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111 lines
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111 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
"Roger Waters' `Death' & Rebirth"
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by Timothy White
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in Music to My Ears
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from Billboard Magazine (Late July, 1992)
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It is the poet's responsibility to foresee the future, and it is his
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neighbor's duty to prevent the worst of it from taking place. With
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"Amused To Death," surely one of the most provocative and musically
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dazzling records of the decade, Roger Waters has fulfilled his part of
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the bargain.
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It was three years before Operation Desert Storm that Waters, the
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British founder and former chief composer of Pink Floyd, began work on
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"Amused To Death," his third solo album, by writing "Perfect Sense," a
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two-part song suite envisioning a world in which live television
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transmissions of war and upheaval become the principal form of mass
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entertainment. According to the album's thesis, since there is nothing
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in the history of civilization that generates more profit for the power
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elite than war, its creators see the enterprise as a can't-miss
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proposition.
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"The idea for the album," says Waters, "was a strangely prophetic one. I
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was working within the general metaphor of a gorilla watching
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television, the ape being a symbol for anyone who's been sitting with
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his mouth open in front of network and cable news for the last 10 years.
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The record explores the idea of television as medicine: It's either
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healing us or killing us. The truth is it's doing both, healing us as a
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target audience but killing off our respective cultures."
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If "Perfect Sense" expresses the corporate philosophy for what Waters
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calls "conflict programming," then it is the thundering trio of tracks
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that compose "What God Wants (Parts IIII)" that spell out the
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rationalization for this odious stroke of global hucksterism.
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"What sparked the writing of 'What God Wants' was the accumulation of
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all the 'God-is-on-our-side' claptrap from Desert Storm," says Waters.
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"It just seems so crass that we're reaching the end of a millenium and
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yet, even with our incredible ability to exchange information between
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cultures, we still cling to our narrow dogmas. Thanks to television, we
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watched a murky missiles-and-fireworks display from the roof of a
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Baghdad hotel, and learned no more than we could see with our own eyes
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which was deliberate. Now Bush is shopping the election-year idea of
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invading Iraq again and it's all the same cheap, dishonest game show."
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>From the start, Waters realized that, in order for "Amused To Death" to
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be terrifying, it had to be woven around rock'n'roll that was
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convincing. Listeners familiar with Waters' distinctive but uneven
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earlier solo offerings ("The Pros And Cons of Hitchhiking," 1984; "Radio
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K.A.O.S," 1987) will find the new album to be much closer in mood and
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execution to Pink Floyd's "The Dark Side Of The Moon" (1973) and "The
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Wall" (1979), for which Waters was the guiding creative force. However,
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it must be stated that, from the near-tactile quality of its musical
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fiber to the epic scope of its theme, "Amused To Death" is a masterful
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rock parable that ranks with or surpasses the Floyd's finest work.
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Give this record your full concentration for one listening and be
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riveted to the point of palpable distress. Play it just once more and
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you will be hooked in perpetuity, its brilliant design etched in your
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brainpan, each lavish mise-en-scene invading your dreams. Waters'
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imploring vocals have never been more polymorphic, changing in shape and
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coloration as they rise from a hiss to a clarion call, and they traverse
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a narrative path that's darkly iridescent with spooky detail. No meadow
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footfall, flutter of a fax machine. or throttled surge in the cockpit of
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an F-1 bomber is overlooked in the album's lustrous auditory spectrum.
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Yet the foreboding noises are so nimbly merged with Patrick Leonard's
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sighing keyboards, the frightful beauty of Jeff Beck's lead guitar, and
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the chordal ring of Andy Fairweather Low's rhythm passages that they
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become a single vivid scheme. It's a grim feast of sound, enthralling
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and unforgettable.
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But the accomplishment doesn't stop there, because the human dimension
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of its storyline is also fully explored. We get skin-close to a serenely
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detached young F-1 ace from Cleveland whose on-camera high-altitude
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bombing runs make him a mammoth video star. And, within the pitiless
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logic of "conflict programming," the same fate befalls a philosophy
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student slain in Tiananmen Square.
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"In the more than five years it took to make this record, my songwriting
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has become more passive, more of a conduit, with less ego," says Waters.
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"And it now allows me to attach more directly to the individual
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experiences l'm writing about. Like that of the imaginary girl in
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Tiananmen Square. It allows me to enter her mind, to give her an
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engineer for a father and a part-time job as a pastry chef, and it
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allows me to weep for her. Maybe," he adds, "I've succeeded in the last
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five to 10 years in tearing down more of my own wall."
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Aspects of "Amused To Death" were molded by the onrush of events that
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paralleled its assembly. Waters feels that a project he interrupted the
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recording to undertake likewise influenced his personal
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transformation~the massive charity concert, "The Wall~Berlin 1990,"
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which he staged in the former no man's land on Potzdamer Platz as a
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benefit for the Memorial Fund for Disaster Relief. The spectacular show
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and live album raised $10 million for the care of international victims
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of disasters, with the concert's companion home video continuing to
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gather funds through sales of a half-million pieces in the U.S. alone.
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Waters has called the World War II death of his own father (an RAF
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pilot) "a wrenching waste." On "Amused To Death," he openly mourns the
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dad he never knew in the song "Three Wishes," intoning at its dramatic
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crest: "I wish somebody'd help me write this song/I wish when I was
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young/My old man had not been gone."
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Waters notes that the only enduring rogues in war television as
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delineated on "Amused To Death" happen to be the peacemakers~because
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they threaten the programming schedule. And the biggest villains on
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conflict TV are the victims who dare call for forgiveness and
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reconciliation. Nobody likes a killjoy, and hatred as hedonism~as
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described in the title song of "Amused To Death"~is destined to become
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"the greatest show on earth."
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If there have been intervals of late when this forecast seems as if it
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may already be unfolding, then "Amused To Death," due for release from
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Columbia Sept. 1, may not reach us an instant too soon. "At the start of
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my record," says Waters, "an actual World War I survivor speaks about a
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fallen comrade he couldn't carry to safety. There's something in me that
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says the sentiments of that survivor are an experience common to all
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humanity. It's the feeling of 'Is there something more I could have
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done?' In my own life, I'd like to learn the answer to that question if
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I can."
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