Rare Early Pink Floyd Photos Part 2 Now in Color Syd Barrett Roger Waters 1963 to 1968 Madcap Laughs
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- Опубліковано 16 бер 2023
- Thanks for Watching Art and Musicshorts! Syd Barrett rare photos going back to 1964. The music is by Telecasted, the song is "Savior."
*one addition to the writing is: the Mick Rock photo session for the cover of "The Madcap Laughs" took place in April, 1969, with Syd meeting Evelyn Rose "Iggy the Inuit" in late March of 69. - Фільми й анімація
Love it! Thank you!
Thanks Marko, I appreciate it!
I just discovered your page and can't stop watching Syd's videos... Syd Barrett is my favourite human in the entire existence, a very very special soul to me💚🍀 I can never thank you enough for all the videos about him, all the information and colorized photos... so beautiful and very touching... I'm forever grateful thank you so so much🙏 The part about him walking all the 50 miles from London back to Cambridge when he had financial difficulties touched me to the bone and moved me to tears... Where did you find this information?🙏
You're Welcome Ray-k there are more to come! Thanks for watching them and commenting, excellent!
**There are more photos of Syd and PF on my community page ,Thanks again
@@johnnygraham4004 Well thank you for all the hard work and the time your investing to pass on all this precious information for future generations... You have no idea how precious your videos are... or you probably do🙏
@@johnnygraham4004 Will definitely check the community page!
@@Ray-kv1ys Thanks Ray, That's very kind. I just make them one after another and I'll think about it later, but I do try to add something new and make something that is worth looking at.
So sad.... Magic MAN....
Sad. But what would the Floyd be without Gilmour? What would Gilmour have been without Floyd?
Yes, Syd did all that he could, I think his inventiveness brought them to 1968 but Gilmour was probably a better musician and he was dependable, something that Syd wasn't, at the end.
@@johnnygraham4004 Syd had a far broader sense of harmonics than Gilmour. Syd had an instinctual sense of creative dissonance and the use of the full chromatic scale, which Gilmour never developed. If he hadn't lost his marbles and continued to play guitar, he would have become better than Gilmour, who has forever remained a prisoner of the blues. Had Gilmour not joined the Floyd, I doubt we would ever have heard of him. He would have been just another of the very many good but unknown guitarists of his generation.
@@chicklets4ever51 Don't agree At all :) & that's okay. Gilmour was far more disciplined and focused and was able to play in those complex pieces that Waters dreamed up. Syd was at home improvising and scraping his guitar with a lighter. That only charms for so long>
@@johnnygraham4004 You're not addressing my musical point. Syd's ear, even though young and still naive, was already pushing harmonic boundaries that Gilmour has never really included in his musical vocabulary, except, perhaps, when taken there by Rick's or Roger's meandering progressions. If Syd had developed technique and discipline (and basically all musicians get better as they continue playing), he would have been more interesting, not less, than Gilmour. His colour palette, simply by instinct, was already incorporating harmonic shifts outside David's fairly strict pentatonic/diatonic playing. This is all speculation of course; I'm merely saying that Syd possessed considerably more raw musical talent than Gilmour, and not just songwriting. It's visible simply by observing his left hand, and the ease with which he can evoke worlds of sound. (I'm a guitarist, myself.) Any decent musician can learn to play the same moving passages over and over.
@@chicklets4ever51 BTW listening to Man and the Journey--Gilmour was playing sublime music btw 1969-1972 straightup. Syd was quirky and clever, but NoWHERE near the depth of later PF
what’s this song playing called?
This is "Savior" by Telecasted