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Pink Floyd 1968WELCOME TO THE 26th YEAR OF BRAIN DAMAGE, YOUR PINK FLOYD, DAVID GILMOUR, NICK MASON, SYD BARRETT, RICHARD WRIGHT AND ROGER WATERS NEWS RESOURCE!

It's 2025! This year sees the 50th anniversary of Wish You Were Here, which is an incredible thought; where does the time go?!

The stunningly restored and remixed Pink Floyd At Pompeii MCMLXXII on Blu-ray, 2CD, 2LP, DVD, digital and cinema screenings are now here - with some more cinema screenings in selected places. However you experience it, it is NOT to be missed!

There's also been three Record Store Day releases released on April 12th, from David Gilmour, Nick Mason's Saucerful Of Secrets, and Roger Waters which are also definitely worth tracking down, either in a participating store, or online, now that RSD has finished.

Last year, David Gilmour's superb new album, Luck and Strange, was released in a variety of formats, and a selection of coloured vinyls. A limited number of concert dates thrilled crowds in Brighton and London, England, Rome, Italy, and Los Angeles and New York, USA. Rome shows were filmed for release and cinema/IMAX screenings, and a book, 2Blu-ray, 3DVD, 4LP, 2CD and deluxe box set options have now been announced.

The Nick Mason's Saucerful Of Secrets 2024 Set The Controls tour revealed a band in even better form than the 2022/23 shows which managed to exceed everyone's hopes and expectations! Our sincerest hopes are that they continue, but in the meantime, there's the RSD release, and the earlier live recording from London's Roundhouse on Blu-ray, DVD/2CD, and 2LP which is really excellent.

Of course, Roger Waters read three extracts from his memoirs in October 2023 at the London Palladium, so it might not be too long before that is published...he's also working on his new album based around The Bar - we'll let you know as soon as we get all the info! Before all that though is the release of Roger Waters This Is Not A Drill Live In Prague on 4LP vinyl, Blu-ray, DVD, 2CD and digital on August 1st!

HOW TO HELP THE SITE: If you want to contribute anything - such as concert reviews, articles or pictures - we'd love to hear from you; please email us.

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All these give much-needed help with things such as site hosting fees, and we really appreciate it. We get no funding, so every penny/cent helps keep the site running. Thanks! Finally, we use cookies to enhance your experience - but we use these purely to remember the size and width settings if you change these. External links may have their own cookies. By staying on our website you agree to our use of cookies.

VERY BEST WISHES
- your friends at Brain Damage


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Pink Floyd's See Emily Play - Top Of The Pops 1967 screening Print E-mail
Written by Matt   
Sunday, 10 January 2010

Syd Barrett and Roger Waters on Top Of The Pops, BBC 1967Flawed but beautiful - the reaction of a rapt audience at the National Film Theatre Screen 1 at the British Film Institute in London last night for a screening of lost gems, the pinnacle of which was the Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd in their first performance of See Emily Play on BBC TV's "Top Of The Pops".

Long lost, presumed gone forever, the footage was recently discovered, albeit in a very distressed state. The damage to the film was palpable but if anything seemed to add to the "holy grail" nature of this performance - which may yet see the light of day again if we're lucky...

The event - the annual "Missing Believed Wiped" - consisted of two separate sessions. The afternoon started with a set of classic British comedy items, but the main event for many was the second session which was devoted to music.

Starting with the only known edition of "Time For Blackburn", a weekly music programme hosted by Tony Blackburn and his awful jokes, the audience were treated with The Who's performance of Magic Bus, complete with incredibly rapid editing - almost enough to give you a headache! This show was followed by a fascinating example of the BBC's regional output - a show called "Look! Hear!" which focused on the West Midlands of the UK, and included a very rare clip of Black Sabbath.

The first of the two freshly discovered episodes of "Top Of The Pops" brought many laughs from the audience at some of the fashions, songs, and performers on offer. Originally broadcast in 1976, the clear highlight was the video of Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody which finished the show.

Then for many, the moment they'd been waiting for - the screening of what survived from the July 6th, 1967 episode of "Top Of The Pops", which featured the first of three appearances by Pink Floyd of See Emily Play. Famously, Syd's clothing was seriously downgraded for each of these performances, and indeed what was seen last night was the whole band in their finery, Syd wearing what appeared to be a particularly fine, long jacket.

The quality of the footage was indeed pretty lousy in many places, with the picture and/or sound rolling, slowing, disappearing, fading away then coming back again. At turns frustrating, you found yourself leaning forward in your seat to try and get more from the footage, to see through the "snow" on screen to try and glimpse more than what there was visible, and yet, it was a magical moment for so many of the audience - as was clear from the thrilled, elated and shocked reactions I heard in the foyer outside the screen afterwards. To see such a significant show, that had been aired almost 43 years ago, in times where recording equipment was a real rarity, was quite incredible.

Syd Barrett on Top Of The Pops 1967With the tape in such bad condition, with the oxide literally falling off of it, the technicians at the BFI have managed to something rather miraculous to get anything at all. We were also treated to a few bits from elsewhere in the episode, including The Turtles hamming it up for their hit, She'd Rather Be With Me, and a hilarious bit with Dave Davies being introduced for his performance of Death Of A Clown as Ray Davies, to a shout of protest by Dave across the studio to presenter Alan Freeman!

The BFI had been alerted to the existance of the tape by music historian and author Andy Neill, who had viewed part of it and instantly recognised its significance. It was in the collection of "an eminent rock musician" and was being stored by Bill Harrison, an expert in the restoration and safe upkeep of audio material.

In his introduction of the 1967 "Top Of The Pops", the BFI's Dick Fiddy noted that a copy of the footage had been sent to the BBC, and also to Pink Floyd's Management, who, he told the audience, wanted to do something with it, maybe as a bonus item on a DVD. If this does happen, it would be marvelous - but don't expect anything too soon! It is entirely possible that before this could happen, further painstaking restoration work would be done on the film to improve the quality.

Our thanks to all at the BFI, and Kaleidoscope, for enabling yesterday's event. In particular, we'd like to thank Dick Fiddy for his help and assistance.

 
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