was an experience to be remembered. For a little equipment history, vinyl albums have one track as the side to side movement of the needle. The second track is up and down movement of the needle. There are up to twenty thousand undulations in either direction for a frequency range of 0- 20000 hrtz. To play quad, there were up to 40000 undulations per second of travel of the needle in the groove. Then it took the two channels that were 20000-40000 htz. and electronically brought them back down to audio range. Very few albums were made this way. Had to have some crazy equipment to make such an album. Out of 1500 albums, he had maybe 25 that were quad channel. In the mid 1970s a reciever capable of playing such albums cost $600. The needle and cartridge for his turntable cost $125.
    The records didn't last long either. The tiny little bumps in the groove of the album wore away quickly.

    • @earevalent1
      @earevalent1 Před 19 dny +1

      I heard them live, twice in Quad in '77 with Animals in the rain in Houston, TX. Unmatched ever. I haven't heard anything since that compares.

    • @earevalent1
      @earevalent1 Před 15 dny

      I was there in Houston, 1977. The quad for welcome to the machine was brain-blasting! As you say, nothing compares.

  • @christianwilkerson939
    @christianwilkerson939 Před 9 dny +2

    Long time musician/guitar and bass etc. player...I am getting a kick out of your response. I am not sure you realize that while you are commenting about everything in the album, you are missing the fact that probably thousands of people have viewed this album, and to a certain extent the entire work of the band, as something they have based their lives on, to a certain extent. I look at it pretty much as you do, but you are treading on toes, somewhat, as I see in the comments, which is hilarious. Fortunately for you, your comments are fairly swinging toward the compliment side....if you had been really critical, someone would have probably bombed your studio.You should go through the whole catalogue...You will end up in awe of the work.

  • @LexTalionis23
    @LexTalionis23 Před měsícem +10

    16:15 that’s because it’s poetry and it’s telling you something, it’s cerebral, not a pop song. I’m glad you’re taking the time to hear it!