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WOW - it's now the 27th YEAR of Brain Damage, your Pink Floyd, David Gilmour, Nick Mason, Syd Barrett, Richard Wright and Roger Waters news resource!
Marking the 50th anniversary of Pink Floyd's iconic 1975 album, a range of Wish You Were Here 50 celebratory editions: deluxe box set, blu-ray, 3LP set, 2CD set and coloured vinyl single LPs came out at the end of last year. Full details here. The LA 1975 concert, recorded by Mike Millard and remastered by Steven Wilson, came out as a standalone item on 4LP for Record Store Day, and 2CD across most of the world.
The stunningly restored and remixed Pink Floyd At Pompeii MCMLXXII on Blu-ray, 2CD, 2LP, DVD, and digital was also released in 2025 - and is NOT to be missed. As is the 4K UltraHD edition out now!
Also last year, celebrating the concerts to coincide with David Gilmour's album, Luck and Strange, cinema/IMAX screenings, and a book, 2Blu-ray, 3DVD, 4LP, 2CD and deluxe box set options were also released and are getting very high praise.
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 their 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 much longer 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 which is out now.
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Roger Waters on his music, Abba, and Senegal |
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Written by Matt
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Thursday, 29 June 2006 |
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In today's Times newspaper
in the UK, former Pink Floyd frontman Roger Waters talks candidly about
his past and present career, his thoughts on music in general (with
specific comments about Abba, the Swedish pop supergroup of yesteryear,
and the release of Pulse on DVD), and reveals how he is providing
direct help to a Senegalese village.
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Roger Waters interview
The Times, 30th June |
It is clear from the interview
how life is taking a lot of Waters' attention. From his personal life
(his divorce a few years ago, and subsequent starting a new
relationship), through to how family and friends have changed his
perception, and affected the work on his new material, he talks
honestly and in a relaxed frame of mind, and also looks back at darker
days.
“[Around the time of The Wall,
and the 1977 tour which lead to it] I was quite separated from myself
and in consequence, quite separated from anyone else.” Improvements in
his outlook has been a result of “getting rid of the judge that sits on
your shoulder telling you you’re an a***hole. I mean, my judge was a
powerful figure for my whole life. That’s why 30 years ago I was so
hard on everyone else.”
With Roger due to perform
the whole of Dark Side Of The Moon at Hyde Park tomorrow, accompanied
by Nick Mason, he seems remarkably relaxed about the activities of his
ex-colleagues. On being told that Pulse was coming out on DVD in July,
which includes their live 1994 version of the album, he said “Is that
the case?” he smiles. “I didn’t know. I gave up after I heard a reggae
version of Money on (the 1988 live album) The Delicate Sound of
Thunder. I remember lying on the floor howling with laughter with my
feet in mid-air.”
With the London concert falling
almost exactly a year after Live8, the question naturally arises of
another collaboration. “From my point of view there is no impediment to
doing more work together,” Waters says. “There would have to be some
kind of emotional negotiation that would need to take place for us to
do that, and I’m not sure that Dave wants to go down that road. He’s
had this baby for 20 years and he doesn’t want to relinquish his grip
on it.”
Still, Waters has got other
things on his mind. After throwing a dinner party in honour of US
economist Geoffrey Sachs (his book "The End Of Poverty" inspiring
Live8), “I’ve put my money where my mouth is and decided to support a
village in Senegal. Single-handedly? Well, yes, but really it’s just a
matter of committing lots of money for the next five years and putting
tons of fertiliser into the ground and buying nets for mosquitoes.”
“But, you know, it’s no one act
that makes you feel happier. I’ve been through a personal journey of
transformation — with parenthood and failed relationships and all the
rest of things that change you.”
The fascinating interview can be read in full over at www.timesonline.co.uk.
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