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Pink Floyd:
David Gilmour (guitar, vocals)
Richard Wright (keyboards, vocals)
Roger Waters (bass, vocals)
Nick Mason (drums)
Additional personnel:
Bruce Johnston, Toni Tennille, Joe Chemay, John Joyce,
Stan Farber, Jim Haas, The Islington Green School.
Producers:
Bob Ezrin, Roger Waters, David Gilmour, James Guthrie.
Digitally remastered by Krieg Wunderlich.
THE WALL was Roger Waters' crowning accomplishment in Pink
Floyd.
It documented the rise and fall of a rock star (named Pink
Floyd), based on Waters' own experiences and the tendencies
he'd observed in people around him.
By now, the bassist had firm control of the group's
direction, working mostly alongside David Gilmour and
bringing in producer Bob Ezrin as an outside collaborator.
Drummer Nick Mason was barely involved, while keyboardist
Rick Wright seemed to be completely out of the picture.
Still, THE WALL was a mighty, sprawling affair, featuring
twenty-six songs with vocals--nearly
as many as all previous
Floyd albums combined.
The story revolves around the fictional Pink Floyd's
isolation behind a psychological wall.
The wall grows as various parts of his life spin out of
control, and he grows incapable of dealing with his neuroses.
The album opens by welcoming the unwitting listener to
Floyd's show ("In The Flesh?"), then turns back to childhood
memories of his father's death in World War II ("Another
Brick In The Wall [Part 1]"), his mother's
overprotectiveness ("Mother"), and his fascination with and
fear of sex ("Young Lust").
By the time "Goodbye Cruel World" closes the first disc, the
wall is built and Pink is trapped in the midst of a mental
breakdown.
On disc 2, the gentle acoustic phrasings of "Is There
Anybody Out There?" and the lilting orchestrations of
"Nobody Home" reinforce Floyd's feeling of isolation.
When his record company uses drugs to coax him to perform ("Comfortably
Numb"), his onstage persona is transformed into a homophobic,
race-baiting fascist ("In The Flesh").
In "The Trial" he mentally prosecutes himself, and the wall
comes tumbling down.
This ambitious concept album was an across-the-board smash,
topping the Billboard album chart for 15 weeks in 1980.
The single "Another Brick In The Wall (Part 2)" was the
country's best seller for four weeks.
THE WALL spawned an
elaborate stage show (so elaborate, in fact, that the band
was able to bring it to only a few cities) and a full-length
film.
It also marked the last time Waters and Gilmour would work
together as equal partners. |