Syd Barrett: The Haunting Legacy Of Pink Floyd’s Fallen Genius (Full Documentary) | Amplified

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  • Опубліковано 5 січ 2022
  • Syd Barrett - Under Review features rare live and studio performances from this hugely influential and legendary musician, interspersed with the independent review and criticism from a panel of esteemed experts.
    Content licensed from MVD. Any queries, please contact us at: owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 802

  • @ArtistYellow
    @ArtistYellow 2 роки тому +37

    Barrett died at home in Cambridge on July 7, 2006 from pancreatic cancer. May you shine on in the cosmos your crazy diamond.

  • @mcelus9124
    @mcelus9124 5 місяців тому +18

    When I was a teenager, I bought The Piper at the Gates of Dawn out of curiosity to hear this first album from the makers of The Dark Side of the Moon, an album that changed my views on what music could be. I was instantly mesmerized by how different it was. It had this enchanting elegance wrapped in psychedelic experimentation. I became obsessed with the album and the story of Syd Barrett. Piper continues to be one of my favorite albums, and I am eternally grateful for Syd’s contributions to our world.

  • @edwardmulholland7912
    @edwardmulholland7912 2 роки тому +381

    “The Madcap Laughs” is a great album, I also find it disturbing. He was still at the peak of his powers but was definitely fading away and describing it brilliantly. Syd was an artist.

    • @musicmavenpublishing2265
      @musicmavenpublishing2265 2 роки тому +18

      Too much of a good thing...it does happen.💔 Everything in moderation kids. Proceed with caution ⚠️.

    • @jessicajujubean5004
      @jessicajujubean5004 2 роки тому +24

      You can actually hear his mind falling apart on that album. Same with Jugband Blues and Bike. Its the sound of a man going insane.

    • @musicmavenpublishing2265
      @musicmavenpublishing2265 2 роки тому +16

      @@jessicajujubean5004 I know. So sad. God bless his precious soul. He's good now though. Made whole again. 💜

    • @bigtwit799
      @bigtwit799 2 роки тому +10

      Madcap and the one with insects were his solo efforts a few years after he left Floyd. Piper was when he was his peak.

    • @edwardmulholland7912
      @edwardmulholland7912 2 роки тому +16

      @@bigtwit799
      I prefer “The Madcap Laughs”, though I love “Piper” too.

  • @swansonjoe7121
    @swansonjoe7121 2 роки тому +240

    It's sad how little bit of interviews we have of syd. We have so many bozos drooling about how much of a "tragic madman genius" he is, but not much Syd speaking for himself

    • @hakancevikel7368
      @hakancevikel7368 2 роки тому +11

      He had a few audio interviews. i listened to one of them. He was under the influence of LSD in that interview.

    • @jennifermustdie3570
      @jennifermustdie3570 Рік тому +5

      @@hakancevikel7368 where can we see those? 👀

    • @hakancevikel7368
      @hakancevikel7368 Рік тому +4

      @@jennifermustdie3570 a few audio interviews of him are available in youtube.

    • @thejoeshow5
      @thejoeshow5 Рік тому +4

      @@hakancevikel7368 tell us where to find them.

    • @bradleysanford6068
      @bradleysanford6068 Рік тому +6

      Your right. It’s irritating to her these Sid experts talk like they knew his inter most thoughts. Just a well loved music man lost to the ages.

  • @MrGothic78
    @MrGothic78 2 роки тому +154

    Syd was one of a kind. I will always love his songs, his rhymes, the way he would play with the English language... "Ice-cream 'scuse me, I seen you looking good the other evening".
    Happy birthday birthday, Syd, shine on.

    • @PinkFloydCollectors
      @PinkFloydCollectors 2 роки тому +4

      He disagrees… two of a kind… ;)

    • @MrGothic78
      @MrGothic78 2 роки тому +1

      @@PinkFloydCollectors Well said! I forgot about that song! 😊👍

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 2 роки тому +5

      Look at the sky look at thee river, isntit good? ,: -0

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 2 роки тому +2

      n which ones pink? ,:-0

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 2 роки тому

      arnol layne... had a strang..... hobby. Collectin clothes... Moonshene, washng line... ,: -00000000

  • @eyraclarisse144
    @eyraclarisse144 2 роки тому +104

    SYD is an emblematic English musician. His songs are rooted in the beautiful and fantastic English Rhymes. I love all: the Rhymes, Syd's songs and Pink Floyd.
    The Rhymes require naiveness and also wit, which Syd had, and once Syd left the group it evolved into much more sophistication in both lyrics and music.. The group has ALWAYS been great and their music has fitted its time. Syd has always been present in Pink Floyd, he left his indelible imprint, he really never left, he's been shining.

    • @pennyhemens478
      @pennyhemens478 2 роки тому +7

      Pink Floyd without Syd was fine for a small while and they sold well but I dunno about him 'shining' on later non syd albums -thats a disservice i feel to Syd's legacy, the guy who replaced him, of course i know his name but I'm tired right now. His playing pales in comparison to Syds playing. Hendrix spoke on that saying how Syd was his peer in guitar experimentalism which is true.

    • @musicmavenpublishing2265
      @musicmavenpublishing2265 2 роки тому

      👍❤

    • @thealchemistdaughter3405
      @thealchemistdaughter3405 2 роки тому +7

      Absolutely.. it’s so subtle and sublime most miss it ..
      He was an ancient bard just on a short visit this time..
      Glad you noticed.

    • @MamaofaWrestler
      @MamaofaWrestler 11 місяців тому +1

      Does anyone realize WHY Syd was fascinated with rhyming, numbers, and had no grip on reality because he was experiencing the early stages of Schizophrenia? God Bless him. He suffered so badly. Imagine not even knowing who you are?

  • @pappyodanial
    @pappyodanial 2 роки тому +62

    Syd Barrett owned that BBC crumb with the "actually I like soft music very much, but you see if we're playing a hall and we want people to dance..." What a great answer. Roger's answer was eloquent as well.

    • @Geezer-yf8hv
      @Geezer-yf8hv 2 роки тому +6

      I would like to pull that dude from time and drop him in the middle of a Death Metal concert!

    • @joelsmith5938
      @joelsmith5938 2 роки тому +11

      Thank you. That guy seemed like the most prototypical example of the out-of-touch old codger the BBC *would* have on their programming. Frankly just embarrassing. Even more so that his guests were perfectly eloquent to his objections to the “loudness” of music. Even classical music was loud, you old fool. Wagner commissioned the construction of massive instruments to capitalize on the huge music halls. I don’t know why I’m so upset by that old man.

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 2 роки тому

      Yeah well it wasn't always going 2 work coming over by taking cues from AMM ,:-0

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 2 роки тому

      Not that I dislike early pink floyd, I can't get enough, just trying to have different perspectives instead of hating or loving something just whatever ,:-0

    • @justinparkerthewildwolf6394
      @justinparkerthewildwolf6394 2 роки тому +5

      Just because he doesn't like loud music doesn't make him a crumb it makes him true to himself, amplifiers were quite new back then and it was probably really loud

  • @ricktherrien8235
    @ricktherrien8235 2 роки тому +74

    I’ve seen ever documentary I can find on Syd Barrett because I was awestruck by him as a child.
    This enigmatic figure from a band that was misunderstood at the time.
    Syd revolutionized music to a new degree and over-rid the status quo for what the recording process was.

    • @shorelined1
      @shorelined1 7 місяців тому +1

      The band didn't seem too misunderstood, being the main band at UFO and very popular, at least no more than other progressive musicians through time. Capt Beefheart ..now there's one misunderstood musician, even so, many recording in the 60's were being very experimental, such as the highly popular and mainstream Beach Boys. Wilson's drug use purportedly aided his more artistic and weird choices on Pet Sounds which is viewed as their best album by many.

  • @impalaman9707
    @impalaman9707 7 місяців тому +6

    I still think "Interstellar Overdrive" is the greatest Pink Floyd song ever. They never did anything since that could top it

  • @timwhistler5882
    @timwhistler5882 2 роки тому +78

    I've loved syd barrett since I was a youth.lots of my friends love him too.He is so 'himself ' no-one else is like him.The stripped back nature of the solo lps and 'opel' is so 'English ' they define a nebulous feeling,hard to describe.

    • @bigtwit799
      @bigtwit799 2 роки тому

      always makes me think of older brothers, cousins etc lounging around on a dry English lawn in Summer, when it never rained and was always sunny FACT

    • @shorelined1
      @shorelined1 7 місяців тому

      @@bigtwit799 fact, huh? now that's not original at all

  • @raulmacias6146
    @raulmacias6146 Рік тому +6

    Quote by SYD BARRETT (About The Madcap Laughs ) ~ "I liked what came out, only it was released for too long after it was done.
    I wanted it to be a whole thing that people would listen to all the way through with everything related and balanced, the tempos and moods offsetting each other, and I hope that's what it sounds like."

  • @kyles5513
    @kyles5513 2 роки тому +183

    There should be a feature film about Syd. Such a strange yet very interesting person.

    • @70AD-user45
      @70AD-user45 2 роки тому +8

      There was The WALL which was partly about Syd.

    • @kyles5513
      @kyles5513 2 роки тому +18

      @@70AD-user45 it's mostly about Roger Waters. The scene where he sits in his chair staring at the TV with a lit smoke in his hand that is all ash and where he shaves all his hair off was inspired by Syd.

    • @baron0877
      @baron0877 Рік тому +13

      Agreed. Timothee Chalamet would make a pretty decent Syd.

    • @WrathofArminius
      @WrathofArminius Рік тому +1

      @@70AD-user45 i probably watched that movie about 500 times lol. Every day after high school I’d go over to Dave’s and religiously that movie would go in. This was back when movies had to go in something.

    • @godloveszaza
      @godloveszaza Рік тому +2

      @@baron0877 hell no

  • @viciousdope66
    @viciousdope66 2 роки тому +31

    I couldn’t help but sing along with “Terrapin” out loud and ignore whatever the commenters were saying over the top. It’s a classic. I’d forgotten how much I prefer that song…Rock on, Dolly Rocker!!!

    • @jiggym4n
      @jiggym4n 2 роки тому

      Have you heard the live version? So good man.

    • @ninaj6051
      @ninaj6051 2 роки тому

      One of the most effective songs that gave me comfort during my sanity fall, though I never descended much, just mild psychosis.

  • @jessicajujubean5004
    @jessicajujubean5004 2 роки тому +8

    One time my neighbors were drunk and arguing loudly in their driveway. I put a speaker in my window facing out and blasted "Bike" loudly at them until they went in the house.
    Incidentally, that song sounds loud at any volume. Its louder than most metal songs

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому

      I fucking love this story!
      Please check out my poem I wrote for Syd Barrett!
      Let me know what you think please!!!
      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

  • @surfercrow
    @surfercrow 2 роки тому +29

    Some of what these talking heads say is accurate, but for them to collectively pan the album “Barrett” as universally accepted opinion that it’s patchy or a misfire or failure is totally BONKERS! -it is not fact; That is their measley collective opinion and means nothing.
    In my opinion “Barrett” is a stone masterpiece, just like “The Madcap Laughs”. Syd was waaay ahead of his time & completely eclipsed his former band’s entire future output with those two LP’s.
    Malcolm Dome & Nigel Williamson touch on his influence on future music but even more so than they say. Barrett invented Lo-Fi, Goth (directly influencing Robert Smith & The Cure), Shoegaze/Neo Psychedelic-Stone Roses, Lush, My Bloody Valentine, Indie Rock (Sebadoh -Barlow is a huge Barrett fan), Space Rock (Spacemen 3), Krautrock (Neu, Kraftwerk, Can: all huge Barrett fans), Punk (The Damned wanted Syd to produce their record! The Jesus & Mary Chain: huge Barrett fans-they covered Vegetable Man), Art Rock (early Genesis), Bowie was hugely influenced by Syd. R.E.M. & Robyn Hitchcock & The Soft Boys owe a huge debt to Barrett. I could go on and on, but enough said. If you know, you know.

    • @_Ramen-Vac_
      @_Ramen-Vac_ 2 роки тому +2

      hear hear.. and if Syd had really WaNtEd to, he'd have remained the front man. It just all seemed so silly to him to compromise art for money, down to the most facetious studio moments for the albums he created sans much help from Rogers and the rest minus David. They just didn't wanna turn into Zappa or Beefheart or like 13th Floor Elevators for that matter. They wanted to produce Beatley work.

    • @CarnivalofLVX
      @CarnivalofLVX 2 роки тому +3

      You have to be a creative to truly understand Syd. These are squares that cannot create art. So they can only dissect it and judge it based on the parameters they define.

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому

      I completely agree with you
      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

    • @jonp3890
      @jonp3890 3 місяці тому +1

      I do know and your words are appreciated 🎉

  • @susanschildt2738
    @susanschildt2738 2 роки тому +30

    Syd had a way with words,he played with words no one would have come up with, An Effervescing Elephant, simple yet beautiful. Very childlike,innocent yet it touches your heart.Syd you are missed.

    • @Sandwich13455
      @Sandwich13455 Рік тому

      His father was a wordsmith!

    • @johnmichaelpatrick369
      @johnmichaelpatrick369 4 місяці тому

      ​@@Sandwich13455you say that his father was a wordsmith !?? ...we know about his mother , but nothing about his father.... Can you please elaborate !??

  • @joshjuanfifarek7382
    @joshjuanfifarek7382 Рік тому +14

    Nothing Syd recorded was disturbing. Very thoughtful and full of childlike wonder and more soo magical

    • @lenini056
      @lenini056 Рік тому

      Uhh, have you heard of Jugband Blues? Disturbing yes because it's a reflection of his declining mental health but still a masterpiece despite Syd's fragile mindset at time.

    • @effdonahue6595
      @effdonahue6595 Рік тому +2

      Always puts me in a good mood, so beautiful!!

  • @mikegburnside
    @mikegburnside 2 роки тому +25

    Love his works. He was notable amongst more than a few creatives in 67, 68.

  • @williamolsen20
    @williamolsen20 2 роки тому +27

    I still love both Barrett albums equally, they both touch me for different reasons.

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому

      Everything he touched was incredible
      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

  • @michaelwills1926
    @michaelwills1926 2 роки тому +10

    I always found the Barrett era as punk adjacent. Brilliant really

  • @Josouto1
    @Josouto1 Рік тому +15

    Amazing documentary, refreshing to see people actually discussing his music in depth rather than gossiping about his drug use. Thank you very much for publishing it.

  • @chelseapoet3664
    @chelseapoet3664 Рік тому +4

    The guy in the film who suggests that LSD might not have been one of the most important factors in Syd's breakdown because some say he took it less than 10 times has no clue. People have gone nuts on one dose. Yes certain people are predisposed to take it badly but never underestimate.LSD.

  • @robertreynolds1167
    @robertreynolds1167 2 роки тому +12

    Syd was super cool. Me thinks he may have gotten a wee bit too close to the sun though. I can definitely see how that could happen back in 1967 as LSD was considered the wonder drug which would expand your mind to an expansive level which would allow you to reach nirvana. Great Time to be alive. Soooo different from today and I’m glad that I was around then. Syd forever.

  • @b.w.22
    @b.w.22 2 роки тому +45

    Syd did it right: he participated when it suited him, dropped some amazing things, blew minds and dipped out. If Syd was up there singing Comfortably Numb, it wouldn’t be the same (if in this alt timeline it’s Gilmour who was the inspiration).
    Syd created a legend and the only thing I disagree with is his continued destruction of his later artworks instead of just giving them to his sister to store for posterity. At least we have his music.
    Edit: My point being that people love nothing more than a mystery. He gave enough of himself to charm and intrigue, recognized that he had a problem with fame and the music industry, and got away with it all.

    • @animalinstinctssociety
      @animalinstinctssociety 2 роки тому +2

      I agree and disagree, yeah he was a star for a short time and it was a good move by him to leave when he did. However, the fame he got cost him his mental health. So I wouldn't necessarily say he "got away with it"

    • @b.w.22
      @b.w.22 2 роки тому +5

      @@animalinstinctssociety - I agree, of course, but I’m not sure Syd wouldn’t have been just as mental without the fame. It seems like taking lots of acid was part of the youth scene they were in and I suspect that if he were merely a fan of Floyd then, he’d have gotten just as fried by it all. Of course you make an excellent point and I, like you too probably, would never make that trade.
      What I meant by “got away with it” wasn’t so much about the toll it all took on him but the ways in which he was able to chart his later life in a way that worked for him and could do so because of the royalties on the music he published with PF, so that he never ended up in some asylum or on the streets and could do his best to live in the anonymity he came to want.

    • @DutchmanAmsterdam
      @DutchmanAmsterdam 2 роки тому +5

      @@b.w.22 Do people really get 'fried' by acid or is that a lie told by the establishment that doesn't want people to have deep psychological and mystical healing and insights but demands of everybody to remain stupid voters, taxpayers, corporate and canonfodder?
      The research by psychiatrists showed overwhelming benefits of acid trips, until it was suddenly made illegal on instigation of Nixon who called it the worst enemy of the state because he feared that people after using LSD would not be manipulatable anymore by the sick establishment, and that was of course correct. Psychedelic tripping makes the user realize their Godly nature and after that no politician or priest will still be able to scare you anymore because you simply see through their games right away. And THAT is what Nixon was afraid of. When it was made illegal in the USA the rest of the western world immediately copied that policy. Why? Just a standard secret directive by the CIA will do the trick. The west is and was really sucking up to the US in secret, behind the voters back.

    • @b.w.22
      @b.w.22 2 роки тому +5

      @@DutchmanAmsterdam - Leaving aside the public policy side of things with an acknowledgement that Nixon and the police-power of a DEA created by executive order is something uncool and an inappropriate sort of secret Federal police force, I will say that in my experience hallucinogens aren’t for everyone. I think everyone should experience them at least once, but I also know people personally who did too much or did them too young and it changed them.
      Which is all to say that it depends on the person, where they are in their lives, their strength of character, their predisposition to real mental-health conditions such as schizophrenia, etc., or even physical characteristics such as enzymatic factor to break down those molecules to be able to stop tripping. These sorts of things are strong medicine, as it were, that is unrelated to the legal regime they exist in. I’ll agree that they are undoubtedly less dangerous than portrayed and are important tools in self-discovery, dealing with grief (see the studies on microdosing of terminal patients at Johns Hopkins), or just to have fun. But they aren’t completely harmless and can change people, so a degree of caution and moderation, as with most things, is required. The term “bad trip” wasn’t coined by Nixon, right?

    • @gratefulkm
      @gratefulkm 2 роки тому +2

      @@b.w.22 That fucking sentence "I know people negative negative"
      1 you provide no evidence of anything
      2 You provide no science
      3 You provide no personal accounts
      4 you do not define the methodology of the ingestation
      5 The Term "Bad Trip" was introduced with the illegality of the substance
      6 Do you know its thousands of % better as an anti inflammatory than anything else , E.G Dying of covid , your whole respiratory system is inflamed, drop a trip , survive FFS
      7 The Psychiatry and Psychology department in the USA declared in 1969, That "All Autistic people should have LSD readily available to them to take whenever they want, Because its allows them to become Social and connected (anti inflammatory deactivates the Amygdala , which is causing the FEAR)
      8 No one has ever become Schizophrenic on LSD or had it reveled earlier , EVER ! it was another scare tactic, " this might happen" , But it never has
      So please take your complete ignorance of LSD and bury it and never speak about LSD again,
      Unless you choose to read thousands of experiments and accounts and take it yourself in high doses
      There are Autistic people all over the world that NEED the drug to be legal
      I need it every single time I walk out the door
      Because I lose my inherent FEAR
      Which means I can talk to people, love people, like people , connect to people
      Lose my monotone voice and no one can tell I'm different
      Syd Barret was Autistic and he simply realized that he didn't like people ,
      That he needed LSD , but the world was freaking out , persuaded By lie after lie after lie
      So no LSD was available anymore
      So fucked of home to ignore everyone like all Autistic people do
      Just think of LSD as the same as BREXIT

  • @obdeisibcirrus993
    @obdeisibcirrus993 2 роки тому +62

    It’s a bummer that so many people are dismissing Syds songwriting. I find it absolutely brilliant. And so did many legendary songwriters like Pete Townshend, Paul McCartney, David Bowie and many more. It’s annoying cause you can tell some people just clicked on this documentary to hate on him and dismiss his gift. I love all Pink Floyd but Syds stuff will always be my favorite.

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому

      I absolutely love him
      Here is a poem I wrote for him
      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

    • @jiggym4n
      @jiggym4n 2 роки тому +3

      Syd was a genius. His live stuff blows my mind especially. I consider it a blessing that we got what we did from his all too brief career as a musician.

    • @stuartmitchell1908
      @stuartmitchell1908 2 роки тому +3

      Barrett is one of my favourite albums. Well said. Wined and Dined is my girlfriends favourite, and she isn’t really a Floyd fan

    • @AnthonyMonaghan
      @AnthonyMonaghan 2 роки тому +4

      Who is dismissing his songwriting? Everyone from Elton John to Iggy Pop and all stops in between are fans of his music. I've yet to hear anyone 'dismiss' his songwriting, his music or his influence. I don't see anyone hating on him or dismissing him, the only complaints I see here are coming from you, complaining about nothing.

    • @obdeisibcirrus993
      @obdeisibcirrus993 2 роки тому +1

      @@AnthonyMonaghan well fortunately there has been more positive comments to drown out the negative ones in this comment section since I commented that

  • @tellmelullabies5552
    @tellmelullabies5552 2 роки тому +3

    Thank you for releasing this!

  • @younglee9162
    @younglee9162 2 роки тому +22

    His songs are not well-organised, contain full of background noises, yet are very genuine. Love his own style of music.

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому

      It’s all magickal mystery man!
      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

  • @punkyduckscn2732
    @punkyduckscn2732 2 роки тому +11

    Living in Cambridge I felt their music was def influenced by the city. I used to see Sydney occasionally , I love all their work and Syd has a special place in my heart 💗

  • @snakefinger
    @snakefinger 2 роки тому +3

    This made my year. THANK YOU LOVE ! ❤️ 💕

  • @mrkgrmn3
    @mrkgrmn3 Рік тому +5

    These so-called music critics yammering on about what Syd must have been thinking is absolutely maddening.

  • @markybhoyflorida
    @markybhoyflorida 2 роки тому +11

    Without the false starts and flubs, the album wouldn't be the same. By including all that, it feels more of a time capsule than an album.

  • @debbieramsey-hanks3757
    @debbieramsey-hanks3757 2 роки тому +6

    Always innovative. Thank you for elusive and insightful interviews

  • @lxlx3458
    @lxlx3458 9 місяців тому

    Thank you for sharing with us!

  • @cherryfox3697
    @cherryfox3697 9 місяців тому +7

    I think Syd was a talented and unique musician who was just deeply misunderstood. The world is a better, more beautiful place because of what he shared with all of us. I understand his fear and distance. May he RIP

  • @seandodd6388
    @seandodd6388 2 роки тому +11

    Kind of funny how the 1966 version of Interstellar Overdrive was much longer and more psychedelic in its own right than the album version in 1967. However the version on Piper may be half the length of the original, but damn they both take you on a trip beyond trips and are both truly forces to be reckoned with...if you can even make it through the entire duration of the songs versions to begin with without blowing a mental fuse no matter what state of mind you may be in at the time....

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 2 роки тому

      n thee fact that they got all this from wind n the willows, great book ,:-0

  • @dianevaccaro4516
    @dianevaccaro4516 2 роки тому +9

    There will never be another musical genius like Sid.

    • @freedom4life123
      @freedom4life123 5 місяців тому

      He was not genius, just stop it and his name is syd not sid

  • @malas90
    @malas90 Рік тому

    Omg thanks for uploading this.

  • @knickd1979
    @knickd1979 2 роки тому +16

    the reasons behind his "decline" or "withdrawal" (whatever you want to label it) cannot be boiled down to one thing, or one factor. like most things, it was complex with multiple factors at play, some even i contrast with each other. it was not merely the LSD, it was not merely his artistic frustrations. it was an overwhelming combination of multiple factors.
    for example, the Artist in this 21 year old, sensitive guy was certainly interested in continuing his explorations and pushing boundaries. But with that said, there is no doubt that he SIMULTANEOUSLY wanted to be commercially successful and producing pop hits. that is the part that i think most Syd fans overlook. This is perhaps due to it not complementing the romantic narrative that his lone motivation was to be the explorer rather than the hit maker. to suggest that he simply did not want fame and money as his bandmates did is simply untrue.
    my reasons for believing that he himself was conflicted in this way is simple. Syd says in multiple interviews that he does indeed want to be a pop star. even as late as '71 he is telling people he doesn't think the pop scene has moved too far beyond him. he was definitely not entirely against this idea. BUT... just like many artists in their early 20s, he is a contradiction within himself.
    imagine being the lone creative force behind one of the underground's most popular bands, you have every stakeholder surrounding you hoping and counting on you to continue to lay golden eggs to prove your worth, but over the other shoulder you have the flies of the underground whispering that you are a sell-out for even bothering to try! (FUN FACT: there was actually a proto-punk band called "the Flies" who's members hurled insults at the Floyd during live shows in late '67/early '68, implying Syd and the gang were sell-outs and no longer true to the underground).
    i take Piper as evidence that Syd wanted to have it both ways, there's whimsical pop tunes aimed at commercial success as well as far out exploration aplenty.
    but the stress of that balance in addition to heavy, heavy use of mandrax/lsd (and various other substances) compiled to overwhelm the poor guy in short time.
    the people that suggest that he did NOT have anything wrong mentally are simply denying the obvious. as a huge Syd fan who has read every book and spent an embarrassing amount of time pondering Syd's story, I am certain he damaged his brain via drug use to such an extent that it was the primary factor for his withdrawal. there is plenty of evidence that he was paranoid and stressed for much of his time. his body language changed, his eyes changed. his behavior was DRAMATICALLY different within 1 year's time. he admits during interviews having difficulty speaking clearly at times but was extremely articulate before the summer of '67. his visual art and his lyrics reveal that he is aware that he is in trouble.
    "with eskimo chain
    i tattooed my brain all the way
    won't you miss me?
    wouldn't you miss me at all?"

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому

      I would love to hear your take on this poem I wrote for Syd Barrett
      I wrote it during a period is psychosis. His music and a few others has always been a huge comfort for me.
      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

  • @motoshelby
    @motoshelby 2 роки тому +8

    Baby Lemonade ⭐️
    Syd was way ahead of his time
    like so many others of this decade lost in the drugs but not forgotten

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому +1

      He went there and back again! Quiet a journey!
      Here is a poem I wrote for Syd Barrett
      Let me know what you think!
      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

  • @jimmyoconnell6167
    @jimmyoconnell6167 Рік тому +10

    Total genius RIP Syd

  • @weedthepeople2795
    @weedthepeople2795 2 роки тому +1

    I immediately started singing along with the first song they played.....havent heard that song in years

  • @luiszuluaga6575
    @luiszuluaga6575 2 роки тому +4

    This is an enlightening documentary with engaging and thoughtful commentary.

  • @timothymurphy6910
    @timothymurphy6910 2 роки тому +5

    loved syd. amazing character and an amazing songwriter/musician. once upona time ( when I lived stateside, before moving to Ecuador ) I owned every pink floyd album ( up to the wall ) and both of syd's albumns. sold all of my vinyl before moving to ecuador. so glad i can still find all pink floyd's music here on youtube ( as well as all of my other favorite artists who's albums I had to sell before moving )

  • @mr.timebombman2230
    @mr.timebombman2230 2 роки тому +4

    Across the stream with wooden shoes, with bells to tell the king the news, a thousand misty riders climb up, higher once upon a time.

  • @TheStevo427563
    @TheStevo427563 2 роки тому +15

    I believe that Syd thought that Floyd was only going to last a couple of years. All his other projects did. He wasn't ready to be committed to a long term commitment. He hated rules and responsibilities. I think a lot of it was an act. He was a prankster as well as a serious person. Yeah. He was a complex. Person.

    • @TheStevo427563
      @TheStevo427563 Рік тому +2

      @@leslumieres1237 How so chief? Guess you're just a hatin troll
      😅🤣

    • @effdonahue6595
      @effdonahue6595 Рік тому +3

      @@TheStevo427563 good title for a song “Guess you’re just a hatin troll”

  • @eleanorion4860
    @eleanorion4860 2 роки тому

    Thanks so much for this.

  • @solfischer613
    @solfischer613 2 роки тому +5

    Wow just clicked on this. Glad to see Syd getting Recognition!!

  • @rxw5520
    @rxw5520 Рік тому +6

    His family says he was never diagnosed with schizophrenia or any mental illness his whole life. He looks more like he’s on a hypnotic sedative (mandrax aka quaaludes) daily through the second half of 67. Mix in some acid and it can explain pretty much everything here and in accounts of him given in interviews with those that were around him.
    The curious bit is how he stayed kinda reliant on family to just live for the rest of his life. It sounds almost more like a brain injury than schizophrenia.

  • @nathanadnitt
    @nathanadnitt 2 роки тому +3

    I have a melody maker from may or april 1967, when Jimi Hendrix was just coming up, Arnold Layne was in the charts as well as purple haze ,as a 19 year old it's pure madness looking at that man

  • @hopefaith3693
    @hopefaith3693 2 роки тому +16

    Long live Syd 🎸🎶🎵

    • @eyraclarisse144
      @eyraclarisse144 2 роки тому

      Yep, I absolutely agree.
      LONG LIVE SYD BARRET !!!!!
      And long live great Pink Floyd !!!!!

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 2 роки тому

      Eye love syd ,:-0

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 2 роки тому

      n taking lots of lsd to their album ,:-0

  • @marcbolan1818
    @marcbolan1818 2 роки тому +43

    There is no difference between Syd's solo work and his very earliest writings like "Effervescing Elephant" written pre-Floyd. Syd had a unique childlike style in his compositions. The Floyd recordings were very produced pop songs of 1967, but a lot of the Piper tracks are no different if you take away the production. Syd obviously wanted out of pop music and to paint and write about art. There was always some underlying issues and the death of his father was, no doubt, devastating for a boy about to turn 16.

    • @jasonmoskowitz246
      @jasonmoskowitz246 2 роки тому +6

      I always thought he stuck Effervescing Elephant at the end of the album to contrast from the (brilliant) horror of Wolfpack and the (transcendent) longing of Wined and Dined. After Piper, imo his whimsy was tempered with a genuine blues.

    • @marcbolan1818
      @marcbolan1818 2 роки тому +5

      @@jasonmoskowitz246 The song is young Syd and not different than Bike. The Madcap Laughs was too much Mandrax.

    • @marcbolan1818
      @marcbolan1818 2 роки тому +1

      @@matt0laughed Well, Bolan copped the Syd look now didn't he and the girlfriend.

    • @Jiv_Ing57819
      @Jiv_Ing57819 2 роки тому

      C Emily play : -)

    • @nowhirr8135
      @nowhirr8135 2 роки тому +1

      Didn't even know he lost his father that young. No wonder he played with drugs the way he did & no wonder those drugs brung whatever mental issues that were lying underneath to the forefront.

  • @dimebagdave77
    @dimebagdave77 2 роки тому +2

    Thanks, used to have this DVD.havent seen it in years

  • @jenmb2679
    @jenmb2679 Рік тому +6

    ive been curious about him since the 90's when i first started listening to Pink Floyd. I only knew about TheWall and The Dark Side Of The Moon. Im just now getting around to learn more about him. Heck, i didnt even know they were from England. Very very talented guy.

  • @angelprincess4414
    @angelprincess4414 Рік тому +4

    i am at a loss to explain the fascination with Syd and his contribution to Pink Floyd. He was on two albums, which get little play time on air. The great albums have no Syd songs. Coincidence? Yeah, Pink Floyd would be a very different band had he remained.

  • @Octavian7771
    @Octavian7771 Рік тому +4

    In an alternate reality, 'Barrett' is the Pink Floyd LP released in leu of Ummagumma. David Gilmore and Richard Wright produced, and play bass and keyboards respectively. In my humble opinion, I prefer the post Fink Floyd work on Madcap, Barrett and Opel. Also, 'Wined and Dined' is the sweetest, most gentle pop song that has ever existed!

  • @HardRockMiner
    @HardRockMiner Рік тому +4

    His 1st name was actually Roger. Even though I wasn't a fan of his music, I am a big fan of Pink Floyd.

  • @gabbygustafsson7894
    @gabbygustafsson7894 2 роки тому +4

    I ❤ Syd Barrett
    You Didn't Even Talk About
    Syd Barretts Best Solo Song
    Late Night From The
    MadCap Laughs .
    I Been Listening To Syd Barrett Since I Was 18 During The Early 1990s .
    I Dig Floyd 😎

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому +1

      I wrote this for him!
      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

  • @greenscarab2
    @greenscarab2 Рік тому +1

    I ❤️ the early songs and still remained devoted as they evolved.

  • @barry1369
    @barry1369 Рік тому +2

    I’m not huge on the syd Barrett stuff but I can certainly see the potential he had because of how unique those songs were

  • @user-jb6ml1sj9o
    @user-jb6ml1sj9o 7 місяців тому

    Was some of this he recorded talking im glad got to see this wonder who found this! Thanks

  • @justinparkerthewildwolf6394
    @justinparkerthewildwolf6394 2 роки тому +4

    I love syd and his music and this early era of floyd, I also find it very sad and a loss of great talent, im glad he went back to painting and was doing that

  • @PinkFloydCollectors
    @PinkFloydCollectors 2 роки тому +6

    Forever missed..

  • @jetthackrah4193
    @jetthackrah4193 Рік тому +11

    3 words: I love Syd.

  • @norbertovelazquez7441
    @norbertovelazquez7441 4 місяці тому

    Gran documental!!

  • @ScarlettRaynes
    @ScarlettRaynes Місяць тому

    I have been so intrigued with Syd since I first heard about him years ago after a Pink Floyd concert I attended. I am a painter, gardener, and play guitar to songs I’ve written and hearing he was very similar to my interests intrigued me. I bought the original record of Piper at the Gates of Dawn and really cherished the sounds of the new era of psychedelic music. I wish I could talk with him. Really talk with him… but I don’t think he could put all his genius thoughts into words and I respect that

  • @Moonie804
    @Moonie804 2 роки тому +10

    Very good doc indeed... but when it talks about Jugband Blues as the example of Syd's awareness of his own condition... there's another song that explains his awareness even more than JB, and it's Vegetable Man. The lyrics of VM are just the description of his inner confusion, written in a moment of amazing clarity, so honest to the point of sounding a bit scary, knowing what's behind them.... No doubt he was an extraordinary artist.

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому

      I would love your take on my poem I wrote for Syd Barrett
      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

    • @jimmyoconnell6167
      @jimmyoconnell6167 Рік тому

      And vegetable man

  • @royferguson3909
    @royferguson3909 2 роки тому

    I am very grateful, that this download found me .
    Thank 😊 you .Now I subscribe
    Happy 😊 😃

  • @beatleographer_10-51
    @beatleographer_10-51 Рік тому +6

    I can't fathom how far Syd would have gone had he not gotten ill and turned his back on music. Can you even imagine the awaiting genius?

  • @chrissutton2586
    @chrissutton2586 8 місяців тому +1

    Words fail me when it comes to Syd

  • @williamolsen20
    @williamolsen20 2 роки тому +19

    I am a huge Syd Barrett fan, and it really bums me out that he just fell out like he did. I remember I saw a video of a trip he was on mushrooms or acid not sure, it was on sale, and I complained about it to the store because it was horribly exploitative to me.

    • @samwindmill8264
      @samwindmill8264 8 місяців тому

      Was that like a VHS tape that was being sold then?

    • @tigerlillyfeelfree1695
      @tigerlillyfeelfree1695 8 місяців тому

      I went to the chalk pits. I will never be the same ❤

    • @youcanmakeoneup
      @youcanmakeoneup 6 місяців тому

      @@tigerlillyfeelfree1695Where the film was made of him tripping?

    • @tigerlillyfeelfree1695
      @tigerlillyfeelfree1695 5 місяців тому

      Yes. In Cambridge. It was an amazing experience ❤

  • @TheNimasan
    @TheNimasan 2 роки тому +5

    there is just a few ppl who got/get madcap laugh. that album was so ahead of its time and it still is. to me personally a master piece!!! loved that man. my GLOD bless his soul where ever he is.

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому

      Some of my most favorite albums!
      Here is a poem I composed for Syd Barrett!
      Out of my nearly 2000 poems this one is probably the longest or was until very recently. Still not finished!
      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

    • @bretthowell5592
      @bretthowell5592 Рік тому

      Glod bless you freind! Luls

  • @tammiealmany6239
    @tammiealmany6239 2 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing 💕 legendary Pink Floyd

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому

      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

  • @rdeye-rb1pe
    @rdeye-rb1pe 2 роки тому +5

    Terappin syds dropping bars his bouncing limericks and statements god man beautiful stuff

  • @dangreene3895
    @dangreene3895 11 місяців тому +2

    I am a child of the 60's I knew people who took a lot of LSD most no long term effect , but a couple it fried their mind . You never know how one might react to a drug as powerful as LSD , for me it gave me a awareness that I did not have before .

  • @HellcatCustoms
    @HellcatCustoms 2 роки тому +20

    I have doubts that drugs are responsible, although they probably didn't help his mindset. I think he broke under the immense pressure from EMI and the forthcoming tour of America. He was fine up until they signed the contract.

    • @thehotyounggrandpas8207
      @thehotyounggrandpas8207 2 роки тому +9

      I agree. There are millions of people with serious mental health problems who have never touched drugs.

    • @joeldavis5815
      @joeldavis5815 2 роки тому +16

      I strongly disagree. I had an otherwise normal friend with a family history of schizophrenia who only started exhibiting symptoms of the illness after a few years of heavy LSD use. It is well documented that hallucinogens in particular can be catalysts in the development of schizophrenia in susceptible individuals.

    • @billyz5088
      @billyz5088 2 роки тому +9

      Some accounts by those around him say he was using far more LSD than many knew - and started much earlier than many had assumed. David Gilmour himself placed the start of the trouble to late May '67 as PF was in studio recording "See Emily Play" - just a couple of weeks before was the famous TV interview with Syd & Roger by Hans Keller (why must it all be so loud ??) - where Syd was obviously very lucid and well spoken - but just 2 weeks later Gilmour had been invited to stop by the studio - and said he was “shocked by the changes in his (Barrett's) personality - and that he did not appear to recognize me" - years later Gilmour would say; "I'll go on record as saying, that was when he changed" .

    • @b.w.22
      @b.w.22 2 роки тому +6

      I think it’s both: I think when Syd began to attain what he thought he wanted, international fame inside the 60’s-70’s music industry, he realized he didn’t want it. I’m pretty sure that acid impacted his mind and personality and that it exacerbated underlying issues with his mental health. But he also made the right choice for himself, actively or subconsciously, to disengage from Pink Floyd and maybe didn’t know exactly how to disappoint his friends who so heavily relied on his creativity.
      I’ve also known people who I’d call acid casualties and I’d need to have met him to decide if he was that. But “acting heavy” was part of his deal and people’s deal generally back then, though it seems there’s a pretty big difference between “Piper” and his wonderful and charming but definitely odd solo work. But he also made the really smart personal choice to retreat from London to his home to live the life of an eccentric but not a madman: Syd didn’t roam the streets of Cambridge with an apocalyptic sign yelling at people like the dude in Aqualung, right?
      Ah, he’s such an interesting guy who can really appeal to we that have had our own mental struggles. I’d think the drugs of the day had their impact on him, but in so many ways he did things exactly right for himself without the endless compromises that shatter the illusion of integrity, as it were.

    • @HellcatCustoms
      @HellcatCustoms 2 роки тому +7

      @@billyz5088 Dave also said ,in the same interview, he was constantly surrounded by shady people. Maybe someone slipped him a large dose, similar to what happened with Peter Green? 🤷

  • @finksinatra1575
    @finksinatra1575 4 місяці тому

    Amazing.

  • @essedragonzote
    @essedragonzote 2 роки тому +3

    I don't think that Syd would been probably influenced by Bob... Syd was a kind of gnome... I can see influences from folk and even ancient celtic or druid culture...
    Greetings from Chili 🇨🇱♥️🇬🇧

  • @joecrawford5582
    @joecrawford5582 2 роки тому +1

    I can see tripping on some real deal heavy acid and watching walls move and see my friends faces melting while listening to Syd's Pink Floyd's music.

  • @lincolnsixecho51
    @lincolnsixecho51 Рік тому +3

    For me, Syd is the Salvadore Dali of Rock music - the incorporstion of surrealism in acousrtic arts! How. Important he was can easily bexseen in the factt that the Floyd needed more then 3.yeard to find their style after Syd had left. "Ato, heart mother" - and more -"Meddle" from 1070/ 1971 were the first albums, that showed new, non-Barrett-sides of the band.

  • @WatanabeDarko
    @WatanabeDarko 6 місяців тому +1

    This quite interesting documentary for me contradicts everything about the commonly perceived Syd's madness. What it seemed to me is that he just grew more and more distant from making music, so he kinda drifted away from the Floyds as he was feeling bored and disconnected from what they were doing. Then, after some time, he contacted Soft Machine himself, as his creative instinct was still there, and he had all the intention to act upon it. This gesture alone proves he was far from gone and certainly not crazy at all. He was certainly not in shape, he was certainly a bit depressed, disconnected, but still fully in himself. After the release of the 2nd solo album, which did not have much success, he decided to retreat to private life, which seems to me completely normal. This is what sensitive, creative and artistic persons do, they give up and change direction, they don't care about the musical career, but hey go their own way, they are not at the whims of society. I don't think he liked all the story which was made up about him in the following years, which certainly made him retreat even more, not giving anyone the chance to disturb him (you can notice this even in his last interviews). I am pretty sure he gave all he had to give to the music world, and he had nothing left. His story is not that different from the one of a girl I knew who literally wrote the most haunting, intense piece of writings I have ever read up to this day. Back in the days, she was writing a lot in her online blogs. Then some years go by, she writes less and less, and at one point she removes all of her blogs which could remove and almost everything she wrote up to that moment. She grew with time apart from writing, and certainly she was not seeing herself as talented or gifted. She had 3-4 peak years in her teenage years, then she faded away. Same happened with Syd and his art: he kinda had the feeling with the Floyd that the whole situation was a burden, so he was less and less fond of going in tour and being around them. But then his creative instinct was still there, so he created his solo albums. He tried to make his music project work by making concerts with another band after the Floyd, but it didn't work well, because I guess the magic for him was gone: he could not retrieve the same feelings he felt with the Floyds, and he had not fun with making music and performing anymore. This is why imho he naturally retreated, and he dedicated himself to painting, which was something new for him. Syd was ahead in any possible sense, he just went into a deep depression because something which used to make him feel good, as music was, was just not working for him anymore. Then he resigned to live an ordinary man's life, because he was just not the kind of person to go around the world and replay again and again his past creations to be acclaimed: that would feel definitely too boring for him to do, and not in line with how he was as a person. He was happy of being a star as long as he was feeling fresh sensations by performing in public, so it was like a collective joy to be experienced. But once he became unable to feel these sensations while making music or concerts, then fame was definitely a burden for him, because all the joy was gone. Syd was an explorer, an adventurer, he looked for new sensations and a coloured world, not for the daily routine of being a musician. He was a comet, a supernova, like Dario Minieri in poker: he shone of the most intense possible light for a very short time and then faded away.

  • @matthewcoombs3282
    @matthewcoombs3282 2 роки тому +3

    I agree that Barrett was a singular artist and a true original. But people around the time said the following artists were key for Barrett. Bo Diddley- you can hear it in his Telecaster sound. AMM Music Keith Rowe improvising on guitar -using the guitar as a sound board -was a big influence on Syd and the Folk Rock of the Incredible String Band. The latter one you can hear on the first Album "Piper at the Gates of Dawn"

  • @reepacheirpfirewalker8629
    @reepacheirpfirewalker8629 2 роки тому +4

    What a change it became after his leaving and how things developed.

  • @christophvonknobelsdorff1936
    @christophvonknobelsdorff1936 2 роки тому

    thanks

    • @NEMOPMORPHY
      @NEMOPMORPHY 2 роки тому

      ua-cam.com/video/Uny5ZjGRMHI/v-deo.html

  • @quacksackerthegreatstarfir6996
    @quacksackerthegreatstarfir6996 2 роки тому +18

    It amazes me how the mind can be so strong and yet so fragile. I once read genius and insanity sometimes go hand in hand, and sadly, I think that's what happened to Syd....😥

    • @freedom4life123
      @freedom4life123 5 місяців тому

      Genius is over the top, come on man, his lyrics were child like.

  • @stoner4378
    @stoner4378 9 місяців тому

    55:28 completely agree , this guy knows whats upppp💯🙌

  • @newforestpixie5297
    @newforestpixie5297 Рік тому

    When experiencing the joys & miseries of illegal highs in the very early 80s , it was a wonderful surprise when See Emily Play cascaded out of a chums’ stereo because I’d not heard the tune since it’s time in the charts & out of teenage sisters’ radio when I was 3 or 4 when obviously not knowing or caring whom had created such music. It didn’t get played on bbc radio 1 or on iLR in the 70s. 🐢❤️😁And Golden Hair was covered by ‘ shoegaze’ artists Slowdive in the early 90s and is wonderful . I haven’t heard Syds’ original yet.

  • @VIPFolix
    @VIPFolix 8 днів тому

    I named my dog after "Relics." Sadly, she died when she was 7. I remember my dad wouldn't come in the sick room with us when she was being put down, and I threw her little Grateful Dead collar at him after she stopped breathing. She was my most difficult dog death. RIP Syd Barrett.

  • @seandodd6388
    @seandodd6388 2 роки тому +3

    My point of my previous comment, sorry I didn't point out initially, was that 1967 psychedelic tended to be levels ahead trippyness wise compared with the more folkedelic sounds of 1966. However, the Beatles with Tomorrow Never Knows on their Revolver album did prove to be as psychedelic as any of their '67 works if not more trippy in some cases. It went hand in hand I guess. The 1966-68 time frame of psychedelia, music wise namely, is truly an irreplaceable era that has truly withstood the hands of time above and beyond anything we have this day and age especially, hands down, in my opinion.

    • @bigtwit799
      @bigtwit799 2 роки тому +1

      Of course we now know that Revolver was a better album the the hyped Sergeant Pepper.

  • @rdeye-rb1pe
    @rdeye-rb1pe Рік тому +1

    I love how syd slammed the binson echo system at the end of bike that's how he got the loud rumble my amp has a huge dual reverb inside and if I want thunder or a wild sound I just lift it off my kitchenn floor very little have my volume and overdrive up and drop and drop it it's awesome 👍 also the only group and artist that I can say if I'm down in the studio I go to his records

  • @sweetsuzie9346
    @sweetsuzie9346 2 роки тому +17

    This is one of the most fascinating rock n roll stories to be told, what's more amazing is the beach boys were loosing Brian Wilson in the same way, at the same time as Floyd was loosing Syd.

    • @Geezer-yf8hv
      @Geezer-yf8hv 2 роки тому +11

      Also Brian Jones from the Stones. His wasn’t a mental breakdown, but more of a soul breakdown, plus being drug-addled.

    • @anabanana7599
      @anabanana7599 Рік тому

      Amazing what hard drugs do to the brain .

  • @SanTenChan
    @SanTenChan Рік тому +6

    *Syd was a Great Genius!* 🧠

  • @waynesilverman3048
    @waynesilverman3048 2 роки тому

    I ve seen all of this but its good how they do them

  • @bernicewalsh3432
    @bernicewalsh3432 Рік тому +1

    I like the songs. It's great. God bless syd

  • @kevinlawrence8580
    @kevinlawrence8580 7 місяців тому +2

    When are you going to do an episode about another fallen genius. Mr. Sly Stone.

  • @SKYSAW59
    @SKYSAW59 2 роки тому +7

    Vegetable Man/Scream thy last Scream would have been the greatest, weirdest double A side of all time.

    • @Moonie804
      @Moonie804 2 роки тому +1

      I 100% agree, 2 stunning songs!!!

  • @malectric
    @malectric 22 дні тому

    I find this very sad. I loved Syd's early compositions and listened avidly to the underground music of the day, especially Pink Floyd's.

  • @kookamunga2458
    @kookamunga2458 Рік тому

    Syd fell down the rabbit hole and I love early Pink Floyd .

  • @user-jb6ml1sj9o
    @user-jb6ml1sj9o 7 місяців тому +1

    We want a Zyde Barrett movie!

  • @terryrollins1973
    @terryrollins1973 Рік тому +1

    Acid burnout. What an 'enigma' 👌

  • @plasteredbastard
    @plasteredbastard Рік тому +1

    i do enjoy the fact syd particularly today is the most celebrated aspect to pink floyd