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Very atmospheric review supplied by Guntmar Ploetzke, from an unknown author. If it is you, please let us know!
Backs to the WALL......the wait and in the flesh
So, here we were seated, sitting two rows back from a balcony on what
Earls Court call "the Balcony". It´s 19:30 hrs, Tuesday August 5th
1980. The show starts at 20:00, and the anticipation and excitement is
building steadily. We've been waiting in the building since the doors
opened at 18:30.
The doors open, we file in and the first real "Thrill of confusion"
takes hold. Finally it felt safe to take out the tickets we'd been
asked to sell a hundred times while waiting in the seemingly never
ending queue outside the building. Through the "bag search" areas then
into the area surrounding the arena.
There's a lot of pushing and shoving at this funnel like ticket
checking area, once clear of this everyone just runs forward into the
main building. Everybody is buzzing with excitement and there is still
one and a half hours until the show (should!) start.
The massive structure supporting the terraced "festival" seating
arrangement erected for these shows dominates the view as we enter the
huge space that is the outer ground floor area of the arena. Giant
blackout curtains seal off this framework, leaving just the authorised
entry & exit gangways leading into the seated arena. We peek
through the closest gangway entrance past the security guards eager to
get our first glimpse of the stage, the house lights are on, the air is
somehow slightly foggy, the warehouse type house lights picking a wide
angle beam through the air. We decide to circumnavigate our way around
the curtained off arena in search for a look at THAT stage; a lot had
been said about this show, there was such hype about the scale of the
thing.
When we did finally find our nominated entry point past the security
we were greeted with a massive "barn like" enclosure. An oval area with
a roof, at a guess probably 150 feet from the floor. Hanging giant
acoustic flags, black flags with the crossed hammer artwork. scanning
around and looking down from the flags comes the upper furthermost row
of seats, orange seats mostly empty at this point as most people were
buying up the T-shirts, posters etc. etc. but I needed to see THAT
stage!
But what a surprise, this was not what I expected to see, the stage
was enormous, it stretched from one side to the other, with long
sloping ramps leading off to each end. At the extreme edges, a stair
stepped construction of large white bricks extending up and into the
seats at the first balcony level, impressive but......then the
instruments on that huge stage, a puny drum kit, small keyboard and a
couple of mike & guitar stands! Can this be correct? There´s no
support band so who´s pathetic looking equipment is this? Surely not
the mighty Pink Floyd?
It´s now 20:20hrs, twenty minutes later than the show should have
started, for the last 10 minutes or so we'd been teased by sudden halts
to the background music that had been played in here since the doors
opened at 18:30. Music and sound effects designed to both set the mood,
and wind up the audience into an atmosphere of almost hysteric
apprehension. The music, World War Two era, Vera Lynn, Glenn Miller and
other 1940's big band stuff, (none of your usual various artists
compilation tapes, but this was not going to be one of your usual
shows!).
As each tune ended, there was a segue into sound effects of aircraft
engines of that time, the unmistakable sound of Rolls Royce V12
Merlins, the power plant of so many WW2 fighter aircraft & tanks.
This deep rumbling mechanical sound reverberating around the "idling"
PA in contrast to the laid-back big band background entertainment. But
for the last 10 minutes those deliberate pauses had been getting
longer, each pause met with a roar from the audience, 18,000 impatient
Pink Floyd fans that didn't want to wait any longer.
But this pause was longer. The PA silent, the crowd whistling,
cheering, SCREAMING in anticipation, but still silence. So somewhere
the standard "we have waited long enough" slow stamping of the feet
begins, it spreads like an audible infection around the arena, on the
raised scaffolding supported seating where I was sitting. The seats
were bouncing with the synchronised stamping of thousands of feet.
Then, just when it seemed an almost dangerous situation, out went
the house lights, the crowd went completely wild, the roar became
deafening, now, stage right, one single circular follow spot lit up a
suited man walking up a ramp to the raised stage, microphone in one
hand he turned to face the audience. "Good evening, good evening ladies
& gentlemen and welcome to Earls Court", the noise of the crowd
eased slightly as the audience started to listen to what was being
said, "the band is not quite ready yet" immediately provoked whistling,
and as it became clear that this suited, apparently official
representative of the Earls Court management was merely lecturing us on
the house rules, the whistling became deafening.
I believe the ITAOT recording of this part of the show has been
edited, Yudman´s intro went on for longer with several "no,no,no" in
reply to his own statement "I think we are just about ready to go".
This was for me an incredible moment, one of the many highlights of
these shows, the crowd really were losing their patience, the stamping,
whistling, shouting in some not so polite language suggestions that Mr.
Yudman should leave the stage.
But then there were people coming up the other ramp, yes one, two,
three, yes four of them, it was THEM it was the band, it was Pink
Floyd....just walking up to their instruments as Gary Yudman continued
his rules and regulations speech. A low keyboard chord could be heard,
a kick on the bass drum, odd guitar notes, still the compere had the
spotlight. Is this it? Is the show going to start? Where´s the big
intro? Why doesn´t this moron get on with it and get the hell off of
that stage!
Again he calls out" I think the band is ready to go now".....no no
no" the testing of the instruments gets louder, is this Roger? Is that
Dave? It must be, this is it, no support, 20 minutes late, that
keyboard sound starts to fill the air and drown out the crowd, its
volume and pitch increasing through the PA then a blinding flash as
four theatrical pyrotechnics explode along the front of the stage
exactly at the first note of "in the flesh". These pyros were so
spectacular I swear I could feel the shock wave they produced. Half a
second later on the third note four more explosions, this time high up
in the structure supporting the suspended PA above the stage, these
rained down showers of sparks meeting the giant white mushroom clouds
rising from the original pyros.
This was incredible, the sound was awesome - incredibly loud but
hi-fi clear, I remember at this point catching sight, and being aware
of the mistakeable aroma of the largest joint I´d ever seen traversing
along the row of seats ahead of me as it was passed from person to
person, looking around there were many more glowing, a dead give a way
to similar activity. "So ya, thought ya, might like to go to the show"
a spotlight on Roger (or was it?) "to feel the warm thrill of
confusion..."
Confusion, yes, something's not quite right here. Looking down from
where I sat this little band on this great big stage, making this
incredible sound...? My senses were confused, this sweet smelling stuff
in the air was getting to me. "LIGHTS!" shouted Roger (I think) and a
dozen or more "super trouper" follow spot lights simultaneously beamed
into life, from high up all around the arena these giant cannon like
search lights each worked by an operator swinging them back and forth
to produce an amazing sight, their powerful beams scanning the audience
in random patterns so much more effective than that of the modern
VarioLite epidemic. No mechanically perfect synchronous movements of
later so called lighting spectacles. No, this is the Wall Live... this
is In The Flesh... in your face... loud... bright... chaotic lighting
"roll the sound effects", from everywhere a deep rumbling... through
subsonic speaker stacks beneath the very seats we were sitting in, came
the sound of a screaming aircraft engine... But no wait, the engine
sound is coming from the rear of the arena...
"Action": the maniac sweeping search lights all swing their beams to
one spot... a place high up at the back of the arena; some of the
audience follow their beams, some still stare at the stage, that´s what
you do at a rock & roll show, isn´t it, look at the stage? What is
it that caught in the converged follow spot beams? As the aircraft
engine sound effects louder and higher pitched... like a plane diving,
isn´t it? Yes it is, flying down at a diagonal but straight towards the
stage... plane sparks... a German Stuka dive bomber itself trailing a
tail of theatrical sparks from its wing tips, traversing the entire
length of the arena heading for the stage and passing by almost level
with where I was sitting. This thing must have been 8-10 feet long, a
6-8 foot wing span theatrically on fire and heading for the stage...
and with perfect timing the stage it hit, well the top section of the
part built wall, right at the peak of that rock crescendo that is the
last note of ITF, sending huge bricks from the part built wall high up
stage left crashing to the ground, as it exploded in a flash of
pyrotechnics so powerful we felt the heat of the blast.
An almighty cheer from the crowd, silence from the PA except the
sound of a baby crying from the rear quad sound stacks, then as the
piano & bass intro to "The Thin Ice" began the band were leaving
the stage, the keyboards and drums descending mechanically into trap
doors below the stage and at the same time a huge black curtain in line
with, but just behind the part constructed wall, began to rise, and as
it rose countless "tell tale" sound equipment indicator lights came
into view and glowed gently against the dark background.
There was our first sight of a much bigger stage, many more
instruments, two double based drum kits, more PA, backing singers,
extra musicians and that most famous of Floyd trade marks, the huge
circular projection screen...
What we´d just seen was an illusion, here were Pink Floyd... the show had only just begun.
"They just sat there, not knowing what was going to happen next"... Roger Waters.
Let´s flex the PA... The Thin Ice
The sound of a baby crying from the rear quad sound stacks; the
piano & bass intro to “the thin ice” began as the `surrogate´ band
were leaving the stage. A huge black curtain in line with but just
behind the part constructed wall began to rise, and as it rose
countless `tell tale´ sound equipment `power on´ indicator lights came
into view and glowed gently against the dark background. There was our
first sight of a much bigger stage, many more instruments, two
double based drum kits, more PA, backing singers, extra musicians and
that most famous of Floyd trade marks, the huge circular projection
screen.
And while that secret curtain rises and the three dimensional depth of
the `new´ stage is revealed, there is a short burst of carefully
rehearsed `roadie´ activity, clearing away the various pieces of
equipment left by the “Fake Floyd” band. The sound of the melodious
intro to “The Thin Ice” now filling the entire arena seemed somehow
fuller; more refined, crystal clear & loud. It occurred to me some
time later how this piece of music provided time for the `surrogate´
band to take up their positions on the real stage behind the partially
built wall. The crowd had quietened down now as was appropriate for the
mellow contrast to what we´d seen and heard a few minutes before, but
also due to concentration brought about by the transformation on stage.
Here were Pink Floyd for real, the previous three minutes had been a
spectacular illusion bombarding the audience with more sensory input
than any other band at that time would have used for their grand finale.
The lighting now also seemed to enhance the feeling of being `in the
presence of´ with vivid colours beaming down from ladder like lighting
frames at each side of the huge stage. Groups of extremely powerful
lights mounted around the circumference of the great circular screen
flooding the stage with rich yellows and greens. This screen perimeter
lighting producing an effect like the rays of the sun fanning out when
seen shining through low cloud, the cloud here being the theatrical
smoke adding to the incredible mood setting effect.
Dave is lit on cue as he stands stage right, his voice fills the arena
with that first line, “Mother loves her baby” the PA was incredibly
clear this vast somehow sounding like a HiFi demo of the highest
quality. To Dave´s right the four backing singers were just visible
standing behind but mainly obscured by a row of guitar amps and
associated equipment looking like it could have provided the entire PA
for the most other reasonable sized venues at that time! The backing
vocalists came in on the harmonising with Dave for the last `Oooooh
baby blue´, just as Roger steps up, brightly lit by those perfectly
timed `super trouper` follow spot beams as they lock on their target
from high up in the Gods of the arena and precisely pin-point him on
the stage. His white No.1 T-shirt singling him out from the rest of the
band.
Here was another personal show highlight. Somehow the lighting, Roger´s
highly luminous presence and that unmistakable voice as he stood centre
stage, leant towards the mic and sang “if you should go skating, on the
thin ice of modern life”.
A truly defining moment for sure, real shivers down the spine stuff.
We´d just experienced three minutes of never been seen before Rock
Theatre. The desperate Rock Star teetering on the edge. The symbolic
death of his Father in that dive-bomber attack, simultaneously
confronting us all with our fear of dying in a crashing aircraft. Then
those new born baby cries echoing around the arena mixed with the
deafening cheers of 18,000 fans applauding that spectacular Plane
Crash!....
It was so unreal, surreal experience, and for me the appearance of
Roger in the spotlight singing that line above was inspirational. This
was indeed HIS show, HIS concept, we all had Roger to thank for being
here, and there was much more to come.
The reason I and I suspect many others were sitting there at all was
because of the empathy we felt with his words through a connection to
his concept that was The Wall. So that moment was priceless, the
feeling of relating to Roger´s message, it was just one of many
throughout the show.
“As you claw the thin ice”... Here we go again... like a roller coaster
reaching the apex of its slow quiet climb, we´d just had the calm
before the storm... cue drums, cue Hammond organ, cue heavy guitar
power chords, cue the whole band on number 11, cue lights. I swear even
“In The Flesh pt.1” hadn´t prepared me for the sound that was about to
hit us, and I mean `Hit´. As those double drum kits sent their shock
waves through that amazing PA, to be delivered to the audience via
countless perfectly phased diaphragms, we were indeed physically
assaulted by this extraordinary sound.
During these last moments of “The Thin Ice” it was pure magic to see
Roger now with his back to the audience standing over close to Nick,
back arched in that trademark stance, belting the notes from that huge
bass guitar, while Dave characteristically contorted his face in
concentration as he screamed those now classic guitar licks. Then as if
to nail home the point, Nick and the second drummer in perfectly
synchronised moves pound out those last drum fills so that they´d be
felt as they rattled the skeletons of each and every one of us before
echoing around the arena. Now within only seconds the reverberating
echo of the drums cross fades into a menacing keyboard sound sent
around the quad sound system.
The lights were low again, the keyboards and repeat echo guitar were chasing each other around the arena...
The `Brick Layers´ were coming, the `Cherry Pickers´ were about to take
off and a nightmare `Monster Marionette´ was going to teach us a lesson.
The show was just starting to get going!!
"They just sat there, not knowing what was going to happen next"... Roger Waters.
Send their heads spinning... Another Brick in the Wall Part 1
The lights were low again, the keyboards and repeat echo guitar were
chasing each other around the arena... But just where was the surround
sound PA?
We were about to be subjected to an aural bombardment which would
have half the audience swivelling their heads and turning in their
seats in what must have been an instinctive reaction to what their ears
were receiving. The other half, determined not to look around for fear
of missing the next surprise on stage, nervously stared ahead.
Yes, there was an impressive collection of speakers hanging far
above the stage. And then there were those two massive stacks of
speaker cabinets sitting high up at the back of the arena, one left,
one right, taking up what must have been literally hundreds of seats,
but the sound we were hearing now seemed to be completely circling the
whole audience.
The keyboard chord slowly transferring from one area to another
seamlessly moving around the arena while changing pitch in an eerie
menacing almost background to the crystal clear punching echo of the
guitars. How could a tiny `plectrum´ create this wonderful sound? A
sound also reverberating from PA stack to PA stack.
I cannot really begin to explain in words how this `sound´
experience was for those of us there. As we sat there soaking up this
unique atmosphere lost in the sheer scale of the almost dark
vertiginous void ahead of our tiered seating looking out over the
`stalls´ area at ground level, our view was of a `sea´ of seated people.
Straight ahead on the other side of the arena was the mirror image
opposite balcony with its bank of packed seats stretching way off up in
the lofty heights in the distance. Our view of the stage required just
a slight right turn of the head, making it possible from this vantage
point to observe all aspects of the show, and a great deal of the
audience. The astonishing height of the Earls Court roof. The majority
of the many huge follow spot positions. The unbelievably complex
looking mixing desk area. The three large garden shed sized boxes sat
on scaffold bases sited to our left at ground level to the rear of the
seated stalls area, their purpose as yet not revealed (more later). The
many black curtained ´gantry´ like tracks suspended above the stage,
one protruding from high above stage right at an angle well out into
the audience area. The occasionally twitching steel wire hawser
stretching far off to our left and up into darkness which just a few
minutes ago had guided the burning plane to its target. And the
ever-present huge statue like flags suspended spaced out uniformly,
hanging to attention apparently inert, their obvious decorative purpose
subtly concealing their true function. A purpose so well achieved the
whole audience were held transfixed, myself included, sensing that this
incredible cocktail of sound, space and sheer atmosphere would be
impossible to recreate or capture ever again, the 45 seconds or so I
have just attempted to describe needed to be savoured. Then up steps
Roger...
“Daddy´s flown across the ocean”...
More intense crystal clear guitar taking a more prominent place in
the mix, the echoing delay bouncing around the arena... ”Leaving just a
memory”... That keyboard now becoming louder in the mix... ”A snapshot
in the family album”... The guitar again but now with even more punch.
“Daddy what else did you leave for me”... The whole sound now becoming
much more intense. Up steps David to the mic for ”Daddy what´d you
leave behind for me”. In comes that great classic bass line holding the
band on course as the guitars and keyboards set off on magical musical
tangents.
“All in all it was just a brick in the wall”...
“All in all it was all just...” bricks in that wall, a wall of sound
now surrounding us, subtle percussion, keyboards, air punching guitars
and bass from all around, but a slight sense of confusion as we hear a
familiar but out of place sound from the rear of the arena, not quite
recognisable at first, but then as it filtered through small audio
spaces in that wonderful echoing guitar arrangement, the realisation
that we were hearing the playful cries of a children´s school yard. The
guitars fade away into the background of the mix as Rick´s eerie
journey up and down the piano scale echoes out through the pa combined
with that signature bass line repeating to maintain the backbone melody
to this piece. The sound of children noisily releasing the stress of
school life in the playground gradually getting louder and moving
forward from the rear of the arena to fully grab our attention. Here we
sensed another moment of apprehension, another calm before a storm,
another theatrical masterstroke about to be pulled.
Lighting again back down low, Roger standing back over with Nick,
facing away from the audience, David eyes down, just busily getting on
with the job and Rick still playing with the keys while the sound
engineers weave their magic and sending his efforts racing around the
PA.
But hey, there´s another sound breaking through, another sound
breaking through, another familiar sound as out of place as the kids
screams were out of place with the music! And what´s happening on
stage? Smoke, lots of smoke, stage left, stage right, at the very
extremes just back behind the still unchanged partially built wall. And
light, very bright light low and beaming through the smoke rising
simultaneously from left and right. And that sound now bombarding our
ears, rising in volume and intensity, competing with the kids screams
and winning hands down, while on stage those lights, those columns of
smoke slowly rising up from behind the `stair stepped´ sides of the
wall.
Helicopters! They´ve got fu**ing helicopters in here! There they
were, two off them taking off from the stage each side of the band. The
sound now absolutely deafening, from all around that air turbulence
sound that only helicopter rotor blades can produce reverberating
around the perfectly tuned pa, stretching our ear drums to near
bursting point. The sight of those ascending `machines´ adding to the
spectacle. Now they were rising up, billowing vertical thruster like
jets of white smoke from the underside of what was becoming clear as a
framework of hydraulically powered mobile lights. Equipment designed to
initially fool us into believing yet more `aircraft´ were present as
part of this show, and fool us they did. Only as they climbed higher,
clear of the giant bricks and obscuring clouds of smoke did their true
theatrical role get revealed. These were wonderfully effective kinetic
lighting rigs. Their ultimate role was shortly to be revealed as each
`Cyclops´ like machine with an intense single dazzingly powerful follow
spot beam scanned its surroundings like some monster robotic assassin.
“You, yes, you. Stand still laddie”
In one perfectly timed audio cut the sound of the helicopters was
gone, replaced by the first all band, extremely tight, skeleton
rattling note of “Happiest Days...”. The cherry picker helicopters hung
there, Roger was facing the crowd and about to march up to his mic. The
spectacle on stage was quite breathtaking, lights pulsating a
symmetrical chase left and right, top to bottom around the perimeter of
the huge circular screen behind the band.
Clouds of smoke still cascading down from the ´helicopters´ but
something else was coming to life stage left, just out of view, another
surprise was about to be revealed. A nightmare `Monster Marionette´ was
on the loose. The army of `Brick Layers´ were getting ready to march
and the `Cyclops Cherry Pickers´ were about to take aim.
The show was just about under way...
"They just sat there, not knowing what was going to happen next"... Roger Waters.
Enter Stage Left!!....The Happiest Days of Our Lives
The spectacle on stage
was quite breathtaking, incredibly powerful multicoloured lights pulsating a
symmetrical chase, left and right, top to bottom around the perimeter of the
huge circular screen behind the band. Clouds of smoke still cascading down from
the two `helicopters´ hovering either side of the huge raised stage. But
something else was coming to life stage left, just out of view; another
surprise was about to be revealed. Roger marched forward from the drums towards
the mic stand. That xxl trademark bass guitar slung low, complete with those
oversized monitor headphones clamped to his head. No discrete custom moulded
inner ear pieces in 1980! Roger’s white trainers stomped in time as they were
picked up by the converging follow spot beams shining down from way up high
above and behind the audience.
“When we grew up and
went to school there were certain teachers who would hurt the children anyway
they could”
As if thrown into
reverse, Roger marched backward to his preferred position over by the drums, a
routine he repeated between each of the first lines. The cherry picker lighting
rigs hung, motionless apparently hovering in thin air, their `Cyclops´ like
single searchlight eye scanning the stage below then fixing on Roger and
tracking his fore and aft stomping march. The stage left rig was nearest,
poised just above the keyboard area, its beam swinging across Rick’s head. The
stage right rig sitting far back above the backing singers, its tracking beam
also following Roger. As the drums and guitars pound out and once again punch
waves of energy through the air for the powerful intro to `Happiest Days´, our
attention was drawn away from Roger highlighted in the spotlight. There, way over
to the right (looking at the stage) was some activity now being picked out in
yet more, bright spotlight beams.
Rising up from the
arena floor level there was what appeared at first to be yet more mechanical
lighting. Two maniac, piecing beams of light were dancing back and forth, up
and down, flitting their laser like beams out into the audience then back to
the floor. But no, this was not another lighting effect; the source of those
maniacal beams was now coming into view. Just above the two lights the huge
pulsating, furrowed brow of a monster forehead, those spotlights forming the creature’s
evil eyes.
“By pouring their
derision upon anything we did”
The `Teacher´, yes
that was what we were seeing slowly rising up, extending from a crouched,
crumpled, resting position. Growing steadily, hoisted up to it’s full imposing
height like the multi-jointed, gangling alien from the film of the same name.
Towering above the stage now, waving his huge cane, head stooped down eying
Roger centre stage.
“Exposing every
weakness however carefully hidden by the kids”
That lunatic screaming
laughter suddenly ricocheting around the quad PA, bouncing out from all around....
I have no idea how they achieved the movements this amazing marionette was
capable of. It was suspended from one of the carefully disguised hoisting
runways mentioned earlier. There was an elaborate but barely visible grid like
frame hanging above the figure from were many wires could occasionally be seen
controlling the lanky creature’s awkward limbs, not unlike the cartoon puppet’s
hand held control frame shortly to be projected onto the great circular screen.
There must have been many theatrical
and mechanical tricks going on behind the scenes. The head would swivel from
side to side, the animated legs and arms swinging in slow motion as the giant
caricature started its traverse across the stage towards the open gap in the
Wall. By some hidden means the head was inflated with air, but whenever the
monster dipped its head low there seemed to be a momentary interruption to the
supply of air inflating the head, which would then partially collapse. The
resultant effect was to cause the forehead to cave in so the crazy spot light
eyes would go `boss eyed´. The mouth and chin would also go limp making the
incredible spectacle even more bizarre. Then as the head lifted or swivelled
into a different position, the inflation would resume and the whole head expand
rapidly altogether creating the effect of a `pulsating head´ adding maniac
facial contortions to the teacher’s many other physical problem! All in all a
fantastic sight, unfortunately for us all now only really appreciated fully in
three dimensions.
“But in town it was
well known when he got home at night etc, etc……”
Oh how I, and I
suspect many more of the audience who’d experienced school in the 1960´s could
relate to the scruffy, creased ill fitting clothing, the hair, the stubble, the
badly trimmed moustache, and of course, the threatening cane. Yes the perfectly
crafted, larger than life nightmare creation towering above and sliding across
the stage in front of us was the perfect intro to the next part of the story.
“Ahhhhh, Ahhhhhhh, etc.,
etc………..”
Thunderous heavy
guitar chords now belting out from that phenomenal PA. Both drummers pounding
out sensational drum fills, Nick and his back up complimenting each other to
percussive perfection, a unique drum sound I have tried for years and years to
re-experience.
Many a set of speakers
have been bought, hired or borrowed in a quite pathetic attempt to wind the
clock back and replay THAT sound. Only recently with ITAOT a decent amp, the
right settings and good cans, has something like the right sonic signature been
written in order for those long locked away memories to spark into action and bring
back the occasional time travel like, partial audio rerun!
Now once again there
is that element of confusion & uncertainty, It´s been almost 14 minutes
since Yudman appeared in the spotlight walking up the long ramp stage right
towards the pathetic looking instruments on that huge but otherwise empty
stage. In that time the audience had been completely `blown away´. Such was the
impact of the sound, the lighting, the pyrotechnics and as Roger liked to call
them `Cheap Theatrics´, we’d had more than our money’s worth already. And the
band hadn’t even said hello. No hi, great to be here, love you all blah, blah,
blah. No, just the most perfectly presented seamless transition from song to
song while all the time unfolding the presentation of the greatest piece of
rock theatre ever to be staged.
I’d gone along to this
show with certain assumptions; one being that a Wall would feature very
prominently in the show. So was that stair stepped, obviously very purposefully
positioned construction of huge white bricks. `The Wall´? These brickwork
`wedges´ which resembled giant unfinished `book ends´ adorning the stage, were
they IT? Were these sets `The Wall´?
After all it made good theatrical sense to symbolically present a wall
like this, tapering down from either side to leave a huge hole through which we
can watch the band. And the giant circular screen behind the band, yes of
course there had to be an enormous opening through which to see the
projections, all that wonderful lighting, the incredible `helicopter´. Yes,
sitting there trying to think ahead a little while Mr. Teacher and the
marvellous `helicopters´ did their thing I was beginning to believe that we’d seen
how The Wall was presented to us, there it was and had been since we entered
the arena...
How wrong I was!
“We don’t need no education…..”
With the tightest of
live segues the band launch into Another Brick Pt. 2 over glides Mr. Teacher as
all follow spots intensify their beams and follow his mechanical saunter across
the stage. Stage left cherry picker `helicopter´ starts to move again, this
time a compound move both vertical and left (looking at the stage) gliding in a
diagonal direction towards stage centre, travelling over the keyboards area,
its single purposeful search light beam relocating from Roger to the Teacher.
An extraordinary sight, this mobile lighting rig apparently with a mind of its
own, moving around the back of the stage intent on getting a better position
from which to flood its victim with brilliant light.
Having deliberately
avoided any reviews at the time, and having not heard any of the earlier shows,
we were sat there awe-struck. It is hard now all these years later when all the
mystique of these shows has been analysed over and over, to convey the
apprehension experienced while seeing this show for the first time. But things
were never what they seemed for any of us caught in the spell of Pink Floyd The
Wall Performed Live!
Now as we enter song
number five greeted with huge applause the arena is truly rocking. We’d just
been introduced to the story’s first (human) character, whose grotesque,
animated “fat and psychopathic wife” was satirically `beating´ him up there on
the great circular screen, while he in turn beat poor old pink!
His mechanical 3D
incarnation meanwhile continued to terrorise both band and audience with his
goofy movements. With the band rocking, the sound somehow tuned to ever more
degrees of perfection, lighting so rich and vivid in colours, wonderful
animated circular projections adding yet another distraction to the incredible
spectacle. But the star of the show had yet to begin its unbelievable
construction.
“Pile on many more
bricks…. and I’ll be joining you in the next part.
"They just sat there, not knowing what was going to happen next"... Roger Waters.
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