I saw Pink Floyd in 1970 (I'm 70 now!😫) and a few years later I saw them again without Roger Waters and then saw Roger Waters without Pink Floyd. The way their songs touch me now is completely different because I am, " Shorter of breath, one day closer to death"! And I tear up a bit when I hear "Remember when you were young....you shone like the sun." The lyrics were cool back then but more relevant and haunting now in the later stage of my life. So thrilling to see the music I loved 50+ years ago is being kept alive and appreciated by young people like y'all. Watching your 1st time reactions takes me back to when I went to Tower Records and bought a new album (or 8 track cassette) and listened to it with my friends for the 1st time. Thanks for the memories and great reactions!😁❤️✌️
At least it's good to see some youngsters opening their eyes (and ears) to what good music is. I cannot tolerate the utter shit that mostly enters my ears these days.
I drove around in my car in rural Missouri as a teenager in 1976-77, listening to this on 8-track and passing around joints. We pretty much wore out the tape.
It’s amazing to think that this music is nearly 50 years old. A lot of music from that time sounds dated. Pink Floyd’s 70s albums all sound like it could be released today. Not just ahead of their time, but it exists in another time and place entirely.
Pink Floyd were geniuses at creating a "theater of the mind" atmosphere. That sound at the end of "Welcome to the Machine" is: elevator doors closing, the express elevator going all the way up, and the doors opening to a penthouse party, which sets up the theme of the next track. This a "concept album" that's both a tribute to Syd Barrett, a founding member of the band (he came up with the band's name), and an indictment against the soulless business side of the music industry. Syd was the "crazy diamond". Look closely at the album's cover art; it's a photo of two men shaking hands on a deal, and one is literally being burned. That's how the band felt record company executives treated the artists.
Hey...TRUE! Great analysis, mate! (One thing is for sure, to reach some Pink Floyd lyrics, (and sound vibrations and melodies) I, after all these years, sometimes (Lousy english) I find very hard to reach the meanings of certain songs or short bursts of text.
When you've heard this a few times you'll put it on for background music. It will become part of you and you'll hear each note in your head before it happens. You'll be a lifelong fan. 50 years and still counting. But you have to go backwards from DSOTM too!
@Phillip Harrison I had Pink Floyd on 8-track and album. Class of 81! In 1980 We got a new High school built. I used to carry a GE Loudmouth 8-track player like a book to some of my classes! I looked up the Loudmouth on UA-cam, and found it! The one I had was Grey. I loved that thing! 😎✌
I never thought about it that way but your right if I am cleaning up the house or even working in the garage I put on some classic rock and yeah it becomes back round music.
For these full album reactions I would recommend finding out where the albums go from Side 1 to Side 2, as this was a natural break in every record. The bands put their albums together knowing that people would be starting and stopping the albums at that point, and the fans are used to hearing the albums be interrupted there as well. Just a thought.
Excellent point . Records put on CD from LP wrecked a lot of album moments (in my opinion ) by starting “Side B” too quickly . Does this make sense ? 🎸🤦♂️👍
I sooo envy you to be listening to so many great artists that are part of the musical DNA of past generations. You are by far the most sincere and authentic reaction channel I have witnessed. Keep up the good work! You are pleasing a ton of us old Hippies! Remember ..Gilmour is known for his subtle genius on the guitar! You will be inundated with explanations of this music and that is fine, but none of the behind-the-scenes was known by us listeners until years after they were released. All we knew was the experience of the music and were left to our own devices as to what the meaning of it all was!
What I remember whilst listening to PF, oh so many years ago, is it being akin to a paradigm shift in my understanding of what was, and what could be, this, coincidentally; or not, whilst contemplating the gentle assent and decent of blobs of melted wax in my lava lamp, also in concert while enjoying the afterglow of, (the unfortunately obsolete), sensi (sensimilla) stick; good times ✌😎✌ Now seeing these youngsters discover for the first time those songs which added to many of our collectives, and individual consciences is a real treat. It's sort of a vicarious reliving of that first contact with PF's magic and subsequent magical times.
@@tjhunger8644 I remember those "sticks" 😁 My favorite album covers, were the ones you could open up and do the twist! 😎✌ A friend of mine had "Big Bamboo" with the giant rolling paper. 😁 Good times indeed! I still have a "Power Hitter" bought brand new from a friend in 1977! The date is printed on the label. Mine is blue. Fun fact: If you Google it and hit images, you'll see a blue one with the same date on it! Even the wrinkles on the label, are almost identical to mine! When I first saw it... 🤯 it kinda freaked me out! 😁
@@robertkroberjr.157 I don't think young people realise the importance of choosing which album you used to roll up on, it definitely infused the magic of the music into the magic of the cigarette. We *always* had a debate about which LP cover to use, DSOTM was an obvious one, The Wall was used only if you were on a downer, and if your head was a real mess then anything by Ozric Tentacles would do... Later, in the 1980s, it could be the VHS video cassette of choice, that would work, however CD covers were too small, completely useless, and people only ever rolled up on a C90 cassette tape cover for a joke... Of course young people don't get it, you can't roll up a decent spliff on an MP3 or a stream!
I haven't heard this in years. I think I read somewhere that Syd turned up in the studio during part of the sessions for Wish You Were Here, hidden somewhere up the back and Floyd didn't know he was there, or recognise him at first. Syd is the 'crazy diamond.' Now deceased.
It's always great to see a new generation discover The Floyd. They have been my constant companions for nigh on 50 years and I remember buying Wish You Here on release in 75 as if it were yesterday.
Yeah I bought it at Musicland at North Dekalb Mall. It had opaque blue plastic wrap. Had to wait till I got home to open it to see the cover. I had actually heard most of the album a few months earlier when I saw Pink Floyd at the Atlanta Stadium June 7, 1975 My first concert. I was 15 years old.
@@philbell5774 63 here as well, it's because of Floyd that I ended up after the Army as a dj for an FM here, and finally I got to jock classic rock, my wheel house, and after 30 years of radio, I got out, too corporate, and NO DEEP CUTS...lol...anyway, I do agree from where I sit, I'm finding getting old, ain't for the young...these snowflakes now a days...sheesh...anyway..Rock ON!!
When we were younger we would sit in a freinds basement (or living room) with a great stereo system, smoke somthing, put on Pink Floyd and just chill out to the music. Often with a few friends, no conversation, no cell phones or other distractions. Ussually someone would have the album cover in hand going over the lyrics or some arcane detail regading the recording. When the side was over, maybe some chatter about the music, then after you got up and flipped the record over, back to the ear candy for another 20 mins! Those were the days.
What I love about this is how Gilmour is deliberately playing at low volume for most of this with little or no effects. Because of of this he's having to wring every note out of the guitar, getting the plectrum to bite to make those notes ring. He's a master of leaving space for the music to breathe. The first three notes he plays on this track tell you everything you need to know about playing the guitar. Space. Tone. Timing. Perfection.
I'm a guy who grew up on Zep, Sabbath, and Deep Purple, but there is something so cerebral and cutting to the Floyd. They cannot be denied. And WYWH is my fav album. Pure, unadulterated genius.
I agree i grew up on those 3 epic bands myself but pink floyd is so different from everyone else , im glad i grew up in classic rock era nothing comes close, dont forget Richie blackmores rainbow with Dio epic
This song was composed to Syd Barret's dedication. Syd was a original member of Pink Floyd. He was adict to LSD and his mind was damage. Shine on...you...crazy diamond. Sid was the more imaginative of them, at the first. Funny, beautiful, good person, but the drogs....
Watch this quick video about Syd. They hadn't seen him in years. Then he shows up at the studio during the mixing of Shine On You crazy diamond. They all cried. ua-cam.com/users/shortsgXGf2PWpOFc?feature=share
The saxophone was played by Dick Parry the unofficial fifth member of Pink Floyd. he played with David Gilmour since they were 15 years old incredible saxophonist even played with him in the later days when he had white hair still fantastic. it’s great to watch live as he switches from the Bari saxophone to the alto saxophone he has one hanging around the front of his neck and the other one around the back and then swings around when he makes the change up
Glad you are trying to do whole sides of Pink Floyd because especially with this album you can see how busting it up track by track wouldn't have made any sense. Good job.
Got high the first time. listening to the, then brand new album, called Dark side of the Moon...of course there was no internet back then, just phones on walls, and in little glass boxes on the street...but I went all over looking for more Floyd...I'm now 63 years old, and now I get to watch a new generation dig "our" music...thank you for the honesty, and reverence you show to these bands...it's well deserved...Rock ON!!!
I've been watching and responding to UA-cam for the last couple years. All the comments I see never say thank you. Thank you for doing what you do, thank you for loving music. Maybe I'll be the first to say thank you but I hope I'm not the last !! Thank you
That's how you do Floyd. Eyes closed with quality headphones. Take just one day where you shut off the wifi (have the music downloaded), unplug and just listen, then read the album cover notes. Then a book and just truly unplug and know what life and human cognition was like, even just 25 years ago, before energetic waves were made thick in the air...and as a consequence, humans were made thick above the neck.
At my age, I should be more familiar with Pink Floyd than I am. I've had a few of their albums in my CD collection since somewhere around the late '80s or early '90s. And while I love those albums, I somehow haven't gotten around to exploring more of their work. I don't think I've ever heard this album. Thank you for reacting to it. I think I might start systematically adding all of their albums to my vinyl record collection. Part way through this video I paused the video and ordered their first album on vinyl. The journey begins ...
Pink Floyd is a Experience.. A Feel, I remember being 17 and coming home on a Friday night with a little buzz Lol and putting the headphones on and just drift away into the music🎸
So glad your hitting my favourite Pink Floyd album. Nothing messes with your head quite like a Pink Floyd album, and this is one of the very best for sure.
To enjoy the best from listening to Pink Floyd, Head phones are a must !! I am glad to see you young men enjoy what us old men and women love to listen to, Awesome old fogie music eh 😁
These guys were geniuses... to write and play every song on every albums this way... every song was a hit as well, when they came out one by one on the radio stations first, then theyd put as many songs on as they wanted per album , tape, or CD sides
Awesome reaction video! Can't wait to see part 2. You'll have to let us know what you think about this album compared to Dark Side of the Moon. No judging here... I love both!
This is what we had as teenagers, this magical, superb music. This is why so much does not appeal to us in regards to some new music with no soul. We were spoilt by having music that fed our souls and took us on journeys. Oh, how lucky we were to have this in our lives!! My ears have been blessed for decades by Pink Floyd!!
As a high school kid in the early 70's, everyone had a stereo system in their room to play our records. Spent lots of time getting high and listening to Floyd. Added bonus of vinyl was the big 12" x 12" album cover and lp sleeve art to look at while listening. I remember looking at that graphic on the inner record sleeve of the red scarf blowing through the trees and I swore it was really moving !
Another great PF album...my 2nd favorite band. You should also do Rush 2112! The whole 1st side needs to be done at one time as it is all parts of one big story song. You will love it!
For Real! Rush is my favorite band since 1974... Then Pink Floyd and Zeppelin (in no particular order, depends on my mood (hehe))... I know Zep is your favorite from seeing you comment on Zep reactions. Cheers!
"Wish You Were Here", (1975), Pink Floyds 9th album, fits in nicely between "Dark Side of the Moon", (1973), and "Animals", (1977 as two of the Best Pink Floyd albums, imo. "The Wall" album in 1979 being the crowning achievement of Pink Floyd, as far as artistic endeavors and musical writing and arrangements go, also imo. This album, like virtually all Pink Floyd albums, is a concept album, it tells a story and is meant to be listened to in one sitting, like your guys are doing! The album is mostly about Syd Barrett, one of Pink Floyds original band member in 1964. he's the Crazy Diamond and he's the one they're referring to in the title of the album and the song, "Wish You Were Here". Syd Barrett was forced to leave Pink Floyd by the end of 1967, before they achieved international status, because of his addiction to LSD and other mind-altering drugs. In addition to that he experienced serious mental health issues resulting from the massive amounts of drugs he ingested. By the end of 1967, Syd Barrett was so bad he couldn't perform and sometimes he didn't seem to know where he was. David Gilmour, a good friend of the band and Syd, took over for Syd Barrett full time in 1968, he is still a part of Pink Floyd today, albeit there are only 2 members left in Pink Floyd today. David Gilmour, (guitar, lead vocals) and Nick Mason, (drums, percussion). Roger Waters, (bass, vocals), quit the band in 1988, and Rick Wright, (keyboards, vocals),
You don't need to smoke to enjoy Pink Floyd. These are great, Silas, glad you are discovering such timeless music. You should try Boston next, just listen to their first album straight through.
"Shine On You Crazy Diamond" was a dedication to Syd Barret who was Pink Floyd's original founder/guitarist and singer who slipped into insanity due to LSD and was replaced by David Gilmour. Try Pink Floyd's first album, "Piper at the Gates of Dawn" from 1967, to hear what Syd sounded like. Every song on that album is his. Gilmour's guitar tone is phenomenal. For some of the greatest of Gilmour's guitar work, try Pink Floyd's much later album, "The Division Bell" from the 1990's. It's funny but I was about your age when this album came out and it's a masterpiece like "Dark Side of the Moon" and "Division Bell", "The Wall" and "Animals", but I also really enjoy Pink Floyd's first four or five CD's. LOL Every album is good.
The thing with listening to and appreciating Pink Floyd music is, you have to be patient. I can't even begin to imagine the long process that must have been involved in completing their songs, but one thing is obvious--they never ever felt rushed to move through the different song segments, and neither can the listener. Somehow they were always able to figure out the exact points where more would turn into redundant, and only then did they move the song along.
So beautiful watching you young men listening to this as we did Back in the Day... eyes closed, rocking back and forth, and loving what you are hearing. I got chills watching you both. Thank you!
Silas you need to do this album again with Alivia I love her reactions and I think she will love "Shine on you crazy Diamond" No disrespect to your friend.
It's great to see some young people reacting to these classic Pink Floyd albums I can remember how I felt hearing them for the first time back when they were first released and as a musician myself how much of an influence they have been to the kind of music I make.
Thanks, Silas, for bringing back the memories. I was in my mid-20s when this album came out and first heard it while sitting in a friend's loungeroom, along with a few other mates, after indulging in some err...recreational substances. When your friend referred to it as "trippy", he sums it up nicely. Aaaah, the good old days. So glad their music is still impressing listeners half a century later.
This shaped all Of our lives that were fortunate enough to grow up with this band, and others, and yea, we would pack a huge bowl or bong and just lose ourselves to the music 😎
Dude you're reactions to these albums brings be so much happiness. You should really watch while reading subtitles. I listened to these albums dozens of times before even realizing how amazing the lyrics are
So nice to be able to watch two young guys experience this for the first time! I was about your age when I first heard this for the first time 700 years ago 🤣. Looking forward to more.
You guys remind me of me when I was your age and first discovering this music. The difference is that you've been exposed to musical forms that never existed when I was your age so you're coming from a much more lofty perspective.
Wait till you get to the album Animals with the songs dogs, pigs, the lot really. So much to come. The wall, meddle etc. You're in for a treat, there's nobody better. All a must listen. Keep up the work and enjoy
Pink Floyd is a vide. When I was young back in the early 80s, I'd light candles, turn off the lights, and just lay back and listen. Let the music take me away. Some of my best memories were of that time. This band is still my number one band of all time. No one had been able to reach the highs of their music. Whether through their words, they music, or the way they use music and sound to flood your mind with images that take you on a journey of their choosing. All you can do is flow with it.
There is "Music" and there is "Pink Floyd". They brings you somewhere out of your body! Pink Floyd made me fly for the last 55 years and I've been bless for that!
As a veteran of attending 1041 concerts in my lifetime, Roger Waters the other night being my latest,it's safe to say I've seen just about every band from A to Z. Nothing, and I mean nothing I've seen and heard compares to Pink Floyd's "In the Flesh" tour of 1977. Promoting the "Animals" album close to perfection was and is the best show I have ever attended. "Animals" will blow you away. I can't wait for your reaction to that much heralded but yet, underrated album.
Hey, SIlas and Roman! Silas, shout out to you for that Reds shirt. I, too, am a long-suffering Reds fan. I'm excited for the video! I will edit my comment and share my thoughts when I'm finished. Hope you and yours are well! :) EDIT, as promised: These are two of my favorites from Floyd. While I no longer put Welcome to the Machine in my top 5 PF tracks, it's still safely in my top 10. It was the first song I had ever heard (nearly 20 years ago at this point) that had that ambient noise, that which was not strictly from the knowledge base I'd had of what instruments sounded like. Welcome to the Machine is, by no means, their most experimental (check out Atom Heart Mother for the experimental stuff), but it was the first I'd heard and it got me intrigued enough to find something else to scratch that itch, and it kickstarted my journey of music. As for Shine On You Crazy Diamond, it's one of the few songs that moves me to tears, nearly every time I hear it. I worried for some time that I was destined to become as Syd Barrett, minus the musical talent, but I've come to the conclusion that I have a choice on that matter, and have striven to reverse that path. My parents were always into music, with my father being more into the prog rock, metal, and punk scenes, while my mom was into the alternative, ska, and country side of things. And, lucky for me, both of them loved classical music, which helped me bridge gaps to other genres I was hesitant to explore. Pink Floyd's discography led me to discovering Tool (which, incidentally, was one of my dad's favorites). I talk of my dad in the past tense because we are estranged--thankfully, after years of neglect, at best, and abuse, at worst--but I can still, somehow, divorce the feelings I have of him, from the music he showed me, and it, in its best moments, has helped me to see that, while things were bad, with him, they weren't all bad. We had good times, but the bad was too frequent and too rough, and thus, outweighed the good, ultimately. I've recontextualized the lack of a relationship I had with him, and have made peace with it. Hearing the music he helped me discover, and watching it positively influence others, has helped me heal, a lot. I don't want to speak for you, but I want to say that, if you ever feel like you're just some kid putting up little videos listening to music, and it's not more than that, I just would like to say that for me, and many of us in the comments, it's way more. Thank you.
we used to get out of school, go to a friends house, get stoned and trip to this wonderful album and yes' "gates of delrium" off of "relayer" all afternoon. such good times and revelations. and to think, i'm actually doing that right now. time doesn't pass. its simply captured for a few microseconds and it moves on. thanks for the video.
i like that your friend just closed his eyes, and allowed the sound to carry him. That's how you listen to Floyd. Also.. someone mentioned Syd.. who the song was written for. Everyone has a Syd in their life. This song can be profound for everyone.
The record companies were big on adding Sourrund Sound into the music, on radio, on albums, on tapes cassets etc.. so with headphones, you still get the Sourrund Sound today as well
So glad that you young people can appreciate this. I wish I could be hearing this for the first time...I was probably your age when I did hear it for the first time.
If you just want to kick back & chill, this is the LP to do it to. Now you see why us old timers say that today's music sucks. The only 'new' band I really like is Greta Van Fleet, but when it comes to 'old' music, you can't go wrong with Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin or Jethro Tull. I'd like to see you do a reaction video on Robin Trower's Bridge of Sighs or Steve Miller's Fly Like an Eagle.
Pink Floyd did such a marvelous job creating a perception of surrounding space for the music to move around in, which is very well demonstrated with headphones. They can make it seem as though specific instruments are sliding all around you, or even ascending into the heavens, pulling you along for the experience..
My kids are blessed to be alive and experience all that’s pink. 40-50- they have enjoyed An still do enjoy the cars- music of our days.(high school) Bob seger- Beatles- skinner Speak to them for me.
If Beethoven and Mozart had had guitars and synthesizers, they might have come up with something like this. Even if they didn't, they sure would have loved it!
Pink Floyd is and will always be my most favorite band. I know them for almost fifty years now. Animals is another great album. The Wall, Dark side of the moon Pulse live concert. A must see concert Echoes, from the album Meddle, is their best song imho. I prefer the studio version because a lot of the subtleties get lost in the live version. The live version is still great though but it’s cut in two pieces. David Gilmour’s epic live concert Remember that Night, contains Echoes as well. More great bands from back then: Gentle Giant. Three friends is a good album to start with. Jethro Tull. Songs from the wood as a starter. Uriah Heep. Demons and Wizards as a starter. King Crimson. Discipline or In the court of the Crimson Ling as starter. Genesis. The albums with Peter Gabriel a lead singer and the first few albums with Phil Collins as singer. YES. Yessongs as a starter. Rainbow.
If I've said it once, I've said it a thousand times...when you world turns to shit and you've had a crappy day, you come home, pour a scotch (or similar), or glass of red, drink that offing it down. Then, pour another, woof that down too, then pour a third one and go turn off all the lights. Put this or any Pink Floyd record on. Go find a bean bag or deep leather couch, put your headphones on and sink down into your chair, close your eyes, sip away the final drink, and let the music sooth your soul !!!
i drove my son all over the state for cricket and he has listened to Pink Floyd since he was 12 on those long trips. i played them all he used to like the final cut
If you guys are interested there's a documentary about Pink Floyd on UA-cam explaining how the band got together and the LSD episode of the charismatic Syd Barrett was never the same after that and faded out of the band.
I saw Pink Floyd in 1970 (I'm 70 now!😫) and a few years later I saw them again without Roger Waters and then saw Roger Waters without Pink Floyd. The way their songs touch me now is completely different because I am, " Shorter of breath, one day closer to death"! And I tear up a bit when I hear "Remember when you were young....you shone like the sun." The lyrics were cool back then but more relevant and haunting now in the later stage of my life. So thrilling to see the music I loved 50+ years ago is being kept alive and appreciated by young people like y'all. Watching your 1st time reactions takes me back to when I went to Tower Records and bought a new album (or 8 track cassette) and listened to it with my friends for the 1st time. Thanks for the memories and great reactions!😁❤️✌️
I'm 68 now. I'm right there with you pal.
At least it's good to see some youngsters opening their eyes (and ears) to what good music is. I cannot tolerate the utter shit that mostly enters my ears these days.
I drove around in my car in rural Missouri as a teenager in 1976-77, listening to this on 8-track and passing around joints. We pretty much wore out the tape.
It’s amazing to think that this music is nearly 50 years old. A lot of music from that time sounds dated. Pink Floyd’s 70s albums all sound like it could be released today. Not just ahead of their time, but it exists in another time and place entirely.
one of the most precise and accurate comments ever about Pink Floyd
DSotM was literally being recorded 50 years ago as I write this. I feel like I should be putting money aside to pay for my funeral 😭
@@ChristopherStendeck Penn Life can help with that.
Pink Floyd were geniuses at creating a "theater of the mind" atmosphere. That sound at the end of "Welcome to the Machine" is: elevator doors closing, the express elevator going all the way up, and the doors opening to a penthouse party, which sets up the theme of the next track. This a "concept album" that's both a tribute to Syd Barrett, a founding member of the band (he came up with the band's name), and an indictment against the soulless business side of the music industry. Syd was the "crazy diamond". Look closely at the album's cover art; it's a photo of two men shaking hands on a deal, and one is literally being burned. That's how the band felt record company executives treated the artists.
I mean they set Money beat to a cash register. 😂 Tell us how you _really_ feel about the music business, Roger....
Yup! And he really was on fire! 🔥
Hey...TRUE! Great analysis, mate! (One thing is for sure, to reach some Pink Floyd lyrics, (and sound vibrations and melodies) I, after all these years, sometimes (Lousy english) I find very hard to reach the meanings of certain songs or short bursts of text.
Every Guitar wants a David Gilmour for Christmas.
When you've heard this a few times you'll put it on for background music. It will become part of you and you'll hear each note in your head before it happens. You'll be a lifelong fan. 50 years and still counting. But you have to go backwards from DSOTM too!
@Phillip Harrison I had Pink Floyd on 8-track and album. Class of 81! In 1980 We got a new High school built. I used to carry a GE Loudmouth 8-track player like a book to some of my classes! I looked up the Loudmouth on UA-cam, and found it! The one I had was Grey. I loved that thing! 😎✌
I never thought about it that way but your right if I am cleaning up the house or even working in the garage I put on some classic rock and yeah it becomes back round music.
Ok...admit it! Our generation had the greatest cars and music!! I was a teen in the 70s...best time of my life!
Ha!! Yes!! 💥
WTTM was1st song I got high to. It had just been released. Wow.
Yes I had a 1970 Pontiac GTO my favorite car
@@paultinella3432 I’ve always wanted a white blue striped 1969 firebird
Agree! Just wish they knew how beautiful it was then.
RIP Syd Barrett, you crazy diamond, caught in the crossfire of childhood and stardom...
For these full album reactions I would recommend finding out where the albums go from Side 1 to Side 2, as this was a natural break in every record. The bands put their albums together knowing that people would be starting and stopping the albums at that point, and the fans are used to hearing the albums be interrupted there as well. Just a thought.
Excellent point . Records put on CD from LP wrecked a lot of album moments (in my opinion ) by starting “Side B” too quickly . Does this make sense ? 🎸🤦♂️👍
Agreed
You're spot on, Julie.
I sooo envy you to be listening to so many great artists that are part of the musical DNA of past generations. You are by far the most sincere and authentic reaction channel I have witnessed. Keep up the good work! You are pleasing a ton of us old Hippies! Remember ..Gilmour is known for his subtle genius on the guitar! You will be inundated with explanations of this music and that is fine, but none of the behind-the-scenes was known by us listeners until years after they were released. All we knew was the experience of the music and were left to our own devices as to what the meaning of it all was!
What I remember whilst listening to PF, oh so many years ago, is it being akin to a paradigm shift in my understanding of what was, and what could be, this, coincidentally; or not, whilst contemplating the gentle assent and decent of blobs of melted wax in my lava lamp, also in concert while enjoying the afterglow of, (the unfortunately obsolete), sensi (sensimilla) stick; good times
✌😎✌
Now seeing these youngsters discover for the first time those songs which added to many of our collectives, and individual consciences is a real treat. It's sort of a vicarious reliving of that first contact with PF's magic and subsequent magical times.
@@tjhunger8644 I remember those "sticks" 😁 My favorite album covers, were the ones you could open up and do the twist! 😎✌ A friend of mine had "Big Bamboo" with the giant rolling paper. 😁 Good times indeed! I still have a "Power Hitter" bought brand new from a friend in 1977! The date is printed on the label. Mine is blue. Fun fact: If you Google it and hit images, you'll see a blue one with the same date on it! Even the wrinkles on the label, are almost identical to mine! When I first saw it...
🤯 it kinda freaked me out! 😁
@@robertkroberjr.157 Haha yeah, I have a black power hitter from '77. A few bongs too.
@@robertkroberjr.157 it sounds like a glitch in The Matrix to me friend
@@robertkroberjr.157 I don't think young people realise the importance of choosing which album you used to roll up on, it definitely infused the magic of the music into the magic of the cigarette. We *always* had a debate about which LP cover to use, DSOTM was an obvious one, The Wall was used only if you were on a downer, and if your head was a real mess then anything by Ozric Tentacles would do... Later, in the 1980s, it could be the VHS video cassette of choice, that would work, however CD covers were too small, completely useless, and people only ever rolled up on a C90 cassette tape cover for a joke...
Of course young people don't get it, you can't roll up a decent spliff on an MP3 or a stream!
I haven't heard this in years. I think I read somewhere that Syd turned up in the studio during part of the sessions for Wish You Were Here, hidden somewhere up the back and Floyd didn't know he was there, or recognise him at first. Syd is the 'crazy diamond.' Now deceased.
It's always great to see a new generation discover The Floyd. They have been my constant companions for nigh on 50 years and I remember buying Wish You Here on release in 75 as if it were yesterday.
Yeah I bought it at Musicland at North Dekalb Mall. It had opaque blue plastic wrap. Had to wait till I got home to open it to see the cover. I had actually heard most of the album a few months earlier when I saw Pink Floyd at the Atlanta Stadium June 7, 1975 My first concert. I was 15 years old.
@@frankmarsh1159
Year younger than me but then again these days everybody seems younger than me😊
@@philbell5774 63 here as well, it's because of Floyd that I ended up after the Army as a dj for an FM here, and finally I got to jock classic rock, my wheel house, and after 30 years of radio, I got out, too corporate, and NO DEEP CUTS...lol...anyway, I do agree from where I sit, I'm finding getting old, ain't for the young...these snowflakes now a days...sheesh...anyway..Rock ON!!
@@frankmarsh1159 Mine was wrapped in black and I still have the stickers and postcard!
@@steddie4514 Wikipedia says it was black but I could have sworn mine was dark blue. lol.
When we were younger we would sit in a freinds basement (or living room) with a great stereo system, smoke somthing, put on Pink Floyd and just chill out to the music. Often with a few friends, no conversation, no cell phones or other distractions. Ussually someone would have the album cover in hand going over the lyrics or some arcane detail regading the recording. When the side was over, maybe some chatter about the music, then after you got up and flipped the record over, back to the ear candy for another 20 mins! Those were the days.
What I love about this is how Gilmour is deliberately playing at low volume for most of this with little or no effects. Because of of this he's having to wring every note out of the guitar, getting the plectrum to bite to make those notes ring. He's a master of leaving space for the music to breathe. The first three notes he plays on this track tell you everything you need to know about playing the guitar. Space. Tone. Timing. Perfection.
I'm a guy who grew up on Zep, Sabbath, and Deep Purple, but there is something so cerebral and cutting to the Floyd. They cannot be denied. And WYWH is my fav album. Pure, unadulterated genius.
I agree i grew up on those 3 epic bands myself but pink floyd is so different from everyone else , im glad i grew up in classic rock era nothing comes close, dont forget Richie blackmores rainbow with Dio epic
This song was composed to Syd Barret's dedication. Syd was a original member of Pink Floyd. He was adict to LSD and his mind was damage. Shine on...you...crazy diamond. Sid was the more imaginative of them, at the first. Funny, beautiful, good person, but the drogs....
Watch this quick video about Syd. They hadn't seen him in years. Then he shows up at the studio during the mixing of Shine On You crazy diamond. They all cried.
ua-cam.com/users/shortsgXGf2PWpOFc?feature=share
Umma Gumma definitely's gotta be Syd ! I've only seen one person react to a song on that album !
CAREFUL WITH THAT AXE EUGENE !
DEFINTELY a synthesizer. Floyd was one of the first groups to make full use of it as an instrument.
The saxophone was played by Dick Parry the unofficial fifth member of Pink Floyd. he played with David Gilmour since they were 15 years old incredible saxophonist even played with him in the later days when he had white hair still fantastic. it’s great to watch live as he switches from the Bari saxophone to the alto saxophone he has one hanging around the front of his neck and the other one around the back and then swings around when he makes the change up
Glad you are trying to do whole sides of Pink Floyd because especially with this album you can see how busting it up track by track wouldn't have made any sense.
Good job.
Got high the first time. listening to the, then brand new album, called Dark side of the Moon...of course there was no internet back then, just phones on walls, and in little glass boxes on the street...but I went all over looking for more Floyd...I'm now 63 years old, and now I get to watch a new generation dig "our" music...thank you for the honesty, and reverence you show to these bands...it's well deserved...Rock ON!!!
Great reaction. Fun to see young people digging these classics.
I've been watching and responding to UA-cam for the last couple years. All the comments I see never say thank you.
Thank you for doing what you do, thank you for loving music. Maybe I'll be the first to say thank you but I hope I'm not the last !! Thank you
That's how you do Floyd. Eyes closed with quality headphones. Take just one day where you shut off the wifi (have the music downloaded), unplug and just listen, then read the album cover notes. Then a book and just truly unplug and know what life and human cognition was like, even just 25 years ago, before energetic waves were made thick in the air...and as a consequence, humans were made thick above the neck.
At my age, I should be more familiar with Pink Floyd than I am. I've had a few of their albums in my CD collection since somewhere around the late '80s or early '90s. And while I love those albums, I somehow haven't gotten around to exploring more of their work. I don't think I've ever heard this album. Thank you for reacting to it. I think I might start systematically adding all of their albums to my vinyl record collection. Part way through this video I paused the video and ordered their first album on vinyl. The journey begins ...
Pink Floyd is a Experience.. A Feel, I remember being 17 and coming home on a Friday night with a little buzz Lol and putting the headphones on and just drift away into the music🎸
So glad your hitting my favourite Pink Floyd album. Nothing messes with your head quite like a Pink Floyd album, and this is one of the very best for sure.
Led Zeppelin is to the soul what Pink Floyd is to the mind. Great reactions 😎
The Yin & Yang of music that brought balance to the universe
Good analogy 👏
Great comment!
Cool comment, but could the analogy be reversed and still be true ?
@@tommythompson9565 Could be, but Pink Floyd lyrics spoke to the mind/consciousness while Led Zeps bluesy style was soulful.
Love to see kids hear what real music was like. Shame you weren't able to see live. saw them 8 times.
The first time I heard this, it was on cassette on a bad stereo.
Still have the cassette and it still plays and sounds great.
To enjoy the best from listening to Pink Floyd, Head phones are a must !! I am glad to see you young men enjoy what us old men and women love to listen to, Awesome old fogie music eh 😁
These guys were geniuses... to write and play every song on every albums this way... every song was a hit as well, when they came out one by one on the radio stations first, then theyd put as many songs on as they wanted per album , tape, or CD sides
This was my first PF album I heard and it blew us away... I was 16. Shout out to Pattie V. 😎 Oh yea, we were high as hell!
Back when masterpieces were recorded
Thank you Dick Parry, a most underrated part of Pink Floyd. His sax lines are amazing....
Yes! You're doing it! Such a great album. Another classic.
While other bands finger-painted on the walls Pink Floyd painted the Mona Lisa
and to think this was utilizing 70's technology, The keyboards / synthesizers were a relatively new thing at the time. PF is the GOAT
Awesome reaction video! Can't wait to see part 2. You'll have to let us know what you think about this album compared to Dark Side of the Moon. No judging here... I love both!
This is what we had as teenagers, this magical, superb music. This is why so much does not appeal to us in regards to some new music with no soul. We were spoilt by having music that fed our souls and took us on journeys. Oh, how lucky we were to have this in our lives!! My ears have been blessed for decades by Pink Floyd!!
The most stunning landscape painted with sound..... just beautiful!
SYD -- Shine on You crazy Diamond -- He was a friend they always missed but couldnt keep
Dark Side of the Moon and WYWH were both released in quadraphonic which sounds even more awesome with the right stereo.
watch the pink floyd concert "pulse 1994". you´ll be floored.
As a high school kid in the early 70's, everyone had a stereo system in their room to play our records. Spent lots of time getting high and listening to Floyd. Added bonus of vinyl was the big 12" x 12" album cover and lp sleeve art to look at while listening. I remember looking at that graphic on the inner record sleeve of the red scarf blowing through the trees and I swore it was really moving !
Just some of the greatest music ever played on God's green earth!
The last 4 words of your comment are not needed.
Everytime every time you listen to a Pink Floyd Song you grow.
Another great PF album...my 2nd favorite band. You should also do Rush 2112! The whole 1st side needs to be done at one time as it is all parts of one big story song. You will love it!
For Real! Rush is my favorite band since 1974... Then Pink Floyd and Zeppelin (in no particular order, depends on my mood (hehe))... I know Zep is your favorite from seeing you comment on Zep reactions. Cheers!
"Wish You Were Here", (1975), Pink Floyds 9th album, fits in nicely between "Dark Side of the Moon", (1973), and "Animals", (1977 as two of the Best Pink Floyd albums, imo.
"The Wall" album in 1979 being the crowning achievement of Pink Floyd, as far as artistic endeavors and musical writing and arrangements go, also imo.
This album, like virtually all Pink Floyd albums, is a concept album, it tells a story and is meant to be listened to in one sitting, like your guys are doing! The album is mostly about Syd Barrett, one of Pink Floyds original band member in 1964. he's the Crazy Diamond and he's the one they're referring to in the title of the album and the song, "Wish You Were Here".
Syd Barrett was forced to leave Pink Floyd by the end of 1967, before they achieved international status, because of his addiction to LSD and other mind-altering drugs. In addition to that he experienced serious mental health issues resulting from the massive amounts of drugs he ingested.
By the end of 1967, Syd Barrett was so bad he couldn't perform and sometimes he didn't seem to know where he was.
David Gilmour, a good friend of the band and Syd, took over for Syd Barrett full time in 1968, he is still a part of Pink Floyd today, albeit there are only 2 members left in Pink Floyd today. David Gilmour, (guitar, lead vocals) and Nick Mason, (drums, percussion). Roger Waters, (bass, vocals), quit the band in 1988, and Rick Wright, (keyboards, vocals),
You don't need to smoke to enjoy Pink Floyd. These are great, Silas, glad you are discovering such timeless music. You should try Boston next, just listen to their first album straight through.
"Shine On You Crazy Diamond" was a dedication to Syd Barret who was Pink Floyd's original founder/guitarist and singer who slipped into insanity due to LSD and was replaced by David Gilmour. Try Pink Floyd's first album, "Piper at the Gates of Dawn" from 1967, to hear what Syd sounded like. Every song on that album is his. Gilmour's guitar tone is phenomenal. For some of the greatest of Gilmour's guitar work, try Pink Floyd's much later album, "The Division Bell" from the 1990's. It's funny but I was about your age when this album came out and it's a masterpiece like "Dark Side of the Moon" and "Division Bell", "The Wall" and "Animals", but I also really enjoy Pink Floyd's first four or five CD's. LOL Every album is good.
The thing with listening to and appreciating Pink Floyd music is, you have to be patient. I can't even begin to imagine the long process that must have been involved in completing their songs, but one thing is obvious--they never ever felt rushed to move through the different song segments, and neither can the listener. Somehow they were always able to figure out the exact points where more would turn into redundant, and only then did they move the song along.
You hear Led Zeppelin,you feel Pink Floyd!
OMG! I am exciting to see your face when you listen this song. Come on!
So beautiful watching you young men listening to this as we did Back in the Day... eyes closed, rocking back and forth, and loving what you are hearing. I got chills watching you both. Thank you!
Been a fan of Floyd since the early 70s. Seen them live. They were awesome.
Silas you need to do this album again with Alivia I love her reactions and I think she will love "Shine on you crazy Diamond" No disrespect to your friend.
Not an endorsement of any kind, but this music is best enjoyed while absolutely stoned, or so I've heard. 😆
I love your reactions. Welcome to the unsyhthetic past!!!
Shine on
You crazy
Diamond
SYD
It's great to see some young people reacting to these classic Pink Floyd albums I can remember how I felt hearing them for the first time back when they were first released and as a musician myself how much of an influence they have been to the kind of music I make.
Thanks, Silas, for bringing back the memories. I was in my mid-20s when this album came out and first heard it while sitting in a friend's loungeroom, along with a few other mates, after indulging in some err...recreational substances. When your friend referred to it as "trippy", he sums it up nicely. Aaaah, the good old days. So glad their music is still impressing listeners half a century later.
GREAT ALBUM NEW SUB THIS ALBUM ALWAYS BRINGS ME TO TEARS TY FOR REACTING TO IT !!!!! IT WAS A GREAT TIME IN MUSIC TRUST US LOL!!!!
This shaped all
Of our lives that were fortunate enough to grow up with this band, and others, and yea, we would pack a huge bowl or bong and just lose ourselves to the music 😎
With Pink Floyd you justgie up and go with the mood and the music. It is always a journey
Dude you're reactions to these albums brings be so much happiness. You should really watch while reading subtitles. I listened to these albums dozens of times before even realizing how amazing the lyrics are
So nice to be able to watch two young guys experience this for the first time! I was about your age when I first heard this for the first time 700 years ago 🤣. Looking forward to more.
I love this! Enjoy your Pink Floyd ride guys!
You guys remind me of me when I was your age and first discovering this music. The difference is that you've been exposed to musical forms that never existed when I was your age so you're coming from a much more lofty perspective.
Wait till you get to the album Animals with the songs dogs, pigs, the lot really. So much to come. The wall, meddle etc. You're in for a treat, there's nobody better. All a must listen. Keep up the work and enjoy
Pink Floyd is the ALTIMATE CEREBRAL experience!
Pink Floyd is a vide. When I was young back in the early 80s, I'd light candles, turn off the lights, and just lay back and listen. Let the music take me away. Some of my best memories were of that time. This band is still my number one band of all time. No one had been able to reach the highs of their music. Whether through their words, they music, or the way they use music and sound to flood your mind with images that take you on a journey of their choosing. All you can do is flow with it.
There is "Music" and there is "Pink Floyd". They brings you somewhere out of your body!
Pink Floyd made me fly for the last 55 years and I've been bless for that!
As a veteran of attending 1041 concerts in my lifetime, Roger Waters the other night being my latest,it's safe to say I've seen just about every band from A to Z.
Nothing, and I mean nothing I've seen and heard compares to Pink Floyd's "In the Flesh" tour of 1977. Promoting the "Animals" album close to perfection was and is the best show I have ever attended.
"Animals" will blow you away. I can't wait for your reaction to that much heralded but yet, underrated album.
Nothing beats a first listen !
Hey, SIlas and Roman! Silas, shout out to you for that Reds shirt. I, too, am a long-suffering Reds fan. I'm excited for the video! I will edit my comment and share my thoughts when I'm finished. Hope you and yours are well! :)
EDIT, as promised:
These are two of my favorites from Floyd. While I no longer put Welcome to the Machine in my top 5 PF tracks, it's still safely in my top 10. It was the first song I had ever heard (nearly 20 years ago at this point) that had that ambient noise, that which was not strictly from the knowledge base I'd had of what instruments sounded like. Welcome to the Machine is, by no means, their most experimental (check out Atom Heart Mother for the experimental stuff), but it was the first I'd heard and it got me intrigued enough to find something else to scratch that itch, and it kickstarted my journey of music. As for Shine On You Crazy Diamond, it's one of the few songs that moves me to tears, nearly every time I hear it. I worried for some time that I was destined to become as Syd Barrett, minus the musical talent, but I've come to the conclusion that I have a choice on that matter, and have striven to reverse that path. My parents were always into music, with my father being more into the prog rock, metal, and punk scenes, while my mom was into the alternative, ska, and country side of things. And, lucky for me, both of them loved classical music, which helped me bridge gaps to other genres I was hesitant to explore. Pink Floyd's discography led me to discovering Tool (which, incidentally, was one of my dad's favorites). I talk of my dad in the past tense because we are estranged--thankfully, after years of neglect, at best, and abuse, at worst--but I can still, somehow, divorce the feelings I have of him, from the music he showed me, and it, in its best moments, has helped me to see that, while things were bad, with him, they weren't all bad. We had good times, but the bad was too frequent and too rough, and thus, outweighed the good, ultimately. I've recontextualized the lack of a relationship I had with him, and have made peace with it. Hearing the music he helped me discover, and watching it positively influence others, has helped me heal, a lot. I don't want to speak for you, but I want to say that, if you ever feel like you're just some kid putting up little videos listening to music, and it's not more than that, I just would like to say that for me, and many of us in the comments, it's way more. Thank you.
Go Reds!! Not far from catching my Cubs! 👍
we used to get out of school, go to a friends house, get stoned and trip to this wonderful album and yes' "gates of delrium" off of "relayer" all afternoon. such good times and revelations. and to think, i'm actually doing that right now. time doesn't pass. its simply captured for a few microseconds and it moves on. thanks for the video.
i like that your friend just closed his eyes, and allowed the sound to carry him. That's how you listen to Floyd. Also.. someone mentioned Syd.. who the song was written for. Everyone has a Syd in their life. This song can be profound for everyone.
The record companies were big on adding Sourrund Sound into the music, on radio, on albums, on tapes cassets etc.. so with headphones, you still get the Sourrund Sound today as well
So glad that you young people can appreciate this. I wish I could be hearing this for the first time...I was probably your age when I did hear it for the first time.
Finish this one and roll on into their next album…Animals
If you just want to kick back & chill, this is the LP to do it to. Now you see why us old timers say that today's music sucks. The only 'new' band I really like is Greta Van Fleet, but when it comes to 'old' music, you can't go wrong with Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin or Jethro Tull. I'd like to see you do a reaction video on Robin Trower's Bridge of Sighs or Steve Miller's Fly Like an Eagle.
It’s good to close your eyes to get into this music, it takes away distractions and you can meditate to the music. Just a thought.
I see them live 8 or 9 time still listen today age 64 I love listen to them
Pink Floyd did such a marvelous job creating a perception of surrounding space for the music to move around in, which is very well demonstrated with headphones. They can make it seem as though specific instruments are sliding all around you, or even ascending into the heavens, pulling you along for the experience..
My kids are blessed to be alive and experience all that’s pink.
40-50- they have enjoyed
An still do enjoy the cars- music of our days.(high school)
Bob seger- Beatles- skinner
Speak to them for me.
If Beethoven and Mozart had had guitars and synthesizers, they might have come up with something like this. Even if they didn't, they sure would have loved it!
Sooooo glad you're doing this. Floyd is the perfect break from Zeppelin. 💥💥💥👍😎
There are the singers but also the guitars and sax sound like they're talking. It's beautiful.
Pink Floyd is and will always be my most favorite band. I know them for almost fifty years now.
Animals is another great album.
The Wall,
Dark side of the moon
Pulse live concert. A must see concert
Echoes, from the album Meddle, is their best song imho. I prefer the studio version because a lot of the subtleties get lost in the live version. The live version is still great though but it’s cut in two pieces.
David Gilmour’s epic live concert Remember that Night, contains Echoes as well.
More great bands from back then:
Gentle Giant. Three friends is a good album to start with.
Jethro Tull. Songs from the wood as a starter.
Uriah Heep. Demons and Wizards as a starter.
King Crimson. Discipline or In the court of the Crimson Ling as starter.
Genesis. The albums with Peter Gabriel a lead singer and the first few albums with Phil Collins as singer.
YES. Yessongs as a starter.
Rainbow.
No!!!! I was waiting for Have a Cigar. Can't wait for the next vid guys 👍
It was great watching your response to mother. Keep up the great work.
If I've said it once, I've said it a thousand times...when you world turns to shit and you've had a crappy day, you come home, pour a scotch (or similar), or glass of red, drink that offing it down. Then, pour another, woof that down too, then pour a third one and go turn off all the lights. Put this or any Pink Floyd record on. Go find a bean bag or deep leather couch, put your headphones on and sink down into your chair, close your eyes, sip away the final drink, and let the music sooth your soul !!!
Love this album and that reds shirt is sweet too
I absolutely love that you both close your eyes. I find it difficult to listen to them with eyes open. ❤️✌️
Suggest watching some live performances you will not be disappointed. Nice reaction.
New generation on fire!!!!
The final cut. Should be next in my opinion.
That's what I'm talking about! 👍😃
Another masterpiece from the Floyd.
God were we so blessed to grow up with all this genius❤️I had Dark side of the Moon poster on my bedroom wall🙏🥰
i drove my son all over the state for cricket and he has listened to Pink Floyd since he was 12 on those long trips. i played them all he used to like the final cut
If you guys are interested there's a documentary about Pink Floyd on UA-cam explaining how the band got together and the LSD episode of the charismatic Syd Barrett was never the same after that and faded out of the band.