[Music] Dark Side of the moon

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Icy Gull

Back on the rollercoaster
Jul 5, 2003
72,015
I've still got a first pressing from the day it was released. Remember waiting outside the shop to buy the vinyl. Luckier still to get it signed 3 years later by the whole band.
You can retire then I imagine, must be worth a fortune? ( well maybe not retire but have a great long haul holiday on the proceeds)
 








Bold Seagull

strong and stable with me, or...
Mar 18, 2010
29,913
Hove
Waters is an awesome lyric writer but I found them too dark from The Wall, I can only take so much and he became, imo, so very bitter with his lyrics. On the other hand Gilmour’s wife’s lyrics are twee and a bit shit on his albums so I gave his albums a miss too after a couple of listens. :smile:
I'd urge you to give TFC another listen. Still resonates with me today, the betrayal of politicians, the legacy of conflict. So full of emotion, feeling and anger. I really love it.
 








Nobby

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2007
2,645
Time has brilliant lyrics, this verse is probably my all time favourite, and so true.

Tired of lying in the sunshine, staying home to watch the rain
You are young and life is long, and there is time to kill today
And then one day you find ten years have got behind you
No one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun
This I think that could well be mine too.

So very true.....
 






BRIGHT ON Q

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
9,135
Time has brilliant lyrics, this verse is probably my all time favourite, and so true.

Tired of lying in the sunshine, staying home to watch the rain
You are young and life is long, and there is time to kill today
And then one day you find ten years have got behind you
No one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun

It is an incredible song, it certainly gets you thinking...
 


bhafc99

Well-known member
Oct 14, 2003
7,162
Dubai
I've still got a first pressing from the day it was released. Remember waiting outside the shop to buy the vinyl. Luckier still to get it signed 3 years later by the whole band.
09EFE0B1-D7EA-44F3-852A-E40BD32CFD56.jpeg
 


GT49er

Well-known member
Feb 1, 2009
47,068
Gloucester
You can retire then I imagine, must be worth a fortune? ( well maybe not retire but have a great long haul holiday on the proceeds)
Grrr! Don't talk to me about records worth a fortune! At Uni, when I wanted a better guitar than the crummy plywood one (well, not actually plywood perhaps, but you get the picture) Mum and Dad gave me when I was about 14, I sold most of my LP collection to finance the purchase (students didn't get credit in those days!). Unfortunately, one of the records was The Beatles White Album, numbered edition, bought on the day before release from Brian Epstein's shop in Liverpool. Number 78, IRCC
:(:(:(:(:(
 
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birthofanorange

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Aug 31, 2011
6,011
David Gilmour's armpit
Time has brilliant lyrics, this verse is probably my all time favourite, and so true.

Tired of lying in the sunshine, staying home to watch the rain
You are young and life is long, and there is time to kill today
And then one day you find ten years have got behind you
No one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun
Indeed, though those 'ten years' soon became twenty and thirty....
 


Nobby

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2007
2,645
Grrr! Don't talk to me about records worth a fortune! At Uni, when I wanted a better guitar than the crummy plywood one (well, not actually plywood perhaps, but you get the picture)Mum and Dad gave me when I was about 14, I sold most of my LP collection to finance the purchase (students didn't get credit in those days!). Unfortunately, one of the records was The Beatles White Album, numbered edition, bought on the day before release from Brian Epstein's shop in Liverpool. Number 78, IRCC
:(:(:(:(:(
Yikes
 


Nobby

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2007
2,645
For anyone into the Floyd, early Genesis etc, there is a band I discovered during the Pandemic, Pendragon
Helped me through at times.
Nick Barrett's writing and guitar is reminiscent of Gilmour at his best
They have written some amazing stuff over the last few years.
Seems that the Floyd, Yes, Genesis prog type stuff isnt quite dead yet....
 




Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
51,336
Faversham
Wind and Wuthering being one of them
At this point, the thread is dead to me.

I was 15 in 73. I'd seen Genesis twice. I bought Trespass, Nursery Cryme, Foxtrot and SEBTP. After that it got a bit silly, and then the sort of people who were middle aged by the time they were 18 were going to Empire Pool Wembley to watch tiny stick men, 200 yards away, sing soppy pop shite with added grade 8 musicianlyship, and then drooling on about it. Christ.

As for Floyd, I have 4 early albums. The latter (Obscured by clouds) is my favourite. Very gloomy and menacing. Then I found that the wanker element in my class at school were getting all excited about DSOTM, and planning a trip to the Coliseum to stand 2.5 kilometers away from a stage where tiny matchstick figures were silhouetted by a laser light show. f*** me.

The irony is that a year earlier these people were calling these bands rubbish.

I make no apology for this opprobrium. If I had a quid for each time one of the dimmer of my acquaintances accused me of not listening to 'proper music', I'd have almost enough money to buy a return ticket from Faversham to London.

:lolol:
 


Pavilionaire

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
30,741
DSOTM is a wonderful piece of work. It is timeless and profound too. I really got into Pink Floyd at a young age but when you are 12 or 13 the messages are quite dark and I eventually got into more uplifting stuff. However, the substance of the DSOTM, WYWH and The Wall have always stayed with me more than 40 years later. I have since come back and listen to Floyd regularly, have taken in all of their studio albums. Animals is superb, and their track Echoes is awesome.
 




Icy Gull

Back on the rollercoaster
Jul 5, 2003
72,015
At this point, the thread is dead to me.

I was 15 in 73. I'd seen Genesis twice. I bought Trespass, Nursery Cryme, Foxtrot and SEBTP. After that it got a bit silly, and then the sort of people who were middle aged by the time they were 18 were going to Empire Pool Wembley to watch tiny stick men, 200 yards away, sing soppy pop shite with added grade 8 musicianlyship, and then drooling on about it. Christ.

As for Floyd, I have 4 early albums. The latter (Obscured by clouds) is my favourite. Very gloomy and menacing. Then I found that the wanker element in my class at school were getting all excited about DSOTM, and planning a trip to the Coliseum to stand 2.5 kilometers away from a stage where tiny matchstick figures were silhouetted by a laser light show. f*** me.

The irony is that a year earlier these people were calling these bands rubbish.

I make no apology for this opprobrium. If I had a quid for each time one of the dimmer of my acquaintances accused me of not listening to 'proper music', I'd have almost enough money to buy a return ticket from Faversham to London.

:lolol:
I genuinely have no idea what you are wittering on about!

Are you dissing Wind and Wuthering?
 




BRIGHT ON Q

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
9,135
For anyone into the Floyd, early Genesis etc, there is a band I discovered during the Pandemic, Pendragon
Helped me through at times.
Nick Barrett's writing and guitar is reminiscent of Gilmour at his best
They have written some amazing stuff over the last few years.
Seems that the Floyd, Yes, Genesis prog type stuff isnt quite dead yet....

Seen them 10+ times, absolutely love them, Nick Barrett and his wife Rachel are lovely, stayed at their B& B in Bude.
Not of this world is one of my favourite albums.Nicks guitar work is up there with the best.watch him from 6:40
 
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