All language subtitles for Classic.Albums.Pink.Floyd.Dark.Side.Of.The.Moon.2006.1080p.BluRay

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic Download
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch Download
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian Download
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:07,000 --> 00:00:12,000 *** Subtitles by dylux *** 2 00:00:41,832 --> 00:00:44,502 Dark Side of the Moon was an expression of 3 00:00:44,627 --> 00:00:47,755 political, philosophical, humanitarian empathy 4 00:00:47,964 --> 00:00:50,466 that was desperate to get out. 5 00:01:11,946 --> 00:01:15,241 Dark Side, I think... I felt like the whole band were working together. 6 00:01:15,366 --> 00:01:18,870 It was a very creative time. We were very open as well. 7 00:01:19,245 --> 00:01:21,789 I think because we still had a common goal, 8 00:01:22,123 --> 00:01:26,627 which was to become rich and famous. 9 00:01:37,680 --> 00:01:41,142 The ideas that Roger was exploring 10 00:01:41,267 --> 00:01:45,021 apply to every new generation. 11 00:01:45,062 --> 00:01:50,443 They still have very much the same relevance as they had. 12 00:02:03,789 --> 00:02:06,918 I think one of the successes of Dark Side is the fact 14 00:02:07,043 --> 00:02:10,755 that actually it's very rich. There's a... there are a lot of songs, 15 00:02:10,880 --> 00:02:14,300 a lot of ideas all compressed onto the one record. 16 00:02:14,509 --> 00:02:18,262 I can clearly remember that moment 17 00:02:18,304 --> 00:02:21,724 of sitting and listening to the whole mix all the way through 18 00:02:21,849 --> 00:02:27,813 and thinking, "My God, we've really... done something fantastic here. 19 00:02:46,582 --> 00:02:48,626 I think it has the all-time record, 20 00:02:48,751 --> 00:02:54,423 constantly on the charts for nearly 750 weeks, about 14 years. 21 00:02:54,590 --> 00:02:56,592 It was a huge album, 22 00:02:56,676 --> 00:03:00,471 and huge not just in terms of its sales, but in terms of its influence. 23 00:03:00,680 --> 00:03:03,724 This was where underground music, 24 00:03:03,808 --> 00:03:07,687 progressive rock, whatever, really went mainstream. 25 00:03:07,770 --> 00:03:10,439 It was a record that had lots of traditional pop values, 26 00:03:10,523 --> 00:03:12,233 you could sing along to these songs, but 27 00:03:12,316 --> 00:03:14,777 it also was a kind of thing that took you places 28 00:03:14,861 --> 00:03:17,029 if you wanted to listen to it in a darkened room. 29 00:03:17,113 --> 00:03:19,031 It may very will be the ultimate concept record, 30 00:03:19,115 --> 00:03:22,201 because the concept is there, the songs are there, 31 00:03:22,285 --> 00:03:24,287 the spaces and the music are there, 32 00:03:24,370 --> 00:03:27,790 but it doesn't take away any of the imagination. 33 00:03:33,713 --> 00:03:38,426 After Syd went crazy in '68 and Dave joined 34 00:03:38,718 --> 00:03:42,930 we were, all of us, searching, fumbling around, 35 00:03:43,055 --> 00:03:44,807 looking for, "What are we gonna do now?" 36 00:03:44,932 --> 00:03:50,521 Because here was the guy who starts producing all these songs, 37 00:03:50,646 --> 00:03:54,400 and was the sort of heartbeat of the band. 38 00:03:54,692 --> 00:03:56,903 Syd casts a long and large shadow of events. 39 00:03:57,028 --> 00:03:59,100 I think that the band was very impressive to keep going, 40 00:03:59,150 --> 00:04:02,100 actually, after loss of their main creative drive, 41 00:04:02,110 --> 00:04:05,229 I mean it was the first time you choose, isn't it, 42 00:04:05,244 --> 00:04:08,080 I mean you wouldn't sit around say, "Okay, let's get rid of our song writer." 43 00:04:08,497 --> 00:04:14,045 After Syd had gone the music became more kind of soundscapes than songs. 44 00:04:14,378 --> 00:04:16,422 You have to watch your strengths, 45 00:04:16,547 --> 00:04:20,718 and, um, it was a very good thing that we could not write singles. 46 00:04:20,927 --> 00:04:23,846 We might not have done some of the very interesting work that we did. 47 00:04:24,096 --> 00:04:29,769 Once Syd was out of the picture, the Floyd just went glacial. 48 00:04:29,936 --> 00:04:33,648 They just let it all spread out. 49 00:04:43,282 --> 00:04:46,285 When I saw the Floyd for the first time, it was the summer of '68, 50 00:04:46,410 --> 00:04:49,413 it was actually their first American tour with David Gilmour, 51 00:04:49,664 --> 00:04:54,001 and they were just extraordinary, you know, it was 52 00:04:54,168 --> 00:04:57,129 "Let There Be More Light", "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun", 53 00:04:57,255 --> 00:05:01,008 it was total space rock. 54 00:05:07,974 --> 00:05:11,978 I started fully out of love with 55 00:05:12,061 --> 00:05:16,607 that, um, some of that... psychedelic noodling stuff. 56 00:05:16,732 --> 00:05:21,362 We were still then playing a lot of instrumental work, if you like, 57 00:05:21,529 --> 00:05:23,364 and that would be half the album. 58 00:05:23,489 --> 00:05:25,616 But we were always searching for a direction. 59 00:05:25,783 --> 00:05:27,410 A fighting a little bit between 60 00:05:27,618 --> 00:05:32,623 wanting to push boundaries back a little bit 61 00:05:32,832 --> 00:05:36,711 and move forward in an experimental way, 62 00:05:36,836 --> 00:05:39,630 but also to retain melody. 63 00:05:39,839 --> 00:05:45,761 When you get to "Meddle", quite clearly, and "Echoes" 64 00:05:45,887 --> 00:05:50,808 shows the direction that we were moving in. 65 00:05:50,975 --> 00:05:53,978 The rest of "Meddle" as I recall was songs, 66 00:05:54,812 --> 00:05:59,066 and so in the flip side was a 20-minute piece 67 00:05:59,192 --> 00:06:04,864 A) and so was a construct, and 68 00:06:05,156 --> 00:06:12,330 B) it was the beginning of all the writing about other people. 69 00:06:12,747 --> 00:06:16,292 ♪ Strangers passing in the street ♪ 70 00:06:16,542 --> 00:06:20,046 ♪ by chance two separate glances meet ♪ 71 00:06:20,379 --> 00:06:26,761 ♪ and I am you and what I see is me ♪ 72 00:06:26,886 --> 00:06:30,973 It was the beginning of empathy, if you like, you know, 73 00:06:31,182 --> 00:06:34,393 "two strangers passing in the street, by chance two passing glances meet, 74 00:06:34,477 --> 00:06:36,646 and I am you and what I see is me" 75 00:06:36,771 --> 00:06:40,233 is a sort of thread that has gone through everything for me ever since then... 76 00:06:40,733 --> 00:06:48,074 and had a big, um, eruption in Dark Side. 77 00:06:48,241 --> 00:06:51,244 You have to remember that the context of the time. 78 00:06:51,369 --> 00:06:55,540 This was the height of glam rock. There was, 79 00:06:55,706 --> 00:06:58,543 you know, Marc Bolan, and T. Rex and David Bowie with 80 00:06:58,709 --> 00:07:02,588 Ziggy Stardust peddling there, sort of pop fantasies, 81 00:07:02,839 --> 00:07:06,342 and the Floyd came along with an album that was about these weighty themes. 82 00:07:06,634 --> 00:07:10,763 He created a story, he created a... basically a theater piece 83 00:07:10,930 --> 00:07:13,516 about what it was like to live in the modern world. 84 00:07:13,850 --> 00:07:16,978 All four of us were there, and there was a discussion about 85 00:07:17,144 --> 00:07:21,732 putting the album together and making it into this "themed", 86 00:07:21,899 --> 00:07:24,610 this... I mean what is now called a "concept album". 87 00:07:24,944 --> 00:07:28,447 There are a number of things that impinge upon an individual to... 88 00:07:28,614 --> 00:07:32,410 that color his view of existence. 89 00:07:32,618 --> 00:07:37,707 There are pressures that are capable of pushing you one direction or another, 90 00:07:38,082 --> 00:07:43,004 and, uh, these are some of them, and, whether they push you towards 91 00:07:43,421 --> 00:07:48,467 insanity, death, empathy, greed, um, whatever. 92 00:07:50,928 --> 00:07:57,685 Uh, there's something about the Newtonian view of that physics 93 00:07:58,144 --> 00:08:01,063 that might be interesting and may be there could be... 94 00:08:01,606 --> 00:08:04,942 this is what this record is about. 95 00:08:05,526 --> 00:08:08,029 There was one of those really good moments 96 00:08:08,112 --> 00:08:09,947 that most bands do experience where everyone is on sight, 97 00:08:10,239 --> 00:08:13,284 and everyone likes the idea, and there's some sort of agreement as to, 98 00:08:13,659 --> 00:08:15,494 more or less, who's going to do what. 99 00:08:15,828 --> 00:08:18,956 Dark Side of the Moon started in a rehearsal room in Bermondsey 100 00:08:19,081 --> 00:08:22,126 I think, that belongs... a warehouse that belongs to The Rolling Stones 101 00:08:22,335 --> 00:08:28,341 where we did some... sort of jamming, writing, whatever you want to call it. 102 00:08:29,008 --> 00:08:31,761 Not sure how much writing happened there. 103 00:08:32,428 --> 00:08:35,681 You know, let's play in E minor or in A for an hour or two, 104 00:08:36,015 --> 00:08:39,727 oh that sounds all right, that will take up 5 minutes. 105 00:08:58,913 --> 00:09:01,624 A lot of the musical ideas just came up 106 00:09:01,874 --> 00:09:05,127 just to the jamming away in these rehearsal rooms... 107 00:09:05,294 --> 00:09:07,505 obviously the lyrics Roger brought in. 108 00:09:07,713 --> 00:09:09,382 Because he had things to say. 109 00:09:09,549 --> 00:09:12,385 And it was the first time he wrote all the lyrics. 110 00:09:12,552 --> 00:09:15,513 Roger was all sorts of a pushing, driving force. 111 00:09:15,680 --> 00:09:18,349 The way Dark Side of the Moon articulates some sense of 112 00:09:18,641 --> 00:09:22,687 early adult's disenchantment is absolutely timeless. 113 00:09:23,104 --> 00:09:26,983 I've listened to it again recently, and, uh, it always amazes me 114 00:09:27,942 --> 00:09:32,029 that I c-- that I got away with it really, 'cause it was so 115 00:09:32,280 --> 00:09:38,077 lower sixth, and, you know, um... 116 00:09:38,369 --> 00:09:40,414 "Breathe, breathe in the air, don't be afraid to care." 117 00:09:40,449 --> 00:09:42,375 In fact, I think, within the context of the music 118 00:09:42,500 --> 00:09:45,526 and within the context of the pieces at whole. 119 00:09:45,585 --> 00:09:50,673 People are prepared to accept that simple exultation 120 00:09:50,965 --> 00:09:53,509 to be prepared to stand your ground and 121 00:09:53,801 --> 00:09:58,014 attempt to live your life in an authentic way. 122 00:10:20,328 --> 00:10:25,750 I came from jazz basically... I love it... 123 00:10:25,875 --> 00:10:28,503 That's my favorite... that's my inspiration. 124 00:10:28,878 --> 00:10:32,381 And the interesting thing about this song is, we're talking about the jazz, 125 00:10:32,632 --> 00:10:36,969 is this certain chord... which is... 126 00:10:39,639 --> 00:10:43,809 That is totally down to a chord I had heard on, actually 127 00:10:44,185 --> 00:10:47,063 Miles Davis album Kind of Blue, 128 00:10:47,396 --> 00:10:52,610 which is a... That chord! That chord! I just loved! 129 00:10:53,319 --> 00:10:55,655 And when we're doing "Breathe", 130 00:10:55,863 --> 00:10:59,992 we got to G, I got to G, and how'd you get to E again? 131 00:11:00,910 --> 00:11:05,957 Well, again, normally you go... 132 00:11:06,916 --> 00:11:10,711 but, um, I remember this chord and I remember 133 00:11:11,045 --> 00:11:14,048 working it out at home listening to the record, and I just thought... 134 00:11:30,898 --> 00:11:33,818 Dave was brilliant at double tracking vocals. 135 00:11:34,235 --> 00:11:38,531 And we could do machines, but there's a difference. 136 00:11:46,664 --> 00:11:49,458 There's also a harmony part. 137 00:11:51,252 --> 00:11:53,421 And that's it how it's sung. 138 00:12:02,263 --> 00:12:03,890 Back to the band. 139 00:12:04,724 --> 00:12:08,227 There's two organ parts which come in now. 140 00:12:15,276 --> 00:12:18,279 They had been performing this work known as "Eclipse" 141 00:12:18,696 --> 00:12:24,202 um, for a few months I think, before actually even coming in to Abbey Road 142 00:12:24,368 --> 00:12:25,995 to start the first recordings. 143 00:12:26,370 --> 00:12:32,460 Which meant that the performances were pretty tight and not so hard to get. 144 00:12:32,752 --> 00:12:35,213 When you're working in a band and you're performing something, it 145 00:12:35,379 --> 00:12:40,009 willy-nilly, it develops and changes. 146 00:13:03,824 --> 00:13:05,952 In pre-bootlegging days this of course was 147 00:13:06,118 --> 00:13:08,579 a far more effective and better way of doing things, 148 00:13:08,788 --> 00:13:11,624 because you went in the studio and rehearsed up. 149 00:13:23,469 --> 00:13:25,930 We'd been playing it live that way for quite some time 150 00:13:26,180 --> 00:13:28,641 as a sort of guitar jam, that sort of a piece. 151 00:13:28,933 --> 00:13:31,853 I think we were none of us that happy with it as a piece, 152 00:13:32,019 --> 00:13:35,690 and when we also had this synthesizer. 153 00:13:35,898 --> 00:13:38,526 This Synth EA which had a little built-in keyboard 154 00:13:38,693 --> 00:13:41,487 and had a sequencer, it was the first sequencer I think. 155 00:13:41,988 --> 00:13:45,283 I just plugged this up and started playing one sequence on it, 156 00:13:45,449 --> 00:13:48,828 and Roger immediately pricked up his ears and said, "That sounded good." 157 00:13:49,370 --> 00:13:52,790 And came up, and we started mucking with it together 158 00:13:52,957 --> 00:13:59,005 and he put in a new sequence of notes, and all developed out of that. 159 00:13:59,172 --> 00:14:03,342 A series of notes played in slowly. 160 00:14:03,926 --> 00:14:07,221 triggering a noise generator and oscillators, 161 00:14:07,471 --> 00:14:11,642 and then just speed it up, you know. 162 00:14:16,147 --> 00:14:18,399 You've got it basically... 163 00:14:23,154 --> 00:14:24,989 And that, of course, immediately sounded 164 00:14:25,156 --> 00:14:28,492 much more exciting than what we were currently doing. 165 00:14:28,910 --> 00:14:31,329 They were the first band to really go out 166 00:14:31,579 --> 00:14:33,998 and try to sort of make music of the future. 167 00:14:34,248 --> 00:14:35,875 We were doing a lot of things with tape loops 168 00:14:36,167 --> 00:14:37,835 and curious sounds and sound effects... 169 00:14:38,085 --> 00:14:40,755 There wasn't something in 1972 when they put that album together. 170 00:14:41,005 --> 00:14:42,757 But that's basically what they were doing. 171 00:14:42,924 --> 00:14:45,092 They were, in a sense, they were giving you a preview 172 00:14:45,343 --> 00:14:47,720 of the sound pictures of the future. 173 00:14:47,887 --> 00:14:50,059 There's some very, very clever 174 00:14:50,109 --> 00:14:55,937 and highly listenable pieces of sonic experimentation. 175 00:14:56,604 --> 00:15:00,483 So this is the main synthesizer, it has the high-hat element built in. 176 00:15:00,650 --> 00:15:03,069 Then we treat it with filters and with 177 00:15:03,152 --> 00:15:06,239 other oscillators to get this sort of vibrato noise. 178 00:15:06,364 --> 00:15:10,284 And we bring in this guitar, which is a backwards guitar with echo stuff on it, 179 00:15:10,409 --> 00:15:13,871 it's been played with a mike stand leg, just sliding up. 180 00:15:14,914 --> 00:15:21,462 That was left-to-right across the stereo. And there's these synthesizers. 181 00:15:21,587 --> 00:15:26,259 Morph synth's, which are creating sort of futuristic vehicle noises, 182 00:15:26,342 --> 00:15:30,555 which you take the pitch down a little bit, and pan it at the same time 183 00:15:30,680 --> 00:15:32,890 that creates an artificial Doppler sound. 184 00:15:33,099 --> 00:15:35,768 What looks like ambulance is whizzing past you, 185 00:15:35,935 --> 00:15:41,858 bringing some footsteps... and some heartbeats for extra tension... 186 00:15:42,108 --> 00:15:45,778 As you see there's an awful lot going on this track. 187 00:15:57,373 --> 00:15:58,833 This section in particular, 188 00:15:59,041 --> 00:16:01,294 "The Travel" section or "On the Run" section, 189 00:16:01,460 --> 00:16:04,505 um, I think was pretty complicated. 190 00:16:04,672 --> 00:16:07,341 A lot of hands on deck. 191 00:16:07,633 --> 00:16:10,428 You do always want to put more things on than you had tracks for, 192 00:16:11,137 --> 00:16:14,765 so tracks would very suddenly change from one thing to a different thing. 193 00:16:15,016 --> 00:16:16,851 All of us were on the desk, 194 00:16:17,018 --> 00:16:18,769 with our fingers on the faders. 195 00:16:18,936 --> 00:16:20,271 But that's the way it was, because, uh, 196 00:16:20,396 --> 00:16:22,148 we didn't have automation in those days... 197 00:16:22,273 --> 00:16:24,859 A mix in those days was a performance, 198 00:16:25,026 --> 00:16:27,278 every bit as much as doing a gig. 199 00:16:27,445 --> 00:16:28,821 It's one thing actually that 200 00:16:28,905 --> 00:16:31,824 we've kind of lost in the modern age. 201 00:16:46,506 --> 00:16:48,424 Very, very well engineered, 202 00:16:48,674 --> 00:16:51,427 it was also very, very carefully constructed. 203 00:16:51,636 --> 00:16:55,181 So there was no, sort of-- everything was well recorded. 204 00:16:55,598 --> 00:16:57,308 Dark Side was really the first 205 00:16:57,475 --> 00:17:00,603 proper engineering job I'd been given with the Floyd. 206 00:17:01,020 --> 00:17:03,523 So there was pretty much putting on the deep end. 207 00:17:03,648 --> 00:17:05,066 It was very great musically as well. 208 00:17:05,316 --> 00:17:08,778 He also came up with a couple of good ideas. 209 00:17:09,153 --> 00:17:13,282 I was commissioned to, um, record some, um, clocks for sound effects, 210 00:17:13,574 --> 00:17:17,203 record for, um, the very early days of quadrophony. 211 00:17:17,537 --> 00:17:20,498 And when we were doing "Time" 212 00:17:20,790 --> 00:17:23,376 he suggested we might like to have these clocks. 213 00:17:23,626 --> 00:17:27,463 My memory of it is just this room full of tapes rolling around 214 00:17:27,630 --> 00:17:32,760 because it was without any sort of computer help, 215 00:17:32,969 --> 00:17:35,137 everything had to be done manually. 216 00:17:35,513 --> 00:17:39,892 Getting all the clocks to chime at the right time, that was a process 217 00:17:40,059 --> 00:17:44,814 of just finding a particular moment on the multi-track tape 218 00:17:45,022 --> 00:17:47,108 where all the chiming would happen, and then 219 00:17:47,233 --> 00:17:49,944 back-timing the quarter-inch originals 220 00:17:50,111 --> 00:17:52,321 which contained each of the clocks. 221 00:17:52,446 --> 00:17:56,242 And then the very critical thing of tapes starting at specific moments, 222 00:17:56,367 --> 00:18:00,913 which was all done with hand signs and stopwatches. 223 00:18:30,318 --> 00:18:34,864 We got the girls making their first appearance here... 224 00:18:37,283 --> 00:18:41,704 That's un-processed... 225 00:18:45,082 --> 00:18:49,587 And we actually put this effect called a "frequency translation" on, 226 00:18:49,795 --> 00:18:53,216 which made them sound like this... 227 00:18:59,388 --> 00:19:02,975 Here is the solo... 228 00:19:30,378 --> 00:19:32,964 This one was probably taking some shape live 229 00:19:33,130 --> 00:19:34,882 before we ever got to do it, 230 00:19:35,049 --> 00:19:37,343 but, usually, in the studio on this sort of thing, 231 00:19:39,011 --> 00:19:42,306 you just go out have a player over it and see what comes, 232 00:19:42,473 --> 00:19:45,726 and it's usually, and mostly, the first take that's the best one, 233 00:19:45,852 --> 00:19:48,813 and you find yourself repeating yourself thereafter. 234 00:20:03,953 --> 00:20:07,373 The 1970's was the era of the guitar. 235 00:20:07,623 --> 00:20:12,837 And, um, he had that sort of very "bluesy" sound 236 00:20:13,045 --> 00:20:15,256 but then also he had that other sound, 237 00:20:15,506 --> 00:20:21,095 that sort of spacey, very crystalline, almost ethereal quality. 238 00:20:54,170 --> 00:20:59,467 I suddenly realized then, that year, that life was already happening. 239 00:20:59,926 --> 00:21:03,638 I think it's because my mother was so obsessed with education 240 00:21:03,804 --> 00:21:07,058 and the idea that childhood and adolescence and, 241 00:21:07,433 --> 00:21:12,688 well, everything, was about preparing for a life that was going to start later. 242 00:21:13,523 --> 00:21:18,402 And I suddenly realized that life wasn't going to start later, 243 00:21:18,569 --> 00:21:23,366 that it is, you know, it starts at "dot" and it happens all the time, and then, 244 00:21:24,033 --> 00:21:30,540 at any point you can grasp the reins and start guiding your own destiny. 245 00:21:30,706 --> 00:21:34,669 And that was a big revelation to me, I mean, it came as quite a shock. 246 00:21:57,191 --> 00:21:59,694 One of the greatest lines I think on Dark Side of the Moon 247 00:21:59,902 --> 00:22:04,156 is Roger's line about "Hanging on in quiet desperation is the English way", 248 00:22:04,365 --> 00:22:07,535 which is a sort of line you could imagine, I don't know, 249 00:22:07,660 --> 00:22:10,454 Evelyn Waugh or Somerset Maugham or someone writing 250 00:22:10,621 --> 00:22:13,332 as an observation on the English character. 251 00:22:13,499 --> 00:22:17,461 And I think that character does permiate the whole record, 252 00:22:17,670 --> 00:22:21,257 and indeed the whole of Pink Floyd's career. 253 00:23:15,728 --> 00:23:20,066 It expresses my feelings about things very simply. 254 00:23:20,233 --> 00:23:25,112 And I think that, um, musically, 255 00:23:25,947 --> 00:23:30,243 I think that the music is to some extent 256 00:23:30,451 --> 00:23:35,373 driven... by that emotional commitment. 257 00:23:35,540 --> 00:23:40,336 The band basically wanted another 4 or 5 minutes of music, 258 00:23:40,545 --> 00:23:43,422 and we thought it could be an instrumental. 259 00:23:43,589 --> 00:23:46,843 I think I just, as I always have done it, is I sat at the piano 260 00:23:46,968 --> 00:23:50,429 and I, and those first two chords came. 261 00:23:50,596 --> 00:23:52,890 "Us And Them" and "The Great Gig In The Sky", 262 00:23:53,099 --> 00:23:54,934 you know, are fabulous chord sequences, 263 00:23:55,142 --> 00:23:58,688 are really truly wonderful pieces of music. 264 00:25:45,545 --> 00:25:49,090 I've no idea whose idea it was to get somebody as a female singer in 265 00:25:49,257 --> 00:25:53,302 but Alan Parsons knew Clare Torry and had been working with her, 266 00:25:53,553 --> 00:25:54,679 and said, "Why don't you try her?" 267 00:25:54,846 --> 00:25:56,889 She's just went in there and improvised over. 268 00:25:57,014 --> 00:25:58,891 And, yeah, that was amazing, that was fantastic. 269 00:25:59,058 --> 00:26:00,518 That was done while we mixing. 270 00:26:00,810 --> 00:26:03,646 We knew what we wanted, not exactly musically, 271 00:26:03,771 --> 00:26:05,815 but we knew that we wanted someone to just... 272 00:26:06,023 --> 00:26:10,570 improvise over this piece. So we directed her 273 00:26:10,736 --> 00:26:13,114 "Well, think about death, think about horror, 274 00:26:13,239 --> 00:26:15,783 think whatever, and just go and sing". 275 00:26:16,159 --> 00:26:19,912 And, my memory is, that she went out in the studio 276 00:26:20,079 --> 00:26:24,208 and did it very very quickly, and then came back in and said, 277 00:26:24,375 --> 00:26:27,712 "I'm really sorry about this," very embarrassed. 278 00:26:27,837 --> 00:26:31,299 And we, in fact, were sitting in the studio saying, "This is wonderful." 279 00:26:31,549 --> 00:26:34,218 And of course, it's absolutely brilliant, 280 00:26:34,385 --> 00:26:37,638 both Rick's piano and organ work, 281 00:26:37,763 --> 00:26:43,895 and Clare's singing is just incredibly moving. 282 00:26:54,989 --> 00:26:57,617 In the very end of this, I remember, 283 00:26:57,825 --> 00:27:01,037 we increased the echo slowly. 284 00:27:38,157 --> 00:27:40,493 We always wanted to kind of... 285 00:27:40,701 --> 00:27:44,080 not be on our covers ourselves, not have pictures. 286 00:27:44,247 --> 00:27:47,583 It is probably the most recognizable album cover of all time. 287 00:27:47,708 --> 00:27:49,669 It's something that you can sit and look at 288 00:27:49,752 --> 00:27:51,671 for a long time without getting fed up with it. 289 00:27:51,796 --> 00:27:55,967 The prism, is, is the logo that absolutely defines the record. 290 00:27:56,092 --> 00:28:00,388 Dark Side of the Moon prism design comes from three basic ingredients, 291 00:28:00,513 --> 00:28:02,473 one of which is the light show 292 00:28:02,640 --> 00:28:05,852 that the band put on tour and trying to represent that and also 293 00:28:06,060 --> 00:28:09,355 one of the themes were lyrics which was, I think, 294 00:28:09,480 --> 00:28:12,275 about ambition and greed. And thirdly, 295 00:28:12,400 --> 00:28:14,110 it was an answer to Rick Wright 296 00:28:14,318 --> 00:28:15,736 who said that he wanted something... 297 00:28:15,862 --> 00:28:18,531 Simple and bold, and dramatic. 298 00:28:18,656 --> 00:28:20,408 The presentation, as we call it, 299 00:28:20,616 --> 00:28:25,204 of the design to the band was a very brief affair. 300 00:28:25,580 --> 00:28:28,332 He just brought in 3 or 4 ideas... 301 00:28:28,541 --> 00:28:31,377 I do remember instantly seeing the pyramid. 302 00:28:31,502 --> 00:28:33,254 They came in and they looked around, 303 00:28:33,421 --> 00:28:35,506 and they went, "Mmm, that one!" 304 00:28:35,673 --> 00:28:37,175 Everyone immediately went, 305 00:28:37,300 --> 00:28:40,136 "Terrific! Great! Let's do that." 306 00:28:40,511 --> 00:28:43,764 As epitomized by there but it did choose it so quickly and so easily is, 307 00:28:43,890 --> 00:28:45,600 I just think it is somehow very fitting, 308 00:28:45,850 --> 00:28:47,977 I mean, it's hard to imagine it without it, isn't it really? 309 00:28:58,867 --> 00:29:02,408 The story in America, being sort of disaster that 310 00:29:02,485 --> 00:29:06,621 really we hadn't sold records. And like all good artists 311 00:29:06,871 --> 00:29:09,207 the first thing you do is blame the record company. 312 00:29:09,957 --> 00:29:13,669 But in this particular case, I think we might get a few more people to agree 313 00:29:13,920 --> 00:29:16,339 that they hadn't performed properly. 314 00:29:16,797 --> 00:29:19,759 And so they brought in a man called Bhaskar Menon, 315 00:29:20,051 --> 00:29:21,427 who was absolutely terrific. 316 00:29:21,552 --> 00:29:23,429 And he decided he was going to make this work 317 00:29:23,596 --> 00:29:26,057 and he was going to make the American company, um, 318 00:29:26,390 --> 00:29:29,727 sell this record. And he did! 319 00:29:30,186 --> 00:29:33,648 We devised a marketing campaign for this, which was 320 00:29:34,023 --> 00:29:38,110 far more extensive than anything that the company had ever done. 321 00:29:38,277 --> 00:29:42,657 It was an album that came after virtually a year of touring. 322 00:29:42,990 --> 00:29:47,328 There was a tremendous amount of credible press. 323 00:29:47,537 --> 00:29:52,375 We got by this time without a single got this album tremendous sales, 324 00:29:52,583 --> 00:29:54,961 close to about a million albums by that stage, 325 00:29:55,086 --> 00:29:56,712 which was quite remarkable. 326 00:29:57,046 --> 00:29:58,965 And I knew that the time would come when 327 00:29:59,298 --> 00:30:02,593 we would have to get on to the next stage, 328 00:30:02,760 --> 00:30:05,805 to get to the next category or level of audience. 329 00:30:06,180 --> 00:30:09,892 We really would need some single-like material. 330 00:30:10,059 --> 00:30:14,146 They always say, you know, you need a hit single 331 00:30:14,272 --> 00:30:16,649 and we had a sort of hit single with "Money". 332 00:30:37,211 --> 00:30:39,755 You know, I would have remembered 333 00:30:40,089 --> 00:30:44,760 writing "Money" as a sort of very bluesy thing. 334 00:30:45,011 --> 00:30:48,055 I can't sing that up in that register of that... 335 00:31:20,796 --> 00:31:23,382 And there's a very kind of transatlantic, 336 00:31:23,508 --> 00:31:27,136 bluesy sort of twang to it all. Listen to the original demo, 337 00:31:27,303 --> 00:31:31,933 it's not like that at all, it's all very kind of prissy and... very English. 338 00:31:32,016 --> 00:31:33,559 The one thing about "Money" that 339 00:31:33,684 --> 00:31:37,313 I think people forget is that it's got the weirdest, 340 00:31:37,396 --> 00:31:40,233 it's one of the biggest hits with the weirdest time signature. 341 00:31:40,525 --> 00:31:45,947 Very unusual 7/8 time. Um, good riff. 342 00:32:42,128 --> 00:32:44,672 I'd played in a band with Dick when we were 343 00:32:44,839 --> 00:32:47,550 sort of teenagers in Cambridge. 344 00:32:47,675 --> 00:32:48,676 Dick was... 345 00:32:48,759 --> 00:32:50,469 was sort of a part of the Cambridge Mafia. 346 00:32:54,390 --> 00:32:57,268 I didn't know any other sax players 347 00:32:57,476 --> 00:33:00,188 and probably too nervous to ask anyone that we'd heard of. 348 00:33:00,438 --> 00:33:02,231 He was terrific. 349 00:33:02,356 --> 00:33:05,568 Well, Dick did his sax solo in the seven-time. 350 00:33:05,818 --> 00:33:08,112 And then we sort of sat and worked out, 351 00:33:08,279 --> 00:33:11,115 um, a different sequence for the guitar solo, 352 00:33:11,324 --> 00:33:13,409 um, probably to make my life easier 353 00:33:13,576 --> 00:33:15,244 so I didn't have to think about the timing. 354 00:33:15,453 --> 00:33:17,955 I love the fact that it does change. 355 00:33:18,164 --> 00:33:19,339 Let me say that lots of things happened 356 00:33:19,340 --> 00:33:22,210 on Dark Side that are kind of magical 357 00:33:22,376 --> 00:33:25,129 without us intentionally making them happen. 358 00:33:25,505 --> 00:33:28,674 It just happened. And I think that's one of the great things 359 00:33:28,758 --> 00:33:31,469 about "Money" is that it does change time signatures. 360 00:33:31,677 --> 00:33:33,971 And that's the thing, he goes back into the 4/4 361 00:33:34,096 --> 00:33:36,641 and all of a sudden, man, it's rock city! 362 00:34:19,684 --> 00:34:22,019 "Money" is an amazing single because it's about 363 00:34:22,144 --> 00:34:25,565 the very thing that it became, it's about success. 364 00:34:25,690 --> 00:34:27,650 Something certainly did the trick and it 365 00:34:27,775 --> 00:34:32,113 moved us up into a super league, I suppose you might say, 366 00:34:32,321 --> 00:34:42,707 which brought with it some great joy, some pride and some... problems. 367 00:34:42,874 --> 00:34:46,002 Of course it changed our life and we were now 368 00:34:46,169 --> 00:34:49,130 a big rock-n-roll band playing at stadiums. 369 00:34:49,255 --> 00:34:51,591 You don't know what you're in it for anymore. 370 00:34:51,757 --> 00:34:54,760 You know, you're in it to achieve massive success and 371 00:34:54,969 --> 00:34:59,223 get rich and famous and all these other things that go along with it. 372 00:34:59,307 --> 00:35:02,518 And, uh, and when they're all suddenly done 373 00:35:02,685 --> 00:35:06,439 you're going, "Hmm, huh? Well, why? What next?" 374 00:35:06,564 --> 00:35:08,608 It's not to say we didn't do some good work, 375 00:35:08,733 --> 00:35:11,694 but the good work we did was actually all about 376 00:35:11,819 --> 00:35:15,948 a lot of the negative aspects of what went on after we'd achieved, 377 00:35:16,574 --> 00:35:19,744 um, the goal. 378 00:35:20,244 --> 00:35:21,996 I mean that obviously informed what 379 00:35:22,121 --> 00:35:25,333 turned out to be the next album quiet deeply 380 00:35:26,125 --> 00:35:28,711 Wish You Were Here. Because we weren't, 381 00:35:28,794 --> 00:35:30,463 most of us most of the time. 382 00:35:30,838 --> 00:35:32,298 They were a platinum monster 383 00:35:32,465 --> 00:35:35,968 and... it's not a lot of fun. 384 00:35:45,561 --> 00:35:49,524 Sort of amazing to me now that we had that piece of music 385 00:35:49,732 --> 00:35:54,612 in 1969 when we recorded the music for Zabriskie Point. 386 00:35:54,779 --> 00:35:57,824 And throughout, I guess, Atom Heart Mother, 387 00:35:58,074 --> 00:36:01,327 the Obscured By Clouds album, the Meddle album 388 00:36:01,494 --> 00:36:05,248 we didn't dig it out and use it, such a lovely piece of music. 389 00:36:16,092 --> 00:36:18,928 Antonioni didn't really know what he wanted. 390 00:36:19,136 --> 00:36:21,222 He needed desperately to have control. 391 00:36:21,389 --> 00:36:24,517 So even if you did the right thing and it was perfect, 392 00:36:24,684 --> 00:36:27,854 he couldn't bear to accept it because there wasn't a choice. 393 00:36:28,145 --> 00:36:29,730 All he really wanted was 394 00:36:29,856 --> 00:36:31,315 "Careful With That Axe, Eugene." 395 00:36:31,482 --> 00:36:34,485 I think we were all getting a bit frustrated of, "What does he want?" 396 00:36:34,569 --> 00:36:37,321 I think I was just sitting in the studio and 397 00:36:37,405 --> 00:36:39,157 I was seeing the piano and they happened 398 00:36:39,240 --> 00:36:41,784 to have this violent sequence up 399 00:36:41,951 --> 00:36:46,164 and I was watching it and, probably I felt a bit tired, or whatever, 400 00:36:46,372 --> 00:36:49,292 I just started this, the chord sequence. 401 00:36:49,375 --> 00:36:53,129 At the time I think everyone thought, 'This is really good.' 402 00:36:53,421 --> 00:36:58,384 When we thought we'd really got something brilliant for his movie, 403 00:36:59,510 --> 00:37:03,055 and Antonioni, he would say... 404 00:37:03,222 --> 00:37:06,976 "It's beautiful, but is too sad," you know, 405 00:37:07,143 --> 00:37:09,061 "It makes me think of church". 406 00:37:09,228 --> 00:37:14,150 It was obviously waiting to be reborn in this album. 407 00:37:21,032 --> 00:37:23,868 The lyrics are so direct and linear. 408 00:37:24,035 --> 00:37:27,622 Those fundamental issues of whether or not 409 00:37:27,747 --> 00:37:31,375 the human race is capable of being humane. 410 00:37:33,628 --> 00:37:36,047 What's good about the writing of this song, from my point of view, 411 00:37:36,172 --> 00:37:40,051 is the leaving of the gaps for the repeat echo. 412 00:37:48,768 --> 00:37:52,607 It's kind of strange hearing it without the, without the echoes in it. 413 00:38:14,585 --> 00:38:19,924 I find myself with instrumentalists over the years working with people 414 00:38:20,174 --> 00:38:24,428 having very, very often as a producer in my capacity 415 00:38:24,637 --> 00:38:27,181 for producing records, having to say to people, 416 00:38:28,057 --> 00:38:32,103 "Now leave a hole, you know, now just play for half a bar 417 00:38:32,270 --> 00:38:35,940 and then leave a bar and a half free, you know, empty." 418 00:38:36,274 --> 00:38:40,653 And that's kind of what that song is, that's the way it works. 419 00:38:40,661 --> 00:38:43,698 The simplicity of Floyd is really almost hard to talk about 420 00:38:43,823 --> 00:38:49,620 because it is so simple. Um, Nick Mason playing very slowly, you know, 421 00:38:49,829 --> 00:38:58,546 exact, without a lot of... overly frilly percussion flourishes. 422 00:38:59,338 --> 00:39:02,884 Um, Richard's touch on piano and organ, very gentle, 423 00:39:02,967 --> 00:39:08,723 very soft, but also exact, and just hitting the notes right. 424 00:39:08,848 --> 00:39:11,517 It was always about leaving space. 425 00:39:32,497 --> 00:39:34,290 I think, Dave and Rick, 426 00:39:34,415 --> 00:39:37,001 their harmony vocals on it are really very affecting. 427 00:39:37,084 --> 00:39:39,378 Funny enough, they have similar voices, 428 00:39:39,462 --> 00:39:41,923 both their voices are a big factor in 429 00:39:42,006 --> 00:39:45,218 Dark Side of the Moon, the way, the way they blend. 430 00:39:48,888 --> 00:39:50,932 That's Dave and Rick together. 431 00:39:51,098 --> 00:39:54,352 Then Rick does another part lower that he did. 432 00:39:55,645 --> 00:39:58,356 And then the girls are also joining in. 433 00:40:27,260 --> 00:40:29,512 "I mean, they're not gonna kill ya, 434 00:40:29,595 --> 00:40:32,640 so if you give 'em a quick short, sharp shock 435 00:40:32,849 --> 00:40:35,893 they don't do it again. Dig it? I mean he got off lightly, 436 00:40:36,018 --> 00:40:39,021 'cause I could've given him a thrashing. I only hit him once! 437 00:40:39,105 --> 00:40:40,898 It was only a difference of right and wrong, ain't it? 438 00:40:41,065 --> 00:40:43,609 I mean good manners don't cost nothing, do they, eh?" 439 00:40:44,026 --> 00:40:47,321 It seemed to me really important, I can't, 440 00:40:47,405 --> 00:40:51,826 I've no idea why to have voices on this thing. 441 00:40:51,951 --> 00:40:54,287 And so the only thing that was clever about it at all 442 00:40:54,290 --> 00:40:57,665 was how to do it, so not to have an interview. 443 00:40:57,874 --> 00:40:59,959 Devised probably in the canteen 444 00:41:00,126 --> 00:41:03,421 and done later that evening. 445 00:41:03,629 --> 00:41:05,464 So I wrote a bunch of cards 446 00:41:05,673 --> 00:41:07,425 with the questions on them. 447 00:41:07,592 --> 00:41:09,594 I think what the voices did on the record was 448 00:41:09,719 --> 00:41:11,888 they actually brought out the dark side, 449 00:41:12,054 --> 00:41:13,890 they were in a way the dark side of the record. 450 00:41:14,307 --> 00:41:16,017 First, we used a number of people 451 00:41:16,142 --> 00:41:17,894 who worked in the studio with us, 452 00:41:18,060 --> 00:41:20,354 so we used 3 or 4 of our road crew. 453 00:41:20,521 --> 00:41:22,565 "I ain't frightened of dying at all, 454 00:41:22,815 --> 00:41:24,734 'cause when you gotta go, you gotta go." 455 00:41:25,234 --> 00:41:26,819 The Irish doorman here, Gerry, 456 00:41:26,944 --> 00:41:29,113 "Why should I be frightened of dying? 457 00:41:29,405 --> 00:41:31,949 There's no reason for it, you gotta go some time". 458 00:41:32,366 --> 00:41:34,243 "Wings" were recording in here at the same time 459 00:41:34,327 --> 00:41:36,704 so we actually used Paul and Linda, Henry McCullough, 460 00:41:36,787 --> 00:41:39,081 "I don't know, I was really drunk at the time". 461 00:41:39,582 --> 00:41:42,752 It's the people who are not used to being interviewed, 462 00:41:42,877 --> 00:41:44,337 who come up with the stuff. 463 00:41:44,462 --> 00:41:45,838 I think they started off with 464 00:41:45,963 --> 00:41:49,967 "what's your favorite color?" and "your favorite food?" 465 00:41:50,092 --> 00:41:52,386 And when none of which was just to get people there. 466 00:41:52,553 --> 00:41:54,972 And then they went into "when was the last time you were violent?" 467 00:41:55,097 --> 00:41:58,184 This was the good bit, "when was the last time you were violent?" 468 00:41:58,351 --> 00:42:02,396 and then you'd take-- you'd answer it and take the next card, 469 00:42:02,522 --> 00:42:04,565 the next card said, "were you in the right?" 470 00:42:04,732 --> 00:42:07,443 "Yeah, heh heh, I was in the right." 471 00:42:07,568 --> 00:42:09,779 "Yes, absolutely in the right!" 472 00:42:09,862 --> 00:42:11,781 "I certainly was in the right!" 473 00:42:11,906 --> 00:42:13,282 "Yeah, I was definitely in the right, 474 00:42:13,407 --> 00:42:14,867 that geezer was cruising for a bruising." 475 00:42:15,117 --> 00:42:18,496 And this remarkable roadie called "Roger the Hat", 476 00:42:18,621 --> 00:42:21,165 "If I participate in this fucking effort, I hope I'm gonna get 477 00:42:21,249 --> 00:42:25,461 my gold disc at the end of it. Imagine that, uh! 478 00:42:26,546 --> 00:42:29,215 They were trying to track him down to do the cards 479 00:42:29,465 --> 00:42:31,259 and by the time they got ahold them, somebody... 480 00:42:31,467 --> 00:42:33,761 the cards had gone missing, I don't know where they'd gone. 481 00:42:34,262 --> 00:42:37,056 So, uh, Roger Waters actually ended up doing it, 482 00:42:37,139 --> 00:42:38,891 he actually did that one as an interview. 483 00:42:39,684 --> 00:42:43,688 Do you ever think you're going mad, Roger? 484 00:42:43,855 --> 00:42:48,818 And... I once reached a stage in my life where I was completely convinced 485 00:42:48,943 --> 00:42:52,921 that I'd gone over the brink, or, well, that's what I'd care to call it. 486 00:43:06,294 --> 00:43:09,130 It was obviously a bit to do with Syd, and... 487 00:43:09,839 --> 00:43:15,970 I think it's about... defending the notion of being different. 488 00:45:22,263 --> 00:45:24,849 The fundamental question that's facing us all is 489 00:45:24,932 --> 00:45:28,519 whether or not we're capable of dealing 490 00:45:28,686 --> 00:45:30,563 with the whole question of "Us and Them" 491 00:45:30,771 --> 00:45:33,191 What he was feeling as an individual 492 00:45:33,566 --> 00:45:38,112 mirrored almost exactly what a lot of other people 493 00:45:38,279 --> 00:45:40,072 were feeling at the time of their own lives. 494 00:45:40,239 --> 00:45:41,616 There's no question in my mind that 495 00:45:41,741 --> 00:45:43,367 Dark Side of the Moon was one of the most important 496 00:45:43,493 --> 00:45:45,870 artistic statements of the last fifty years, probably. 497 00:45:46,120 --> 00:45:49,749 It touched very many people all over the world 498 00:45:49,874 --> 00:45:53,377 in ways that could not simply be put down the fact that, 499 00:45:53,503 --> 00:45:56,172 "Oh, the nice tunes" and "Oh, I like that bit at the end." 500 00:45:56,255 --> 00:45:58,382 I mean, this was a complete experience. 501 00:45:58,508 --> 00:46:00,635 It was actually a really grim time, 502 00:46:00,801 --> 00:46:07,350 and he wrote a very grim record but did it with music 503 00:46:07,475 --> 00:46:12,146 that was extremely uplifting and compelling and bewitching. 504 00:46:12,313 --> 00:46:15,900 I think it was a ,very happy and creative 505 00:46:16,067 --> 00:46:18,694 and enjoyable time when we made this album. 506 00:46:18,861 --> 00:46:22,657 It was probably the most focused moment in our career 507 00:46:22,824 --> 00:46:26,160 in terms of all of us working together as a band. 508 00:46:26,285 --> 00:46:31,833 I'd love to have been a person who could sit back with his headphones on, 509 00:46:32,166 --> 00:46:36,379 listen to that the whole way through for the first time, 510 00:46:36,504 --> 00:46:39,757 I mean, I had never had this experience, 511 00:46:40,216 --> 00:46:42,035 But, uh, it would've been nice. 512 00:46:42,036 --> 00:46:43,650 The thing that's often missed is the fact 513 00:46:43,696 --> 00:46:46,681 that basically people respond to that on the 514 00:46:46,848 --> 00:46:50,000 emotional level, and that's what makes great records. 515 00:46:50,100 --> 00:46:52,895 It is driven by emotion. 516 00:46:53,145 --> 00:46:55,481 There's nothing plastic about it, you know. 517 00:46:55,606 --> 00:46:58,609 There's nothing contrived about it. 518 00:46:58,693 --> 00:47:01,478 And, I think that's what is giving it its, 519 00:47:01,488 --> 00:47:05,366 or maybe one of the things that's given it its longevity. 520 00:48:19,232 --> 00:48:22,902 But that's not to say that potential for the sun to shine doesn't exist. 521 00:48:23,110 --> 00:48:25,488 You know, walk down the path towards the light 522 00:48:25,655 --> 00:48:28,282 rather than walking into the darkness. 523 00:48:28,783 --> 00:48:30,827 There is no dark side on the moon really, 524 00:48:31,202 --> 00:48:33,955 matter of fact, it's all dark.46238

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.