Band:
Syd Barrett / guitar and vocals
Jerry Shirley / percussion, drums
John Wilson / drums
Vic Saywell / tuba
Willey / percussion
Richard Wright (Pink Floyd)/ organ, harmonium, piano, keyboards,
production
David Gilmour (Pink Floyd) / organ, guitars, bass, production
If THE MADCAP LAUGHS was Syd Barrett's attempt to pare down his
songs into their basic components to reveal their inner workings,
then BARRETT is the fruition of that process.
While BARRETT is not a tremendous departure from what Barrett had
been working on earlier,
it seems to have benefited from Rick Wright taking Roger Waters'
place alongside of
David Gilmour in the producer's chair.
(If Waters had trouble "getting" Barrett in the context of Floyd,
then there was little chance of
a sympathetic ear during the solo sessions.)
Wright and Gilmour also accompany Barrett on much of the material.
Their tasteful blend of murmured bass, harmonium, and piano nicely
compliments Barrett's
acoustic strumming and the album's slower pace and slightly darker
mood, providing a
counterpoint to Barrett's dislike of conventional song structure.
From the seemingly paranoid free-association of "Rats" to the dirge
"Maisie," Barrett seems
to be channeling his wounded psyche directly on to the vinyl.
But just when you think you've heard it all, Barrett surprises with
the beautiful (and almost conventional) "Gigolo Aunt."
The importance of the contributions that Syd Barrett--a man
simultaneously years ahead and
years behind the times--made to music are undeniable.
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