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Godfather Records have
presented us with quite a curious release in Respect For These
Knights, in that it is essentially an album of Pink Floyd members
doing cover songs during a secret gig in Copenhagen, Denmark after
their regular performance at Gentofte Stadium during the “Momentary
Lapse” tour, and as an added bonus included the tracks from the Syd
Barrett tribute performed by the surviving members of the band.
Throughout the course of the
tour, David Gilmour, Richard Wright, and occasionally Nick Mason (along
with the full cast of touring musicians) performed secret club gigs
to blow off steam, have fun, and “jam” like in the early days.
It is interesting to consider
that both the early Floyd, and Gilmour’s previous band Joker’s Wild
performed quite a
few blues, RNB, and pop covers when approaching these side gigs as a
listener now, as they provide a glimpse into the diverse musical
backgrounds of the players.
Personally, I’m quite sure
that for the main Floyd men, it was also a liberation from the
precisely structured tour -
no lighting cues, click tracks, sequencing (etc.) - instead chances
to just “go off” which unquestionably eased some of the rigors of
the road and soothed the pressure placed upon them by Roger Waters’
threats of legal action for continuing without him.
Godfather have provided us
with some incredibly insightful liner notes that I’ll reproduce here,
detailing the history of these secret shows under the moniker The
Fishermen: “The mega-tour following Pink Floyd’s rebirth (which
began in September 1987 and extended through the summer of 1989),
resulted in some very interesting side-trips into musical
territories seldom explored by the group; on several occasions, the
members of Pink Floyd slipped into local clubs after their primary
concerts and delivered musical gems to a few unsuspecting, lucky
attendees.
Dubbed as “The Fishermen,” the
Floyd members, undoubtedly inspired by the young musicians touring
with them, along with the need to break from the monotony of their
meticulously calculated, structured stadium shows, threw caution to
the wind and embroiled themselves in fun, impassioned jams at these
surprise appearances, with setlists running the gamut from Soul
andRNB standards to timeless Rock classics.
The first of these ghost shows
took place on October 11th, 1987, at New York City’s World Club
after Floyd played the second of three shows in East Rutherford, New
Jersey (which we did not include here due to the poor sound quality
of the mastertapes). The next surprise gigs took place in 1988
during the Australian leg of the tour.
These included a show in
January at the Round Midnight Club in King’s Cross, Sydney as well
as two additional shows in February at the Corner Hotel in Richmond,
Melbourne.
The first Richmond gig
featured guest appearances by Roy Buchanan and Vanetta Fields, one
of Floyd’s backing vocalists during the 70s.
#At
the second show, they performed “I Shot The Sheriff”, “Unchain My
Heart”, “Superstition”, “Good Lovin’ Going Bad” and “Reeling In The
Years” among others. Unfortunately, we did not have access to any
documents of these Australian gigs and questionwhether any
recordings even exist.
The next surprise club gig
occurred during the European leg of the tour, after the Floyd
concert at Gentofte Stadium in Copenhagen, Denmark under usual
nickname of The Fishermen. This took place at the famous club
Annabel’s in the early hours of August 1st, 1988. With the exception
of Nick Mason, the entire touring band performed at this venue.
The gig was arranged by the
Danish branch of EMI Records to celebrate the birthday of Barrie
Knight (”Black Knight”), the manager of personal security for the
band, who even jumped onstage to sing along!
The setlist once again
included Motown classics such as Otis Redding’s “Respect”, “Rock
Steady”, an Aretha Franklin tribute performed as part of a medley
that also included “Rappers Delight,” (a curious blend of Soul and
Rap! Who could imagine this?), “My Girl”, ”Can’t Get Enough Of Your
Love”, another Otis Redding tune (with Knight onstage) and two
Stevie Wonder superhits, “Master Blaster” and “Superstition”.
The Floyds, despite some
technical problems with the audio system, demonstrated their
professionalism even in a casual setting performing splendidly. This
would be the last surprise show of Pink Floyd as The Fishermen.”
While I’m not personally qualified to judge the quality of The
Fishermen’s interpretations, what I can say is that the performances
are very loose, laid back, and clearly the musicians are having a
lot of fun. One of the vocalists was correct when she said “You’ll
never see anything like THIS again!” to the surely stunned audience.
Previously, this recording was
available via the Pro-CDR release Atom Soul Brother (A-tera 024) and
various fan-produced releases, but Godfather was correct in deeming
this recording worthy of a silver pressing - it does sound fantastic,
and so clear you can hear some of the onstage conversations calling
out keys and so forth.
The bonus tracks from the Syd Barrett tribute nearly a decade later
have also appeared on various fan-produced releases, but they do
round out the disc nicely.
Another interesting back story behind these, so I’ll again refer to
Godfather’s liner notes: “Syd Barrett, co-founder of Pink Floyd,
died at the age of 60 in July 2006 due to diabetes-related
complications.
Many musicians and fans
gathered in memoriam at a tribute concert held in Barbican Hall,
London, UK on May 10, 2007.
This show, organized by Nick
Laird-Clowes and Joe Boyd (producer of the first Floyd LPs),
featured big names from the UK music scene including Damon Albarn (Blur,
Gorillaz), Chrissie Hynde (The Pretenders), John Paul Jones (Led
Zeppelin), Robyn Hitchcock and many more - all of whom were
announced as participating in the event.
The biggest surprise however,
was not announced publically; Roger Waters, David Gilmour, Richard
Wright and Nick Mason would also perform at the concert.
Unfortunately, the tensions
between Waters and the other three, prevented them all from
performing together onstage, despite setting their differences aside
at Live8.
Roger Waters played an
acoustic version of his own song “Flickering Flame” with Jon Carin
(a multi-instrumentalist who toured with Pink Floyd from 1987 to
1994 and with Waters himself on recent solo tours), while the other
Floyds performed one of Barrett’s songs, “Arnold Layne” - their
first hit single.
The finale was another Syd
classic “Bike,” performed together with all of the participants of
the evening, including all of the Floyd members with the surprising
exception of Roger Waters!
When asked for an explanation,
Waters expressed concerns that the audience had crowded too close to
the stage - could this be proof that his own phobias which
originally built The Wall were still alive or simply further
evidence that the bad blood between him and his former bandmates
could never be overcome? Regardless of the answer, this is the final
document of the three remaining members of Pink Floyd performing
together onstage, and it is with this in mind that we have included
these valuable tracks from the archives here. “
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