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The Paradox of the Prankster


 A Pink Floyd Memory
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Left to right, Rick Wright, Roger Waters, Nick Mason standing
and David Gilmour -- during the heady days of the early 1970's.

I was a graduating senior finishing High School in Virginia in June, 1975. A few days after school let out for the final time I got to see the legendary band Pink Floyd at the Capitol Centre in Landover, Maryland on June 10. Landover was not that far away from where I lived. A Pink Floyd ticket was a very hot ticket for this second of two nights at Capitol Centre and I had tickets for my girlfriend Liz and I. We shared a really fun day as we went out to an early dinner at a tall rooftop restaurant overlooking Washington, D.C. from Arlington, Virginia. We dined out and attended the concert with some buddies so she and I did not have to drive anywhere. After a very nice dinner Liz and I partook of some special dessert, 'Dixie Flat Tops' is what we called these little brown psychoactive fungi we collected in the cow pastures of Northern Virginia. We did not feel the full clean and clear impact of the psychedelic shrooms until we got to our seats which was perfect timing. The Capitol Centre at the time was a relatively new facility at that time that seated around 18,000 and for Pink Floyd every seat was sold. Despite the passage of 32 years and those mighty fine mushrooms, I still remember this show very clearly and with great fondness.



Prank's favorite Pink Floyd albums. Top from left to right 1971's 'Meddle' and 1972's 'Obscured by Clouds'.
Bottom left to right 1973's 'The Dark Side Of The Moon' and 1975's 'Wish You Were Here'.

By the early 1970's Pink Floyd core was a four piece band consisting of Rick Wright on Keyboards, David Gilmour on Vocals and Guitar, Nick Mason on Drums and Roger Waters on Guitars and Vocals. All the band members contributed songs and wrote many together as a team, but Roger Waters and David Gilmour emerged as the main lyrical forces and all the band members often clashed over the direction of the band. Pink Floyd also had many guest players including Dick Parry whose sax solos added jazz textures to Pink Floyd's recorded and live sounds for most of the 1970's. Vocalists Venetta Fields and Carlena Williams toured with Pink Floyd during this period as well as appearing on the albums above. Riding high on the charts, Pink Floyd was in their prime both in the recording studio and with their live performances. By 1975 Pink Floyd had just released the album 'Wish You Were Here' which was the follow-up to their smash 'The Dark Side Of The Moon' from 1973 and which was on the Billboard Top 200 album charts 591 weeks in a row from 1976 to 1988. The buzz was that the 2nd half of the show would be the complete performance of 'Dark Side' in full quadraphonic sound and with the infamous crashing airplane. Quad sound was an ancient form of surround sound for you youngbloods out there. 'The Dark Side Of The Moon' was concept album of sorts, madness, powerlessness and mindless materialism were the main themes I picked up on as I would listen to this album in various states of mind over and over again in 1973 and 1974. I went through at least 4 vinyl copies of this one before I got it on CD. 'Wish You Were Here' also covered the territory of insanity and the greed of the music business. I am most fond of all the Pink Floyd albums from this era covering 1971 through 1975 including 'Meddle' and 'Obscured By Clouds'. I loved 'The Wall' and most of their later material but those 4 albums pictured above are what I cut my teeth on and they all still sound great to me.

Pink Floyd was originally named Tea Set in 1964 but changed their handle when they found another band was using that name. They became The Pink Floyd Sound, in tribute to two blues musicians, Pink Anderson and Floyd Council. The Sound part of the name was dropped by 1966. A true story about Pink Floyd from the 'Wish You Were Here' recording sessions. The album itself was a tribute to Syd Barrett. Syd died on July 7, 2006. He joined Waters, Wright and Mason in the band in 1965 to play Guitar and write songs and he soon was adding his unique vocal stylings. Syd was institutionalized in the late 1960's due to his fragile mental state attributed to a daily diet that included LSD for most of 1968. Syd was gone from the band by 1969 entirely. In '68 he would often show up to concerts and play a single chord over and and over or detune his guitar while the rest of the band was performing. David Gilmour joined Pink Floyd to play Guitar in 1968 and he eventually replaced Syd. The band members hoped that Syd would just stop showing up for the shows and soon thereafter he did stop. Syd put out a few solo albums in 1970 and then ended his music career. By 1974 Syd was a heavyset man, his head and eyebrows completely shaved, Syd wandered into the studio while the band was mixing 'Shine On You Crazy Diamond'. His former bandmates did not recognize Syd at first, when suddenly one of them realized it was their 'Crazy Diamond' Syd. Syd was asked how he gained the extra weight he had put on since they last saw him, to which he replied "I have a fridge full of pork chops". Syd was greeted warmly by the band but he subsequently slipped away during the impromptu party for David Gilmour's wedding which coincidentally was also on that day. It was the last time any of the other band members saw Syd Barrett alive.

O.K. back to the concert. There was no opening act, just an evening with Pink Floyd with help from Parry on sax, Fields and Williams on lead and backing vocals. As we got to our seats which were 5 rows off the floor to the right side about 20 rows from the stage. The house lights dimmed and we could see a large circular screen that was a few stories tall behind the stage with small shadowy figures in front of the screen. Those shadows were Pink Floyd and the band played on with no interruptions or words to the crowd other than the songs. They seemed almost introverted when compared to some of the shows like The Who or Iggy Pop or The Stones that I have seen. Nope, these guys wanted us to watch the screen while they played in the dark and it was pretty wild if you like the visuals. There were a few spotlights on the band, no drum solos, no guitar hero antics, just a solid run through some of the greatest Pink Floyd music of all time. We were first treated to an hour plus set of all the songs from the album 'Wish You Were Here' followed by a short break. The second hour was the complete 'Dark Side of the Moon' suite and there was this blinking eye on the screen. The jumbo screen was at least 30 feet tall and that eyeball was blinking right at us and Liz and I just started to laugh like loons. The quad sound setup in the arena provided crystal clear sound and truly enhanced the show, it was not a gimmick. As the music began we followed the descent into insanity and subsequent hospitalization and treatment of whomever's brain that big blinking eyeball was attached to on the jumbo screen. Scenes from a small airplane heading into a crash, ambulances, operating rooms, mental health facilities and some animations played on the jumbo screen. As we got to the end of the 'Dark Side' suite a small red airplane came out of the ceiling of the Capitol Centre and crashed behind the stage. All the while we see the reaction of the eye on the screen as the planes shatters into small pieces. Liz and I both jumped out of our seats as that little plane swooped across the arena and crashed, we both were laughing and looked at each other and said "Did you see that too?" and the whole crowd went pretty crazy. Everyone was standing and cheering and the band just waved and I think Waters said 'Thank you' but that was it for the crowd interaction. I had read that this airplane crash spectacle happening at some Pink Floyd shows put on in outdoor settings and was surprised they could pull it off indoors. Witnessing it live was much better than I could have ever anticipated in my mind's eye. The final encore piece was the song 'Echoes', which was a album side epic from 'Meddle' back in the ancient days when vinyl disks had 2 sides, and it was a fitting finale to one of the most remarkable shows I have witnessed. The music was great and the images and story line on 'Dark Side' gave this fresh new High School Graduate a lot to think about. It was a hell of a lot of fun. We left with the show with big smiles and our minds totally blown and images of a big 30 foot tall blinking eyeball forever seared into our memories.



© Prankster Media Services 2007

Time
(Mason, Waters, Wright, Gilmour)
Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day
You fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way.
Kicking around on a piece of ground in your home town
Waiting for someone or something to show you the way.

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.

So you run and you run to catch up with the sun but it's sinking
Racing around to come up behind you again.
The sun is the same in a relative way but you're older,
Shorter of breath and one day closer to death.

Every year is getting shorter never seem to find the time.
Plans that either come to naught or half a page of scribbled lines
Hanging on in quiet desperation is the English way
The time is gone, the song is over,
Thought I'd something more to say.

Posted by Prank at 11:15 AM - 42 Comments   Add a Comment  
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Love the post! So glad you put a Pink Floyd song on. I love them. I was just thinking about putting one of their songs on my blog. They are great aren't they? They have some really good music. Ray and I used to listen to them all the time!
 
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by Miss Lou (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 12:01 PM




Prank,

Some poignant thoughts on time. thanks for the memories and the words.

glad none of the particles feel on your head1

chow.
 
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by AZRON (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 12:04 PM




great blog... I'd forgotten just how good Pink was and for some strange reason that I'd quit listening to them....

interesting stuff Prank, ... thanks!

ice

p.s. the poem/song "Time" is one to "save." one of the best I've ever read about 'time.'....
 
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by icemelts (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 12:41 PM




Wish you were here is the first song I ever learned how to play on the guitar.  
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by Zappa Fan (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 5:37 PM




I saw Pink Floyd in Milwaukee, I think around 1976. A buddy and I went. We had a great time. Nice to hear one of their songs. Thanks.  
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by The Peever (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 6:00 PM




Some of the shows I saw over the years tend to blur, Miss Lou. But Pink Floyd was a singular event that still stands out and puts a smile on my face whenever I think about it. I have gone over a year or two sometimes without listening to a certain old favorite but all of a sudden something will trigger the thought to put it on and voila! Some fun old memories pour out.

I hope you and Ray can Set Your Controls For The Heart Of The Sun and have a great time this weekend!
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 6:50 PM




Thanks, Ron, so far I have ducked most of that space junk.

And I was surprised how well that Pink Floyd song held up over time. The lyrics really spoke to me when I was a kid and they still do now.

Have a great day!

Prank
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 6:59 PM




A fine choice of a song to learn as you popped your guitar cherry, ZF. "Wish You Were Here" has always been one of my all time favorities.  
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 7:02 PM




I know how it is, ice. I have eras that I listen to and then they recede and another era takes hold for awhile. Sometimes there's a seasonal flair to it but there's the under current flowing. Pink Floyd is one band where I will listen to their albums intently for a period and then nothing for a year or two. Not sure why that is but it is is, that is.  
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 7:05 PM




Pink Floyd. Good Memories. I played Dark Side of the Moon so much I wore out the album and had to buy a new one. I wish I'd gotten to see them in concert. Great post Prank!  
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by Pilar (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 10:08 PM




You remember every minute of that night....I really enjoyed this one....Thanks for sharing the memories and the story about Syd too....Those were crazy wonderful times...and Pink Floyd still takes me right back there!  
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by Coloconnect (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 10:17 PM




Sweet memories, Prank! I loved reading this recollection. It reminds me of the days when concerts weren't so expensive and prohibitive for real fans to experience them. Your love of the music shows through. I hope kids today get to experience the kind of joy we had then.

Dixie Flat Tops? I forgot they were called that! If you ever make a wrong turn and wind up in Chattanooga, I'll direct you to a certian Black Angus farm that we as kids...uh...shall I say...harvested from time to time.
 
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by Biggie T (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 11:31 PM




I loved Pink Floyds music, Great Choice sir Prank a delic!  
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by Scratch (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 11:33 PM




Great article, Prank.

I love "meddle" but when I mention it to most people they don't have the slightest clue as to what I am talking about!

I put that album up with their best.

Good work!
 
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by Randy420 (PM , CC ) on Saturday January 6, 2007 @ 11:35 PM




A little sweet Tea with some special ingredients might make for a fun afternoon.

And you are right, those shows were $10-15 and we thought that was expensive. But I always had a job in those days and I had some bucks to see the live shows and I am so glad I did. I just wish I could extract it all from my brain like a computer or tape recorder.

I see youngsters at some of the shows I have attended, with their parents, even some kids at Social D in Norfolk with their Dad and the kids got on stage for a good chunk of the show. I love the unpredictablity of the live performance along with the energy.

Thanks for stopping by,
Prank
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 12:59 AM




Meddle was such a great album and relatively unknown, but they still played songs from that one into the 80's and early 90's. Pink Floyd went through 3 distinct stages; the Syd Barrett/Psychedelic era from 65 to 69, the still Psychedelic but more confident and studio savvy era from 1970 to 1980 and the post Roger Waters era when Waters left the band and they still continued on with some very nice work in the 1980's but it was not as good as the 1970 to 1980 era in my opinion.  
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 1:05 AM




Psst..just found this little nugget on You Tube and figured you were the only one that would appreciate this besides me.

 
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by Biggie T (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 1:05 AM




"You remember every minute of that night"

Yes, Colo, isn't it funny how certain evenings just sear into one's memory?

I love it when that happens...

Hope you having a very fine Sunday morning!

Prank
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 1:07 AM




Thanks, T, that was very cool.

For those who may not be familiar with the video that T posted, it is of David, Brian May from Queen on guitar, Mick Ronson on lead guitar and many other fine musicians backing up former Mott the Hoople lead singer Ian Hunter on a classic Mott song "All The Young Dudes". Which also happened to be written by Bowie. None of these guys played in Pink Floyd or anything. Just a cool video....
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 1:22 AM




Well I hope you can break out the old CDs and give them a spin...Pink Floyd holds up well I think, Pilar. There might even be a DVD you could rent, it wasn't like they were dynamic performers, but if they show something more like a wild film loop that enhances their music then that would be pretty cool...if such a beast exists.

Thanks for stopping by,

Prank
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 1:33 AM




Prank...I am infamous for getting off track. I found that vid and had to post it somewhere! I'm nothing if not random. T  
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by Biggie T (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 3:22 AM




Prank,
Your own poem at the end of this post spoke volumes to this soul. And thanks for sharing the concernt experience with a guy who never managed to attend a one.
 
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by MrOrnery1851 (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 4:48 AM




Why thank you, MrO, the poem at the end of this blog post are most of the lyrics to the song that was playing called "Time" which written and performed by Pink Floyd. I sometimes will post lyrics with a song and sometimes I post a song along with a poem I have writtent which may have something in common with a given tune. Anyway, I want to be sure that you, and everone, knows I am not trying to take credit for a song, a very fine one indeed, that I did not write.

Thank you for being a regular visitor here and I look forward to a Rockin' 2007.

Best wishes,

Prank
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 9:19 AM




Glad the Pink Floyd brought a smile to your face, Scratch. I always enjoyed the peaks and valleys of their music. The intense psychedelia to the very pastoral pieces plus most of the lyrics still sound fresh today. All tucked in over the course of 2 sides of vinyl. Oh yeah...

Thanks for stopping by the snow bound Prairie Palace!
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 10:38 AM




Hi Prank!! great post,just came by to say how are you? Love ya Madie  
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by Madie (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 11:57 AM




Prank,
Clearly I wasn't fully conscious when I made my stop. The song was playing as I read your concert remembrance, but I found myself visualizing the giant eye and crashing plane and didn't really listen to the lyrics. Your more alert readers already knew, I'm sure.
 
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by MrOrnery1851 (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 1:43 PM




Thanks, MrO!  
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 2:00 PM




I remember my Pink Floyd days as well.
Shrooms I never did, probably because I lived by the JD bottle as my mind altering drug, today I like one Long Island Iced Tea with a little bit of Floyd, is it wisdom or is it because morning comes early? Either way they go down sweet and cool.
 
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by Whispered Promise (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 6:29 PM




Yeah, the Floyd shows stay with you...I saw them twice in 1987 and while I may have been in the second tier and on a whole potpouri of psycho-active substances, I remember the shows well.....

Now, I couldn't tell you much about seeing Rush, front row center in 1988 cuz I was drunk....like toilet hugging, obnoxious screaming drunk, and I don't really like drinking at concerts so much cuz I can't remember much!

I HATE that!
 
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by Randy420 (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 6:39 PM




A toast to you this fine Sunday night, WP.

I had a mild affinity for the shrooms for awhile in the college days and Pink Floyd was one of the best soundtracks for that. But now I hear them with different ears and most of their stuff still works for me. Doesn't always happen that way, I remember my very fist record album, Freddie & The Dreamers, they even had their own dance and it was called "The Freddie" and it was one massively geeky dork dance...my next LP was by the Jimi Hendrix Experience and that one startled the parents a bit...

May you enjoy the Springtime in January. We're seeing Winter a Mile High in ways I have never experienced in the almost 23 years of living here. I look forward to the beach.

Prank
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 7:19 PM




Yes, Randy, Pink Floyd puts on quite a show. That's where I developed my fondness for flaming eyeballs and such. I had a nice tie dye flaming eyeball surfing a wave in a ring of fire shirt and it was treasured and worn until it dissolved in the washing machine one day.

Now I had a very bad experience with alcohol at a Bluegrass Festival in Sept. 1976. It one where you would camp out at the concert site on some farm over the course of a weekend. We got there Saturday and it was a blast. On the Sunday finale, it was a nice day, sunny and all...and someone handed this fool a bottle of gin which I proceeded to chug. Less than an hour later it was good that I was outside because I wandered off into a woody area and kinda just laid around there under a few trees for a few hours recovering. A friend would come over with water once in a while as I sat in the the shade revisiting breakfast and getting closer to God. Haven't made that mistake since...I can still taste it...
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 7:28 PM




Gin?


Bluegrass?


That's not a good combo.
 
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by Randy420 (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 7:54 PM




No mention of Atom Heart Mother? tsk,tsk....BC  
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by BigChris (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 8:03 PM




Well there you go, BigC, maybe you can tell us about Atom Heart Mother sometime in a blog, I had the vinyl and it was good one too...  
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 8:15 PM




Great post Prank!!


You have been BUSTED on Overheard in the Stream Saturday!
Come take a look at what my spies quoted you saying!

Lucy
 
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by Lucy. (PM , CC ) on Sunday January 7, 2007 @ 9:01 PM




Prank, That was great,... and to come here from ice's last post. Man,
cosmic stuff. i dig P.Floyd. you are a very interesting man. I grew up in Lovettsville, and Vienna and Richmond. Virginia. Now near Seattle.
Cya 'round the stream. I've read your posts many times, but first time left a comment. Glad I did. You are appreciated. Goodnight for now,TTR
 
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by trust the rust (PM , CC ) on Monday January 8, 2007 @ 12:38 AM




Hello TTR,

Thanks for stopping by and you all have been getting nasty weather too. Seems like the Northwest and Mountain West are having a Winter we won't forget while Old Virginny and the East is way warm.

I used to live in Reston. So I spent a lot of time in Vienna and used to play baseball and basketball against teams from Vienna. Small world, eh?

I appreciate the kind vibes and hope you come back for another visit sometime.

Prank

 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Monday January 8, 2007 @ 11:48 AM




I loved this post, Prank, I don't even know where to start with a comment. The info, your memories, the music, the comments, the memories it all brought me... great!  
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by Daisy (PM , CC ) on Monday January 8, 2007 @ 6:27 PM




I didn't know Syd Barrett died last June. When I was in London some time in the mid... no, was it 90? It was that year of The Wall concert from the Berlin Wall. My wife and I thought of going, but we decided to stay put in our own flat and watch it on TV. (Shoulda gone. It was a bore on TV.) In one of the tabs was a picture of Syd Barrett on the front page - the man Pink Floyd forgot, or some such crap. He was in his front yard, front yard of his Aunt's house? Can that be right or am I thinking Lovecraft again? (I do that. My cross to bear.) Apparently, the neighbors complained about his periodic episodes of barking. I possess those solo albums, "The Madcap Laughs," and "Barrett" in a two-disc reissue. His rendering of Joyce Chamber Music V "Goldenhair" is haunting. "Octopus" is brilliant. A lackluster Peel Sessions CD rounds out my Barrett, along with his work on "Piper" and his small contribution to "Saucerful of Secrets." I too enjoy "Obscured By Clouds," and I've seen the movie with the mud men - the whole bit. "Atom Heart Mother!" "Allen's Psychedelic Breakfast..." Marmalade, I like marmalade... Thanks for the memories.  
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by John the Squabbler (PM , CC ) on Tuesday January 9, 2007 @ 10:28 PM




Thank you, John, for sharing your fond thoughts regarding Syd Barrett and Pink Floyd...they brought a smile to my face.

Best wishes,
Prank
 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Thursday January 11, 2007 @ 9:53 PM




Cripes! I am late in catching this post! But thank you for it...just thank you.  
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by HeatherN (PM , CC ) on Wednesday January 17, 2007 @ 9:55 PM




 
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by Prank (PM , CC ) on Wednesday January 17, 2007 @ 10:20 PM


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   
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