There's not a lot of Floyd that I've missed in my 46 yrs. But this one is new to me. I love how your can hear them working out classics early on. True genius. 🤘🔥🤘
@DannyHood-j He's 46 yrs old. Not everyone has seen and heard alot of these specials. Lucky for you to have a copy of this. Thankfully, there are Floydians who upload these types of videos. SHINE ON 💎 🌙
They replayed this on KQED in 1982 and I randomly saw it in TV guide. We turned our crappy TV all the way up and blew out the speaker. Thank you Pink Floyd.
1. The Amazing Pudding (Early name for Atom Heart Mother) - 0:53 2. Cymbaline - 17:31 3. Grantchester Meadows - 26:11 4. Green Is The Colour - 33:46 5. Careful With That Axe, Eugene - 37:16 6. Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun - 46:26 7. Astronomy Domine - 59:18
I had just turned 15 years old. Grandma was the first person I knew that had cable tv. I was at her house scanning through channels and I came across this. I missed the first minute or two, so I had no idea what it was. I had never heard, or seen anything like it. Music like this was just not played in Arkansas in 1970. I sat, mesmerized through the whole thing. I didn’t know what it meant when they flashed “The Pink Floyd” on the screen. It was at least three years before I found out that it was Pink Floyd. I wish I had known from the beginning.
That’s a great story.the beginning of something that lasts for decades.i too would scan grandmas tv late at night after all were in bed.midnite special or don kirshners”rock comcert”filmed Live no lip sync garbage.
Great story! Be grateful for the wonderful memory you have. I'd say you witnessed history. They were so fresh and full of their new ideas back then. A real treat and an important Psychedelic event. I was just 14 living in Los Angeles. Within 2 years the Floyd would explode on the scene. We were lucky to be there for that! Still gives me goosebumps!
Grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area..... Public Television ruled it then & still rules it today!!! Channel 9 in most places in the Bay Area and beyond in Northern California!!!! Some of the only honest broadcasting left.... Share Public Television with Your children. I'm glad it was available to me throughout my life.....
Ikr? Like I wasn’t technically alive when this happened but I still remember it from a past life. Like for reelz it’s THAT strong 🤯 talk about LIT!!! Pink Floyd rulez!
@LudiCrust. Great music transcends time and space, and then gently places itself forever in the firmanent. Just saw David Gilmour two weeks in L.A., and he still brought the ether of Pink Floyd.
I remember watching this "mind-expanding" performance on public television back in '71..., I was just 16yrs old. Its great to see footage of these guys early on in their careers.They really were an underground band..., only a few Bohemians, Freaks, & other hippy-types listened to them regularly..., Afterwards came a string of incredible albums; "Echoes", "Obscured by Clouds", then "DSOTM" put them in the spotlight where they've been ever since!
The people who were in that studio were talking about it years and years later. Imagine having access to such a private performance! If they had known how big Floyd was yet to become. I love how this has been remastered.
Well done. The Icelanders have great faith in language and believe that if you can get the right words down, in the right order, then anything is possible. You have nothing to lose, let's just say that everything is possible in the "Twilight Zone".
Man, the version of Grantchester Meadows really kicked my ass. Reminds me of being a kid laying in the back seat of my Pop Pop’s car (1979) listening to Ummagumma on 8 track (studio side). Those were the days. I was 6yrs old. What an album to start off with the Floyd. ❤️🤘
Same story here! I was born in 65 and was literally in kindergarten when my older brother was playing this regularly at home while getting high with his friends. I saved up my allowance and went out and bought my first album Saucerful of Secrets. I guess I was a little different than other kids!
little did they realize on that day that rock immortality, Dark Side of the Moon, was just a few short years down the road. I consider them the greatest rock group ever.
@@tagaudiRoger had big ideas which were great. The others seemed to just go along with it. With this footage, who would expect the tall guy playing bass would have these epic things in his head.
@@tagaudi Wow !! , What a stupid and ignorant comment. Roger's journey was one of integrity, honour and compassion (especially to those in the world whose voices were / are not being listened too.......as in those having genocide and war crimes commited on them right now in Palestine and many indigenous people's around the world....The only few who think like you are the corrupted psychopaths who support war crimes, genocide and psychopathic colonialism. PS most bands throughout history split up and go their own ways as they feel different creative forces, and join up with new musiciians who match their new journeys. Looks like Roger is doing rather well for himself in terms of being popular....all his massive tours around the world are huge sell outs, and he's also highly respected by most human beings with empathy for his fearlessness in speaking up for those who need to be heard the most.
@@buschovski1 True, Roger had all the ideas and concepts, and big motivation and inspiration. For all his failings, Waters was far less motivated by money than has been the case with the Gilmour led years of Floyd.
@@AnoNym-he1yv I wasn't trying to name a type of music, but more like a vision that it gives me. Egypt does come to mind along with ancient European images.
This was on public tv at the thime. I was ready for it and made an open mike cassette. The program Never played again. The cassette lasted my years. Then it mysteriously disappeared. Now: catch a documentary on Fractals: one hr of Gilmour, great documentary "fractals are God's signature."
From back when they were an esoteric, spacey, experimental little band, familiar mostly to those of us who ingested various psychedelic substances before listening. It's not apparent here, but we know Pink Floyd would soon begin having a major impact on a lot of people with immense, powerful, timeless music.
Thank you for posting this, this footage is priceless ! The songs are very well performed too, you can never be disappointed with Pink Floyd. This band is timeless !!!...
I saw them in Boston at a nice small theater touring the Meddle album. It had just been released and it was epic. They sounded so fine back then. Saw 'em again in probably '74 with the Darkside tour. Again in Boston but this time at The Garden. They still sounded good but nothing beats them in a cozy music hall setting. This is quality right here. thank you KQED!
Listening to Astronomy Domine especially, and also Set the Controls, made me think - at the time of this in April 1970, in between gigs like this, David Gilmour and Richard Wright were working on Syd Barrett's second album. That January his first solo album was released which David and Roger worked on. The specter of Syd always followed the band.
So true. The lament that is expressed in "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" is a rare and precise bit of such true emotion -- over their collective loss---which for most young men with musical talent was usually reserved & directed at the loss of a woman or lover.
@@karenscigliano9787 Just as a point of information in case this isn't obvious to everyone because it took me years to notice: (note the capital letters) ShineonYoucrazyDiamond. No doubt a play off LucyintheSkywithDiamonds since they played off the Beatles a lot.
Awesome!! Atom hart mother!! And live!! Thank u man that was back when LSD was flowing! 1995-98 I know I was to young blaa blaa . But old enough to buy it on CD! Beautiful dark haunting overwhelming and the light shines threw! Best of the West. Brings up all kinds of old ancient feelings .
It’s sick how lsd is gone but loads of pharmaceuticals are on open markets with Lilly white commercials to promote them and the newfound ailment.bogus man.
It’s sick how lsd is gone but loads of pharmaceuticals are on open markets with Lilly white commercials to promote them and the newfound ailment.bogus man.
KQED was our public broadcast CH 9 in SanJose cal. Where I grew up . Man I was 13 on that date an had just graduated jr High. We loved The Pink Floyd. Been listening to them for 3yrs already mate.
I still have a couple of bootleg cassettes I recorded when I saw them in Carnegie Hall in '72. Snuck in a cassette recorder. They did the entire Ummagumma LP and a few other tunes.
Wow! Watching this was a definite trippy flashback in time! I happened to see an impromptu, free show they did, just about a week later, in LA, on the UCLA campus. This was right at the time of the Kent State Massacre, and colleges across the country (including UCLA) were shut down by student demonstrations, so it was very tense times, tempered by pot, pure psychedelics, and Pink Floyd's very deep, improvisational music!! We were shocked, after first being impatient, since it took them a longer time to set up, than the usual local bands who played on Friday afternoons. We were going, "who the hell are these guys, and why's it taking so long for them to set up"? They kept bringing more & more amps onto the grassy quadrangle, until they finally began playing, and we couldn't believe what we were seeing & hearing! We listened quite often to their early albums, so to see them in-person was incredible! In later years I got to meet and hang with Richard Wright, for an evening, as a friend brought him out to a gig I was playing in Kailua, HI. He stayed till the end, then we hung at a friend's almost all night with him. Quite a thrill, to say the least...
I was you, until I heard the remixed Animals, which was like hearing a new Pink Floyd album. It's even better if you drop the terrible first and last tracks. The rest is pretty good.
@@caseykittel Have you heard the remix? That was the first time I ever really listened, and it was great! [Aside from those dreadful opening and closing tracks.]
Yes. You’re talking about The remaster. Right? at first it seemed very jarring to me, having listened to the original for so long it wasn’t welcomed by my ears. Now I can listen to it without noticing, but there is something dark and looming about that album and I found the older more analog sound was a little more fitting. For the record, I love 99% of the remastered albums I listen to. I am not one of these analog only people with a $100,000 record player. I love tech. It’s just that the remaster changed the experience for me. I had to adjust. I am also careful about using the words remix and remaster. A remix implies they actually changed levels between instruments or made things stereo where it was originally recorded mono.
I’ve been looking for this one for more than a decade. I had watched somewhere before UA-cam era. Thank you very much for sharing. I’m sure I watched it in a Italian friend s home. Perhaps It’s you…
Cymbaline is still haunting to this day sending chills up my spine like a tube train .I listened to this song on a train in London felted connected to floyd in a British way
Amazing performance in every aspect amd detail. You expect tbis level of tightness in a jazz or classicla quarter, but in the rock world I cannot think of anyrhing tbat comes close. Frankly, most of rock with their interminable drum solos and soulless guitar riffs led to its own demise. Luckily we have this recording to rwmund us of what could be achieved in rock music and that Floyd was a lot deeper than a bombastic Wall.
awesome vid. still can hear the remnants of Syd but David is feeling it now and the band is about to produce one of the game changing albums of music history... 54:00 i love that slide sound David makes. i love it even more in Dogs from Animals in 1977.
Now, THIS is what the band should be working on getting officially released (as well as other early performances), not another version of DSOTM from Earls Court 1994!!
@cinemascope53 It would be nice as an individual release. Along with the soundtrack to Live at Pompeii and the Venice concert. A decent DVD release of Crystal Voyager would also be on my wants list, as well as the long awaited and probably never to appear 5.1 version of The Wall. One is just tired of the same things being remixed, remastered or repackaged. A 5.1 of Meddle would be great!
I agree there's a big incredible. Of music from 69 to 72 that is so incredibly overlooked. But you know how it is. If it's not going to sell a lot of units nobody fucking cares. If I buy it. So what. I can't believe how many people buy 20 different reissues of basically the same thing. Isn't it amazing how they found a way to take a $15 audio CD and sell it to you for $150! Wow
I had just been born, the Mariners had just won the 3rd straight SuperBowl and Jordan hung his head in shame. As I opened my eyes I saw Nick Mason with his Gibson upside down and restrung. He was dancing on the voodoo barn with Lighting Jack McQueen from the crossroads. I looked to the sky and saw pink and seafoam waves. It was my first time hearing the Pink Floyd. My St. Bernard took the mic and he sang, BowDown and my life changed for ever on the Steppe. Uncle Ghengis said, let's go check out the desert to the west. Twas a great time in the future.
The reason I xan go to these performances and albums is because it doesnt have any emotional weight on me. Its timeless music I can only float with and enjoy. It clears my head.
All Floyd from 1966 to 1985 is absolute gold and is some journey with amazing music and more and more powerful lyrics that are now more relevant than ever. After the Final Cut Floyd ended for me (and most others) But thnkfully Roger Waters carried the work through with him and still does to the present day. An amazing guy whom is respected all over the world for helping people who need a voice and need to be heard due to thjem facing illegal war crimes and genocide (whether is be in Palestine or many indigenous peoples around the world) Roger Waters . a man of true integrity, honour and compassion.
@@smittyeverybodyknowsone6191 lol, tickets in the UK for Roger's latest tour this last year were £70 (that's approx 89 USD) A very decent and fair price for a show that is pretty much the biggest and more elaborate show in the world. The same levels of ticket prices were the same for his shows all over the world too. Everyone I know whom went enjoyed every minute and that includes myself. Also, the feedback from around the world is the same. His shows are loved everywhere he goes. Go look up his South American shows for srarters. The only people whom don't like Roger are supporters of genocide and war crimes by the psychopathic Israeli Government. The world is watching and that is by there will be even bigger mass boycotts of anything Israel does until they stop murdering and robbing the lands of millions of Palestinians. Have a look at how well it went for the Apartheid regime in South Africa, until Nelson Mandela was freed from jail and Aparthied was banished.
At 53 minutes, they go full space-music. In 1970, space music - music without drum-bass rhythm, and different composition, was pretty new. Subotnik had just done Silvers Apples 3 yrs previous. Mixing this into pop music was pretty new. And, here, really well-done. Stockhausen had pioneered alt composition styles, and Musique Concrete had also been experimental, but this space music thing was barely just starting.
There's not a lot of Floyd that I've missed in my 46 yrs. But this one is new to me. I love how your can hear them working out classics early on. True genius. 🤘🔥🤘
Fillmore west-1970 April 9th isn't bad.
This has been around forever. I had a burned copy back in the 90’s.
If you only go back 46 years you’re NOT getting full Pink Floyd.
@DannyHood-j
He's 46 yrs old. Not everyone has seen and heard alot of these specials. Lucky for you to have a copy of this. Thankfully, there are Floydians who upload these types of videos.
SHINE ON 💎 🌙
@@gilbertgranby9339Exactly. Just because he's 46 doesn't mean he hasn't heard music before his birth.
They replayed this on KQED in 1982 and I randomly saw it in TV guide. We turned our crappy TV all the way up and blew out the speaker. Thank you Pink Floyd.
That’s funny! Come to think of it, I can’t imagine a TV speaker making it all the way through careful with that ax Eugene
@@drkmriggsit didn't
they sounded great smoked and sometimes caught on fire and had to be toss in the yard and hosed down , great times😂
I saw the 82 broadcast also ...
You got off easy. I went back in time and can't return.
The whole show has such a similar sound to Pompeii which was a year later. If you look close you see a lot of the equipment they used in that show.
The Silver Sparkle Ludwigs!
1. The Amazing Pudding (Early name for Atom Heart Mother) - 0:53
2. Cymbaline - 17:31
3. Grantchester Meadows - 26:11
4. Green Is The Colour - 33:46
5. Careful With That Axe, Eugene - 37:16
6. Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun - 46:26
7. Astronomy Domine - 59:18
thank you for this!
All of this is just wow. This is an amazing recording of Cymbaline. Thank you.
@jackiehill6357 oooo absolutely!!!
❤
🤠You calling me Puddin, Puddin?!?
God bless Rick Wright!!!
Notonly for his being, but his sharing, as he passed through! Xx
Perfect 10
Yes. My favorite song on Saucerful of Secrets is Ricks "Seesaw". A wonderful tune that has very advanced changes in it. And he sang it beautifully
@@buschovski1
I think that Rick Wright was ahead of his time and even today it is hard to understand his huge contribution to the world of music
Exactly....a very special guy.Making magic& classical organs blend with spaceships🖐️✨☝️🌜💊🔭✨🛸🎹🧪🎛️🎚️⚗️ 👽0ne of a kind....and absolutely timeless.
I had just turned 15 years old. Grandma was the first person I knew that had cable tv. I was at her house scanning through channels and I came across this. I missed the first minute or two, so I had no idea what it was. I had never heard, or seen anything like it. Music like this was just not played in Arkansas in 1970. I sat, mesmerized through the whole thing. I didn’t know what it meant when they flashed “The Pink Floyd” on the screen. It was at least three years before I found out that it was Pink Floyd. I wish I had known from the beginning.
Great memory!
That’s a great story.the beginning of something that lasts for decades.i too would scan grandmas tv late at night after all were in bed.midnite special or don kirshners”rock comcert”filmed
Live no lip sync garbage.
I was only hours old.
Great story! Be grateful for the wonderful memory you have. I'd say you witnessed history. They were so fresh and full of their new ideas back then. A real treat and an important Psychedelic event. I was just 14 living in Los Angeles. Within 2 years the Floyd would explode on the scene. We were lucky to be there for that! Still gives me goosebumps!
Wow…great stuff. Particularly enjoyed this version of Grantchester Meadows…Floyd never gets old. Geniuses - all of them.
Grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area..... Public Television ruled it then & still rules it today!!! Channel 9 in most places in the Bay Area and beyond in Northern California!!!! Some of the only honest broadcasting left.... Share Public Television with Your children. I'm glad it was available to me throughout my life.....
Hell, yeah! And a shout out to channel 13, PBS affiliate, in Dallas-Ft. Worth.
Back when legendary bands gave great shows on late-night public access tv.
Ikr? Like I wasn’t technically alive when this happened but I still remember it from a past life. Like for reelz it’s THAT strong 🤯 talk about LIT!!! Pink Floyd rulez!
@LudiCrust. Great music transcends time and space, and then gently places itself forever in the firmanent. Just saw David Gilmour two weeks in L.A., and he still brought the ether of Pink Floyd.
I remember watching this "mind-expanding" performance on public television back in '71...,
I was just 16yrs old. Its great to see footage of these guys early on in their careers.They really were an underground band..., only a few Bohemians, Freaks, & other hippy-types listened to them regularly..., Afterwards came a string of incredible albums; "Echoes", "Obscured by Clouds", then "DSOTM" put them in the spotlight where they've been ever since!
This beats Dark side, in fact this is where it all starts from. Love it..
🎉Pink Floyd's music 🎶 will forever be timeless.
New York's Channel 13, which was PBS at the time, broadcast this in 1974. I watched it on the little black and white TV in my teenage bedroom.
What an experience!!
I wish I did. It would have really expanded my horizons. I lived in NJ.
PBS channel 13 wnet was available in nj
Me too
The people who were in that studio were talking about it years and years later. Imagine having access to such a private performance! If they had known how big Floyd was yet to become.
I love how this has been remastered.
I just mailed my letter. Fingers crossed!
Sorry to say that boat has sailed.😢
Uh 😮😮😮😮😮
That was almost 50 years ago
But don't feel bad I start to write it down too until I realized it was in 1970
Well done. The Icelanders have great faith in language and believe that if you can get the right words down, in the right order, then anything is possible. You have nothing to lose, let's just say that everything is possible in the "Twilight Zone".
😂😉
Man, the version of Grantchester Meadows really kicked my ass. Reminds me of being a kid laying in the back seat of my Pop Pop’s car (1979) listening to Ummagumma on 8 track (studio side). Those were the days. I was 6yrs old. What an album to start off with the Floyd. ❤️🤘
One of my favourite Floyd tunes, we used to get stoned and listen to this, it totally carried me away..
My mom got me Ummagumma for my 14th birthday. She weren't right.
Same story here! I was born in 65 and was literally in kindergarten when my older brother was playing this regularly at home while getting high with his friends. I saved up my allowance and went out and bought my first album Saucerful of Secrets. I guess I was a little different than other kids!
@@3genac she wasn't wrong either
@@Jesse-rj2ye fair
Nick's drumming is so melodic. Fantastic piece of history here ✨🙏🐦🔥❤️
Always wanted to be David G.....still do at 65. Bravo for Cymbaline!
I più’ grandi di sempre… Tra 200 anni si parlerà’ sempre dei Pink Floyd…❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
I’ve been looking for this recording for YEARS. I first saw it it in 1970 when I was 16 in Bloomfield, CT.
It was released in Pink Floyd’s 2016 box set The Early Years: 1965-1972. IIRC they streamed it on UA-cam during lockdown for a few weeks.
little did they realize on that day that rock immortality, Dark Side of the Moon, was just a few short years down the road. I consider them the greatest rock group ever.
Indeed.
@@leonskum.5682Resume
Otto vacant!
This is gold. Back when they really functioned as a band
Yes, so accurate. They were still a band, a group, a geshtalt. Later on Ego and Money disintegrated them. Thanx mainly for Roger Waters
@@tagaudisad but true
@@tagaudiRoger had big ideas which were great. The others seemed to just go along with it. With this footage, who would expect the tall guy playing bass would have these epic things in his head.
@@tagaudi Wow !! , What a stupid and ignorant comment. Roger's journey was one of integrity, honour and compassion (especially to those in the world whose voices were / are not being listened too.......as in those having genocide and war crimes commited on them right now in Palestine and many indigenous people's around the world....The only few who think like you are the corrupted psychopaths who support war crimes, genocide and psychopathic colonialism. PS most bands throughout history split up and go their own ways as they feel different creative forces, and join up with new musiciians who match their new journeys. Looks like Roger is doing rather well for himself in terms of being popular....all his massive tours around the world are huge sell outs, and he's also highly respected by most human beings with empathy for his fearlessness in speaking up for those who need to be heard the most.
@@buschovski1 True, Roger had all the ideas and concepts, and big motivation and inspiration. For all his failings, Waters was far less motivated by money than has been the case with the Gilmour led years of Floyd.
I grew up in sf bay area
KQED was always a treasure trove of cool stuff, cuz all the staffers were total heads ✌️❤️
I saw this on CH13, back where I grew up in New Jersey.
My favorite Floyd era. Post Syd and pre DSOTM.... just finding their feet and playing their asses off
Pinkney "Pink" Anderson + Floyd Council = Pink Floyd. Considering how great PF is then imagine how awesome The Anderson Council must be.
Incredible, this era of Floyd reminds me of ancient or medieval times. Past meets the future.
its egypt mason stuff to its core.
at least you still was able to "name" that in some kind of fashion
@@AnoNym-he1yv I wasn't trying to name a type of music, but more like a vision that it gives me. Egypt does come to mind along with ancient European images.
What an unexpected treasure! This made my day, so amazing to rediscover early Floyd- thank you for uploading 👍
This was on public tv at the thime. I was ready for it and made an open mike cassette. The program Never played again. The cassette lasted my years. Then it mysteriously disappeared.
Now: catch a documentary on Fractals: one hr of Gilmour, great documentary "fractals are God's signature."
I saw this in 1970 on public television. I was 11 years old. It changed my life
Pretty great!
I don't doubt it.
I saw Live at Pompei when i was 15 or 16 and haven't been the same since...
Why? It ain't exactly Yes...
What major effect could this have on an 11 year old's life?
Stop eating Captn Crunch?
From back when they were an esoteric, spacey, experimental little band, familiar mostly to those of us who ingested various psychedelic substances before listening. It's not apparent here, but we know Pink Floyd would soon begin having a major impact on a lot of people with immense, powerful, timeless music.
Psychedelic drugs this is more like mandrex the kind Led Zeppelin fans ate
Beautiful. I used to have The More soundtrack in my walkman all the time. My walkman lol. I miss it. I still have it but it no longer works.
riding out a thunder and lightening storm here in New Hampshire and this pops up. thank you.
huh...thats funny, im sitting in my car during a storm right now in NC. Listening to this is perfect. The wind is actually rocking my car.
This was suddenly recommended by the algorithm at half past 4:00AM; half asleep, half hung over, sitting in a car waking up prepping for the work day.
Thank you for posting this, this footage is priceless ! The songs are very well performed too, you can never be disappointed with Pink Floyd. This band is timeless !!!...
I saw them in Boston at a nice small theater touring the Meddle album. It had just been released and it was epic. They sounded so fine back then. Saw 'em again in probably '74 with the Darkside tour. Again in Boston but this time at The Garden. They still sounded good but nothing beats them in a cozy music hall setting. This is quality right here. thank you KQED!
Listening to Astronomy Domine especially, and also Set the Controls, made me think - at the time of this in April 1970, in between gigs like this, David Gilmour and Richard Wright were working on Syd Barrett's second album. That January his first solo album was released which David and Roger worked on. The specter of Syd always followed the band.
Indeed, the specter of Syd blossomed on "Wish You Were Here".
So true. The lament that is expressed in "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" is a rare and precise bit of such true emotion -- over their collective loss---which for most young men with musical talent was usually reserved & directed at the loss of a woman or lover.
Syds song dominoes is what their next evolution of the Pink Floyd sound became… That slide guitar and subdued keys
Damn i didn't know that.
Syds solo stuff was great. I didn't know Dave and Rick were on Syds solo stuff
@@karenscigliano9787 Just as a point of information in case this isn't obvious to everyone because it took me years to notice: (note the capital letters) ShineonYoucrazyDiamond. No doubt a play off LucyintheSkywithDiamonds since they played off the Beatles a lot.
Amazing footage of a very talented band really beginning to find their feet after the Syd era❤️
Thank you for sharing this gem! Thank you KQED for always providing outstanding programs!
I remember seeing this on channel 13 in NY Public acess channel no commercials
Awesome!! Atom hart mother!! And live!! Thank u man that was back when LSD was flowing! 1995-98
I know I was to young blaa blaa . But old enough to buy it on CD! Beautiful dark haunting overwhelming and the light shines threw! Best of the West. Brings up all kinds of old ancient feelings .
It’s sick how lsd is gone but loads of pharmaceuticals are on open markets with Lilly white commercials to promote them and the newfound ailment.bogus man.
It’s sick how lsd is gone but loads of pharmaceuticals are on open markets with Lilly white commercials to promote them and the newfound ailment.bogus man.
KQED was our public broadcast CH 9 in SanJose cal. Where I grew up . Man I was 13 on that date an had just graduated jr High. We loved The Pink Floyd. Been listening to them for 3yrs already mate.
I still have a couple of bootleg cassettes I recorded when I saw them in Carnegie Hall in '72. Snuck in a cassette recorder. They did the entire Ummagumma LP and a few other tunes.
Nice! I bet that was sublime. LOVE *Ummagumma*!
@@jimhurlbut3649 Indeed !
Trippy,and......................soothingly meditative,while also.................intimately sedative 😎
Always loved this song
Just great in every way. Surprisingly good sound and video quality, and just a superb song collection. Dreamy and scary.
wow, this feels so special to listen to I feel like I just by luck caught the original broadcast ♥ I never knew about this
Absolutely timeless, surreal and serene
As so often, it's the transition from Green Is The Colour to Careful With That Axe, Eugene, that gives me a positive shudder.
Thank you for this Crazy Diamond
Wow! Watching this was a definite trippy flashback in time! I happened to see an impromptu, free show they did, just about a week later, in LA, on the UCLA campus. This was right at the time of the Kent State Massacre, and colleges across the country (including UCLA) were shut down by student demonstrations, so it was very tense times, tempered by pot, pure psychedelics, and Pink Floyd's very deep, improvisational music!!
We were shocked, after first being impatient, since it took them a longer time to set up, than the usual local bands who played on Friday afternoons. We were going, "who the hell are these guys, and why's it taking so long for them to set up"? They kept bringing more & more amps onto the grassy quadrangle, until they finally began playing, and we couldn't believe what we were seeing & hearing! We listened quite often to their early albums, so to see them in-person was incredible!
In later years I got to meet and hang with Richard Wright, for an evening, as a friend brought him out to a gig I was playing in Kailua, HI. He stayed till the end, then we hung at a friend's almost all night with him. Quite a thrill, to say the least...
This is a gold mine!
The band have said they weren’t happy with AHM but I love it including Alan’s Psychedelic Breakfast.
I don't care what Waters and Gilmour have to say about AHM. This was sick. I think they just probably didn't like playing it.
Alan’s Psychedelic Breakfast is the track I go to first when listening to AHM.
Mason is the engine of the band. He's the Man!
This is my favorite time period of Pink Floyd. I had every album up to Wish You Were Here. After that, no thank you. 😊 Love this! 🎶❤️🎶❤️
I was you, until I heard the remixed Animals, which was like hearing a new Pink Floyd album. It's even better if you drop the terrible first and last tracks. The rest is pretty good.
I kinda agree but Animals is good
Animals has always felt like a very personal experience to me. I listen to alone, loud and in its entirety when possible.
@@caseykittel Have you heard the remix? That was the first time I ever really listened, and it was great! [Aside from those dreadful opening and closing tracks.]
Yes. You’re talking about The remaster. Right? at first it seemed very jarring to me, having listened to the original for so long it wasn’t welcomed by my ears. Now I can listen to it without noticing, but there is something dark and looming about that album and I found the older more analog sound was a little more fitting. For the record, I love 99% of the remastered albums I listen to. I am not one of these analog only people with a $100,000 record player. I love tech. It’s just that the remaster changed the experience for me. I had to adjust. I am also careful about using the words remix and remaster. A remix implies they actually changed levels between instruments or made things stereo where it was originally recorded mono.
Pink Floyd is the best of the best
Early PINK FLOYD 💗
UMMA GUMMA MEDDAL ERA.
BEFORE DARK SIDE.
You can see progressive elements. Trippy.
Thank you for uploading this!
I’ve been looking for this one for more than a decade. I had watched somewhere before UA-cam era. Thank you very much for sharing. I’m sure I watched it in a Italian friend s home. Perhaps It’s you…
I could have been there! (kicking myself) David and Rick's voices are angelic.
In the studio at KQED for the filming of this?
@@augustusbetucius2931 I might have been able to swing it; was attending high school in SF that year.
Unless you worked @ KQED, you weren't there. There was no audience for this show.
@@ThePinkfloyd51 oh darn
@@marymargaretmoore9034 I should have added they played the Fillmore later that night. Now that you quite possibly were at!
Wright was a force to be reckoned with!
Was not aware of this, incredible !😊
Well worth sticking around for the encore!
Fantastic ,,Thanks for sharing ,,, Shine on you ....
THE GREAT STUFF is everything from MEDDLE backwards. Oh and Roger's greatest achievement SNIMALS
Aww, WOW! thanks so much for uploading this . . a rare gem unearthed! Pete 🏴 Stockport.
Yes an hour with pink floyd
wow
Cymbaline is still haunting to this day sending chills up my spine like a tube train .I listened to this song on a train in London felted connected to floyd in a British way
Such an amazing song.
Amazing performance in every aspect amd detail. You expect tbis level of tightness in a jazz or classicla quarter, but in the rock world I cannot think of anyrhing tbat comes close. Frankly, most of rock with their interminable drum solos and soulless guitar riffs led to its own demise. Luckily we have this recording to rwmund us of what could be achieved in rock music and that Floyd was a lot deeper than a bombastic Wall.
I was 2 years old when this first aired. Thanks for give me the opportunity to see it.
What a quality? Ufff thanks!!!! Mighty Floyd.
Awesome video quality for 1970..Awesome concert.
Cool music to listen to 300am I have some wonderful times listen to them thank you for allow me ❤
NEW respect for Pink Floyd.
All I previously knew was "Dark Side of the Moon" and what came after.
But this is better by FAR ! ! !
Get with it newbie! Look em up and go thru their albums in order . Like any band you dig
If you like this video, check out the film Live at Pompeii.
Check out their albums 1967-72
One of a kind music, R.I.P. Rick, wish you were here ...
Beautifull, the bass leads the band, it is like it's soul, driving it. With insight , it is no wonder Gilmour's ego would have got frustrated.
Que versão fantástica de Atom Heart Mother, a melhor ao vivo que já ouvi, the best
the Barrett spirit is in the space
26:11 It took me this many years to find this? I'm going to need some time to process this...
I love everything PF did, but My favorite era was always post Syd/pre DSOTM. Prolly bc the first thing I ever heard/saw was the Pompeii video.
awesome vid. still can hear the remnants of Syd but David is feeling it now and the band is about to produce one of the game changing albums of music history... 54:00 i love that slide sound David makes. i love it even more in Dogs from Animals in 1977.
YEAH PINK FLOYD YOU ARE THE LEGENDS JUST PLAY ME A LULLABY I AM SO TYRED
Shit I don't even know what to say while watching this unfold. Magical.
Now, THIS is what the band should be working on getting officially released (as well as other early performances), not another version of DSOTM from Earls Court 1994!!
It was released in Pink Floyd’s 2016 box set The Early Years: 1965-1972 along with most of their other early performances.
@@cinemascope53How Nice ! 55:55
@cinemascope53
It would be nice as an individual release. Along with the soundtrack to Live at Pompeii and the Venice concert. A decent DVD release of Crystal Voyager would also be on my wants list, as well as the long awaited and probably never to appear 5.1 version of The Wall. One is just tired of the same things being remixed, remastered or repackaged. A 5.1 of Meddle would be great!
@@andrewhaines3259 Not quite an individual release, but it is on the 1970 package called DEVI/ATION. There is a 5.1 of Echoes on REVERBER/ATION.
I agree there's a big incredible. Of music from 69 to 72 that is so incredibly overlooked. But you know how it is. If it's not going to sell a lot of units nobody fucking cares. If I buy it. So what. I can't believe how many people buy 20 different reissues of basically the same thing. Isn't it amazing how they found a way to take a $15 audio CD and sell it to you for $150! Wow
Only just heard this one after listening to the Floyd for 50 years, they were crafting themselves,
I had just been born, the Mariners had just won the 3rd straight SuperBowl and Jordan hung his head in shame. As I opened my eyes I saw Nick Mason with his Gibson upside down and restrung. He was dancing on the voodoo barn with Lighting Jack McQueen from the crossroads. I looked to the sky and saw pink and seafoam waves. It was my first time hearing the Pink Floyd. My St. Bernard took the mic and he sang, BowDown and my life changed for ever on the Steppe. Uncle Ghengis said, let's go check out the desert to the west. Twas a great time in the future.
The band on the quest. Great cacophony. Much better then THE WALL
Very good morning my love how is everything your morning been treating me so good I miss seeing your smiling faces you have lots more fun today ❤
Amazing….Just perfect
How cool is this? Thanks for sharing this television broadcast!
For those who think Nick Mason as a drummer was only a time keeper …
51:00
He wasn’t always a time keeper either.
He is a great musician. His first solo album is a rocker
@@artysanmobilelol
kinda rude. i mean time has plenty to do w music…
Wow this gem! I think that was David’s first strat that was stolen the following year and then replaced with the famous maple board “black strat “
The reason I xan go to these performances and albums is because it doesnt have any emotional weight on me. Its timeless music I can only float with and enjoy. It clears my head.
On the day I was born OMG
😮
Beginning of a great time for the band, they had a lucky streak in the 70s
Un registro maravilloso, muchas gracias
❤ Love the early Floyd, musical geniuses . So cool ! 😎
Thank you !
All Floyd from 1966 to 1985 is absolute gold and is some journey with amazing music and more and more powerful lyrics that are now more relevant than ever. After the Final Cut Floyd ended for me (and most others) But thnkfully Roger Waters carried the work through with him and still does to the present day. An amazing guy whom is respected all over the world for helping people who need a voice and need to be heard due to thjem facing illegal war crimes and genocide (whether is be in Palestine or many indigenous peoples around the world) Roger Waters . a man of true integrity, honour and compassion.
who charges 350.00 usd per ticket. So much for fighting the capitalist pigs
@@smittyeverybodyknowsone6191 lol, tickets in the UK for Roger's latest tour this last year were £70 (that's approx 89 USD) A very decent and fair price for a show that is pretty much the biggest and more elaborate show in the world. The same levels of ticket prices were the same for his shows all over the world too. Everyone I know whom went enjoyed every minute and that includes myself. Also, the feedback from around the world is the same. His shows are loved everywhere he goes. Go look up his South American shows for srarters. The only people whom don't like Roger are supporters of genocide and war crimes by the psychopathic Israeli Government. The world is watching and that is by there will be even bigger mass boycotts of anything Israel does until they stop murdering and robbing the lands of millions of Palestinians. Have a look at how well it went for the Apartheid regime in South Africa, until Nelson Mandela was freed from jail and Aparthied was banished.
@smittyeverybodyknowsone6191 I've seen Waters multiple times never more than £80.
Amused to death my favourite album of all time.
Waters is nowadays a Maduro asslicker. Enough for me.
At 53 minutes, they go full space-music. In 1970, space music - music without drum-bass rhythm, and different composition, was pretty new. Subotnik had just done Silvers Apples 3 yrs previous. Mixing this into pop music was pretty new. And, here, really well-done. Stockhausen had pioneered alt composition styles, and Musique Concrete had also been experimental, but this space music thing was barely just starting.