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Pink
Floyd:
David Gilmour (vocals, guitar, VCS3 synthesizer)
Roger Waters (vocals, bass, VCS3 synthesizer, sound effects)
Richard Wright (keyboards, VCS3 synthesizer, background vocals)
Nick Mason (drums, percussion, sound effects)
Additional personnel:
Clare Torry (vocals)
Dick Parry (saxophone)
Doris Troy, Leslie Duncan, Liza Strike, Barry St. John (background
vocals)
Recorded at Abbey Road Studios, London between June 1972 &
January 1973.
DARK SIDE OF THE MOON was a benchmark record.
It turned the musical world on its ear with a hitherto unseen
combination of sounds, and changed things considerably for Pink
Floyd.
For this project, Pink Floyd resurrected older and unfinished
numbers, some of which came from the multitude of soundtracks
the band members had previously worked on.
The film "Zabriskie Point," a study of American materialism from
a foreigner's perspective, provided "Us And Them" (originally
titled "The Violence Sequence").
Waters rewrote "Breathe" after its appearance on his and
avant-garde composer Ron Geesin's score for "The Body," a
surreal medical documentary.
Floyd and their long-time engineer, Alan Parsons, used a
multitude of sound effects--from stereophonically-projected
footsteps and planes flying overhead ("On The Run") to a roomful
of ringing clocks ("Time").
Further adding to the record's mystique, barely audible spoken
passages were sprinkled throughout--a result of hours
interviewing random Abbey Road occupants about their views on
insanity, violence and death.
Floyd must have struck a nerve; DARK SIDE OF THE MOON remained
on Billboard's albums chart for an astounding fourteen years.
It made Pink Floyd a household name, elevating them to the level
of the Rolling Stones and The Who in the rock pantheon.
Editorial reviews:
...The sound is lush and multi-layered while remaining clear and
well-structured....a fine album with a textural and conceptual
richness that not only invites, but demands involvement....the
excellence of a superb performance...Q Magazine (10/94, p.137) -
4 Stars - Excellent New Musical Express (3/20/93, p.33) - 8 -
Excellent - ...although everything your punk rock elder brother
said was undeniably true, it doesn't take a great mental leap to
achieve the mind-set of the pot-smoking philosophy student and
pronounce this album a super-sensory classic...Uncut (5/03,
p.112) - 4 stars out of 5 - ...The subdued, darkly muttering,
sombrely somnolent music of DARK SIDE OF THE MOON startles....An
achievement of considerable merit...
Rolling Stone (05/24/1973)
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