Right cause if you watch Led Zeppelin live they are trash and I like zeppelin music but real musicians are put to the test when playing live and Pink Floyd kills it on live stage ❤
They did very few of the typical "love" songs other bands were doing. They sung/sing about life, death, war, greed, mental illness, regret, current events, etc. It really did set them apart. Their music is simply timeless.
I wish they had used women more. Brit floyd doing "mother" with a woman singing gives it a more creepy vibe and adds alot to the song. The album should have a women doing it
I find myself spontaneously smiling very big every time I watch this. A very big smile. I wish I had been there. What a life-changing experience. I’m thankful I get to see it here.
Hey buddy, very similar story. Dad put on this concert mid day and I watched it all, went out to play for a bit and all the time I was out the feeling was I just seen something which would impact me. To further compound the head trip Dad later on put on Queen live at Wembley and I think I just Lay in a daze for a while. I was maybe 11 or 12, to this day I can still remember the feelings. Music is magical, a journey to energize the soul.
Normal! ils jouent ensemble depuis si longtemps. De plus chacun d’eux après de multiples essais de techniques nouvelles en fin 1960 qu’ils sont devenus des maîtres dans l’utilisation de leurs instruments et ce qui ne gâche rien, ils donnent tout et avec autant de plaisir que nous avons, nous a les écouter. Que de chemin parcouru depuis Ammaguma où on les prenait pour des malades drogues. J’ai 70 ans et suis toujours émerveillé par leur créativité. Que se soit de Roger, David ou Paul… Merci à eux. Qu’ils puissent vivre le plus longtemps possible.
That's how you end a show !!!!! Gotta love David Gilmour and all Pink Floyd !!! Richard, Nick, and Guy, and don't forget those Back Up Singers !!!! What a Show !!!
I played a five string walking all over town telling everyone I was looking for a guitar string no strings attached. Played 4+20 for the water department. It's a LONG STORY
Hell, I'm 40 and I'd LOVE to have David Gilmour for Christmas myself. Though I guess I'll just keep myself content with the music and the giddy feeling of knowing I have the same color telecaster he's got... and now I'm itching to pick it up and get a dedicated practice routine set up again. That's what I love about good music. It makes me wanna learn and create.
Yes, this is my "litmus test" for a band. Pink Floyd is better live. In that category also are Chicago, Return to Forever, Yes, and Emerson, Lake & Palmer. The album is a forerunner, a taste of the ideas. Performed live, you get to see the mature form of each composition with all the bugs worked out and a big dose of fun added in. I love it.
Legendary masterpiece and as always somebody points to a specific bass or drums player as a crucial component, childish. 100% sure nobody would notice them missing.
@@MrSookonn it's legendary masterpiece as you said also because of specific and parts of different instruments. Don't even try to convince yourself that this rhythmics doesn't make you head nod in time with music because of catchy bassline and drums. This music is not only about lyrics and storytelling, but also about energy and emotions. Audience doesn't clap their hands and jump just because of Roger's wittiness
After almost 50 years of listening to Pink Floyd, they remain a Beacon of Musical quality in a land of geniuses to me. The 70s/80s had so many fantastic groups and artists but as history begins to set, Pink Floyd will be ranked beside Bach/Mozart/Beethoven and many other memorable musicians as one of the best examples of musicianship of their time.
70s seem like a decade in retrospect that said "hey everyone be free!" Certainly the first several years when a decade hasn't been particularly defined yet the dudes from PF were operating under the element of free society( in garage rock style Nick Mason would later praise punk rock saying he liked that era it reminded him of the end of the 60s/ the mundane everyday life drug use is so frowned apun that when all you have is each other that enabling says the same "Hey each of us be free!" Guys like Roger and David really utilized the years 727374757677787980 helped each other destroy all the limits of musical theatre and reached for quite possibly the heavens; Shine on you crazy diamond Is a space opera brilliant And fantastic albums then when You finally part It's all over you each cut your hair It's over no more enabling Dreams of what once was Still enjoy classic rock radio Blasting Rock and Roll into the ethos
I was there, PULSE in Berlin back in the 90s. And I saw Grandfathers jumpin' off their ass and puttin' their Grandchildren on their shoulders, tellin' them to feel this once-in-a-life-time experience.
I’m so jealous. I was introduced to Pink Floyd in the late 90,s and lately have been on a deep dive of their music. I so wish I could have experienced the Pulse concert.
Watch the whole concert. It's the best concert I've never been too. I've been watching it since VHS to DVD to UA-cam and is never gotten old ( 25 +years).
You haven’t seen a rock show until you’ve seen David Gilmore and band mates. And speaking of shows, their light shows are the most amazing of all... ever. Life altering stuff.
Kim Kay - cheers Kim ... wonderful comment - lived and loved seeing Floyd live in concert in Perth, Western Australia in the late 80’s - and yes “with the aromatic scent of “weed” in the air from an enormous crowd - well we were all flying high - what a concert
I have been fortunate enough to have seen them twice. Once in 1984 at the LA Coliseum and then in 1994 at Tampa stadium the night before my wedding. Was my wife’s first Floyd experience although she has heard countless stories from me about the first concert. I would tell her that if you ever got to see them live you will be a fan for life. Well she now agrees with that statement whole heartedly and now tells others the same thing. We love Pink Floyd!!
@@kdog9440 I'm super envious of your experience, getting to enjoy the greatest of all, The PINK FLOYD , actually IN THE FLESH( no pun intended)!!! I would give almost anything to experience the magic that they created in person. Out of 1 to 10 what would u rate their performance that u witnessed that particular time? I only ask because some shows the Pink Floyd played were deemed to be much more memorable than others.Some venues were seemingly vastly superior acoustically.... For example, IMHO (and many other peoples as well)the holy Grail of David Gilmour's Comfortably Numb solos was at a show they played in Gdansk, Italy. I'm sure u have watched and listened to this particular bit of mastery in absolute awe like I have been every time I put it on. I always tell people that this; must be played at 50 pe percent volume at the very minimum if one wishes to immerse themselves in one of, if not THE best guitar solo of all time. I wish Id got to experience what u did at a live P. F concert. Thanks in advance fellow Floydist!!
Turin 13 September 1994. This was my first live concert and I must say that if I had seen other concerts they would not have given me the emotions I had that evening........ I am 55 years old and with tears in my eyes I can only say thank you to the emotions you made me feel that evening. Thanks Pink Floyd
@@haroldbrown6630 not knowing your age if your younger or listen to jazz or something else it's understandable. He has been with David anytime he needed a bass player. Really a stand out in the Floyd lineup. How cool to be so young and just step in for Roger Waters!!!
3:15 in when you realize the bass player had pipes 30 years later.. I love pink Floyd and David Gilmore ... Only regret is I could never see them live.. that 🤕 but thanks David for all the years of inspiring me as my favorite guitar player of all time.
I agree 100 % !!!! Just something about the way he makes you feel what he's playing !!! I don't think.any other guitarist does that to me like he does !!!
What a concert this was. October 20th 1994 and still the best musical event of my life. I still had tears in my eyes from Comfortably Numb when this the final song of the night started.
@@exorcist1998 u lucky, lucky person. I'm envious of your experience.. I have had tears in my eyes when I've played "Live in Pompeii" at close to max volume sitting at home!! I would have had a very emotional experience if I had been at that show. I'm green with envy!!!! Respect fellow Floydist.
Just WOW! I been to a ton of concerts, but never in my wildest dreams could I imagine seeing a performance like this and I will assume that most never will see anything like it! PINK FLOYD ❤
Poderoso, demoledor, enorme, inigualable. Guy Pratt solido en el bajo (mas que waters, definitivamente) y preciso en vocals. El trabajo de los delays en las guitarras es asombroso! Lo he visto unas 50 veces y no me canso de verlo.
Saw this in Melbourne. The Momentary Lapse Of Reason tour 1988, concert was awesome. We were 9 rows from the stage in front of the girls singing backup vocals.
David Gilmour - guitar, vocals Nick Mason - drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording) Rick Wright - Hammond organ, synthesiser Guy Pratt - bass guitar Gary Wallis - percussion, extra drums on Pulse Tim Renwick - rhythm guitar Jon Carin - synthesiser, sorry for those who insist on 4.3 , get yourself a big screen set ! Enjoy !
@@amyhall4099 Run Like Hell" is a song by the English progressive rock band Pink Floyd, written by David Gilmour and Roger Waters. It appears on the album The Wall. It was released as a single in 1980,[1][2] reaching #15 in the Canadian singles chart as well as #18 in Sweden, but only reached #53 in the U.S. A 12" single of "Run Like Hell," "Don't Leave Me Now" and "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" peaked at #57 on the Disco Top 100 chart in the U.S.[3] Contents 1 Concept 1.1 Film adaptation 2 History 3 Composition 3.1 Film version 4 Live performances 4.1 Pink Floyd 4.1.1 The Wall Tour 4.1.2 Later tours 4.2 Roger Waters 4.3 David Gilmour 5 Personnel 6 Charts 7 Cover versions 8 In popular culture 9 Further reading 10 References 11 External links Concept The song is written from the narrative point of view of antihero Pink, an alienated and bitter rock star, during a hallucination in which he becomes a fascist dictator and turns a concert audience into an angry mob. The lyrics are explicitly threatening, directed at the listener, one with an "empty smile" and "hungry heart", "dirty feelings" and a "guilty past", "nerves in tatters" as "hammers batter down your door." Even the act of sexual intercourse is doomed, for "if they catch you in the back seat trying to pick her locks", the results will be fatal. Although the lyric "You better run like hell" appears twice in the liner notes, the title is never actually sung; each verse simply concludes with "You better run". Film adaptation In the film adaptation, Pink directs his jackbooted thugs to attack the "riff-raff" mentioned in the previous song, in which he ordered them to raid and destroy the homes of queers, Jews, and black people, among others. One scene depicts an interracial couple cuddling in the back seat of a car when a group of neo-Nazis accost them, beating the boy and raping the girl. The Wall director Alan Parker hired the Tilbury Skins, a skinhead gang from Essex, for a scene in which Pink's "hammer guard" (in black, militaristic uniforms designed by the film's animator, Gerald Scarfe) smashes up a Pakistani diner; Parker recalled how the action "always seemed to continue long after I had yelled out 'Cut!'."[4] History The music was solely written by David Gilmour (one of three songs on The Wall for which Gilmour is credited as a co-writer), and the lyrics were written by Roger Waters. Waters provides the vocals (except for Gilmour's multitracked harmonies singing "Run, run, run, run,"). The first version of the song had music written by Roger Waters (which appears on the Immersion box set of The Wall) with the lyrics as on the album (in the key of G) but then Roger's music was scrapped in favor of Gilmour's music during the recording of the band demos (which too appears on the Immersion box set). The song features the only keyboard solo on The Wall by Richard Wright (although on live performances, "Young Lust" and "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2" would also feature keyboard solos); after the last line of lyrics, a synthesizer solo is played over the verse sequence, in place of vocals. Following the solo, the arrangement "empties out" and becomes sparse, with the guitar only playing an ostinato with rhythmic echoes, and brief variations every other bar. Sound effects are used to create a sense of paranoia, with the sound of cruel laughter, running footsteps, car tyres skidding, and a loud scream. The original 7" single version and "Pink Floyd The Wall -- Special Radio Construction" promotional EP both contain a clean guitar intro, without the live crowd effects. The EP version also contains an extended, 32-beat intro and an extended 64-beat outro where David Gilmour's main guitar phrase repeats before the track ends.[5] As with "Comfortably Numb", also from The Wall, the music to "Run Like Hell" has its roots in Gilmour's first solo album. "Short and Sweet" can be seen as this song's precursor. "Yes," Gilmour told Musician magazine, "it's a guitar with the bottom string tuned down to a D, and thrashing around on the chord shapes over a D root. Which is the same in both [songs]. [Smiling] It's part of my musical repertoire, yes."[6] Composition After the previous song, "In The Flesh", the crowd continues to chant, "Pink! Floyd! Pink! Floyd!" The guitar intro begins with the scratching of strings dampened with left-hand muting, before settling on an open D string dampened by palm muting. As heard earlier on the album in "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1", the muted D is treated with a specific delay setting, providing three to four loud but gradually decaying repeats, one dotted-eighth note apart, with the result that simply playing quarter notes (at 116 beats per minute) will produce a strict rhythm of one eighth note followed by two sixteenth notes, with rhythmic echoes overlapping. Over this pedal tone of D, Gilmour plays descending triads in D major (mostly D, A, and G), down to the open chord position (a quieter, second overdubbed guitar plays open chords only). Some of the guitar tracks are also treated with a heavy flanging effect. The verses are in E minor, with pedal tones of the guitar's open E, B, and G strings (a full E minor triad) ringing out over a sequence of power chords, resulting in the chords E minor, Fmaj7sus2(♯11), C major seventh, and Bsus4(add♭6). Providing contrast, another guitar, equally treated with delay, plays a low-pitched riff on the roots and minor sevenths of each chord, although the E♭ (minor seventh of F) and B♭ (minor seventh of C) do not match the sustaining open E and B strings an octave above.[7][8] Aside from the added tones in each chord, the basic verse sequence of E minor, F major, E minor, C major, and B major is reprised later in "The Trial", the conceptual climax of The Wall. However, David Gilmour is not credited as a co-writer of "The Trial", which is credited to Waters and producer Bob Ezrin. Before the final riff ends the song, a piercing shriek by Roger Waters can be heard, not unlike one heard between "The Happiest Days of Our Lives" and "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2". At the conclusion of the song, the crowd begins chanting, "Hammer! Hammer!" as the sound of soldiers marching is heard before segueing into the next song, "Waiting for the Worms". Film version The movie version of the song is considerably shorter than the album version, though this is likely done for the sake of pacing. The second guitar refrain between the first and second verses was taken out, with the verse's last line, "You better run", leading directly to Gilmour's harmonized chant ("Run, run, run, run"), which now echoed back and forth between the left and right channels. Also, Richard Wright's synth solo was superimposed over the second verse, and the long instrumental break between the end of the synth solo and Waters' scream was removed. Live performances Pink Floyd The Wall Tour During the previous song, "In the Flesh", a giant inflatable pig was released, which Waters refers to in a speech between both songs. The speech given varied slightly on each concert and therefore can be used to identify which show a recording came from. On Is There Anybody Out There? The Wall Live 1980-81, the speech is a mix of the 15 June 1981 and 17 June 1981 speeches. It was sometimes introduced by Waters as "Run Like Fuck" and Waters and Gilmour sang alternating lines in the verses, while the vocal quartet of Stan Farber, Jim Haas, Joe Chemay, and John Joyce sang the choruses. During the song, the "surrogate band" (also referred to, in Nick Mason's book, as the "shadow band") are onstage with the Pink Floyd members and their quartet of singers. Both Andy Bown and Roger Waters play bass on this song. Bown plays the bass exactly as it was recorded-four quarter notes per bar, playing only roots, using the lowest possible root in drop D tuning. Waters, meanwhile, plays variations at key moments, plays whole notes while singing, and, during the "emptied out" section on D following the synth solo, Waters sometimes improvised high-pitched riffs above Bown's low D.[9] Later tours Following Waters' departure from Pink Floyd, the song became a regular number in the band's concerts, usually ending the show and going over nine minutes long. One live version was used as the B-side to "On the Turning Away". The song also was the closing track on the live album Delicate Sound of Thunder. Gilmour generally played an extended guitar introduction, sharing vocals with touring bassist Guy Pratt, with Pratt singing Waters' lines. In the 1994 tour, Pratt sometimes sang the name of the city where they were playing instead of the word mother in the line "...they're going to send you back to mother in a cardboard box..." - in the Pulse video (live at Earls Court, 1994), he clearly sings London. According to Phil Taylor, David Gilmour played Run Like Hell on a Fender Telecaster guitar tuned to a drop-D, in the 1994 tour.[10]
@@andrewware9985 Gilmour is underrated? WTF. He is consistently rated the top 5 rock guitarists and Comfortably Numb guitar solo gets picked in most opinion polls as the best guitar solo.. Gilmour is a great musician but the creative brain behind Pink Floyd is Roger.
@johanneswarn5488, Drummers usually get shoved to the backstage, more often they're the least visible performers. Everyone's having a good time up front while the drummers working his A$$ off, never realized how true this was until I watch some backstage camera feed.
To this day as a working drummer I tell people I want to be a percussionist because of this absolutely incredible performance; the whole show had me floored as a young drummer.
Bless you gary wallis get also brilliant high recomendation from dave gilmour to play drums with british band 10cc eric stewart from 10cc adores wallis drum playing and gary went on massive live tour with 10cc all over the world and japan.
Saturday 29th October '94 final song on the final ever full Floyd concert and I was there to witness it, still sends shivers down my spine when I hear this. Anyone else who was there on that night get the same experience as me?
My favorite version of this song. The intro.... let the echoes die off to silence and then pick it up again. Start it gradually. No rush. Get the feeling.
I know what you mean…I decided not to go to Berlin to see The Wall live..well…I did see it on TV over a glass of scotch…missed it but still..Pink Floyd has been in my life since being a teenager..I will enjoy them for a couple of decades to come.
When my kids, who are now seniors in college, heard me ply Pink Floyd when they were young though that they were "weird". Then they started to smoke weed.
Saw it in 94 at Arrowhead stadium in KC. Rented a van and drove across Missouri from St. Louis to see it with five friends. Best light show I've ever seen before or since. Looking at that stage was like staring into a portal into another world. The opium we were smoking probably helped a little. It really was quite stunning. Can't wait to see him again three nights at the Hollywood Bowl. Halloween with David Gilmour - does it get any better?
I love how Dave counts Nick and the rest of the band in…even though they have played this song hundreds and hundreds of times and STILL could play it FLAWLESSLY while handcuffed, blindfolded and hungover!
Growing up I thought Pink Floyd music was just ok. But after having seen this epic performance I'm blown away and I'll forever think differently of the music when I hear it.
No band or musician comes anywhere near the creative genius of Pink Floyd, and I know most agree that David Gilmour is not of this world. He is THAT awe inspiringly good. So brilliant. Every member of the band is truly deserving of the deepest respect. Richard Wright, Rest in Peace Eternally. U are Legendary.
One of the most distinctive rock sounds ever, great track and very innovative, superb performance here and certainly adds to PF legendary status. The great Richard Wright's contributions to the PF story still in our minds, RIP Richard.
This is the encore isn't it? Just after they play Comfortably Numb and say goodbye? In the middle of the lingering applause after the lights have gone dark there's Gilmour playing the unmistakable first notes of Run Like Hell. People must have gone totally wild! Especially after realizing the entire band was back to perform and all the lights were well ready for it. What a treat that show must have been! It happened 11 years before I was born. If I ever become a billionaire I will pay people to recreate this concert in Virtual Reality down to minutiae. Fuck going to space, I wanna go back *there and then.*
I am 48 years old, I discovered it with 12 since my cousins a little older listened to them, it has accompanied me all my life and I never get tired of hearing them, there is no group that gives me more goosebumps than Pink Floyd, it is a hurt that there will NEVER be something that comes close to it even the least, this King Crimson that are good, but that magic that Pink Ployd has, those harsh and critical lyrics... no band like it... All his songs I like, but for me there is a very special and underrated, his lyrics are beastly that is Sorrow, in the version of Pulse I jump the tears
Only time I saw them kinda live was during the Live 8 in 2005 on TV :/. I started to notice PF first in 1997 or so, a couple of years after their final tour.
stephen white I’m sure you have heard to check out Brit Floyd before but if you haven’t seriously do. Obviously it isn’t PF but I’ve seen Brit Floyd twice and their shows are phenomenal. More than just a tribute band for sure
I must have watched that dozens of times over the years and that is the first time I have noticed how much david was enjoying playing this. Every time I watch Floyd they always surprise me with something I missed the last time I watched them. Always a pleasure. Thank you Pink Floyd
If I could invent a time Machine this is one of the first events I would go to !!! What a mind blowing show and song! If anyone went there I’m dying to know what it was like The editing and filming of this song was absolutely amazing too! Vocals by singers too this must have been a once in a lifetime event
Man, I've often overlooked how f%$king awesome the moment at the start of the song when DG flips from his opening riffs to the actual chords in the song. Tooo epic
The look on his face too after getting into the swing of it.... that's not a man who toured the world playing concerts loke this because its what he thought would sell records, that is a man who does it because he enjoys it
I've been listening to Pink Floyd since I was a teenager, never had the opportunity to see them live as a band but did travel up to Johannesburg years ago to see David Gilmor live, and experience I'll never forget
The David Show. Yup, this is how it's done. And he's having a blast, too.
I honestly don’t see how live music can get any better than this.
I can. Maybe show the people playing instead of a bunch of flashing light that block your view.
Concordo pienamente con il tuo pensiero!
Add more distorchers, delay, etc, etc
Right cause if you watch Led Zeppelin live they are trash and I like zeppelin music but real musicians are put to the test when playing live and Pink Floyd kills it on live stage ❤
prince creep at coachella has similar levels of excellence.
How in the hell did these folks make music like this? It never will be matched ever again. Thank you Pink Floyd
By running like Hell 😁😁 Thank you Pink Floyd 🎉❤
They are unique
I totally agree! Could listen toit the whole day!!!!
Not just the music but the light show aswell . My first time Llandudno 1979 aged 12 still here
They did very few of the typical "love" songs other bands were doing. They sung/sing about life, death, war, greed, mental illness, regret, current events, etc. It really did set them apart. Their music is simply timeless.
Pink floyd are not a band, they are an experience.
An institution !
I had the pleasure in Vancouver Canada the group was fantastic they gave our country the best show
Beautiful track by Pink Floyd.....who's out there listerning now 2024?
Слушаю и смотрю почти каждый день...
✋️
👍
I am. Btw, I am 14 years old. Love this band. Have listened to this whole concert on youtube like 5 times AT LEAST.
Me, right now
must not forget the ladies backing Floyd !
Sam Brown - backing vocals
Durga McBroom - backing vocals,
Claudia Fontaine - backing vocals,
I wish they had used women more. Brit floyd doing "mother" with a woman singing gives it a more creepy vibe and adds alot to the song. The album should have a women doing it
Love Durga.
...and Sinead O'Connor's "Berlin Wall" version is staggeringly good too.
R.I.P. Claudia Fontaine.
@@flyinpigmusic331 😔
I find myself spontaneously smiling very big every time I watch this. A very big smile. I wish I had been there. What a life-changing experience. I’m thankful I get to see it here.
Я думала, что одна здесь улыбаюсь... Пинк Флойд это восторг и КОСМОС...!!!
I share your idea! Every day that I listen this Pink Floyd show I'm happy
How would you like to be Guy Pratt? Young kid not only playing with Pink Floyd but singing as well? Hell of a resume for later in his career.
I'm 66 now. I hope I'm around for a long time yet. There's not a day goes past that a Pink Floyd song is not played in our house lol.
Becoming a bigger fan by the day
just checking in with you fella are you still about, i hope you are.
Same here my friend
Да, Да-да, слушаю каждый день!!! Ни с чем не сравнимый кайф!!!
Always
Guy Pratt just is killing it on the Bass
His singing as well.
Roger who??
@@angusbull9685 some conceited twat I dunno
@@angusbull9685yep!!!
Guy Pratt and Dave Gilmour did a song in the movie Hackers. Called Grand Central. I didn’t even know it was them until later.
Nothing else can be said about Gilmour....But my hats off to Pratt.
What a fantastic performance
Dont forget Pratt learned how to play that song from the best x
BTW, bro who is Pratt?
@@rebelliouslord7646Guy Pratt on the Spectre bass guitar. And the backing vocal shout!
the one nailing Roger Water's parts
@rebelliouslord7646 was in a Australian band Called Icehouse for 1 or 2 album's
Im 41 now and my dad bring me to this band when i was 11 and i love it so much. Greatest band of all time❤
I was seven! I can’t get enough. Makes for good people ☀️☀️
@@drho yes you are right
Hey buddy, very similar story. Dad put on this concert mid day and I watched it all, went out to play for a bit and all the time I was out the feeling was I just seen something which would impact me. To further compound the head trip Dad later on put on Queen live at Wembley and I think I just Lay in a daze for a while. I was maybe 11 or 12, to this day I can still remember the feelings. Music is magical, a journey to energize the soul.
I love the way they all keep smiling to each other. Its just so obvious they are enjoying every second of performing with each other
Normal! ils jouent ensemble depuis si longtemps. De plus chacun d’eux après de multiples essais de techniques nouvelles en fin 1960 qu’ils sont devenus des maîtres dans l’utilisation de leurs instruments et ce qui ne gâche rien, ils donnent tout et avec autant de plaisir que nous avons, nous a les écouter. Que de chemin parcouru depuis Ammaguma où on les prenait pour des malades drogues. J’ai 70 ans et suis toujours émerveillé par leur créativité. Que se soit de Roger, David ou Paul… Merci à eux. Qu’ils puissent vivre le plus longtemps possible.
They have amazing chemistry together
When you do magic; so it is…
Yep
Because Roger Waters wasn’t there
That's how you end a show !!!!! Gotta love David Gilmour and all Pink Floyd !!! Richard, Nick, and Guy, and don't forget those Back Up Singers !!!! What a Show !!!
This song is for everyone in 2024! Good advice!
Check out the David Gilmour Live at Pompeii….2016..if this does not blow you away…I love the DVD
In a Time portal- listening through the Ether, from the past - Here ? ...Its Summer, 1993 - Can I ask you- Is the world still there .... - ? LOL
If I had the chance to travel back in time to attend one concert this would be that concert.
SAME HERE!
Only Pink Floyd show I ever attended. Summer of 1994… June I believe. RCA Dome in Indianapolis. Best concert I ever saw 🎤🎷🎹🥁🎸🎶
Gilmour is one of a kind. Great vocalist, and one of the greatest guitarists in the history of Rock. When I listen to PF, he's the reason.
Without a doubt!
I played a five string walking all over town telling everyone I was looking for a guitar string no strings attached. Played 4+20 for the water department. It's a LONG STORY
Guitars want David Gilmour for Christmas
brilliant!
Thats funny bro im laughing so much brilliant
Hahaha, that's a good one. Can't stop laughing....
Hell, I'm 40 and I'd LOVE to have David Gilmour for Christmas myself.
Though I guess I'll just keep myself content with the music and the giddy feeling of knowing I have the same color telecaster he's got... and now I'm itching to pick it up and get a dedicated practice routine set up again.
That's what I love about good music. It makes me wanna learn and create.
That’s Gold!
It’s rare when a band sounds as good in concert as it dose on a record, this is one of those times.
David is one of the greats👍👍👍👍👍👍
there is not maneskin
Yes, this is my "litmus test" for a band. Pink Floyd is better live. In that category also are Chicago, Return to Forever, Yes, and Emerson, Lake & Palmer. The album is a forerunner, a taste of the ideas. Performed live, you get to see the mature form of each composition with all the bugs worked out and a big dose of fun added in. I love it.
Guy Pratt not only kills it on bass, but if you close you eyes, you'd swear it was Roger Waters singing. Just an incredible performance by everyone.
When he had hair.
Yes, but it’s NOT Roger Waters, and that’s important. Roger wrote so many of these songs.
Legendary masterpiece and as always somebody points to a specific bass or drums player as a crucial component, childish. 100% sure nobody would notice them missing.
@@MrSookonn it's legendary masterpiece as you said also because of specific and parts of different instruments. Don't even try to convince yourself that this rhythmics doesn't make you head nod in time with music because of catchy bassline and drums. This music is not only about lyrics and storytelling, but also about energy and emotions. Audience doesn't clap their hands and jump just because of Roger's wittiness
Guy pratt's vocals are leagues better than roger's in my opinion
Strongest finish I’ve ever heard to a concert in my life. Pink Floyd rules the world.
Buona. .notte..by..Gio. sss..primo..Music. .company..e..Paola. .Ferrari. .ciao? ..Milano. Italy. .?
facts
Some granpas still rock don't they. He'll, probably great granpas now.
@@saddletramp6935Hell yea.
It’s grander than the entire fking eras tour
After almost 50 years of listening to Pink Floyd, they remain a Beacon of Musical quality in a land of geniuses to me. The 70s/80s had so many fantastic groups and artists but as history begins to set, Pink Floyd will be ranked beside Bach/Mozart/Beethoven and many other memorable musicians as one of the best examples of musicianship of their time.
@Andrew W haha - i was too young!!
I'm with you keep this alive and then somemore keep this train going lol
Cocaine makes people feel invincible marijuana too ; summer of 1967 brewed many a strange
J O ...💖Your comment is spot on! So true!
This is one of my favorite tracks, btw...
😎😎
Run Run Run Run🎶🎶🎵🎼🎹
🎸🎸
LPM
70s seem like a decade in retrospect that said "hey everyone be free!" Certainly the first several years when a decade hasn't been particularly defined yet the dudes from PF were operating under the element of free society( in garage rock style Nick Mason would later praise punk rock saying he liked that era it reminded him of the end of the 60s/ the mundane everyday life drug use is so frowned apun that when all you have is each other that enabling says the same "Hey each of us be free!" Guys like Roger and David really utilized the years 727374757677787980
helped each other destroy all the limits of musical theatre and reached for quite possibly the heavens;
Shine on you crazy diamond
Is a space opera brilliant
And fantastic albums then when
You finally part
It's all over
you each cut your hair
It's over no more enabling
Dreams of what once was
Still enjoy classic rock radio
Blasting Rock and Roll into the ethos
Rick Wright on good form on the keyboards as usual. R.I.P Rick...gone but not forgotten
Such a sad loss that was.
Gracias .señoor😊 3:26 en
Pink Floyd .. por muchos años que pasen me sigo emocionado como la primera vez ❤️🔥
It wouldn't be Pink without the Rick Floyd Wright
This is what you call music that you never ever get sick of. These guys are amazing, and that's why I have been a fan over 30 years.😁
I was there and it remains the most jaw-droppingly brilliant thing I have ever seen "live". I can't see anything like this ever being bettered.
Saw them in Tampa on this tour, and absolutely agree.
Alex Harris me too
I saw them back then too they took me away to another World when I watched them to this great song.
Pulse 1994!
me too alex , still as fresh in my memory ! :)
Guy Pratt killed it but so did David. One of my favorite performances.
A very happy 76th Birthday David Jon Gilmour 6 March 1946 Cambridge, England.
You are Pink Floyd and Pink Floyd is you.. Many more mate..
Gotta love Dave Gilmour, no gimmics or messing about, looking like hes going shopping and he just makes that guitar sing like an angel
I am 51 years old and can honestly say I have never heard a Pink Floyd song that was played too loud.
After a long time, I heard this song again and for some reason I got emotional. What a great performance! I miss this...
Pulse is indeed the best ever !!! and I just love the way that Guy Pratt on bass guitar added them vocals... fucking fantastic !!!
I was there, PULSE in Berlin back in the 90s.
And I saw Grandfathers jumpin' off their ass and puttin' their Grandchildren on their shoulders, tellin' them to feel this once-in-a-life-time experience.
Ich war in Köln und es war eines der besten Konzerte meines Lebens. Never forget
You lucky bastard!! :)
I’m so jealous. I was introduced to Pink Floyd in the late 90,s and lately have been on a deep dive of their music. I so wish I could have experienced the Pulse concert.
Watch the whole concert. It's the best concert I've never been too. I've been watching it since VHS to DVD to UA-cam and is never gotten old ( 25 +years).
Guy Pratt was simply awesome here. Great performance.
You haven’t seen a rock show until you’ve seen David Gilmore and band mates. And speaking of shows, their light shows are the most amazing of all... ever. Life altering stuff.
Kim Kay - cheers Kim ... wonderful comment - lived and loved seeing Floyd live in concert in Perth, Western Australia in the late 80’s - and yes “with the aromatic scent of “weed” in the air from an enormous crowd - well we were all flying high - what a concert
I've never seen a Floyd concert that wasn't the best one ever.
I have been fortunate enough to have seen them twice. Once in 1984 at the LA Coliseum and then in 1994 at Tampa stadium the night before my wedding. Was my wife’s first Floyd experience although she has heard countless stories from me about the first concert. I would tell her that if you ever got to see them live you will be a fan for life. Well she now agrees with that statement whole heartedly and now tells others the same thing. We love Pink Floyd!!
Rammstein....'Hold my beer'
Saw them in 94 in Toronto. Two young 15 year olds sitting behind us, and this was their first ever concert. Can u imagine??
The greatest concert I have ever been to and will ever go to Earl’s Court 94
Am so envious! what an experience!!
@@kdog9440 I'm super envious of your experience, getting to enjoy the greatest of all, The PINK FLOYD , actually IN THE FLESH( no pun intended)!!! I would give almost anything to experience the magic that they created in person. Out of 1 to 10 what would u rate their performance that u witnessed that particular time? I only ask because some shows the Pink Floyd played were deemed to be much more memorable than others.Some venues were seemingly vastly superior acoustically.... For example, IMHO (and many other peoples as well)the holy Grail of David Gilmour's Comfortably Numb solos was at a show they played in Gdansk, Italy. I'm sure u have watched and listened to this particular bit of mastery in absolute awe like I have been every time I put it on. I always tell people that this; must be played at 50 pe percent volume at the very minimum if one wishes to immerse themselves in one of, if not THE best guitar solo of all time. I wish Id got to experience what u did at a live P. F concert. Thanks in advance fellow Floydist!!
Definitely 10 out of 10 😄🤩
Turin 13 September 1994. This was my first live concert and I must say that if I had seen other concerts they would not have given me the emotions I had that evening........ I am 55 years old and with tears in my eyes I can only say thank you to the emotions you made me feel that evening. Thanks Pink Floyd
4:58 Guy Pratt absolutely nails this line in true Floyd fashion. Brilliant
I like his bass playing better than Waters. His backup vocals are spot on.
Who is this guy? I must live under a rock. Guy Pratt. My hat is off to this guy. Absolutely brilliant.
@@haroldbrown6630 not knowing your age if your younger or listen to jazz or something else it's understandable. He has been with David anytime he needed a bass player. Really a stand out in the Floyd lineup. How cool to be so young and just step in for Roger Waters!!!
@@LuciferMornStar confession: I am just out of touch. Old. Yes. 55. When he sang ... I was all in.
@@haroldbrown6630 David is still playing and recording. Last I heard Guy is still playing bass. He has other projects I'm thinking. Merry 🎄
3:15 in when you realize the bass player had pipes 30 years later.. I love pink Floyd and David Gilmore ... Only regret is I could never see them live.. that 🤕 but thanks David for all the years of inspiring me as my favorite guitar player of all time.
Guy Pratt absolutely made this performance perfect. WOW! Just amazing....
Saw them in 1977 the wall live in Chicago the best concert in my lifetime and IV seen hundreds of concerts!
David Gilmour. Gotta be the best guitarist in the world. Freakishly talented. GOOSEBUMPS
listen to jan akkerman
I agree 100 % !!!! Just something about the way he makes you feel what he's playing !!! I don't think.any other guitarist does that to me like he does !!!
@@billsimmons5186 æàll
long time Floydette!
Gifted, the description is Gifted!!❤️❤️❤️
And THAT is how music should be done! Guy Pratt and his onstage running in place while playing always makes me smile!
Yes yes and yes! Seeing him run in his place gives me joy and energy😊
What a concert this was. October 20th 1994 and still the best musical event of my life.
I still had tears in my eyes from Comfortably Numb when this the final song of the night started.
@@exorcist1998 u lucky, lucky person. I'm envious of your experience.. I have had tears in my eyes when I've played "Live in Pompeii" at close to max volume sitting at home!! I would have had a very emotional experience if I had been at that show. I'm green with envy!!!! Respect fellow Floydist.
Only David Gilmour can make a guitar sing like that. He’s such a god.
Yes, ppl say Jimi is best , but he sounds highly technical but not soulful like Gilmour.
True..
I'm glad I'm not the only one that thinks D.G is a god
Eric Clapton > David Gilmour
I just love the way that echoey Telecaster fills the Earls Court arena and propels this jam. Gilmour is a legend.
The light show to this just goes above and beyond what a finish to a concert, there is no better
Just WOW! I been to a ton of concerts, but never in my wildest dreams could I imagine seeing a performance like this and I will assume that most never will see anything like it! PINK FLOYD ❤
Thirty years later I can still remember almost every word of the album. I must have listened to it 100 times.
Poderoso, demoledor, enorme, inigualable. Guy Pratt solido en el bajo (mas que waters, definitivamente) y preciso en vocals. El trabajo de los delays en las guitarras es asombroso! Lo he visto unas 50 veces y no me canso de verlo.
Dave Gilmour does not play a guitar, HE IS THE GUITAR! Best guitarist EVER.
Oh heavens yes!!!! Superb all the way around and stellar vocals!
This is so Great! The lights, the singers, the timing, the greatness of it all!
Saw this in Melbourne. The Momentary Lapse Of Reason tour 1988, concert was awesome. We were 9 rows from the stage in front of the girls singing backup vocals.
Still listening to PF 50 years later on 9.2.2024😊❤ and counting!!!
David Gilmour - guitar, vocals
Nick Mason - drums, percussion, vocal phrase (recording)
Rick Wright - Hammond organ, synthesiser
Guy Pratt - bass guitar
Gary Wallis - percussion, extra drums on Pulse
Tim Renwick - rhythm guitar
Jon Carin - synthesiser,
sorry for those who insist on 4.3 , get yourself a big screen set !
Enjoy !
HDPinkFloyd I must say that you are strong and that it has an excellent taste ... thanks brother !!! 👍👍👍
@@amyhall4099 i need time to breathe
@@amyhall4099 Run Like Hell" is a song by the English progressive rock band Pink Floyd, written by David Gilmour and Roger Waters. It appears on the album The Wall. It was released as a single in 1980,[1][2] reaching #15 in the Canadian singles chart as well as #18 in Sweden, but only reached #53 in the U.S. A 12" single of "Run Like Hell," "Don't Leave Me Now" and "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" peaked at #57 on the Disco Top 100 chart in the U.S.[3]
Contents
1 Concept
1.1 Film adaptation
2 History
3 Composition
3.1 Film version
4 Live performances
4.1 Pink Floyd
4.1.1 The Wall Tour
4.1.2 Later tours
4.2 Roger Waters
4.3 David Gilmour
5 Personnel
6 Charts
7 Cover versions
8 In popular culture
9 Further reading
10 References
11 External links
Concept
The song is written from the narrative point of view of antihero Pink, an alienated and bitter rock star, during a hallucination in which he becomes a fascist dictator and turns a concert audience into an angry mob. The lyrics are explicitly threatening, directed at the listener, one with an "empty smile" and "hungry heart", "dirty feelings" and a "guilty past", "nerves in tatters" as "hammers batter down your door." Even the act of sexual intercourse is doomed, for "if they catch you in the back seat trying to pick her locks", the results will be fatal. Although the lyric "You better run like hell" appears twice in the liner notes, the title is never actually sung; each verse simply concludes with "You better run".
Film adaptation
In the film adaptation, Pink directs his jackbooted thugs to attack the "riff-raff" mentioned in the previous song, in which he ordered them to raid and destroy the homes of queers, Jews, and black people, among others. One scene depicts an interracial couple cuddling in the back seat of a car when a group of neo-Nazis accost them, beating the boy and raping the girl.
The Wall director Alan Parker hired the Tilbury Skins, a skinhead gang from Essex, for a scene in which Pink's "hammer guard" (in black, militaristic uniforms designed by the film's animator, Gerald Scarfe) smashes up a Pakistani diner; Parker recalled how the action "always seemed to continue long after I had yelled out 'Cut!'."[4]
History
The music was solely written by David Gilmour (one of three songs on The Wall for which Gilmour is credited as a co-writer), and the lyrics were written by Roger Waters. Waters provides the vocals (except for Gilmour's multitracked harmonies singing "Run, run, run, run,"). The first version of the song had music written by Roger Waters (which appears on the Immersion box set of The Wall) with the lyrics as on the album (in the key of G) but then Roger's music was scrapped in favor of Gilmour's music during the recording of the band demos (which too appears on the Immersion box set). The song features the only keyboard solo on The Wall by Richard Wright (although on live performances, "Young Lust" and "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2" would also feature keyboard solos); after the last line of lyrics, a synthesizer solo is played over the verse sequence, in place of vocals. Following the solo, the arrangement "empties out" and becomes sparse, with the guitar only playing an ostinato with rhythmic echoes, and brief variations every other bar. Sound effects are used to create a sense of paranoia, with the sound of cruel laughter, running footsteps, car tyres skidding, and a loud scream. The original 7" single version and "Pink Floyd The Wall -- Special Radio Construction" promotional EP both contain a clean guitar intro, without the live crowd effects. The EP version also contains an extended, 32-beat intro and an extended 64-beat outro where David Gilmour's main guitar phrase repeats before the track ends.[5]
As with "Comfortably Numb", also from The Wall, the music to "Run Like Hell" has its roots in Gilmour's first solo album. "Short and Sweet" can be seen as this song's precursor. "Yes," Gilmour told Musician magazine, "it's a guitar with the bottom string tuned down to a D, and thrashing around on the chord shapes over a D root. Which is the same in both [songs]. [Smiling] It's part of my musical repertoire, yes."[6]
Composition
After the previous song, "In The Flesh", the crowd continues to chant, "Pink! Floyd! Pink! Floyd!" The guitar intro begins with the scratching of strings dampened with left-hand muting, before settling on an open D string dampened by palm muting. As heard earlier on the album in "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1", the muted D is treated with a specific delay setting, providing three to four loud but gradually decaying repeats, one dotted-eighth note apart, with the result that simply playing quarter notes (at 116 beats per minute) will produce a strict rhythm of one eighth note followed by two sixteenth notes, with rhythmic echoes overlapping. Over this pedal tone of D, Gilmour plays descending triads in D major (mostly D, A, and G), down to the open chord position (a quieter, second overdubbed guitar plays open chords only). Some of the guitar tracks are also treated with a heavy flanging effect.
The verses are in E minor, with pedal tones of the guitar's open E, B, and G strings (a full E minor triad) ringing out over a sequence of power chords, resulting in the chords E minor, Fmaj7sus2(♯11), C major seventh, and Bsus4(add♭6). Providing contrast, another guitar, equally treated with delay, plays a low-pitched riff on the roots and minor sevenths of each chord, although the E♭ (minor seventh of F) and B♭ (minor seventh of C) do not match the sustaining open E and B strings an octave above.[7][8]
Aside from the added tones in each chord, the basic verse sequence of E minor, F major, E minor, C major, and B major is reprised later in "The Trial", the conceptual climax of The Wall. However, David Gilmour is not credited as a co-writer of "The Trial", which is credited to Waters and producer Bob Ezrin.
Before the final riff ends the song, a piercing shriek by Roger Waters can be heard, not unlike one heard between "The Happiest Days of Our Lives" and "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2". At the conclusion of the song, the crowd begins chanting, "Hammer! Hammer!" as the sound of soldiers marching is heard before segueing into the next song, "Waiting for the Worms".
Film version
The movie version of the song is considerably shorter than the album version, though this is likely done for the sake of pacing. The second guitar refrain between the first and second verses was taken out, with the verse's last line, "You better run", leading directly to Gilmour's harmonized chant ("Run, run, run, run"), which now echoed back and forth between the left and right channels. Also, Richard Wright's synth solo was superimposed over the second verse, and the long instrumental break between the end of the synth solo and Waters' scream was removed.
Live performances
Pink Floyd
The Wall Tour
During the previous song, "In the Flesh", a giant inflatable pig was released, which Waters refers to in a speech between both songs. The speech given varied slightly on each concert and therefore can be used to identify which show a recording came from. On Is There Anybody Out There? The Wall Live 1980-81, the speech is a mix of the 15 June 1981 and 17 June 1981 speeches. It was sometimes introduced by Waters as "Run Like Fuck" and Waters and Gilmour sang alternating lines in the verses, while the vocal quartet of Stan Farber, Jim Haas, Joe Chemay, and John Joyce sang the choruses.
During the song, the "surrogate band" (also referred to, in Nick Mason's book, as the "shadow band") are onstage with the Pink Floyd members and their quartet of singers. Both Andy Bown and Roger Waters play bass on this song. Bown plays the bass exactly as it was recorded-four quarter notes per bar, playing only roots, using the lowest possible root in drop D tuning. Waters, meanwhile, plays variations at key moments, plays whole notes while singing, and, during the "emptied out" section on D following the synth solo, Waters sometimes improvised high-pitched riffs above Bown's low D.[9]
Later tours
Following Waters' departure from Pink Floyd, the song became a regular number in the band's concerts, usually ending the show and going over nine minutes long. One live version was used as the B-side to "On the Turning Away". The song also was the closing track on the live album Delicate Sound of Thunder. Gilmour generally played an extended guitar introduction, sharing vocals with touring bassist Guy Pratt, with Pratt singing Waters' lines. In the 1994 tour, Pratt sometimes sang the name of the city where they were playing instead of the word mother in the line "...they're going to send you back to mother in a cardboard box..." - in the Pulse video (live at Earls Court, 1994), he clearly sings London. According to Phil Taylor, David Gilmour played Run Like Hell on a Fender Telecaster guitar tuned to a drop-D, in the 1994 tour.[10]
@@amyhall4099 Interesting and no need to be sorry , well i hope you have been enjoying this music, cheers and thank you
HDPink Floyd ♥️ Thank You for the Credit's, very much appreciated ❣️🌟👏
Love pf from the bottom of my ❤❤❤❤❤ 2023 53 years old still listening 🎉❤
X
That band was truly a force to behold on the Pulse tour. Their live performances were unparalleled in musicianship and theatrics.
both cleveland shows were incredible
A bloke in Dad jeans and t shirt showing the world how it should be done.
Oh YEAH...... showing my 12 year-old son this.....
Dave Gilmore is underrated, so much great stuff
@@andrewware9985 Gilmour is underrated? WTF. He is consistently rated the top 5 rock guitarists and Comfortably Numb guitar solo gets picked in most opinion polls as the best guitar solo..
Gilmour is a great musician but the creative brain behind Pink Floyd is Roger.
@@andrewware9985 he isn't underrated at all, ppl know he's one of the absolute greatest of all time, my opinion
Perfect
Why isn’t Gary Wallis getting more recognition for the drumming on this one? It’s stellar
True. Nick Mason's just keeping time here with snare, bass drum and hi hat. Wallis is doing all the fills.
@johanneswarn5488,
Drummers usually get shoved to the backstage, more often they're the least visible performers.
Everyone's having a good time up front while the drummers working his A$$ off, never realized how true this was until I watch some backstage camera feed.
To this day as a working drummer I tell people I want to be a percussionist because of this absolutely incredible performance; the whole show had me floored as a young drummer.
Bless you gary wallis get also brilliant high recomendation from dave gilmour to play drums with british band 10cc eric stewart from 10cc adores wallis drum playing and gary went on massive live tour with 10cc all over the world and japan.
And THAT folks is a rock concert!!!
Saturday 29th October '94 final song on the final ever full Floyd concert and I was there to witness it, still sends shivers down my spine when I hear this. Anyone else who was there on that night get the same experience as me?
If there's one point in time I'd love to go back to is the day I went to this show in De Kuip, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Saw them at Texas Stadium in 1994. It was amazing.
Seen them live in 1978 at age 11 totally blew my mind still my favourite band to this day
The bass guitar is fantastic in this song!!
The BEST BAND
Of ALL TIME.........
Absolutely Manuela! ;-)
Without a doubt...THE BEST! I love David Gilmour's guitar playing, too.
Yep, in the 70's i went to the texas jam and PF and led zeppelin were the main ones, the good days are gone with the wind
oui pascal
@@karatebressolles7009 Я присоединяюсь к вашим комментарием.
My favorite version of this song. The intro.... let the echoes die off to silence and then pick it up again. Start it gradually. No rush. Get the feeling.
This opening gives me chills every time.
Amen!!
even after it's finished i've still got goose bumps and i'm 77
mine too love the intro
De lo mejor de ellos.
Omgosh The Light Show Mix Is Epic 🎸🇬🇧😀💓👏
I am a big big big fan of Pink Floyd, but this tune is so amazing, unbelievable! Thank you so much!
Opportunity lost. I regret never seeing these guys in concert. One of the greatest bands in the history of the universe.
I know what you mean…I decided not to go to Berlin to see The Wall live..well…I did see it on TV over a glass of scotch…missed it but still..Pink Floyd has been in my life since being a teenager..I will enjoy them for a couple of decades to come.
The only band with the best lighting displays love watching them on tv in the dark lights up the room
Hell yeah!
The only way to watch this dvd.
When my kids, who are now seniors in college, heard me ply Pink Floyd when they were young though that they were "weird". Then they started to smoke weed.
Saw it in 94 at Arrowhead stadium in KC. Rented a van and drove across Missouri from St. Louis to see it with five friends. Best light show I've ever seen before or since. Looking at that stage was like staring into a portal into another world. The opium we were smoking probably helped a little. It really was quite stunning. Can't wait to see him again three nights at the Hollywood Bowl. Halloween with David Gilmour - does it get any better?
I love how Dave counts Nick and the rest of the band in…even though they have played this song hundreds and hundreds of times and STILL could play it FLAWLESSLY while handcuffed, blindfolded and hungover!
One of the best rock concert performances and films, ever.
Growing up I thought Pink Floyd music was just ok. But after having seen this epic performance I'm blown away and I'll forever think differently of the music when I hear it.
I was lucky enough to see them twice on that tour, London & Rotterdam. Those gigs will live with me till the day I die.
I was there in Rotterdam with you! Will never forget! Best gig ever!!!
Guy Pratt is right in the pocket and makes this song. He was very young, mid twenties only. What a fabulous version.
Live at Gdank. I saw that too 🙏😎 pyrotechnics, the chances you've taken. Thank you
1994.26 years ago.And there's never been a live show to remotely compare to it since.
oleole52 Pontiac MI July 15,1984. 19 years old. Haven’t seen anything better since
So true. This is just on another level.
Gdansk says "hai".
I will go to my grave regretting never have seeing Pink Floyd live. At least there is Brit Floyd to keep the fire going.
@Andrew W But a "Tribute" band keeping the music alive, is better than no music at all. I've seen Brit Floyd twice, they are great.
No band or musician comes anywhere near the creative genius of Pink Floyd, and I know most agree that David Gilmour is not of this world. He is THAT awe inspiringly good. So brilliant. Every member of the band is truly deserving of the deepest respect. Richard Wright, Rest in Peace Eternally. U are Legendary.
One of the most distinctive rock sounds ever, great track and very innovative, superb performance here and certainly adds to PF legendary status. The great Richard Wright's contributions to the PF story still in our minds, RIP Richard.
Massive , Massive , Love This So Much ,Every Emotion Employed for me , Total Tune P F Thanks.
Love the way David counts down. True musician and artist. These days have Pink Floyd written all over them.
Wow, I’m 55 in tears, that song meant so much to me ... back when🙏🌹
это писец
David Gilmore is one of the best guitar players EVER!!
He is also a genius composer and a great vocalist. And is good looking, too.
It's David Gilmour tho
That was my thought as well. Easy mistake tho
@@prostoprohozhijnadjadjupoh5802 yes he is one of the best!!!👍👍👍👍👍👍
@@rosaragnvindr6198 yes and is one of the GREATS OF GUITAR!!!!!👍👍👍👍👍👍
This is the encore isn't it? Just after they play Comfortably Numb and say goodbye? In the middle of the lingering applause after the lights have gone dark there's Gilmour playing the unmistakable first notes of Run Like Hell. People must have gone totally wild! Especially after realizing the entire band was back to perform and all the lights were well ready for it. What a treat that show must have been! It happened 11 years before I was born. If I ever become a billionaire I will pay people to recreate this concert in Virtual Reality down to minutiae. Fuck going to space, I wanna go back *there and then.*
Saw Pink Floyd in the 70s at Roosevelt Stadium/NJ. They were fantastic, and the light show (on a huge screen) was phenomenal.
I am 48 years old, I discovered it with 12 since my cousins a little older listened to them, it has accompanied me all my life and I never get tired of hearing them, there is no group that gives me more goosebumps than Pink Floyd, it is a hurt that there will NEVER be something that comes close to it even the least, this King Crimson that are good, but that magic that Pink Ployd has, those harsh and critical lyrics... no band like it... All his songs I like, but for me there is a very special and underrated, his lyrics are beastly that is Sorrow, in the version of Pulse I jump the tears
My only regret in life is that I didn’t get to see Pink Floyd live! What an amazing experience it must have been judging from these clips! Thanks 🙏
Only time I saw them kinda live was during the Live 8 in 2005 on TV :/. I started to notice PF first in 1997 or so, a couple of years after their final tour.
I was only 13 when I saw this tour. It was at Giant Stadium and I will NEVER forget it.
i have seen them 1973 / 1980 & 1994 all at earls court mind blowing
stephen white I’m sure you have heard to check out Brit Floyd before but if you haven’t seriously do. Obviously it isn’t PF but I’ve seen Brit Floyd twice and their shows are phenomenal. More than just a tribute band for sure
Saw them in 91'.....Pittsburgh never saw a gig better and that includes the Stones......God save the queen and Pink Floyd!
I must have watched that dozens of times over the years and that is the first time I have noticed how much david was enjoying playing this. Every time I watch Floyd they always surprise me with something I missed the last time I watched them. Always a pleasure. Thank you Pink Floyd
I also.remark how David enjoy the show, smile and move on the scene more than usually
Plaisir partagé, cher.David
Oh, Wow! How true! Always more to find next time.
Respect . It has been truly a good time to be alive.
If I could invent a time
Machine this is one of the first events I would go to !!! What a mind blowing show and song! If anyone went there I’m dying to know what it was like The editing and filming of this song was absolutely amazing too! Vocals by singers too this must have been a once in a lifetime event
The greatest guitarist and band that ever was!! I had the privilege to see them back in the day.... whatta show!!
I'm drawn back to this performance again and again, simply wonderful
Man, I've often overlooked how f%$king awesome the moment at the start of the song when DG flips from his opening riffs to the actual chords in the song. Tooo epic
Same, literally been thinking the same thing. I keep listening to that part.
Wish he was mine! LIVELY LOVELY REAL MAN!❤✌
The look on his face too after getting into the swing of it.... that's not a man who toured the world playing concerts loke this because its what he thought would sell records, that is a man who does it because he enjoys it
@@mikedouglas9863 Me too
Totally amazing concert. Pink Floyd forever the one and the best !
You Tube,merci de partager toute cette belle musique,que je redecouvre après cinquante ans.
I've been listening to Pink Floyd since I was a teenager, never had the opportunity to see them live as a band but did travel up to Johannesburg years ago to see David Gilmor live, and experience I'll never forget