mirror of
https://github.com/opsxcq/mirror-textfiles.com.git
synced 2025-08-31 12:21:55 +02:00
636 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
636 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
News Clippings - short blurbs
|
|
|
|
|
|
Q Magazine, September 1991
|
|
|
|
'The last few thousand of the quarter million toiling out of the Potsdamer
|
|
Platz, Berlin,20 minutes after the end of 'The Wall' were transfixed to hear
|
|
the whole extravaganza starting up again behind them. Because of substantial
|
|
technical hitches which afflicted the early part of the performance -
|
|
including an expanse of dead silence at one point - and the requirements of a
|
|
live album due for genuine "rush" release within weeks, Roger Waters and the
|
|
producers had decided they should go straight back out and fill in the blanks.
|
|
A few days later, with a candour unusual, veering towards the unique, in the
|
|
history of the live album, Waters headed sceptics off at the pass by revealing
|
|
the exact extent of the "retouching" involved. The unnofficial after-midnight
|
|
performance provided The Thin Ice (with Ute Lemper). Another Brick In The part
|
|
1 and The Band's parts on Mother (Sinead O'Connors vocal, interrupted on the
|
|
night,was taken from the dress rehearsal). Bryan Adams went into the studio to
|
|
debug his version of Young Lust, Cyndi Lauper did likewise for Another Brick
|
|
part 2, and they both added some extracurricular work on The Tide Is Turning,
|
|
the entire cast encore. All the proceeds from the record are, of course, going
|
|
to Leonard Cheshire's International Fund For Disaster Relief.'
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Extracts from Hipgnosis book RE: "A Nice Pair"
|
|
|
|
'At first we couldn't think of anything for this cover. Slowly we amassed a
|
|
collection of otes and pencil roughs. But they were mostly silly jokes and
|
|
didn't feel sufficiently strong to work on their own. In the end we got so
|
|
attached to them that we decided to use them all. Nice Pair is, essentially,
|
|
eighteen individual sleeve designs and it took, therefore, a very long time to
|
|
do. The inner spread comprises numerous Floyd photos from the archives and shows how the rigid layout began to ore the pants off the designer - his
|
|
concentration flagged and he simply made a mess of it at the end.
|
|
The Floyd have a good sense of humour so many of the ideas were jokes,
|
|
pictures, puns or aphorisms like 'laughing all the way to the bank' (Bob
|
|
Lawrie), 'nip in the air' (Colin Elgie), 'fork in the road', and a 'frog in the
|
|
throat'. Other pictures are just ones we like, for instance, the cinema foyer
|
|
(one of our favourite locations, see 10cc 'Sheet Music'). Some are a bit wry
|
|
like the paranoid peephole in the door of a family called Fear, and the
|
|
spectacles out of focus. The latter belong to the photographer taking the
|
|
picture. When he took them off to shoot them, he couldn't see to well, and so
|
|
was unable to focus correctly. The completely stoned freak with his kaftan and
|
|
psychedelic goggles is a reference to the Floyd's psychedelic past. The one of
|
|
Po and I in our studio is about discussing this Floyd sleve ('Dark Side' has
|
|
gone, or is disappearing). We are in the process or rejecting an all pink cover
|
|
as a solution. We're no fools. The Floyd's own football, PFFC, is an oddity. In
|
|
fact it's a replacement for a photo of Floyd Patterson, the boxer, painted pink
|
|
all over. But he wanted five grand for the privilege so it was quickly
|
|
forgotten. You'd think he'd pay to be on a Floyd sleve'
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
A blurb from the magazine "Kitchen and Bath Business," (don't know the
|
|
issue, it's prob. around March '92, but my photocopy doesn't include the date):
|
|
|
|
People who plan kitchens for families with children know that a lot of kid's
|
|
cooking abilities stop at microwave burritos. "The Rock and Roll Kitchen," a
|
|
TV show currently being offered to syndicators, may help alleviate this
|
|
condition. The show is designed to give kids the message that it's "cool to
|
|
cook," said its host, *Scott Page* [emphasis mine], a musician currently
|
|
working with Pink Floyd. Guests include the likes of Brian Wilson of the
|
|
Beach Boys. The show features live performances and cooking demos., and the
|
|
most striking visual element of the decidedly rock-ish set is a cooktop
|
|
shaped like an enormous electric guitar. Also planned is a cookbook of rock
|
|
stars' recipes. Given the creativity that goes into the names of acts--like
|
|
Humble Pie, Meat Loaf, The Strawberry Alarm Clock, The Flying Burrito
|
|
Brothers, The Mighty Lemon Drops, Meat Puppets, Throbbing Gristle and of
|
|
course, Vanilla Ice--the rock star recipes should be at the very least
|
|
somewhat amusing, if not actually appetizing. And here's hoping the recipes
|
|
won't simply be a thousand variations on grilled cheese or whatever tastes
|
|
good with corn flakes.
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Reprint without permission from the 8/28/92 edition
|
|
of the Boston Globe, page 58. (And, no the author is
|
|
not Steve Morse the guitarist.)
|
|
|
|
Waters sounds a blast against war
|
|
---------------------------------
|
|
|
|
by Steve Morse
|
|
|
|
When last seen in 1990, former Pink Floyd braintrust
|
|
Roger Waters was performing "The Wall" at the foot
|
|
of the crumbling Berlin Wall. It was a timely concert
|
|
for freedom that included such guests as Van Morrison
|
|
and the Scorpions. It also signaled the end of an era
|
|
for Waters, who then went away to reflect on yet another
|
|
epic concept album.
|
|
|
|
Waters returns next Tuesday with "Amused to Death," a
|
|
devastatingly acerbic, but ultimately inspiring album
|
|
about the idiocy of war and the way it's covered on
|
|
television. He clearly spent hours watching the Gulf
|
|
War unfold - and it left him filled with revulsion.
|
|
|
|
A centerpiece song is "The Bravery of Being Out of Range,"
|
|
with this commentary vocal: "Just love those laser-
|
|
guided bombs/ They're really great for righting wrongs/
|
|
You hit the target and win the game." To which he adds:
|
|
"With the bravery of being out of range/ We zap and maim."
|
|
|
|
Waters, his stentorian, recitative voice intact (much of
|
|
the music will evoke "The Wall" LP), also comments on
|
|
everything from Vietnam to Tiananmen Square, amid
|
|
thunderous backbeats and the searing guitar of none
|
|
other than Jeff Beck on many blues-atmosphere tracks.
|
|
The album plays like a soundtrack from a couch potato
|
|
Twilight Zone, though Waters strikes the target time
|
|
and again. As he finally concludes about mankind:
|
|
"This species has amused itself to death."
|
|
|
|
Look for a Waters tour late this year or the beginning
|
|
of next.
|
|
|
|
[ There is a publicity-style picture of Waters playing
|
|
his bass, looks like it was taken during the same
|
|
time as the KAOS tour program photos. The caption
|
|
reads: "Roger Waters: Taking aim at the Gulf War."]
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Exceprt from August 30, 1992, The Sunday Times
|
|
[London, presumably, as Poster was from Leeds, UK]
|
|
|
|
[review of Madonna stuff deleted]
|
|
|
|
* Conspicuous by his absence from all of Madonna's latest moves is her former
|
|
songwriter-in-chief and musical MD, Pat Leonard. In a remarkable musical U-turn,
|
|
Leonard has transferred his allegiance to Roger Waters, the man who authored
|
|
some of the weightiest concept albums of the 1970s when he played bass, wrote
|
|
and sang with Pink Floyd. The 1980s weren't a good time for Waters: the
|
|
protracted lawsuit over who owned the Floyd's name was bad enough, and his
|
|
two solo albums, The Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking and Radio KAOS were, in the
|
|
opinion of many, worse.
|
|
|
|
His new one, Amused to Death (Columbia, all formats, out September 7), which
|
|
Leonard co-produced, is a marked improvement. It comes heavily stamped with
|
|
Water's usual apocalyptic preoccupations and his puzzling distrust of mass
|
|
entertainment. This time he is fgretting mostly about the ways in which
|
|
television leaches war of its horror and significance. Fortunately for the rest
|
|
of us, Amused to Death recaptures the way the old Pink Floyd used to sound -
|
|
interleaving taped voices, evocative sound effects, floaty textures and dramatic shifts in musical direction - rather more effectively than it pulls
|
|
off its grand conceptual design. "Cinema for the ears" is pushing it. Not a bad
|
|
reminder this, though, of that far off time when rock felt it had a dutyto
|
|
try to make people think.
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Article/interview from TOP magazine, September.
|
|
|
|
[Top is a freebie mag produced by Tower Records UK; generally pieces are
|
|
purely promotional so don't expect too much! JK.]
|
|
|
|
ROGER WATERS
|
|
The heavy hitter of rock targets war on his latest work
|
|
|
|
by Sam Johnson
|
|
|
|
Sitting in the swish hotel suite in Chelsea Harbour, Roger Waters looks
|
|
alarmingly relaxed. As he smilingly offers liquid refreshments, one is
|
|
given to wondering whether this can be the same man whose troubles psyche
|
|
has launched a dozen major musical traumas on the world; whose spilt from
|
|
Pink Floyd was famously acrimonious; whose relationship with the press has
|
|
frequently been less than cordial? The answer appears to be yes.
|
|
The reason for Waters' bonhomie lies in the release of a new album, his
|
|
first since _Radio K.A.O.S._ in 1987. The title of the new work is _Amused
|
|
To Death_, a gleaming artefact co-produced by Pat Leonard (of Madonna fame)
|
|
and featuring contributions from the likes of Jeff Beck, Don Henley, P.P.
|
|
Arnold and Rita Coolidge.
|
|
Unsurprisingly, 'Amused To Death' is a concept album. That concept is
|
|
war, specifically the way in which, as Waters sees it, war is glamourised
|
|
as entertainment in the media. Musically, the record harks back to the
|
|
halcyon days of Pink Floyd with its grand soundscapes and unceasing search
|
|
for that epic effect. From the opening track, 'What God Wants (Pt.1)', we
|
|
know we are in the presence of a statement.
|
|
So, does Roger Waters feel that the Pink Floyd comparison is fair
|
|
comment?
|
|
"I don't mind the comparison at all. I think I may have blundered
|
|
slightly on 'Radio K.A.O.S.' by allowing myself to be persuaded to use more
|
|
modern production methods -- rather against my better judgement. There was
|
|
a lot of Fairlight programming. I went into this project absolutely
|
|
determined to make this record in the way I knew how."
|
|
The choice of Pat Leonard, he of the slick pop song, as co-producer is an
|
|
interesting one. How did that come about?
|
|
"I talked to a few producers about the album and when I got to Pat,
|
|
notwithstanding the fact that he'd never made a record that I'd liked at
|
|
all, I did like him very much. We had a good conversation over the phone
|
|
which had jokes in it. When we met, he told me he had watched a live
|
|
performance of 'Dark Side Of The Moon' as a 14-year-old and had been a fan
|
|
ever since."
|
|
Moving on to weightier topics, it seems from the lyrics on the new album
|
|
that you have a horrible fascination with war. Would you agree?
|
|
"Well, this is a concept album. It's about the relationship between us
|
|
and the television set. The theatre of the album is characterised as a
|
|
monkey watching a television set. War -- and Desert Storm seems a perfect
|
|
example of this -- has become a manifestation of the need that we have in
|
|
the civilised West to amuse ourselves in the exercise of entertaining and
|
|
dramatic foreign policy. It's jolly good TV.
|
|
"I'm concerned that this type of gunboat diplomacy has got tied up with
|
|
economic factors that we don't notice because it's done so subtly. I
|
|
identify very much with the guy at ground zero, the one that might get
|
|
blown to bits or see his children slaughtered. And I think, 'What the fuck
|
|
for?'. This has been one of my preoccupations for the last 20 years."
|
|
What do you hope the effect of the record will be on its audience?
|
|
"There is stuff there for people to take for their own if they're
|
|
prepared to, in the same way I took stuff from Lennon's early work, or
|
|
indeed Dylan's. I hope people can understand it and that some of them may
|
|
realise that they're not alone. Maybe we can gather together in small
|
|
groups and make the world a better place.
|
|
"It's like certain organisations that I approve of -- Amnesty
|
|
International and Greenpeace, for example -- have gained serious footholds
|
|
in the early nineties to the extent that most of us take them seriously.
|
|
All these environmental issues are finally starting to colour the way
|
|
policies are formed."
|
|
So if it's a quick hop, skip and a jump you're after, _Amused To Death_
|
|
is not the record for you. If, on the other hand, you're up for grappling
|
|
with something big, weighty and difficult, then Roger is your man.
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
This comes from Knight-Ridder newspaper, written by Gary Graff, and showed up
|
|
in the Columbus dispatch.
|
|
|
|
[on what disks got left out of _Shine On_]
|
|
|
|
"Gilmour said the hardest part of the process was deciding what would be
|
|
deleted from Shine On. Some choices were obvious: Gilmour wasn't aboard for
|
|
1967's Piper at the Gates of Dawn, and 1983's The Final Cut was a
|
|
Waters-controlled project that Gilmour, drummer Nick Mason, and keyboardist
|
|
Rick Wright dislike." [!]
|
|
|
|
"As for the rest, Gilmour said, 'something had to go in order to keep it at a
|
|
somewhat reasonable price. One way or another, someone's favorite is going to
|
|
be left out. Roger wanted The Final Cut to be in there and not AMLOR but the
|
|
rest of us wanted it the other way around, so he was outvoted.'" [and I'm sure
|
|
he did it calmly with grace - I can imagine what meetings with the 4 guys must
|
|
have been like!]
|
|
|
|
[on the next album]
|
|
|
|
"With Shine On completed, Gilmour has set his sights on the next Floyd album.
|
|
Waters - who sought an injunction in 1987 to stop Gilmour from using the Pink
|
|
Floyd name - was mollified with an out-of-court financial settlement, although
|
|
he spears his former band mates in an interview in the latest Musician
|
|
magazine. Gilmour, meanwhile, said a jam session about a year ago with Mason,
|
|
Wright, and other musicians from the most recent Floyd tour made him feel
|
|
optimistic about the upcoming project."
|
|
|
|
"'Rick and Nick and myself seem to be fairly well in agreement on the way we
|
|
like to do things, which makes things much smoother' Gilmour said. 'We've been
|
|
listening to some ideas we still have lying around, trying to think of what to
|
|
do.'"
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
The January 8, 1993 issue of Goldmine features Pink Floyd as its
|
|
cover story.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
...Gilmour is asked whether the group's failure to place so many
|
|
of its early singles on later compilation albums indicates a
|
|
dissatisfaction with them.
|
|
"Certainly, there is an element within the people involved that
|
|
aren't that keen on every single one of them," he replies
|
|
diplomatically, "and there was actually some opposition amongst us all
|
|
to whether we should even do this at all [i.e., release them on Shine
|
|
On].
|
|
"There are lots of tracks on those early albums, on Saucerful of
|
|
Secrets and these early singles, which are for real enthusiasts only,
|
|
if you know what I mean," Gilmour adds, laughing, "to put it
|
|
delicately. Certainly, there are tracks that I hate on some of these
|
|
things.
|
|
"But it's historical. I don't want to get too precious about it,
|
|
we'll just put the stuff out. There are people who want it, a lot of
|
|
people who want it, abd I think it's an interesting little historical
|
|
hole to fill."
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Another tidbit regarding Atom Heart Mother:
|
|
---
|
|
Gilmour does not remember the album favorably and decided to leave it
|
|
off of Shine On, though he promises it will be remastered for an
|
|
improved CD version in the near future.
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
And regarding "When the Tigers Broke Free"
|
|
---
|
|
Asked if he had considered including it on the rarities disc of
|
|
Shine On, Gilmour replies, "To be honest with you, it never occurred
|
|
to me. The whole period of the post-The Wall period and The Final Cut
|
|
period are all such a nightmare in my mind that I tended to blank all
|
|
of that out of my thought processes. It would be a good idea. It's
|
|
a very nice track, actually. Maybe Roger should put it out on his
|
|
greatest hits."
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
A bit about Welcome to the Machine, touring in general, etc., from the
|
|
"Backstage" book by Bob Hassall
|
|
|
|
|
|
...We left in a group of six and spent the twenty minute ride
|
|
listening to the crew's chit-chat. I heard why 'Welcome To The
|
|
Machine' hadn't made it onto the video that had just been
|
|
released. Floyd are allowed to play it but Rog still has a say
|
|
in the matter concerning whether or not it goes on film. The same
|
|
reason it wasn't to be played in Venice which was to be filmed and
|
|
sent out "live" to 27 countries.
|
|
|
|
|
|
...During a back-stage interview at Wembley (6th of August '88). and
|
|
in reply to this whole affair, David Gilmour Said:
|
|
|
|
"Well, it's my job. What can I say? It's what I do for a living.
|
|
Pink Floyd is the particular career that I've chosen and have been
|
|
involved with for twenty years and without a good reason, I don't
|
|
see why I should pack it in. I'm 42. I've got no intention of
|
|
retiring. I've got no intention of jacking this in or anything
|
|
else that I do. I have no idea what I'll feel like in the future.
|
|
You might see us when I'm 60, I don't know. I mean, if it's fun
|
|
and people wanna come see it, it's a privilege... I mean, I might
|
|
have to work otherwise!"
|
|
|
|
Nick Mason said:
|
|
|
|
"People had the tendancy to sort of feel more and more that Roger
|
|
held the regins and was the controlling influence but I think when
|
|
he did go, there was still realisation that we 'could' carry on.
|
|
Rog is very fond of saying, "No-one's indespensable", and er...
|
|
he was right".
|
|
|
|
|
|
...I went across to Bob Mardon. He's the P.T.S driver and was responsible
|
|
for those four clusters of lights (pods) that horizontally and vertically
|
|
moved across the stage. He told me that the guy in the 'Lapse' film is
|
|
actually the same guy who looks after David Gilmour's boat house/studio.
|
|
The location used for the films was Grantchester Meadows, a place that's
|
|
always been close to the hearts of the band. An inspirational place,
|
|
responsible for many good track back in the early days.
|
|
|
|
About the 'eagle' (used during Learning To Fly) ...Apparently because it
|
|
wasn't all that good, the crew had burnt it in Manchester ('88) on the
|
|
carpark: they'd been carrying it around but not using it for too long.
|
|
|
|
Back-stage in Werchter (B), I'd seen a life size bulbman standing between
|
|
two white pillars (a plastic fern plant on each). There were electric
|
|
cables running up one leg,... Bob told me that it was used only to
|
|
brighten up the dressing-room areas!
|
|
|
|
|
|
...Marc Brickman had worked with Roger Waters back in '84 when 'Pros And
|
|
Cons' hit the road. He also had his hand in the making of 'The Gunner's
|
|
Dream' film from 'The Final Cut' album (1983). Here he was again with the
|
|
Floyd, this time as the lighting designer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
...Again Scott Page (sax) was busy with his video camera. More than once
|
|
I'd seen him filming the sound-checks. For his scrapbook, I imagine.
|
|
|
|
|
|
...About ten minutes before the gig started I saw Gary Wallis wandering
|
|
around, mingling with the fans. Nobody expected one of the band to come
|
|
out to the public so he managed to stay unrecognised. In only a few
|
|
minutes everyone would be freaking to Gary's fantastic drum play but now
|
|
they seemed to be annoyed at yet another guy pushing his way through.
|
|
|
|
|
|
...In Moscow, during 'Money', overenthusiastic fans began to throw coins
|
|
at the stage. The whole band had to wear safety helmets before they could
|
|
carry on.
|
|
|
|
|
|
...As a point of interest, Floyd were carrying a second pig, the main
|
|
difference being that on the one, the horns protrude and on the second
|
|
they are drawn on. They were being used at random. First one out of the
|
|
flight-case, type of thing.
|
|
|
|
|
|
...Knebworth: Before the band entered the stage, there was about 20
|
|
minutes of film shown on enormous video screens. Apart from getting a
|
|
mini history of the Floyd (made up from clips and old b/w footage), we
|
|
were also given some new scenes from the 'Lapse' film. The oarsman would
|
|
sit on the floor, in the middle of an empty room and make rowing motions,
|
|
with a glazed look in his eyes, as if reminiscing on things gone by
|
|
('Signs Of Life' was shown). He'd take a feather and stare through it,
|
|
trying to hold on to some vague memory (we got 'Learning To Fly').
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
A couple 'obits" from TAP (#56)
|
|
|
|
Leonard Cheshire
|
|
----------------
|
|
|
|
Lord Cheshire, founder of the Memorial Found for Disaster Relif,
|
|
died of motor neurone disease on July 31. He was 74. After his
|
|
wartime career as a bomber pilot, for which he won the Victoria
|
|
Cross, Cheshire established homes for the disabled in 45 countries.
|
|
He is survived by his wife and two children.
|
|
In 1990, Roger Waters said of Cheshire: " He demonstrates a
|
|
complete lack of selfishness, extraordinary energy and loads of
|
|
compassion."
|
|
|
|
|
|
also in TAP (which all of you probably knows):
|
|
|
|
Jeff Porcaro
|
|
------------
|
|
|
|
Jeff Porcaro drummer with Toto, died recently of a suspected
|
|
heart attack. He was 38. Porcaro played on Mother, About Face and
|
|
Amused To Death.
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Something else for San Francisco Bay Area folks, quoted without
|
|
permission from the 23Aug92 Datebook section of the SF Chronicle:
|
|
|
|
"Started on a shoestring 25 years ago in the bucolic glade of Los
|
|
Gatos, Guitar Player magazine caught the first wave of exploding
|
|
interest in rock's chief instrument, persevered and finally prospered,
|
|
becoming one of those rare publications that actually communicates with
|
|
the audience it indended -- in this case, musicians. Which probably
|
|
explains why Guitar Player can hold a silver aniversary concert and get
|
|
a virtual Who's Who of the field to perform."
|
|
|
|
"Although the program probably will shift around before show time,
|
|
those who already have agreed to appear at the Spetember 19 benefit at
|
|
the Warfield Theater include David Gilmour of Pink Floyd, all-around
|
|
great Ry Cooder, blues immortal John Lee Hooker, session heavy Larry
|
|
Carlton, unique fusion jazz specialist Stanley Jordan, and such noted
|
|
iconoclasts of the instrument as former David Bowie sideman Adrian
|
|
Belew, Dixie Dregs frets man Steve Morse, and former Joe Satriani
|
|
bassist Stu Hamm, who will appear with rockers-turned-jazzbeaux drummer
|
|
Steve Smith of Journey and keyboardist Tom Coster of Santana."
|
|
|
|
"Guitarist Jeff "Skunk" Baxter of the Doobie Brothers and Steely Dan is
|
|
serving as special consultant, and Dick Bright, former musical director
|
|
of the Bammies {San Francisco's music awards}, will preside over the
|
|
house band for the event -- not an evening to be missed for guitar
|
|
fans."
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Source: Information Week, 11/30/92, pg 46, Joseph Panettieri
|
|
|
|
Scott Page, president of Walt Tucker Productions, was at Comdex/Fall 92
|
|
- not just pitching his wares on the trade show floor
|
|
- but blowing saxophone at the Thomas & Mack Center for 15,000 people
|
|
'the professional sax player has recorded and toured with everyone
|
|
from Diana Ross to Pink Floyd. Now he's moving on - sort of'
|
|
o "I'm getting to a point where I have to make a decision about what I
|
|
what to dedicate my time to. I've done my music stint.
|
|
Building an interactive multimedia company is my next challenge.
|
|
I'm more concerned now about the multimedia business than...stage"
|
|
o the 4-year-old venture specializes in CD/ROM technology for the home
|
|
- the name is an amalgam of two of Scotts heroes
|
|
. Walt Disney, Preston Tucker
|
|
o yet even as he was launching it, Page toured with Pink Floyd in 1988
|
|
'Pink Floyd...is close to committing to another world tour.
|
|
If they get back on stage, he couldn't possibly sit that one out'
|
|
|
|
Norm deCarteret Advantis - Tampa FL
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Subject: Extracts from Hipgnosis book RE: _A Nice Pair_
|
|
|
|
'At first we couldn't think of anything for this cover. Slowly we amassed a
|
|
collection of notes and pencil roughs. But they were mostly silly jokes and
|
|
didn't feel sufficiently strong to work on their own. In the end we got so
|
|
attached to them that we decided to use them all. Nice Pair is, essentially,
|
|
eighteen individual sleeve designs and it took, therefore, a very long time to
|
|
do. The inner spread comprises numerous Floyd photos from the archives and
|
|
shows how the rigid layout began to ore the pants off the designer - his
|
|
concentration flagged and he simply made a mess of it at the end.
|
|
The Floyd have a good sense of humour so many of the ideas were jokes,
|
|
pictures, puns or aphorisms like 'laughing all the way to the bank' (Bob
|
|
Lawrie), 'nip in the air' (Colin Elgie), 'fork in the road', and a 'frog in the
|
|
throat'. Other pictures are just ones we like, for instance, the cinema foyer
|
|
(one of our favourite locations, see 10cc 'Sheet Music'). Some are a bit wry
|
|
like the paranoid peephole in the door of a family called Fear, and the
|
|
spectacles out of focus. The latter belong to the photographer taking the
|
|
picture. When he took them off to shoot them, he couldn't see to well, and so
|
|
was unable to focus correctly. The completely stoned freak with his kaftan and
|
|
psychedelic goggles is a reference to the Floyd's psychedelic past. The one of
|
|
Po and I in our studio is about discussing this Floyd sleve ('Dark Side' has
|
|
gone, or is disappearing). We are in the process or rejecting an all pink cover
|
|
as a solution. We're no fools. The Floyd's own football, PFFC, is an oddity. In
|
|
fact it's a replacement for a photo of Floyd Patterson, the boxer, painted pink
|
|
all over. But he wanted five grand for the privilege so it was quickly
|
|
forgotten. You'd think he'd pay to be on a Floyd sleve'
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Q Magazine, September 1992
|
|
|
|
The last few thousand of the quarter million toiling out of the Potsdamer
|
|
Platz, Berlin,20 minutes after the end of 'The Wall' were transfixed to hear
|
|
the whole extravaganza starting up again behind them. Because of substantial
|
|
technical hitches which afflicted the early part of the performance -
|
|
including an expanse of dead silence at one point - and the requirements of a
|
|
live album due for genuine "rush" release within weeks, Roger Waters and the
|
|
producers had decided they should go straight back out and fill in the blanks.
|
|
A few days later, with a candour unusual, veering towards the unique, in the
|
|
history of the live album, Waters headed sceptics off at the pass by revealing
|
|
the exact extent of the "retouching" involved. The unnofficial after-midnight
|
|
performance provided The Thin Ice (with Ute Lemper). Another Brick In The part
|
|
1 and The Band's parts on Mother (Sinead O'Connors vocal, interrupted on the
|
|
night,was taken from the dress rehearsal). Bryan Adams went into the studio to
|
|
debug his version of Young Lust, Cyndi Lauper did likewise for Another Brick
|
|
part 2, and they both added some extracurricular work on The Tide Is Turning,
|
|
the entire cast encore. All the proceeds from the record are, of course, going
|
|
to Leonard Cheshire's International Fund For Disaster Relief.
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Gilmour's Garage (From Today newspaper, Jan 21)
|
|
|
|
Pink Floyd star Dave Gilmour has paid 90,000 pounds for a 10ft by 16ft
|
|
garage.
|
|
|
|
The millionaire guitarist, who co-wrote the hit Money, paid three times
|
|
the market value for the north London lock-up.
|
|
|
|
He was so fed up with his car being broken in to that he slapped in an
|
|
offer that could not be gazumped.
|
|
|
|
"The buyer paid well over the odds," said estate agent Nigel De Keyser,
|
|
who handled the sale. "Even if the market picked up, the garage would
|
|
undoubtedly sell at a loss."
|
|
|
|
Gilmour uses a 25,000 pound BMW to ferry his family around, but is also
|
|
mad keen on Ferraris.
|
|
|
|
Asked about his new acquisition yesterday, Gilmour, 47, smiled: "I don't
|
|
want to talk about it."
|
|
|
|
But a friend said: "Few of the houses in the area have garages. Dave had
|
|
to park in the road. People have gone to great lengths to break in and
|
|
steal the radio. It was damaged several times."
|
|
|
|
Dave shares his love of cars with Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason, who has
|
|
one of the worlds most valuable collections.
|
|
|
|
They have made a fortune from albums like Dark Side of the Moon.
|
|
|
|
The garage belonged to a couple who sold the house and disposed of the
|
|
lock-up separately when the new buyers did not need one.
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Andrew Lloyd Webber & Echoes (From Q Magazine Feb 93)
|
|
|
|
The Who The Hell column interview with Roger Waters in the November
|
|
issue of Q raised a question about the similarity between certain
|
|
musical phrases in Phantom Of The Opera and Pink Floyd's instrumental
|
|
Echoes.
|
|
|
|
Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber has now pointed out that the music of Phantom
|
|
was, in fact, taken from incidental music he himself composed for the
|
|
film Gumshoe in 1971. We regret any suggestions of plagitarism and
|
|
apologise to Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber for any embarrassment caused by
|
|
our article.
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
Floyd Sighting in National News Magazine
|
|
|
|
In the Feb 8 Newsweek magazine here in the states, there was an
|
|
article on p. 60 called "Turning Over a New, Old Leaf" It was about
|
|
the supposed resurgence of marijuana decorations on jewelry and
|
|
clothing. It's basic point was that silver
|
|
pot-leaf shaped earrings, for example, are trendy again.
|
|
|
|
Here's the part that cracked me up:
|
|
|
|
"These days, pot is as much a symbol of simplicity and health
|
|
consciousness as it is a companion to one's Pink Floyd CDs."
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
A bit from The Age newspaper, 20 Mar 93 (Australia):
|
|
|
|
[Roger] also accepts, albeit grudgingly, that Pink Floyd has survived his
|
|
departure, just as it survived the loss of Syd Barrett. "It might be that,
|
|
if you had a reasonably adept producer, Pink Floyd could go on for another
|
|
200 years after the original members were dead ... It is a very powerful name."
|
|
|
|
The source of the article is given as "The Independent".
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
MTV (Europe) News At Night 4th May 93:
|
|
|
|
FLOYD DEATH THREATS
|
|
|
|
"27 year old Canadian musician Gerald Jackman has been
|
|
charged with extortion, after he sent a letter to Pink
|
|
Floyd manager Steven O'Rourke threathning to kill the
|
|
band, if he did not recive 2.2 million dollars".
|
|
|
|
PRIVATE NUMBER CALLED
|
|
|
|
"A spokesman for London Metropolian Police Force said the
|
|
groupe initialy took no notice to the death threat, but
|
|
became more concerned when a telephone call was made to
|
|
one of their private unlisted numbers".
|
|
|
|
TRACKED DOWN BY INTERPOOL
|
|
|
|
"Jackman was tracked down by Interpool following his second
|
|
demand to deliver the money to an address in Toronto".
|
|
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
An article in The Virginia Pilot Ledger Star, newspaper the other
|
|
day showed an Associated Press photo of the Pink Floyd Airship.
|
|
The caption said "The pink Floyd Airship took flight Monday at the
|
|
airship facility in Weeksville, North Carolina (USA) The airship, owned
|
|
by the rock band, is 194 feet long, 63 feet high and contains 235,000
|
|
cubic feet of helium."
|
|
The black and white photo shows the airship fully painted with a
|
|
large mask (possibly to be seen on the new album ??) takeing up 2/3 of
|
|
the side, with the words Pink Floyd in large letters on the lower
|
|
portion of the tail section.
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- |