Bros I’m that 62yr old black man who discovered this about 73 74. I’ve seen them twice!! It truly warms my heart to see young brothers learn this music. Me and my brothers were talked about back then cuzz our people didn’t understand. I love our R&B but the world is so much more! Yes, you see a movie in your head becoz that’s wat happens wen ur floyded!!! All their music is diff.Dark side didn’t sound like this and Animals which is next doesn’t sound like this. Lyrics mean a lot, a whole lot with Floyd! So start trying to understand. This album is about their band mate who started it and mentally lost it. And Animals is about society. Thank you for giving this a chance, and listen…..🙏🏿🙏🏿
I’m black too. Like my R&B, especially the back in the day stuff, but also like the various genres of rock and metal. Plus rock and then metal is an evolution from American Blues, so it’s all of a piece. 😊 Music is for everyone. If you like it you like it!
Gilmour's iconic guitar playing is very rooted in the blues, especially in Shine On You Crazy Diamond and many of his solos. And the name Pink Floyd came from 2 blues musicians that Syd Barrett admired, Pink Anderson and Floyd Council.
We called this music “head music” back in the day. You would put the record on in your room or living room and close your eyes and it would take you somewhere else. Pink Floyd are definitely their own genre.
...i spoke to someone who tripped with headphones on alone at night, in bed listening to umma gumma for the first time, when "careful with that axe, uegene" came on, the live performance. He freaked, nearly shit himself when the screaming started and chopping got frenzied.
I thought we called it head music because back then being a head meant you got high, and when we listened to Pink Floyd back then we got high. You had the jocks, the brains and the heads though it was cool to cross over to all three groups if you were a cool smart athlete.
I was called "a head" for listening to rock and progressive music like it was a bad thing. Remember this was a largely backwards era where being "a tree hugger" was supposed to be something horrific. Same crowd of trouble makers. And I don't mean "the heads and tree huggers". We need more heads and tree huggers.
@@PickpocketJones yes they were but when i grew up in that era i listened to them,zep,black sabb and queen,others like bad company,many great bands too numerous to mention but the first three were my stable picks
They are a European Psychedelic fusion band. They fused R&B, Blues, Soul, Funk, Acid Rock, Choir Music, and everything under the sun to make their sound. They are pioneers in their own right and the music speaks for itself. Love everyone in the comments section! We should go to a show sometime haha
Shine on you crazy diamond is a tribute to band co-founder Syd Barrett who basically took LSD every day for a couple of years and wound up becoming mentally ill from the drug use- some believe it was schizpherenia. Syd was doing laser shows, essentially "raves" in small clubs for Pink Floyd's early live tours in the 60s, trippy lyrics etc as the singer and song writer, Guitarist David Gilimour joined when Syd couldn't function anymore to take over guitar and singing. Syd did release a solo album later but died basically a recluse who was cared for by family members
Predisposition to schizophrenia caused him to go crazy, LSD itself has been shown to have no effect on "mentally sane" individual's, but if your family has a history of mental illness it can get passed down through the bloodline and psychedelics drugs could act as a potentiator for mental illness years before it would come out naturally.
Syd actually showed up at the studio while the band was recording this album, but he looked nothing like himself - way heavier, bald, and barely there mentally, almost catatonic, just a shadow of himself. It took the rest of the band quite a while to figure out who he was and it really hit them hard emotionally, apparently they were in tears after he left. This is a brilliant album, really looking forward to hearing your thoughts. Peace and love from Canada! ☮
As I listen I'm sitting on the front porch, it's drizzling rain and I'm enjoying a king size home grown blend with my best buddy laying at my feet. I can honestly say I live the life of a king.
Why y’all haven’t already at least reached 100k subscribers is beyond me this channel is the real deal absolutely nothing fake about you guys it’s obvious you know music not only from a just a listener’s viewpoint but your technical knowledge and production knowledge is outstanding y’all know what your doing and you for real “get it “
First of all, I love that you are listening to an “vinyl” version of this, just as it should be. The “crackle” in the background just brings back so many memories of listening to this when it was released. Watching you two react to all of this great 70’s music is great and the fact that you love it is fantastic!! Keep the great reactions coming and “Shine On”!!
I saw this tour in 1977 at Madison Square Garden and they played the complete album and it blew us away! Oh and then they played the complete Animals album also. BTW the ticket cost $10.50. Yes that's right ( ten dollars and fifty cents ) The encore was Money and Us and Them. I may be old but I saw the best bands. Enjoy side 2.
I saw the same concert except on the Best coast, Anaheim Stadium. I was 21 and we had a picnic sitting on the outfield grass. Wine and Doobie's. What a trip! Those were the best days. 🌌 👽🌛👣✌️
I remember the first time I heard the outro of Welcome To The Machine. I never knew bitterness could be conveyed through a synthesizer. The dark disgust and bitterness of that song is so beautifully expressed through both the vocal delivery and instruments. It still blows my mind after all these years. It’s music that truly stands the test of time.
We didn't really do the headphone thing, but instead would smoke a doobie, :D and then just lay back and relax, in the center of 4 speakers, close our eyes and feel the music. Pink Floyd is an experience. I remember quadraphonic sound, what Pink Floyd was most known for, but if you used 4 speakers, you would hear things that you wouldn't hear just using 2. I do remember when this album first came out, Dark Side was still going strong. Even though we loved it, it wasn't 'yet' played as much as Dark was still being played.
I knew once that sax dropped in Shine On You Crazy Diamond it was over. That shit still hits so hard no matter how many times I hear it and it was genuinely amazing to see how much of an impact it made. You guys are awesome.
I'm riding with the brothers again! Your selections have been absolutely tremendous lately!!!! Zeppelin, the Dan and now Pink Floyd, no reason to even change the channel!!
Pink Floyd always took their time. That's one of the things I love most about them ... they were never in a hurry to get anywhere. If they were going to blow your fucking mind, they were going to do it right.
To have you young men listening to this stuff, so many years after this stuff first came out and to appreciate the craftsmanship that went into it makes my heart swell. And young black men. Wow. For me, an old black man out of Chicago, Los Angeles fill my heart with so much hope. You men are a step above. Thank you for what you are doing.
This was the opening number to their shows I saw in 1987 and 1988 at RFK Stadium in DC. The build-up was intense. Gilmour described his riff as a "lament" which is what it was: a sad tribute to their former bandmate who went insane after excessive LSD use back in the sixties. Dick Parry played baritone and tenor on this number, and also featured on Dark Side.
Stadium music indeed. Saw them at Soldier Field in Chicago in 1994. With Pink Floyd the entire stadium is wired for sound. Speakers literally 360° around the stadium. So all the music, sound effects, spoken voices, are all reproduced live as it is on the albums and it comes at you from all directions. I don't think the albums were recorded with stadiums in mind so much as they were for a full rich sonic experience through your speakers and headphones. I've also seen them at an indoor arena. Same deal. These guys are perfectionists in every sense of the word when it comes to music. I've never heard of anyone who attended a Floyd concert complaining about the sound. Looking forward to side 2.
"That may have been the best sound I've ever heard." Oh man, that was amazing! I'm new to your podcast, and enjoying you guys. Nice to see the appreciation go deep and musical.
Recently saw Roger Waters (bassist and other singer of Pink Floyd) a few months ago. Best concert I’ve ever been too hands down. I wasn’t alive when the whole band was together so this was the next best thing and it still didn’t disappoint one bit. He performed songs from almost all their records and you’re absolutely right, this music is made to be performed in stadiums.
I saw Rogers show in Manchester UK a few years ago. Unfortunately the band had stopped touring by the time I got into them. I've seen a lot of big bands but that show was the best I've ever seen. Have tickets to see him again in June.
Great band pf, and "the pros and cons of hitchhiking" is fucking great and i dont let a musicians dodgy opinions spoil my enjoyment of their music but I find Waters has some really dodgy views...I wouldn't put a penny in his pocket...
I witnessed Pink Floyd in 1977 at Soldier Field in Chicago. I was 17 and to this day have NEVER seen or heard anything comparable. The sound was just piercingly clear. The visuals were just awesome, it was the Animals tour. Yes stadium music, but yet enjoy them so much at home on my own system. I also saw Zeppelin in 77, nothing like Floyd tho
Watching you guys is now part of my daily routine. Your reactions are so genuine and expressive. Makes me think back how I felt when I first heard this album I suspect you will enjoy side 2 as much or more.
I've been a PF listener for 45 yrs and their evolution in this period is so interesting and great. I feel the band was much better after syd barrett and when Roger took creative control of the band and its concepts and writing but so much of Roger's writing and concepts are inspired by Syd or just flat out about him like this one. It's such a cool dynamic. The early syd floyd albums are a little too psycho trippy for me but there are some nice gems in there but the 70's is the gold.
Yes, same sax player, Dick Parry. Shine On part 1 at beginning of album, part 2 at end. David Gilmour on harmony vocal and lead guitar. And they sounded just as good live as they did on their albums. Amazing album.
That's Roger Waters on lead vocals for Shine On. Gilmore on the harmonies. Gilmour performs it live cause of course Roger was no longer with them after 85.
When you guys do Part 2, pay attention to how it transitions from Welcome to the Machine into Have a Cigar. Think of `Shine On You Crazy Diamond,` as bookends to the album. First part at the beginning and the last part at the end. It's kind of like a prologue and an epilogue with the story in the middle. You'll get more out of it.
“Way ahead of their time”, you say. True, in a “time” that was full of bands ahead of their time! Yes, King Crimson, Tull, Zeppelin, Zappa, Grateful Dead, Emerson/Lake/Palmer, and on and on! It’s the very reason so many of us older heads have trouble relating to a lot of “music” today! The sixties and seventies were heady times indeed!
Thanks for hearing the guitars talking. Ive been saying that fo 40 plus years from the very first time I heard. Gilmore is a genius when it comes to drawing emotion out of his playing.
@@ThomasTallant Check out the '78 solo album from David Gilmour ~ "No Way Out Of Here", "Raise My Rent", "So Far Away", "I Cant Breathe Anymore" and "No Way".... If you like The Division Bell, I think you will like it as well...! As for the Waters fans.... What has he done without David and Rick's composition and production, which turned his concepts and lyrics into music with a worldwide appeal...? Waters was a great lyricist and vocalist, but it was David and Rick that made it music...!
Ahh the classics. So happy it entered your lived it will not be the same. You heard it now!!!! Music be the food of luv...play On... Momma has always said.... floyd is musical story telling! Now imagine if you didn't wait what you would have missed. Can't judge a song by the intro!!!🤣🤣 Cheers
so...the singer is also the lead guitar...David Gilmour...one of my favs....spent my teenage delinquency with Floyd and Zeppelin, Ramones...too many to list here.. Wonderful reaction...so satisfying when reactors get it and appreciate real instruments and musicianship
Actually, that’s a baritone sax Dick Parry starts with, (on Shine On) when the tempo changes mid solo, he switches to a tenor sax. Watch the video of this song from the Pulse concert and you’ll see him with BOTH hanging from his shoulders, and then the switch occurs. Sat right in front of him for Pulse, and it still blows me away. Good to see young men enjoying what we grooved on back in the day. Until you hear it for yourself, no words can capture the experience. Enjoying your reactions, even with the seldom miss, (just like the rest of us) your knowledge of the era’s music is right on track. Regards 🤘😎
@@Yausbro Lol, your right (of course). Funny thing is, I knew that. Another example of my brain missing a synapse with more frequency these days. 🤔👈 However, we’re both half right. His last name is Parry. I’ll edit original comment. Much appreciated.
I am 61 and my first exposure to Pink Floyd was my parents owing the "Dark Side of the Moon" vinyl album. It was awesome, I couldn't believe my parents were that cool!
Man, Pink Floyd is just different. So much creativity and imagination.....and they took huge risks. To me, the greatest rock band of all-time. Doesn't mean they rocked harder than Zeppelin or others, but the unique creativity is unmatched.
Just can't get enough Floyd, thankyou 🙏 this album is really about watching their friend and band member detatch from reality, when is part 2 ? 😆 🇬🇧 ❤️
Now imagine this with 50 thousand of your closest friends in Rice Stadium in Houston Texas 1994 with lights and lasers everywhere and it starts raining. It was absolutely the best concert of my life even though it ended early because most all of the instruments shorted out.
They have always had truth embedded in their lyrics and they made sure you felt them. You wonder why none of them are featured in movies or TV shows as soundtracks. "They" fear if the people listened to them, they would gain to much of a consciousness and immediately go against the grain. Music has a huge part of guiding people towards the right or wrong direction. Pink Floyd always had a higher consciousness than most. The sounds they make are unreal, and if someone was to tell me to choose one band to blow everyone's minds, I would summon them, without a doubt. To me, the most advance Artists and Musicians collectively on the face of the planet. Give me young Pink Floyd all day, Because the current state is that they dont see eye to eye musically anymore. I love your reactions, I can tell every single moment that blew your mind, its that face you make when you have never heard anything like it.
Loving your passion and adventure into the music of my youth and early twenties. I am 71 and it warms my heart the respect you are giving some of the all time great music of our time. Great music never dates or ages. Thank you guys Geoff
When I was teen I was home alone at night quite often and I would light a fire in the fireplace, turn off all the lights and crank this album while laying by the fire. it is one of my favorite memories. I could go anywhere I wanted and never leave my spot by the fireplace.... hahahaha BTW, I want to thank both of you for not stopping the music too much... great job guys!!!!!
You guys hit the nail on the head. They created their own genre. The artistry, the ability to weave sounds and effects into their music, they way they created a concept is just peerless in the music world. Loved your reaction to side 1. It's easy to tell you guys are diggin' what Pink Floyd laid down. Looking forward to side 2 dropping. Keep up the great work.
As with Dark Side of the Moon, Animals, and The Wall, this album starts and ends on the same song and note so you could play continuously and seamlessly.
With pink Floyd you hear every note, the music is so precise and clear. the lyrics are a story but then the music after makes you think what the meaning of the story. Thinking music
I was living in a co-ed college dorm (Haggett Hall, North Tower, Devoe House), UW, Seattle, WA 1972-76, and Pink Floyd albums were often played. Usually. on a weekend evening, we'd go to someone's dorm room that had the best stereo equipment of the time, like Bose speakers mounted high in the corners of the dorm room-played somewhat loud but not over-whelmingly loud. And we might be under some effects at the time too. You didn't have to be in a huge stadium to enjoy this music. But, in Sept. 1972, I did see Pink Floyd perform the entire "Dark Side of the Moon" album, in quad sound bouncing all over the four corners of the Hec Ed basketball pavilion. What a memorable concert! (And, as we all now know, that LP went on to become a classic.)
Love watching your facial reactions, I was the same back in the day, Wish and Dark Side just blow you away, cos you’re never quite sure what’s coming next. By the way Dark Side is 50 this year and we’ve been together all of them, and ATM Wish is on in the car.
Floyd is a humungous vibe. You don't just listen, you get taken away, kidnapped by magicians who take you on a trek who won't return control of your senses until they're good and done with you 20, 30, 40 minutes down the musical highway. Second to none. Singular and epic. Floyd.
Watching you two listen to this reminds me so much of being 17 and hanging with my buddies in our first shared apartment getting high and listening to Floyd.❤😊
The fact that their music still surprises people is awesome. This is music that all new music should emulate. They were ahead of their time. Their message of anti-hate, antiwar and a general love of all humanity must be respected. There will never be another Pink Floyd. I wish David Gilmour would make a dozen more albums before his "time" is through.
Pink Floyd is from Cambridge, England, the famous old university town, and their families were involved in education, etc. As Gilmour said, “We could all speak proper English.” Basically, everyone they knew was educated, so when they decided they needed someone to try to get Syd straightened out and help him out on stage they thought “What about David Gilmour? He trusts him, and he can play guitar.” When they decided to put saxophone on ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’, Gilmour said “What about Dick Parry? He plays saxophone.” Same for Hipgnosis, who designed their album covers. They were all friends from Cambridge who they’d known most of their lives. Roger Waters was still picking up Syd at his mom’s house to take him to doctor’s appointments toward the end of his life, 30 years after he left the band. And you’re right: at the concert the music is the main part, but only part of the show. There is the band, music, lights, lasers, film, objects moving around over your head, on the stage, etc. The music is the soundtrack.
I found you guys yesterday & have been binge watching. You guys are great at this, keep it going. Love your reactions as guys with music backgrounds and knowledge. Loved all these bands.
When I saw them in 94 at Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh my wife had tears running down her face at the end of the show. When I asked her what's wrong she just said I don't want the show to be over 🤟
Pink Floyd had all of those sounds available, because those early synthesizers, like the Mini-Moog that they used in this cut, are capable of creating virtually any sound from wind, to machine sounds, to music, but they were extremely difficult to set up. It involved patch cords and multiple switches and rheostats for each channel. All of those sweeps and hisses and electronic songs all came from the synthesizer. I think you would have a very difficult time recreating this song today with one of the modern keyboards That's one guy playing both the tenor sax and the alto that came after, he has both on slings and as soon as he finishes the tenor solo, he throws the tenor sax behind his back and pulls the alto around from the other side...quite a little stunt.
Everything you said is right, but he actually starts on a baritone sax and finishes on tenor. I’ve seen the trick you’re talking about, where he’s basically wearing the two saxes and flinging one behind to okay the next. Awesome.
I was really looking forward to this. My favorite Pink Floyd album, though I pretty much love them all. I put this one on and play all the way through quite often! As a drummer myself, I love your guy's musician takes on your reviews.
I just happened upon your channel a few days ago. I love your reactions. You both seem to not only appreciate music, but you understand it and I'm assuming you have some education in music based on your comments. I really enjoy watching and listening to you. It's the closest I can get to hearing all these songs that I grew up hearing for the first time again. I'm 60 years old. Thank you for making me smile. I will show your channel to my grandson. He will be 17 yrs old in March. He loves old classic rock. We can sit and watch UA-cam music together for hours at a time. He is an aspiring guitar player and loves music like I do.
One thing can be said: this music is packed to the brim with a duality of extreme restraint and unraveling abandon, but they never let it get away from them, yet it’s never in a cage…
You can think of this album as a Progressive Rock opera; it's telling a story. The theme of the story is how the music industry abuses the artists and how that tragically affected the band's co-founder, Syd Barrett. He is the "crazy diamond". This band mastered creating a "theater of the mind" on vinyl. The sound you hear at the end of "Welcome to the Machine" is the doors of an express elevator closing, the elevator accelerating to the penthouse, then the doors opening to a record company executive's party. This will make sense to you when you hear the next track. I love that UA-cam is acting as a bridge between generations so that the younger generation is able to discover & keep this great music alive.
As an old guy who started listening to the Floyd about 1970, I'm glad to see two, smart, young guys who totally get. You guys are doing good work, here.
Longtime Pink Floyd fan who attended multiple Pulse shows here. As you now deeply appreciate, this is transformative music. Truly one of the greatest joys is when other people discover and understand what is unfolding. They made music on humanistic themes that is relevant every year since it came out. For at least a couple years I have been dropping in here to watch batches of new people discovering it, and I have to rank your reaction right at the very top. You are two highly intelligent reviewers and this was a joy to watch with you. Thank you.
I came across the two of you after watching other reaction videos , this music is the sound track of my youth ! Along with zeppelin, Black Sabbath , and many others , there is only one Pink Floyd , they were intelligent in their lyrics and their music took you to places known & unknown , didn’t matter if you were high or not …. I’ve so enjoyed watching you enjoy listening to all of these one of a kind brilliant artists .
I've heard it on the original stadium setup. Speakers all the way around the stadium and timed so that sonic effects swirled around the arena. Unbelievable! MIND BLOWING!!!! I was about 20 then. I'm old now and have finally managed to put together a sound system that can almost come close to recreating that effect. almost.
Guys, vinyl is cool. Full respect, I shake your hand. Pink Floyd is my favorite team. Greetings from Russia. I noticed the cap of the "Dynamo" club, a smile appeared automatically.
I'm so glad the younger generation appreciate Floyd, they where as you say, way ahead of their time..fun fact...🙄 as a young teen when they "came out" my parents generation where still listening to Sinatra 😳 they where HORRIFIED when they heard Floyd 🤣🤣🤣🤣 quote.."ya can get that shite off right now" was often heard when we tried to put our albums on the deck...🤣🤣🤣👍
I like that you guys delve deep, listening to time signatures, phrasing, the nuances of background instruments, and lyrics, as well as the obvious meat and potatoes of the songs. I dig your channel.
Thank you for doing this album. As others have said, shine on you crazy diamond is respects for founding member Sid Barrett. Tragic story. If you ever look into Sid's life the lyrics are so powerful. Much appreciation to Pink Floyd for the awesome love they gave Sid.
Bros I’m that 62yr old black man who discovered this about 73 74. I’ve seen them twice!! It truly warms my heart to see young brothers learn this music. Me and my brothers were talked about back then cuzz our people didn’t understand. I love our R&B but the world is so much more! Yes, you see a movie in your head becoz that’s wat happens wen ur floyded!!! All their music is diff.Dark side didn’t sound like this and Animals which is next doesn’t sound like this. Lyrics mean a lot, a whole lot with Floyd! So start trying to understand. This album is about their band mate who started it and mentally lost it. And Animals is about society. Thank you for giving this a chance, and listen…..🙏🏿🙏🏿
I’m black too. Like my R&B, especially the back in the day stuff, but also like the various genres of rock and metal. Plus rock and then metal is an evolution from American Blues, so it’s all of a piece. 😊 Music is for everyone. If you like it you like it!
when they recording this album Sid came to the studio. He watched them, and left. They didn't recognised him.
Gilmour's iconic guitar playing is very rooted in the blues, especially in Shine On You Crazy Diamond and many of his solos. And the name Pink Floyd came from 2 blues musicians that Syd Barrett admired, Pink Anderson and Floyd Council.
Plus ...they were intesly influenced by blues music 😉
Do we have to -recall- remind anybody that "Pink Anderson" and "Floyd Council" were the base of their name ? Both black blues musicians.
Love the recording crackle - takes me back decades.... thank you
We called this music “head music” back in the day. You would put the record on in your room or living room and close your eyes and it would take you somewhere else. Pink Floyd are definitely their own genre.
💯
...i spoke to someone who tripped with headphones on alone at night, in bed listening to umma gumma for the first time, when "careful with that axe, uegene" came on, the live performance. He freaked, nearly shit himself when the screaming started and chopping got frenzied.
I thought we called it head music because back then being a head meant you got high, and when we listened to Pink Floyd back then we got high. You had the jocks, the brains and the heads though it was cool to cross over to all three groups if you were a cool smart athlete.
I was called "a head" for listening to rock and progressive music like it was a bad thing. Remember this was a largely backwards era where being "a tree hugger" was supposed to be something horrific. Same crowd of trouble makers. And I don't mean "the heads and tree huggers". We need more heads and tree huggers.
But you left the drugs bit out 😅
That’s how you do a Pink Floyd reaction.
All the way through, on vinyl.
Kudos gentlemen.
Careful Johnny…I hear he’s real fast
@@argentsilver928
* twirls six shooter *
@@johnnyringo1949 welp time to watch tombstone lol. What a great movie
@@argentsilver928The Best
And without too much chatter!
Floyd sound is unique, there’s no band quite like them, they’re in a genre by themselves, fact🙏👍
I do agree but they are psychadelic blues ultimately.
Prog-blues?
@@PickpocketJones yes they were but when i grew up in that era i listened to them,zep,black sabb and queen,others like bad company,many great bands too numerous to mention but the first three were my stable picks
They are a European Psychedelic fusion band. They fused R&B, Blues, Soul, Funk, Acid Rock, Choir Music, and everything under the sun to make their sound. They are pioneers in their own right and the music speaks for itself. Love everyone in the comments section! We should go to a show sometime haha
That's is exactly why no one covers their music!!
This album is so great partly because of Richard Wright's keyboard and David Gilmour's guitar, impeccable!
“partly” is the key word here…Waters funks it out as usual after the upshift to the 6/8 feel…
"The instruments are talking"
Hell yeah
Shine on you crazy diamond is a tribute to band co-founder Syd Barrett who basically took LSD every day for a couple of years and wound up becoming mentally ill from the drug use- some believe it was schizpherenia. Syd was doing laser shows, essentially "raves" in small clubs for Pink Floyd's early live tours in the 60s, trippy lyrics etc as the singer and song writer, Guitarist David Gilimour joined when Syd couldn't function anymore to take over guitar and singing. Syd did release a solo album later but died basically a recluse who was cared for by family members
Predisposition to schizophrenia caused him to go crazy, LSD itself has been shown to have no effect on "mentally sane" individual's, but if your family has a history of mental illness it can get passed down through the bloodline and psychedelics drugs could act as a potentiator for mental illness years before it would come out naturally.
Syd actually showed up at the studio while the band was recording this album, but he looked nothing like himself - way heavier, bald, and barely there mentally, almost catatonic, just a shadow of himself. It took the rest of the band quite a while to figure out who he was and it really hit them hard emotionally, apparently they were in tears after he left. This is a brilliant album, really looking forward to hearing your thoughts. Peace and love from Canada! ☮
"Now there's a look in your eye, like two black holes in the sky"
Gets me every time
@@hpawebster65 Right? Just a killer lyric, absolutely gut-wrenching.
Just about to write that 😂👍🏻
I graduated high school in 1975. Can’t tell you how important this music was to us. Life changing. Thanks for listening to it with me.
This album is an absolute MASTERPIECE.
I used to have WELCOME TO THE MACHINE as my greeting on my answering machine, lol.
Ahhh answering machines. So nice to think of a time before cell phones.
@@tomleslie6668 Hahahahaha.. when I was a teacher I had "We Don't Need No Education" as my ring tone....
As I listen I'm sitting on the front porch, it's drizzling rain and I'm enjoying a king size home grown blend with my best buddy laying at my feet.
I can honestly say I live the life of a king.
Why y’all haven’t already at least reached 100k subscribers is beyond me this channel is the real deal absolutely nothing fake about you guys it’s obvious you know music not only from a just a listener’s viewpoint but your technical knowledge and production knowledge is outstanding y’all know what your doing and you for real “get it “
Spot on comment don't get why but hopefully it will snowball when it gets to that critical mass.
I agree but it will def grow with the type of stuff they are listening to and how cool they are.
A lot of people can't much relate to reactors who really understand music and its creation and production
Well, they added one new one today with me!! This came up on my recommendations & I subbed after about 2 minutes lol 😎👍
Agreed. Turned my sister onto them as well. She said the same thing, they are real, genuine.
What an album. We called it head music back then. :)
Lol 🤣 truth!!
WE CALLED IT ACID MUSIC
We called stoners “Heads”. None drug users were “Straights”..
No band in this world is like Pink Floyd, period. All of humanity needs to have the pleasure of listening to these men bring humanity together.
First of all, I love that you are listening to an “vinyl” version of this, just as it should be. The “crackle” in the background just brings back so many memories of listening to this when it was released.
Watching you two react to all of this great 70’s music is great and the fact that you love it is fantastic!!
Keep the great reactions coming and “Shine On”!!
I saw this tour in 1977 at Madison Square Garden and they played the complete album and it blew us away! Oh and then they played the complete Animals album also. BTW the ticket cost $10.50. Yes that's right ( ten dollars and fifty cents ) The encore was Money and Us and Them. I may be old but I saw the best bands. Enjoy side 2.
I saw this same show, 21 years old and I’ve never looked at or listened to music the same since.
That must have been an amazing show!
@@kevinmcfarlane2752 One of my all time favorite shows.
Ticket prices today are crazy!!! As a teenager, we could afford to go see a concert.
I saw the same concert except on the Best coast, Anaheim Stadium. I was 21 and we had a picnic sitting on the outfield grass. Wine and Doobie's. What a trip! Those were the best days. 🌌 👽🌛👣✌️
I remember the first time I heard the outro of Welcome To The Machine. I never knew bitterness could be conveyed through a synthesizer. The dark disgust and bitterness of that song is so beautifully expressed through both the vocal delivery and instruments. It still blows my mind after all these years. It’s music that truly stands the test of time.
We didn't really do the headphone thing, but instead would smoke a doobie, :D and then just lay back and relax, in the center of 4 speakers, close our eyes and feel the music. Pink Floyd is an experience. I remember quadraphonic sound, what Pink Floyd was most known for, but if you used 4 speakers, you would hear things that you wouldn't hear just using 2. I do remember when this album first came out, Dark Side was still going strong. Even though we loved it, it wasn't 'yet' played as much as Dark was still being played.
Why did I ever get rid of my turntable back in the '80's and all my vinyl records when CDs came out?
I knew once that sax dropped in Shine On You Crazy Diamond it was over. That shit still hits so hard no matter how many times I hear it and it was genuinely amazing to see how much of an impact it made. You guys are awesome.
I'm riding with the brothers again! Your selections have been absolutely tremendous lately!!!! Zeppelin, the Dan and now Pink Floyd, no reason to even change the channel!!
Pink Floyd always took their time. That's one of the things I love most about them ... they were never in a hurry to get anywhere. If they were going to blow your fucking mind, they were going to do it right.
Floyd will teach you a whole new way to listen to music. Seeing y’all laughing in disbelief of just how good it was really made my day.
To have you young men listening to this stuff, so many years after this stuff first came out and to appreciate the craftsmanship that went into it makes my heart swell. And young black men. Wow. For me, an old black man out of Chicago, Los Angeles fill my heart with so much hope. You men are a step above. Thank you for what you are doing.
The intro is why I started playing the guitar, and this was the first song I learned to play start-to-finish.
I know what you mean same thing happened to me.
This was the opening number to their shows I saw in 1987 and 1988 at RFK Stadium in DC. The build-up was intense. Gilmour described his riff as a "lament" which is what it was: a sad tribute to their former bandmate who went insane after excessive LSD use back in the sixties.
Dick Parry played baritone and tenor on this number, and also featured on Dark Side.
He also toured with them a good while.
I saw that tour: JFK stadium in Philly. Amazing!
@@seajaytea9340 I was there also. Tripping
Stadium music indeed. Saw them at Soldier Field in Chicago in 1994. With Pink Floyd the entire stadium is wired for sound. Speakers literally 360° around the stadium. So all the music, sound effects, spoken voices, are all reproduced live as it is on the albums and it comes at you from all directions. I don't think the albums were recorded with stadiums in mind so much as they were for a full rich sonic experience through your speakers and headphones. I've also seen them at an indoor arena. Same deal. These guys are perfectionists in every sense of the word when it comes to music. I've never heard of anyone who attended a Floyd concert complaining about the sound. Looking forward to side 2.
It’s also very intimate music. You, alone in the dark. Just you & the music.
@@sukie584 absolutely! Probably intimate first and foremost. Transformed to spectacle in ways only they can when performed live and in stadiums.
"That may have been the best sound I've ever heard." Oh man, that was amazing! I'm new to your podcast, and enjoying you guys. Nice to see the appreciation go deep and musical.
Recently saw Roger Waters (bassist and other singer of Pink Floyd) a few months ago. Best concert I’ve ever been too hands down. I wasn’t alive when the whole band was together so this was the next best thing and it still didn’t disappoint one bit. He performed songs from almost all their records and you’re absolutely right, this music is made to be performed in stadiums.
was it the diaper trump tour
I saw Rogers show in Manchester UK a few years ago. Unfortunately the band had stopped touring by the time I got into them. I've seen a lot of big bands but that show was the best I've ever seen. Have tickets to see him again in June.
Too bad you missed David Gilmour and Rick Wright, the true talent in Pink Floyd!
@@detroitlady7201 I know! It would have been so wonderful to see.
Great band pf, and "the pros and cons of hitchhiking" is fucking great and i dont let a musicians dodgy opinions spoil my enjoyment of their music but I find Waters has some really dodgy views...I wouldn't put a penny in his pocket...
Pink Floyd should always be listened to with your eyes closed!
I witnessed Pink Floyd in 1977 at Soldier Field in Chicago. I was 17 and to this day have NEVER seen or heard anything comparable. The sound was just piercingly clear. The visuals were just awesome, it was the Animals tour. Yes stadium music, but yet enjoy them so much at home on my own system. I also saw Zeppelin in 77, nothing like Floyd tho
The sax actually starts with a baritone and then switches to a tenor..same player as dark side of the moon.....great job guys. Doing amazing work.
Watching you guys is now part of my daily routine.
Your reactions are so genuine and expressive.
Makes me think back how I felt when I first heard this album
I suspect you will enjoy side 2 as much or more.
I've been a PF listener for 45 yrs and their evolution in this period is so interesting and great. I feel the band was much better after syd barrett and when Roger took creative control of the band and its concepts and writing but so much of Roger's writing and concepts are inspired by Syd or just flat out about him like this one. It's such a cool dynamic. The early syd floyd albums are a little too psycho trippy for me but there are some nice gems in there but the 70's is the gold.
Yes, same sax player, Dick Parry. Shine On part 1 at beginning of album, part 2 at end. David Gilmour on harmony vocal and lead guitar. And they sounded just as good live as they did on their albums. Amazing album.
That's Roger Waters on lead vocals for Shine On. Gilmore on the harmonies. Gilmour performs it live cause of course Roger was no longer with them after 85.
When you guys do Part 2, pay attention to how it transitions from Welcome to the Machine into Have a Cigar. Think of `Shine On You Crazy Diamond,` as bookends to the album. First part at the beginning and the last part at the end. It's kind of like a prologue and an epilogue with the story in the middle. You'll get more out of it.
I saw them in Cleveland in 77 animals tour 2 days before I went to the Army I was still recovering in ft sill.
Saw them on my 19th birthday. Animals tour in Cleveland Stadium. Great reaction, as always!
“Way ahead of their time”, you say. True, in a “time” that was full of bands ahead of their time! Yes, King Crimson, Tull, Zeppelin, Zappa, Grateful Dead, Emerson/Lake/Palmer, and on and on! It’s the very reason so many of us older heads have trouble relating to a lot of “music” today! The sixties and seventies were heady times indeed!
Thanks for hearing the guitars talking. Ive been saying that fo 40 plus years from the very first time I heard. Gilmore is a genius when it comes to drawing emotion out of his playing.
The Division Bell is an absolute Masterpiece...! "A Great Day For Freedom", "Wearing The Inside Out", "High Hopes", "Lost for Words"
that album means more to me than can be typed. it is my go to after a life change, or a depression.
Highly underrated for sure. A bit overproduced, but great. The only kicking it gets a4e from the Roger Waters fan boys.
I think it's their best, but Waters fans will be here to talk s**t
@@ThomasTallant Check out the '78 solo album from David Gilmour ~ "No Way Out Of Here", "Raise My Rent", "So Far Away", "I Cant Breathe Anymore" and "No Way"....
If you like The Division Bell, I think you will like it as well...!
As for the Waters fans.... What has he done without David and Rick's composition and production, which turned his concepts and lyrics into music with a worldwide appeal...?
Waters was a great lyricist and vocalist, but it was David and Rick that made it music...!
i can’t listen to high hopes, it’s too depressing
Shine on Syd you crazy diamond 🙏 ✨️ 💖
Best reaction channel out there, nicely done! "Animals" is a must play through. You won't regret it...ask anyone.
Ahh the classics.
So happy it entered your lived it will not be the same. You heard it now!!!! Music be the food of luv...play On... Momma has always said.... floyd is musical story telling!
Now imagine if you didn't wait what you would have missed.
Can't judge a song by the intro!!!🤣🤣
Cheers
so...the singer is also the lead guitar...David Gilmour...one of my favs....spent my teenage delinquency with Floyd and Zeppelin, Ramones...too many to list here.. Wonderful reaction...so satisfying when reactors get it and appreciate real instruments and musicianship
Actually, that’s a baritone sax Dick Parry starts with, (on Shine On) when the tempo changes mid solo, he switches to a tenor sax. Watch the video of this song from the Pulse concert and you’ll see him with BOTH hanging from his shoulders, and then the switch occurs. Sat right in front of him for Pulse, and it still blows me away. Good to see young men enjoying what we grooved on back in the day. Until you hear it for yourself, no words can capture the experience. Enjoying your reactions, even with the seldom miss, (just like the rest of us) your knowledge of the era’s music is right on track. Regards 🤘😎
the man's name is Dick Perry
@@Yausbro Lol, your right (of course). Funny thing is, I knew that. Another example of my brain missing a synapse with more frequency these days. 🤔👈 However, we’re both half right. His last name is Parry. I’ll edit original comment. Much appreciated.
I am 61 and my first exposure to Pink Floyd was my parents owing the "Dark Side of the Moon" vinyl album. It was awesome, I couldn't believe my parents were that cool!
Man, Pink Floyd is just different. So much creativity and imagination.....and they took huge risks. To me, the greatest rock band of all-time. Doesn't mean they rocked harder than Zeppelin or others, but the unique creativity is unmatched.
They rocked harder than Zeppelin and others.
Just can't get enough Floyd, thankyou 🙏 this album is really about watching their friend and band member detatch from reality, when is part 2 ? 😆 🇬🇧 ❤️
Hopefully next week.
Now imagine this with 50 thousand of your closest friends in Rice Stadium in Houston Texas 1994 with lights and lasers everywhere and it starts raining. It was absolutely the best concert of my life even though it ended early because most all of the instruments shorted out.
They have always had truth embedded in their lyrics and they made sure you felt them. You wonder why none of them are featured in movies or TV shows as soundtracks. "They" fear if the people listened to them, they would gain to much of a consciousness and immediately go against the grain. Music has a huge part of guiding people towards the right or wrong direction. Pink Floyd always had a higher consciousness than most. The sounds they make are unreal, and if someone was to tell me to choose one band to blow everyone's minds, I would summon them, without a doubt. To me, the most advance Artists and Musicians collectively on the face of the planet. Give me young Pink Floyd all day, Because the current state is that they dont see eye to eye musically anymore. I love your reactions, I can tell every single moment that blew your mind, its that face you make when you have never heard anything like it.
Loving your passion and adventure into the music of my youth and early twenties. I am 71 and it warms my heart the respect you are giving some of the all time great music of our time. Great music never dates or ages. Thank you guys Geoff
When I was teen I was home alone at night quite often and I would light a fire in the fireplace, turn off all the lights and crank this album while laying by the fire. it is one of my favorite memories. I could go anywhere I wanted and never leave my spot by the fireplace.... hahahaha
BTW, I want to thank both of you for not stopping the music too much... great job guys!!!!!
You guys hit the nail on the head. They created their own genre. The artistry, the ability to weave sounds and effects into their music, they way they created a concept is just peerless in the music world. Loved your reaction to side 1. It's easy to tell you guys are diggin' what Pink Floyd laid down. Looking forward to side 2 dropping. Keep up the great work.
21:52. "That might be the best thing i have EVER heard" hahahahaha. i have said that 1000 times with Floyd over the years.
Ahead of their time yes but their musicality will never ever be questioned or beaten period ❤❤❤
As with Dark Side of the Moon, Animals, and The Wall, this album starts and ends on the same song and note so you could play continuously and seamlessly.
DSOTM starts and ends with a heartbeat, not the same song.
Yes, and who wouldn’t want to play their music on a continuous loop?❤
@@neillenet291 you knew what he meant. The records are book ended.
Can't tell you how much I'm enjoying listening to this music with you guys. Looking forward to "The Wall"
Rick Wright (RIP) in many ways is the star of this album with his sweeping cinematic keyboard playing and sounds.
Don’t you wonder if they even knew how great they were when they were creating this?❤
They knew they were making music that they liked to play, and had their poetry needed to be spoken.
With pink Floyd you hear every note, the music is so precise and clear. the lyrics are a story but then the music after makes you think what the meaning of the story. Thinking music
Love you guys and look forward to your morning video here on the east coast. Shine on is my favorite song. Thanks!
« Man! … That might be the best thing I ever heard! … as far as sound is concerned… » 😎😆🥹 Awesome!! The BEST quotes from you guys. Lovin it!
You know it's gonna be a good day when you start it off with a little with you were here and watching you guys enjoying the experience. Thank you
Our pleasure!
I was living in a co-ed college dorm (Haggett Hall, North Tower, Devoe House), UW, Seattle, WA 1972-76, and Pink Floyd albums were often played. Usually. on a weekend evening, we'd go to someone's dorm room that had the best stereo equipment of the time, like Bose speakers mounted high in the corners of the dorm room-played somewhat loud but not over-whelmingly loud. And we might be under some effects at the time too. You didn't have to be in a huge stadium to enjoy this music. But, in Sept. 1972, I did see Pink Floyd perform the entire "Dark Side of the Moon" album, in quad sound bouncing all over the four corners of the Hec Ed basketball pavilion. What a memorable concert! (And, as we all now know, that LP went on to become a classic.)
Love watching your facial reactions, I was the same back in the day, Wish and Dark Side just blow you away, cos you’re never quite sure what’s coming next. By the way Dark Side is 50 this year and we’ve been together all of them, and ATM Wish is on in the car.
“With Random Precision”; what a lyric. This music transports you.
Floyd is a humungous vibe. You don't just listen, you get taken away, kidnapped by magicians who take you on a trek who won't return control of your senses until they're good and done with you 20, 30, 40 minutes down the musical highway. Second to none. Singular and epic. Floyd.
Couldn’t have said it better Mr Zappa :);)
Watching you two listen to this reminds me so much of being 17 and hanging with my buddies in our first shared apartment getting high and listening to Floyd.❤😊
My ultimate favorite track. Evokes so many emotions.
The fact that their music still surprises people is awesome. This is music that all new music should emulate. They were ahead of their time. Their message of anti-hate, antiwar and a general love of all humanity must be respected. There will never be another Pink Floyd. I wish David Gilmour would make a dozen more albums before his "time" is through.
Pink Floyd is from Cambridge, England, the famous old university town, and their families were involved in education, etc. As Gilmour said, “We could all speak proper English.” Basically, everyone they knew was educated, so when they decided they needed someone to try to get Syd straightened out and help him out on stage they thought “What about David Gilmour? He trusts him, and he can play guitar.” When they decided to put saxophone on ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’, Gilmour said “What about Dick Parry? He plays saxophone.” Same for Hipgnosis, who designed their album covers. They were all friends from Cambridge who they’d known most of their lives. Roger Waters was still picking up Syd at his mom’s house to take him to doctor’s appointments toward the end of his life, 30 years after he left the band. And you’re right: at the concert the music is the main part, but only part of the show. There is the band, music, lights, lasers, film, objects moving around over your head, on the stage, etc. The music is the soundtrack.
~17:00. “Dropping’ all that butter” and “Cookin’ with fish grease”…..that made my day.
I better double up on my Lipitor tonight.
All the best guys.
I found you guys yesterday & have been binge watching. You guys are great at this, keep it going. Love your reactions as guys with music backgrounds and knowledge. Loved all these bands.
When I saw them in 94 at Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh my wife had tears running down her face at the end of the show. When I asked her what's wrong she just said I don't want the show to be over 🤟
"Where have you been?
It's alright, we know where you've been.
What did you dream?
It's alright, we told you what to dream"
Watching you guys "get it" brought me a lot of joy. Welcome to the machine.
Pink Floyd had all of those sounds available, because those early synthesizers, like the Mini-Moog that they used in this cut, are capable of creating virtually any sound from wind, to machine sounds, to music, but they were extremely difficult to set up. It involved patch cords and multiple switches and rheostats for each channel. All of those sweeps and hisses and electronic songs all came from the synthesizer. I think you would have a very difficult time recreating this song today with one of the modern keyboards
That's one guy playing both the tenor sax and the alto that came after, he has both on slings and as soon as he finishes the tenor solo, he throws the tenor sax behind his back and pulls the alto around from the other side...quite a little stunt.
Everything you said is right, but he actually starts on a baritone sax and finishes on tenor. I’ve seen the trick you’re talking about, where he’s basically wearing the two saxes and flinging one behind to okay the next. Awesome.
Richard Wright on keys and all those effects. Brilliant!
Wow, you're doing one of my ALL-TIME FAVORITE ALBUMS.... no joke, truly a feast for your ears 🎉
Pink Floyd is a organism for you ear that doesn't stop!
I was really looking forward to this. My favorite Pink Floyd album, though I pretty much love them all. I put this one on and play all the way through quite often! As a drummer myself, I love your guy's musician takes on your reviews.
It gives my heart joy to see young men discover music from my childhood...
Born in 69 boys...lol
I just happened upon your channel a few days ago. I love your reactions. You both seem to not only appreciate music, but you understand it and I'm assuming you have some education in music based on your comments. I really enjoy watching and listening to you. It's the closest I can get to hearing all these songs that I grew up hearing for the first time again. I'm 60 years old. Thank you for making me smile. I will show your channel to my grandson. He will be 17 yrs old in March. He loves old classic rock. We can sit and watch UA-cam music together for hours at a time. He is an aspiring guitar player and loves music like I do.
Nothing I love more than Pink Floyd reactions. The whole world needs to listen and at least try to understand. It would bring peace I tell ya!
One thing can be said: this music is packed to the brim with a duality of extreme restraint and unraveling abandon, but they never let it get away from them, yet it’s never in a cage…
That’s the greatest representation of Pink Floyd’s music
"Welcome to the Machine" is perhaps my favorite Pink Floyd song. Can't turn it off once it's started.
You can think of this album as a Progressive Rock opera; it's telling a story. The theme of the story is how the music industry abuses the artists and how that tragically affected the band's co-founder, Syd Barrett. He is the "crazy diamond". This band mastered creating a "theater of the mind" on vinyl. The sound you hear at the end of "Welcome to the Machine" is the doors of an express elevator closing, the elevator accelerating to the penthouse, then the doors opening to a record company executive's party. This will make sense to you when you hear the next track.
I love that UA-cam is acting as a bridge between generations so that the younger generation is able to discover & keep this great music alive.
As an old guy who started listening to the Floyd about 1970, I'm glad to see two, smart, young guys who totally get. You guys are doing good work, here.
Longtime Pink Floyd fan who attended multiple Pulse shows here. As you now deeply appreciate, this is transformative music. Truly one of the greatest joys is when other people discover and understand what is unfolding. They made music on humanistic themes that is relevant every year since it came out. For at least a couple years I have been dropping in here to watch batches of new people discovering it, and I have to rank your reaction right at the very top. You are two highly intelligent reviewers and this was a joy to watch with you. Thank you.
I came across the two of you after watching other reaction videos , this music is the sound track of my youth ! Along with zeppelin, Black Sabbath , and many others , there is only one Pink Floyd , they were intelligent in their lyrics and their music took you to places known & unknown , didn’t matter if you were high or not …. I’ve so enjoyed watching you enjoy listening to all of these one of a kind brilliant artists .
I've heard it on the original stadium setup. Speakers all the way around the stadium and timed so that sonic effects swirled around the arena. Unbelievable! MIND BLOWING!!!! I was about 20 then. I'm old now and have finally managed to put together a sound system that can almost come close to recreating that effect. almost.
Guys, vinyl is cool. Full respect, I shake your hand. Pink Floyd is my favorite team. Greetings from Russia. I noticed the cap of the "Dynamo" club, a smile appeared automatically.
Pre digital heaven
I did go to the concerts.... 4 times seeing PINK FLOYD. The Greatest Live Performance Band Of All Time. AWESOME
I'm so glad the younger generation appreciate Floyd, they where as you say, way ahead of their time..fun fact...🙄 as a young teen when they "came out" my parents generation where still listening to Sinatra 😳 they where HORRIFIED when they heard Floyd 🤣🤣🤣🤣 quote.."ya can get that shite off right now" was often heard when we tried to put our albums on the deck...🤣🤣🤣👍
I'ts always fun to watch people descend the rabbit hole. Enjoy the journey!
I've been waiting for this ,enjoy your reactions .
I like that you guys delve deep, listening to time signatures, phrasing, the nuances of background instruments, and lyrics, as well as the obvious meat and potatoes of the songs. I dig your channel.
Thank you for doing this album. As others have said, shine on you crazy diamond is respects for founding member Sid Barrett. Tragic story. If you ever look into Sid's life the lyrics are so powerful. Much appreciation to Pink Floyd for the awesome love they gave Sid.