Τετάρτη 28 Φεβρουαρίου 2024

Pink Floyd 1974 Richard Wright Interview History of Rock 1974 Θεάματα ΜΟΥΣΙΚΗ

 




Pink Floyd 1974

Richard Wright Interview

Melody Maker November 1974

History of Rock 1974

(from the Archives of New Musical Express and Melody Maker)

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   IN THE CURRENT era, when groups and artists come and go with alarming regularity, the continuing success of the Pink Floyd is a peculiar state of affairs.

   For the Floyd are rock's hermits, and rare in deed is it for them to emerge from their caves to tour or make records. It's well over a year since they last played in this country and their only bow to a live audience during that time was a short French outing in une. They didn't even tour the States to reap the rewards obviously in the offing following the success of Dark Side Of The Moon.

 

    It's a good 18months since that album was released, and by the way Floydian matters are shaping up, it'll be another six months before their next record reaches the shops. Throughout this period of lengthy inactivity no word is heard from the Floyd. There are no solo albums forthcoming.

   They keep their private lives very much to themselves, and little is even forthcoming about the musical thoughts of Messrs Waters, Wright, Mason and Gilmour, other than the fact that they dislike being probed.

 

   Roger Waters' love of football is well known. He is also pretty fanatical about golf and thoroughly enjoys a game of squash.

  Nick Mason spends many a happy hour messing about in boats and was recently seen on Top Of The Pops playing his drums behind Robert Wyatt on "I'm A Believer".

  Dave Gilmour likes riding motorbikes and enjoys a life in the country, very occasionally turning up to play with a local band when the mood takes him.

   But Rick Wright, the keyboard virtuoso, remains a complete mystery, a face guaranteed to warrant not a spark of recognition should he choose to board a London bus or creep silently into the stalls of the Rainbow Theatre in the unlikely event that he wants to catch an up-and-coming act. His efforts with the Floyd earned him tenth place in the keyboards section of this year's MM poll [:Melody Maker poll], a position hardly worthy of the talent he displays on stage with the group.

 

    

  

    According to the excellent programme available on the current Pink Floyd UK tour, Wright is pictured as a glamour-seeking playboy, surrounded by Hugh Hefner, Charlton Heston and a bevy of naked girls. In effect, though, nothing could be further from the truth. Wright is a happily married man who lives in Cambridge and spends most of his un-Floydian time pottering about in his home studio.

   It was, then, with some reluctance that he agreed to be interviewed in the Caledonian Hotel in Glasgow following the opening of the band's tour last week. Settling down with a packet of Piccadilly tipped cigarettes and strong coffee, he nevertheless proved a fine spokesman for the Floyd.

    We began by talking about the three new pieces the group are performing on the tour."Raving And Drooling", it turns out, was written by Waters about two months ago; "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" was written about the same time and worked on during rehearsals at Elstree; and "Gotta Be Crazy" began as a Gilmour riff. Roger Waters wrote all the lyrics, and none of the songs have been recorded yet.

   "We always like to write numbers, go on the road with them and record them later," said Rick." We did this with Dark Side Of The Moon and we think it's easily the best way to go about it. A number changes so much when we do it live over a long period; 'Shine On' has changed a lot since we started already.

   "I can't think of any other bands that work this way. Usually bands record songs and then play them, but we feel that if you do a few tours with a number, then that number improves immensely.

  "We will probably record them after the tour. There's enough material in the three songs for an album, but I don't know yet. We may do something else as well which we haven't actually played yet. There are things I am working on in my studio that I would like to put on the next album."

    A new Floyd album can be expected in March. The time between Christmas and then will be spent in the studio and next year the group will embark on two US tours, their first for two years.

  "It'll be a two-year gap between Dark Side and the next one, and that's too long in my opinion," said Rick. "We have never been a prolific group in terms of records. We average about one a year over our whole career. It's not a policy to work like that-it's just the way it happens.

    "We have a deal with the record company that makes us do about seven albums in five years, which is one album a year and may be a couple of film scores. It's very easy to make that deal."

    The immense success of Dark Side has taken the band by surprise, although they all felt it would do well at the time it was released.

  "It's been in the English charts ever since it was released, which is quite amazing," said Rick. "We all felt it would do at least as well as the other albums, but not quite as well as it did.

   "All our albums have done well in this country, but Dark Side was Number One in the US and we never dreamed it would do that. It was probably the easiest album to sell in that it was the easiest to listen to, but

it's success has obviously put some kind of pressure on us, and that is what to do next.

   "We have always tried to bring out something different with our next release, and it would be very easy now to carry on with the same formula as Dark Side, which a lot of people would do. It's changed me in many ways because it's brought in a lot of money and one feels very secure when you can sell an album for two years. But it hasn't changed my attitude to music.

   "Even though it was so successful, it was made in the same way as all our other albums, and the only criteria we have about releasing music is whether we like it or not. It was not a deliberate attempt to make a commercial album, it just happened that way. Lots of people probably thought we all sat down and discussed it like that, but it wasn't the case at all. We knew it had a lot more melody than previous Floyd albums, and there was a concept that ran all through it. The music was easier to absorb, and having girls singing away added a commercial touch that none of our other records had."

 

   Rick has no idea how many copies Dark Side has actually sold, but it's well in to the millions. Around 700,000 copies have been bought in this country, and at least three times that amount have been sold in the US.

   "I never know about things like sales," said Rick. "I know that it was the first gold record we had in America and since it's release our other albums have picked up in sales over there. We have made a lot of new fans as a result, because it was the first time we ever had an AM airplay in America. 'Money' was played on AM radio, and for a lot of people it was the first time they'd heard us.

   "I like to think this hasn't put a pressure on us in terms of what we write next, but for a whole year we never did anything. We all sat around and got heavily in to our reasons for being and our group. We got in to a bad period when we didn't do anything at all creatively. We all still enjoy playing Dark Side and anytime one of us didn't enjoy it, we wouldn't do it again, ever. The first time we played it at the Rainbow, it was totally different from today, but it's remained virtually the same since we recorded it.

   "There's a solo in 'Money' which varies according to how Dave Gilmour feels, and 'Any Colour You Like' is just improvisations, but various parts are very arranged and it's almost like a score."

   The accompanying film isn't Rick's territory, but he feels there's still room for improvement in the visual aspects of their show." It was hard work for Roger Waters, Nick Mason and Arthur Max, the sound engineer, but it's still not right. I think we are still at the experimental stage in finding out what visuals work and which don't-even after all these years.

    "It's so easy to have a film that is distracting, and of course, I've never any idea what the effect to the film is-I'm always on stage playing. People always expect the Floyd to come up with something different, new and better when it comes to visuals, and it's very difficult to keep thinking of new ideas.

   "The projector for the film was incredibly

expensive and we got a new mixing desk too, which was also expensive. Buying those will probably mean we lose money on this tour, but that doesn't matter because we'll recoup it on later tours. We can never make money in England with 25 in the crew.

   "We have got a new guy mixing the sound and he is used to working in a studio. Last night was the first time he's worked with a live band and that's why the first half of the concert wasn't right. The second half was easier because he'd got to know us and the board by then.

   "We spent two weeks rehearsing at Elstree before this tour, but in the end we couldn't spend one whole day playing because of problems fitting the new system together. Also it demanded a lot of attention getting the notes for the first half of the show, which we hadn't played much before this tour. Dave Gilmour had to have the words of the songs stuck on to the top of his guitar."

 

    I commented that I thought the three new songs were harsher, heavier numbers than the Floyd usually played and Rick agreed.

   "Yes, it's the way the numbers have been written and it's the way we played them. We always play heavier when we don't know songs so well.

   When we first performed Dark Side it was heavier and harsher than it is now. As we get to know a song better, we tend to play it quieter.

   "Did you realize that 'Shine On You Crazy Diamond' is about Syd[Barrett]? We don't see much of him now since he left and we're definitely a different band since his day. Thank God we're not the same. I know that it's very fashionable to like Syd these days, but I think we have improved immensely since he left, especially live. He was a brilliant songwriter and he was fantastic on Piper, but he was in the wrong state to play any music.

  "I am all for people trying to keep his name going, but...he hasn't written anything for years. His two solo albums show the way he was going. The first album was better than the second, and since then no one has been able to get him in to a studio."

 

   Rick Wright seemed anxious to change the subject from his former colleague, so I inquired why it was the Floyd played live so infrequently.

   "We all differ in opinions about how much we should play live. Dave Gilmour and I would like to do more live work, but Roger Waters and Nick Mason are happy with the way it is.

    "It's such a headache going on the road, and all of us except Dave Gilmour are married with kids. I believe it's very important that I am a good father and I am around with my children.

   "We limit ourselves to three-week tours and this has saved us from going mad. I feel that if we worked for weeks and weeks on the road all the time we wouldn't be producing such good music.

   "Bands who work live all the time do it purely for the money, I think. No band can really enjoy playing one-nighters week after week, so it must be a financial rather than a musical motive.

  "Last year, apart from a French tour, we didn't go out on the Road at all, and we had a Number One album in the States. We could have gone over then and made a fortune, but we would have made ourselves mad at the same time. We will probably do twothree-week tours of the US next year and take a two-month break in-between. But even so, I don't think we have played enough recently.

   You get to the point where you don't play and then you lose the whole reason for being in a band in the first place-and that, after all, is to go out and make music for people.

   "I would like to reach a situation where we devote six months in a year to the Floyd and six months to whatever we like. If for one of us this meant going on the road, then he could play with another band, and I think we might be reaching that stage now.

   "There are many things I would like to do which would not involve the Floyd, and this attitude could well save the Floyd in the long run. Everyone of us wants to do other things, but at the moment we don't have the time.

   "I feel this would be a good idea. Any band is a compromise between four individuals, but a compromise for a whole year isn't a good thing. It's only time that has prevented us doing solo projects, and if I had six months away from the group I would certainty make an album of my own. The others feel the same way.

  "I couldn't visualize going out with my own band on the road, but I would probably do a film score or may be produce another artist. I know I would like to try playing with other musicians for a change."

    Conversation switched to the low-key approach the group has towards the media, and Rick Wright agreed that this was a deliberate policy.

   "We are not trying to sell ourselves, just the music. Right from the start we adopted this policy. We have never had a publicity agent and we've never found one necessary. We don't go to all the in parties and we don't go to the 'in' clubs in London.

   "People don't recognize us on the streets, and even if they did it wouldn't be a problem. That kind of thing has changed since I moved out of London to Cambridge where people don't know anything about the Floyd.

   "Sometimes I get people tramping through my garden and asking for an autograph because they've heard I'm in a pop group, but they don't know what the Floyd do. They probably think we're like Gary Glitter.

  "It's a very nice situation to be in. Rod Stewart has the kind of personality that encourages all the fan worship, but we don't. We're just not that kind of band. Incidentall, I think Rod Stewart makes great music too.

   "I like all sorts of music myself. I listen to my old favourites and I listen to records that people bring to me if I respect their taste. I ignore the way pop is going. I have completely lost touch with the singles charts. I don't listen to what is being played on the radio, I don't watch Top Of The Pops and I don't watch The Old Grey Whistle Test.

   "I don't even know how the rock business is going, except that I think the bubble will burst fairly soon. It's already burst in the States, where Joe Public has decided he's not going to pay such enormous ticket prices any more. I don't agree with these huge shows in front of tens of thousands of people. Wembley Empire Pool is the biggest place you can play before you lose the effect."

 

  And how long could Pink Floyd last as a band?

   "It could last forever," he said. "There's no reason why it shouldn't, but then we could have a fight tonight and split up tomorrow. If we carry out that idea of being a group for six months and individuals for the next six months, then there's no reason why we can't carry on for a long time.

    "As a group we still have much to do and much to do together. We probably do things much better with each other than we ever could with anyone else.

  "We are basically happy with the situation at this time. Roger Waters is very keen on sports, which suits his competitive spirit, and Nick Mason is keen on sailing, and that's another thing that helps us survive.

   "We're not underground any more, despite what people say. At the UFO it was underground, but you can't be underground when you sell out every concert hall and your album goes to Number One. No, the Pink Floyd can't claim to be underground any more."

 

            Chris Charlesworth

 

 

 

 

Melody Maker, November 16, 1974

 

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[ ανάρτηση 28 Φεβρουαρίου 2024 :  

Pink Floyd 1974

Richard Wright Interview

Melody Maker November 1974

History of Rock 1974

(from the Archives of New Musical Express and Melody Maker)

Θεάματα

ΜΟΥΣΙΚΗ ]

 

 


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