What's new
Fantasy Football - Footballguys Forums

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

FBG'S TOP 100 PINK FLOYD SONGS - #01 - Comfortably Numb from The Wall (1979) (1 Viewer)

Vulture Ranking (out of 165 songs): 54
UCR Ranking (out of 167 songs): 42
Louder Ranking (out of 50 songs): 37
WMGK Ranking (out of 40 songs): 25
Ranker Ranking (out of 132 songs): 49
Billboard Ranking (out of 50 songs): NR

Vulture Ranking (54 out of 165 songs): Waters kicks off Animals with an 85-second deliberately acoustic number, apparently written from the point of view of two of us sheep, hating each other and watching the “pigs on the wing” overhead. His sarcasm on Wish You Were Here was somewhat tempered by the loving nature of the title song and Shine On — not to mention having Roy Harper sing on Have a Cigar. But by the time of Animals, there’s something off here; his vocal is highly unsubtle, and he’s too obviously relishing in the images. The casually strummed acoustic guitar and his natural vocals contrast too sharply with the electronics that will follow. This is the closing track on Animals, a reprise of the first song: just 90 seconds of strummed acoustic guitar and a few short lines. More on Animals later, but I want to say this: Waters is a smart guy and I don’t want to be glib criticizing his conceptions. But I don’t understand the narrator’s voice here. He’s happy he has a place to “bury [his] bone,” so he has to be a dog. Is he a dog? I didn’t get that from part one. In that one, the characters don’t care for each other, and in this case they do, which I guess is a sign of resignation as they watch the pigs fly above. What this song is really about, however, is songwriting royalties. The two little Pigs on the Wing snippets on Animals — basically the same song with different words, 90 seconds each, nothing more than Waters playing a casual acoustic guitar and singing — are credited to Waters alone as songwriter. Accordingly, they represented two separate tracks on the album when it came to songwriting (or “publishing” or “mechanical” royalties) separate from the royalties the band as a whole made from the record. Waters probably took home 3 cents per album sold for each track he wrote, so he would have made a total of 6 cents per album just for these two basically identical little ditties. Now let’s look at Dogs, which is credited to Waters/Gilmour, and lasts for 16 minutes. That would have given Gilmour about a penny and a half per album sold. Animals sold 12 million copies worldwide, meaning Waters the songwriter might have taken away three-quarters of a million dollars just from the two little Pigs on the Wing snippets, compared to about $90,000 for Gilmour for his work on the epic Dogs. Drummer Nick Mason, in his highly honest, highly enjoyable autobiography, says that inequities like these contributed to the resentment the band felt toward Waters. (Waters, of course, might have argued and no doubt did that it was his songs that drove the record sales that kept the rest of the band in English manor houses.)

UCR Ranking (42 out of 167 songs): It’s no secret that love songs are not Floyd’s (and certainly not Roger Waters’) strength. Animals’ acoustic bookends don’t celebrate love as much as classify it as a better alternative to the miseries of modern life. Sonically simple (just voice and guitar), Part 1 can be praised for its brevity and lightness in introducing the album’s gloomy concept. Part 2, although sounding nearly identical to its first half, gets the edge because of how expertly Waters wraps up this dense, complicated album. Love conquers his dog-like ways and the clouds part to reveal something akin to hope. A happy ending on a Pink Floyd album? When pigs fly.

Louder Ranking (37 out of 50 songs): Even measured against the prevailing punk scene, 1977’s Animals was spitting-mad. Strange, then, that the Floyd’s brutal swipe at Britain’s social order should open – and close – with the purest love songs that Waters ever wrote, serenading new girlfriend Carolyne Anne Christie on acoustic guitar. “There was a certain amount of doubt as to whether that song was going to find its way onto the album,” considered the bassist. “But otherwise, it would just have been a sort of scream of rage."

WMGK Ranking (25 out of 40 songs): Part 1 opens Animals, and Part 2 closes it. Each version features just Roger Waters singing and playing acoustic guitar. Part 1 asks what would happen “If you didn’t care what happened to me, and I didn’t care for you.” Thankfully, Part 2 ends the very dark album on an optimistic note: “You know that I care what happens to you/and I know that you care for me too,” which is about as romantic as Waters ever gets. And he realizes that even in a heartless world, if you have someone to love, you “don’t feel alone.” Because “any fool knows a dog needs a home… a shelter from pigs on the wing.”

The pain lingers on for @PIK95 as we hit up another offering from The Wall.
 
#29 - Goodbye Blue Sky from The Wall (1979)

Appeared On: 7 ballots (out of 33 . . . 21.2%)
Total Points: 73 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 8.8%)
Top Rankers: @BrutalPenguin @Yo Mama Friend of @PIK95 @Grace Under Pressure @DocHolliday
Highest Ranking: 9

1980 Rehearsal, Band Demo #1, Longer Demo, Live 1980, Film Version, Berlin 1990 With Joni Mitchell, RW The Wall Version, Istanbul - 2013

Live Performances: PF: 31, RW: 226

Covers: Heart, Steve Howe, Yonder Mountain String Band, System Of A Down, Soren Madsen

Waters described the song as being a recap of the first side of album one, summing up Pink's life to that point. As Waters says, in its most simplistic form "it's remembering one's childhood and then getting ready to set off into the rest of one's life." The child who says the line, "Look mummy, there's an airplane up in the sky" is Roger's son Harry, who was only two years old at the time. Harry, like his father, also became a musician. Harry played keyboards on his father's DSOTM and The Wall tours (and has released 3 albums on his own).

The film version depicts imagery of war, fear, and death, this striking scene relates the themes of the Wall to their larger context. The 'frightened ones' are shown by Scarfe's animation to be fearful creatures donning gas masks (a childhood memory for him, from the days of the air raid sirens), cowering from the falling bombs. Animator Gerald Scarfe describes the animation sequence: "The dove of peace explodes and from its entrails a terrible eagle is born. This menacing creature tears great clods from the countryside with its gigantic talons, destroying whole cities. Swooping low it gives birth to the War Lord, a gargantuan figure who turns to metal and sends forth bombers from its armpits. The bombers turn to crosses as the frightened ones run to their shelters. The ghosts of soldiers fall and rise again continuously and on a hill of bodies a Union Jack turns to a bloody cross. Blood runs down the cross and through the corpses and pointlessly trickles down the drain. When Roger conceived The Wall, he told me he wanted to make it into an album, then into a show, and finally into a film. We got on well. We had the same ironic-stroke-sardonic view of the world.”

The album version opens with pastoral sound effects of chirping birds. A few seconds later, the ominous sound of an approaching bomber squadron starts to fill the soundstage. The end of the track fades out to the sounds of public address announcements in an airline terminal as it segues into the cold, industrial-sounding opening of Empty Spaces. Like other Wall tracks, the song was trimmed down to accommodate other songs and space restrictions. An extended studio version of Goodbye Blue Sky was never released.

For Roger's The Wall Live tour, everything was bigger than what PF had done in 1980-81, starting with the blockade itself. A 66-strong production team travelled on 6 buses, while equipment weighing 112 tons filled 21 lorries and necessitated 80 loaders at each venue. Some 3,000 amps of electrical current coursed through 20 miles of wiring, powering 82 lights and 23 projectors. No wonder the cost of the tour was figured at $46 million (although Waters would claw this back – and then some – during a three-year itinerary that ultimately grossed a record-breaking $367 million from 219 shows). “The difference between the projection technology in 1979 and now is enormous,” noted Waters, who was now able to duet with his younger self on Mother. “It’s night and day. We can now project over 244 feet, and back then we could only project over 90. When we tell people what we’re doing, they say: ‘What? You’re insane!’ Yes, we’re insane. And it’s all good.”

Vulture Ranking (out of 165 songs): 75
UCR Ranking (out of 167 songs): 50
Louder Ranking (out of 50 songs): 27
WMGK Ranking (out of 40 songs): 30
Ranker Ranking (out of 132 songs): 24
Billboard Ranking (out of 50 songs): 24

Vulture Ranking (75 out of 165 songs): This is somewhat sunk due to the clotted lyrics, but other than that it’s a functional bit of The Wall, underscoring the damage, physical and emotional, of World War II.

UCR Ranking (50 out of 167 songs): By this time, Pink Floyd were masters at using the VCS synthesizer to create a terrifying drone – here meant to stand in for the Luftwaffe blitzing Britain in Pink’s memory. Gilmour’s beautiful performance, subdued vocal and restless guitar are the humanity that survives in between the destruction. But even the survivors don’t get away unscathed, as the song suggests: “the pain lingers on.”

Louder Ranking (27 out of 50 songs): Roger Waters described Goodbye Blue Sky as a remembrance of “one’s childhood and then getting ready to set off into the rest of one’s life”. Rather than any cozy exercise in nostalgia, however, it’s a searing portrait of ordinary life during the Blitz. ‘Did you see the frightened ones?/Did you hear the falling bombs?/The flames are all gone, but the pain lingers on,’ sings David Gilmour, the horror of the message softened by gentle guitars and deft harmonies. Waters modelled the solitary lead character of The Wall, the abandoned Pink, after himself and Syd Barrett. As with Pink, Waters’s own father had died in action during World War II. On this track he presses home the family connection by using his young son, Harry, to announce the arrival of the bombers: ‘Look mummy, there’s an aeroplane up in the sky.’

WMGK Ranking (30 out of 40 songs): A quick song that encapsulates the horrors and effects of war, even for those too young to remember it. Gilmour sings, “Did you see the frightened ones? Did you hear the falling bombs? The flames are all long gone/But the pain lingers on.” It’s something that Waters addressed often on The Wall. Waters’ father died in World War II when Roger was just a few months old; you can see this influence throughout the storyline of ‘The Wall.’ David Gilmour plays acoustic guitar, bass and sings over Waters and Richard Wright’s synths to haunting and mournful effect.

Billboard Ranking (24 out of 50 songs): A brief Blitz ballad with some of the most heavenly harmonies acoustic picking of the band’s career, the serenity of the main refrain chillingly undercut by the creeping synths and shellshocked lyrics (“Did-did-did you see the falling bombs?“) on the verses. They may have nicked the outro melody from the chorus to The Rolling Stones’ Ruby Tuesday from a decade earlier, but Sky ended up lending the main riff to Def Leppard’s Hysteria a decade later, so it evens out.

Up next, a song called Scat . . . a 3-minute song in the studio that ballooned up to 8 or 10 minutes (or longer) in live performances (and one of the few 70's songs that Roger had no hand in writing).
 
The two Pigs on the Wing tracks work nicely as starter and ending pieces on a great album, but as a standalone song, I can’t imagine thinking they rate. To each their own.
The version that appeared on the 8-track release of Animals is long enough to be considered a legit song (3:20), tying the two shorter versions together with a nice guitar solo in the middle. Still not Top 25 for me . . . but closer to the Top 25 than a lot of the bridge / lead-in songs from The Wall. Surprisingly, I still have that 8-track in my basement . . . although I haven't had an 8-track player in 40 years. The full version of Pigs On The Wing opened the 8-track version of the album (instead of starting and ending it).
 
Up to 7 songs revealed in the countdown so far:
  • Another Brick In The Wall (Part 1) - FBG 32T (?), JWB 15
  • Goodbye Blue Sky - FBG 29, JWB 18
  • Sorrow - FBG 51, JWB 19
  • Nobody Home - FBG 36, JWB 20
  • Is There Anybody Out There? - FBG 38T, JWB 22
  • Pigs On The Wing (Parts 1 & 2) - FBG 30, JWB 23
  • Don't Leave Me Now - FBG 78T, JWB 24
Also, @Anarchy99, looks like you missed the other song #32 or your numbering is off:

 
Also, @Anarchy99, looks like you missed the other song #32 or your numbering is off:
You are correct. My numbering in this case is accurate . . . meaning I left out a song. I picked up things in the wrong spot after being out of town.

I will get to that song next . . . a non-album track originally called Games For May . . . that hit the Top 10 on the British and Irish charts. Then the label pulled a Beatles album release strategy on folks . . . issuing a different version of an album in the U.S. than they did in the U.K.
 
Love this song - one of my favorites on the Wall and was my #10 overall. To me, the vocals for the lyrics “goodbye blue sky, goodbye” are up there in drawing emotion from me with “how I wish, how I wish you were here”.

I love this part in the movie too.
I wouldn't quite say that I have the same feelings for WYWH (the song) as PIK has for the rest of The Wall . . . but it's close. I didn't vote for WYWH, as I think it's been played out, is overly sappy, and strikes me as a song intended to be poppy and overly emotional. I would have thought that as I got older, I would get to appreciate it and like it more . . . but the opposite has happened. I've had plenty of friends and family pass away . . . that still hasn't impacted my opinion any. I am well aware that I am in the minority on this one (19 people voted it in their Top 5) and that might be cause for revolt. I appreciate the song as being well written and performed very well. It just doesn't grab me. I don't think it's trash by any stretch, but every time it comes on, I skip over it. And there are very few PF songs I just pass over.
 
The two Pigs on the Wing tracks work nicely as starter and ending pieces on a great album, but as a standalone song, I can’t imagine thinking they rate. To each their own.
I love them but they're both so short that it's hard to consider them songs. I agree that I see them as more a lead in and wrap up to Animals.
 
Love this song - one of my favorites on the Wall and was my #10 overall. To me, the vocals for the lyrics “goodbye blue sky, goodbye” are up there in drawing emotion from me with “how I wish, how I wish you were here”.

I love this part in the movie too.
I wouldn't quite say that I have the same feelings for WYWH (the song) as PIK has for the rest of The Wall . . . but it's close. I didn't vote for WYWH, as I think it's been played out, is overly sappy, and strikes me as a song intended to be poppy and overly emotional. I would have thought that as I got older, I would get to appreciate it and like it more . . . but the opposite has happened. I've had plenty of friends and family pass away . . . that still hasn't impacted my opinion any. I am well aware that I am in the minority on this one (19 people voted it in their Top 5) and that might be cause for revolt. I appreciate the song as being well written and performed very well. It just doesn't grab me. I don't think it's trash by any stretch, but every time it comes on, I skip over it. And there are very few PF songs I just pass over.
I love WYWH, but I get it. I feel that way about Mother, auto skip every time.
 
#29 - Goodbye Blue Sky from The Wall (1979)
Seriously depressing stuff
In contrast to all the uplifting material in the PF cauldron.

Seriously though, I’d have to rack my brain a bit to come up with the most optimistic, uplifting Floyd song.

“Bike” maybe :shrug:

Learning to Fly maybe. I mean, by the end of the song, he learns to fly, right? It's a success story. But yeah, point taken.
 
#29 - Goodbye Blue Sky from The Wall (1979)
Seriously depressing stuff
In contrast to all the uplifting material in the PF cauldron.

Seriously though, I’d have to rack my brain a bit to come up with the most optimistic, uplifting Floyd song.

“Bike” maybe :shrug:
High Hopes FTW!
I thought of that - the title sounds more hopeful than the actual lyrics seem to be.
 
The two Pigs on the Wing tracks work nicely as starter and ending pieces on a great album, but as a standalone song, I can’t imagine thinking they rate. To each their own.
The version that appeared on the 8-track release of Animals is long enough to be considered a legit song (3:20), tying the two shorter versions together with a nice guitar solo in the middle. Still not Top 25 for me . . . but closer to the Top 25 than a lot of the bridge / lead-in songs from The Wall. Surprisingly, I still have that 8-track in my basement . . . although I haven't had an 8-track player in 40 years. The full version of Pigs On The Wing opened the 8-track version of the album (instead of starting and ending it).
8-tracks were before my time and until 10 minutes ago I was unaware of Snowy White. The 2 parts + solo sound great as an entire song. Definitely my favorite from Animals.
 
8-tracks were before my time and until 10 minutes ago I was unaware of Snowy White. The 2 parts + solo sound great as an entire song. Definitely my favorite from Animals.
White was added as a second guitarist for their 1977 tour (and 1980 as well). IMO, he took the band to another level. For me, the 1977 tour was the band at their all-time peak. Their concerts featured all of WYWH and Animals plus Money and Us + Them from DSOTM. But they really did a lot of improvisation and extended each song. White and Gilmour traded licks for essentially two and a half hours. Dave was on a different astral plane on that tour. Sadly, once that tour ended, the RW version of the band would only go on to play songs from The Wall (so only three good songs in the entire concert according to some people). The only non-Wall songs we got from PF with RW past 1977 were Breathe, Money, and Wish You Were Here in their Live 8 set.
 
#29 - Goodbye Blue Sky from The Wall (1979)
Seriously depressing stuff
In contrast to all the uplifting material in the PF cauldron.

Seriously though, I’d have to rack my brain a bit to come up with the most optimistic, uplifting Floyd song.

“Bike” maybe :shrug:
High Hopes FTW!
I thought of that - the title sounds more hopeful than the actual lyrics seem to be.
e wanted everything, wanted everything
Mama said
Burn your biographies
Rewrite your history
Light up your wildest dreams
Museum victories, everyday
We wanted everything, wanted everything
Mama said don't give up, it's a little complicated
All tied up, no more love and I'd hate to see you waiting
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Shooting for the stars when I couldn't make a killing
Didn't have a dime but I always had a vision
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Didn't know how but I always had a feeling
I was gonna be that one in a million
Always had high, high hopes (high, high hopes)
Mama said
It's uphill for oddities
Stranger crusaders
Ain't ever wannabes
The weird and the novelties
Don't ever change
We wanted everything, wanted everything
Stay up on that rise
Stay up on that rise and never come down, oh
Stay up on that rise
Stay up on that rise and never come down
Mama said don't give up, it's a little complicated
All tied up, no more love and I'd hate to see you waiting
They say it's all been done but they haven't seen the best of me
So I got one more run and it's gonna be a sight to see
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Shooting for the stars when I couldn't make a killing
Didn't have a dime but I always had a vision
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Didn't know how but I always had a feeling
I was gonna be that one in a million
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Shooting for the stars when I couldn't make a killing
Didn't have a dime but I always had a vision
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Didn't know how but I always had a feeling
I was gonna be that one in a million
Always had high, high hopes (high, high hopes)
 
#29 - Goodbye Blue Sky from The Wall (1979)
Seriously depressing stuff
In contrast to all the uplifting material in the PF cauldron.

Seriously though, I’d have to rack my brain a bit to come up with the most optimistic, uplifting Floyd song.

“Bike” maybe :shrug:
High Hopes FTW!
I thought of that - the title sounds more hopeful than the actual lyrics seem to be.
e wanted everything, wanted everything
Mama said
Burn your biographies
Rewrite your history
Light up your wildest dreams
Museum victories, everyday
We wanted everything, wanted everything
Mama said don't give up, it's a little complicated
All tied up, no more love and I'd hate to see you waiting
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Shooting for the stars when I couldn't make a killing
Didn't have a dime but I always had a vision
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Didn't know how but I always had a feeling
I was gonna be that one in a million
Always had high, high hopes (high, high hopes)
Mama said
It's uphill for oddities
Stranger crusaders
Ain't ever wannabes
The weird and the novelties
Don't ever change
We wanted everything, wanted everything
Stay up on that rise
Stay up on that rise and never come down, oh
Stay up on that rise
Stay up on that rise and never come down
Mama said don't give up, it's a little complicated
All tied up, no more love and I'd hate to see you waiting
They say it's all been done but they haven't seen the best of me
So I got one more run and it's gonna be a sight to see
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Shooting for the stars when I couldn't make a killing
Didn't have a dime but I always had a vision
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Didn't know how but I always had a feeling
I was gonna be that one in a million
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Shooting for the stars when I couldn't make a killing
Didn't have a dime but I always had a vision
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Didn't know how but I always had a feeling
I was gonna be that one in a million
Always had high, high hopes (high, high hopes)
Who knew Panic! At The Disco covered a PF song?
 
#29 - Goodbye Blue Sky from The Wall (1979)
Seriously depressing stuff
In contrast to all the uplifting material in the PF cauldron.

Seriously though, I’d have to rack my brain a bit to come up with the most optimistic, uplifting Floyd song.

“Bike” maybe :shrug:
High Hopes FTW!
I thought of that - the title sounds more hopeful than the actual lyrics seem to be.
e wanted everything, wanted everything
Mama said
Burn your biographies
Rewrite your history
Light up your wildest dreams
Museum victories, everyday
We wanted everything, wanted everything
Mama said don't give up, it's a little complicated
All tied up, no more love and I'd hate to see you waiting
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Shooting for the stars when I couldn't make a killing
Didn't have a dime but I always had a vision
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Didn't know how but I always had a feeling
I was gonna be that one in a million
Always had high, high hopes (high, high hopes)
Mama said
It's uphill for oddities
Stranger crusaders
Ain't ever wannabes
The weird and the novelties
Don't ever change
We wanted everything, wanted everything
Stay up on that rise
Stay up on that rise and never come down, oh
Stay up on that rise
Stay up on that rise and never come down
Mama said don't give up, it's a little complicated
All tied up, no more love and I'd hate to see you waiting
They say it's all been done but they haven't seen the best of me
So I got one more run and it's gonna be a sight to see
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Shooting for the stars when I couldn't make a killing
Didn't have a dime but I always had a vision
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Didn't know how but I always had a feeling
I was gonna be that one in a million
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Shooting for the stars when I couldn't make a killing
Didn't have a dime but I always had a vision
Always had high, high hopes
Had to have high, high hopes for a living
Didn't know how but I always had a feeling
I was gonna be that one in a million
Always had high, high hopes (high, high hopes)
Who knew Panic! At The Disco covered a PF song?
I would have been happy with the Frank Sinatra version.
 
The two Pigs on the Wing tracks work nicely as starter and ending pieces on a great album, but as a standalone song, I can’t imagine thinking they rate. To each their own.

Shocked that two people had them in the top 5. Did Timschochet submit two lists?
 
The film version depicts imagery of war, fear, and death, this striking scene relates the themes of the Wall to their larger context. The 'frightened ones' are shown by Scarfe's animation to be fearful creatures donning gas masks (a childhood memory for him, from the days of the air raid sirens), cowering from the falling bombs. Animator Gerald Scarfe describes the animation sequence: "The dove of peace explodes and from its entrails a terrible eagle is born. This menacing creature tears great clods from the countryside with its gigantic talons, destroying whole cities. Swooping low it gives birth to the War Lord, a gargantuan figure who turns to metal and sends forth bombers from its armpits. The bombers turn to crosses as the frightened ones run to their shelters. The ghosts of soldiers fall and rise again continuously and on a hill of bodies a Union Jack turns to a bloody cross. Blood runs down the cross and through the corpses and pointlessly trickles down the drain. When Roger conceived The Wall, he told me he wanted to make it into an album, then into a show, and finally into a film. We got on well. We had the same ironic-stroke-sardonic view of the world.”
The first time I ever got high I was 18 and my buddy (a long time smoker at that point) put on The Wall movie. This scene was the coolest thing I’d have ever seen in my life at that time (yes I was high as ****). coming up on 30yrs later I still remember that scene/feeling like it was yesterday.
Oh, yeah, the song rocks too and would have been in my top 20.
 
Love this song - one of my favorites on the Wall and was my #10 overall. To me, the vocals for the lyrics “goodbye blue sky, goodbye” are up there in drawing emotion from me with “how I wish, how I wish you were here”.

I love this part in the movie too.
I love this song too even if it is really most enjoyable as part of the album. The topic of the song is quite depressing but the song is just beautiful. I loved it the first time I heard it and still enjoy it, and put at 17 on my list. It’s not a PF powerhouse song or epic PF song by any means but it is stunning in its simplicity. The vocal delivery isn’t some piece of outstanding singing but works really well.
 
#31-T - See Emily Play from Single (1967)

Appeared On: 9 ballots (out of 33 . . . 27.3%)
Total Points: 61 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 7.4%)
Top Rankers: @Mookie Gizzy @worrierking @PIK95 @turnjose7 @Ghoti
Highest Ranking: 6

Instrumental Version, Live 1967, Top Of The Pops, Alternate Mix, Nick Mason Version

Live Performances: PF: 15, NM: 156

Covers: David Bowie, Three To One, Chemistry Set, Salon Music, The Lies, Zodiak, Brit Floyd, Aussie Floyd, Grapes Of Wrath, All About Eve, 3

See Emily Play was first known as Games For May, named after a free concert in 1967, at which Pink Floyd performed. It was the first show where the group set up a quadrophonic PA system, which would be a regular feature of future gigs. See Emily Play is included in the RNR HOF's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll list. It is also the 277th most acclaimed song of all time according to Acclaimed Music. It was a Top 30 pick by all outside rankers.

The song is about a girl named Emily, whom Barrett once said he saw while sleeping in the woods one night after he had taken an hallucinogenic drug. Barrett later reportedly claimed that the story about sleeping in the woods and seeing a girl before him was made up "...all for publicity." Some speculate that Emily is the Honourable Emily Tacita Young (b. March 13, 1951), daughter of the Baron Kennet and nicknamed "the psychedelic schoolgirl" at the UFO Club (15 at the time).

Emily missed the event but someone told her all about it. She recalled: "I thought, gosh, that's nice, a song with my name, but I didn't think it was about me. And I don't think it was now because Syd and me didn't have a love affair and he didn't really know me. It could have been some other girl who played a part in his dream. It could have been Jenny, but Emily scanned better."

The slide guitar work on the song is said to have been done by Barrett with a Zippo lighter. The bass riff from the song is similar to the one used in Goodbye Cruel World from The Wall. Barrett, reportedly, wasn't happy with the final studio cut. He protested against its release, which producer Norman Smith has speculated was based on Barrett's fear of commercialism.

Rick Wright talked about the sound of the single and the part played by Arnold Layne's engineer. "Although it sounds a bit gimmicky, hardly any special effects were used. Take that 'Hawaiian' bit at the end of each verse: that was just Syd using a bottleneck through echo. The part that sounds speeded-up, though, was speeded-up! John Woods, the engineer, just upped the whole thing about an octave."
Emily was a big and exciting hit for the Floyd, landing them in the top ten on the British charts, and allowing them to appear on the BBC's Top of the Pops program three times. However, this sudden new success began to take its toll on Syd, and it is during this period that there were the first indications that all was not right with him.

Manager Peter Jenner: "One thing I regret now was that I made demands on Syd. He'd written See Emily Play and suddenly everything had to be seen in commercial terms. I think we have pressurized him into a state of paranoia about having to come up with another 'hit single.'" Syd: "Singles are always simple. The whole thing at the time was playing on stage obviously, but being a pop group, one wanted to have singles."

The song was added to the U.S. version of The Pipers At The Gates Of Dawn release.
 
Vulture Ranking (out of 165 songs): 17
UCR Ranking (out of 167 songs): 7
Louder Ranking (out of 50 songs): 29
WMGK Ranking (out of 40 songs): 15
Ranker Ranking (out of 132 songs): 30
Billboard Ranking (out of 50 songs): 8

Vulture Ranking (17 out of 165 songs): The band’s second single, originally presented at (and named for) a psychedelic event on the south side of the Thames, Games for May; Barrett later changed the title. Stories differ as to why. The result is an interesting amalgam of then-current styles, including Merseybeat, that lurches into a plainly psychedelic mélange. Barrett’s classic early psychedelia lyrics — “You’ll lose your mind and play,” etc., etc. — cut deep. There’s a wonderful B+W video, too.

UCR Ranking (7 out of 167 songs): There are few better marriages of pop single and ’60s psychedelia than Emily. Syd Barrett’s Pink Floyd packs this catchy tune full of tricks – from the disorienting space-age intro to the buzz saw guitars to an elfin piano solo (that sounds like Wright recorded it in a dollhouse) to the deep “duh-dunn” that announces each verse – but never strays far from the melody. There’s also some heavy feelings ground into this portrait of a LSD-tripping festival-goer who is content to “borrow somebody’s dreams” and “float on a river, forever and ever.” It’s almost as if Barrett was forecasting his own drug-prompted troubles.

Louder Ranking (29 out of 50 songs): Sun-kissed, woozy and perfectly in step with the Summer Of Love, See Emily Play was originally titled Games For May, and written for the concert of the same name held at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on May 12, 1967. Floyd’s management smelled a rare hit single, and although Barrett was vehemently opposed to pursuing the song, he reworked it, introducing references to his Cambridge childhood.

WMGK Ranking (15 out of 40 songs): A slice of classic psychedelic pop written by Syd Barrett. It’s Floyd’s second single. David Gilmour, who was not yet a member of the group, visited the studio while they were working on the song, and was reportedly stunned by how much his boyhood pal had changed. Barrett would, sadly, change even more drastically in the months and years to come. He’d no longer be part of the band, but he’d inspire some of their greatest songs in his absence.

Billboard Ranking (8 out of 50 songs): Pink Floyd’s signature early hit in their home country, with sighing guitar slides, lush production, an expert chorus, and the least knotty melody or song structure of Barrett’s tenure. Of course, Syd thought it was too poppy and begged the band not to release or promote it (“John Lennon doesn’t do Top of the Pops“!), and it’d be years before the band released anything nearly so immaculate again, with or without their self-destructive front man. All the more reason that See Emily Play stands today as such a standard-bearer for psych-pop, brilliant, precious and thoroughly transportive.
 
See Emily Play is the first MONSTER Pink Floyd tune to make an appearance imo. On some days I could have ranked it #1 and felt good about it. It's unfortunate that it's success seemed to have a negative impact on Syd's mental health.
 
See Emily Play is the first MONSTER Pink Floyd tune to make an appearance imo. On some days I could have ranked it #1 and felt good about it. It's unfortunate that it's success seemed to have a negative impact on Syd's mental health.
I am SHOCKED by this development.

:sarcasm:
I would take 3/4 of The Wall over Emily. It's not a bad song (and it's one of the best Syd era songs). But not even close to the same weight class as The Wall offerings. But I'd pick Emily 120 times out of 100 compared to Panic! At The Disco.
 
See Emily Play was just outside of 25 at #30 on my list. This one reminds me a lot of the Beatles.

Yeah....I would have thought it was a Beatle's song. Not sure how anyone could have this in consideration for #1 as a Floyd fan.
 
Love this song - one of my favorites on the Wall and was my #10 overall. To me, the vocals for the lyrics “goodbye blue sky, goodbye” are up there in drawing emotion from me with “how I wish, how I wish you were here”.

I love this part in the movie too.
I wouldn't quite say that I have the same feelings for WYWH (the song) as PIK has for the rest of The Wall . . . but it's close. I didn't vote for WYWH, as I think it's been played out, is overly sappy, and strikes me as a song intended to be poppy and overly emotional. I would have thought that as I got older, I would get to appreciate it and like it more . . . but the opposite has happened. I've had plenty of friends and family pass away . . . that still hasn't impacted my opinion any. I am well aware that I am in the minority on this one (19 people voted it in their Top 5) and that might be cause for revolt. I appreciate the song as being well written and performed very well. It just doesn't grab me. I don't think it's trash by any stretch, but every time it comes on, I skip over it. And there are very few PF songs I just pass over.
Completely agree with you about WYWH (the song). It has never done anything for me at all.
 
#28 - Any Colour You Like from The Dark Side Of The Moon (1973)

Appeared On: 8 ballots (out of 33 . . . 24.2%)
Total Points: 84 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 10.2%)
Top Rankers: @Todem @Dwayne Hoover @ericttspikes @Pip's Invitation @Grace Under Pressure
Highest Ranking: 9

Early Mix, Rehearsal, London - 1972, Brighton - 1972, Chicago - 1972, London - 1974, Ontario - 1975, Boston - 1975, Long Island - 1975, Pulse, Pittsburgh - 2022

Live Performances: PF: 171, DG'S PF: 18, RW: 187

Covers: Dream Theater, Flaming Lips, Squirrels, World Trade, Robben Ford, Buddha Lounge Ensemble, Vitamin String Quartet

Our first song with 10% of votes. And our last song with single digit voters. It's also the highest ranking song without a Top 5 vote.

The song started out as Scat, then Dave's Scat Section, then Breathe (Second Reprise). The title came from an answer given by a technician to questions put to him: "You can have it any color you like", a reference to Henry Ford's apocryphal description of the Model T: "You can have it any color you like, as long as it's black." This is notable because it's the only song during Waters' tenure that is credited only to Gilmour, Mason, and Wright. In earlier live versions of the piece, there was no keyboard solo, and the work was a long jam piece. Gilmour frequently sang along with his guitar solo, and the band's female backing singers sometimes came up on stage and sang as well. By 1975, live performances were said to be 10-15 minutes long.

Roger's version on naming the song is slightly different. "In Cambridge where I lived, people would come from London in a truck full of stuff that they're trying to sell. And they have a very quick and slick patter, and they're selling things like crockery, china, sets of knives and forks. All kinds of different things, and they sell it very cheap. They tell you what it is, and they say 'It's ten plates, lady, and it's this, that, and the other, and eight cups and saucers, and for the lot I'm asking NOT ten pounds, NOT five pounds, NOT three pounds... fifty bob to you!', and they get rid of this stuff like this. If they had sets of china, and they were all the same colour, they would say, 'You can 'ave 'em, ten bob to you, love. Any colour you like, they're all blue.' And that was just part of that patter. So, metaphorically, 'Any Colour You Like' is interesting, in that sense, because it denotes offering a choice where there is none. And it's also interesting that in the phrase, 'Any colour you like, they're all blue', I don't know why, but in my mind it's always 'they're all blue', which, if you think about it, relates very much to the light and dark, sun and moon, good and evil. You make your choice but it's always blue."

The song used advanced effects for the time both in the keyboard and the guitar. The VCS 3 synthesizer was fed through a long tape loop to create the rising and falling keyboard solo. David Gilmour used 2 guitars with the UniVibe guitar effect to create the harmonizing guitar solo for the rest of the song.

Vulture Ranking (out of 165 songs): 23
UCR Ranking (out of 167 songs): 46
Louder Ranking (out of 50 songs): NR
WMGK Ranking (out of 40 songs): 20
Ranker Ranking (out of 132 songs): 28
Billboard Ranking (out of 50 songs): 39

Vulture Ranking (23 out of 165 songs): A Gilmour/Wright/Mason jam. It could have been — should have been — this album’s big mistake, but the amazing sounds, the clarity of the ideas, and the passable groove lets the album as a whole breathe. The engineering is exquisite; the song contains several of the most interesting instrumental passages this suite-crazy band ever laid down. Here again Wright makes his mark. Nothing high-energy, but the overlaid sounds and the keening emotion of the keyboards allow this odd track to hold its own with its fellows. Radically constructed; and the intro and outro — into Brain Damage — are brilliant.

UCR Ranking (46 out of 167 songs): Providing much more than breathing room between Us and Them and Dark Side’s big finish, this three-and-a-half-minute instrumental features rain showers of Wright’s synthesizer playing, looped in beautifully disorienting fashion. Then, Gilmour hijacks the proceedings with a couple minutes of shimmering guitar, playfully overdubbed so that the solos “bawk-bawk” at each other like cranky chickens. The sonic transitions in and out of Any Colour You Like only enhance the songs that surround the track.

WMGK Ranking (20 out of 40 songs): Any Colour You Like is an instrumental jam, composed by Gilmour, Wright and Mason. It gives you time to digest what you’ve just heard, as you’re transported by Wright and Gilmour’s solos.

Billboard Ranking (39 out of 50 songs): Wright’s time to shine on Dark Side, his synth beams taking center stage for the most arresting sections of the short instrumental — though there’s plenty of time for Gilmour’s guitar to raise its own talking points in between. Like On the Run, not quite a fully fleshed song, but vital connective tissue for one of the most fluid LPs ever assembled, and undeniable proof that ******* it, this album really needed its own friggin’ laser show.

Up next, Panic! At The Disco drops by to discuss whether the grass was greener, the light was brighter, or the taste was sweeter.
 
I had Any Colour You Like included in my first draft. Once I remembered a couple I missed, it was just off. As a standalone it just ends so abruptly. Great piece though.
 
I think Any Colour You Like is the only song from Dark Side that didn't make my top 25, probably because it's so hard to judge on its own, but it's still an amazing piece of music. It works great as a bit of a comedown after the amazing Us and Them and also does a great job in setting us for the astonishing 1-2 punch at the end.
 
I think Any Colour You Like is the only song from Dark Side that didn't make my top 25, probably because it's so hard to judge on its own, but it's still an amazing piece of music. It works great as a bit of a comedown after the amazing Us and Them and also does a great job in setting us for the astonishing 1-2 punch at the end.
Amazing it is - very curious how high it will rank here.
 
I think Any Colour You Like is the only song from Dark Side that didn't make my top 25, probably because it's so hard to judge on its own, but it's still an amazing piece of music. It works great as a bit of a comedown after the amazing Us and Them and also does a great job in setting us for the astonishing 1-2 punch at the end.
Amazing it is - very curious how high it will rank here.
Not showing up anytime soon.
 
I think Any Colour You Like is the only song from Dark Side that didn't make my top 25, probably because it's so hard to judge on its own, but it's still an amazing piece of music. It works great as a bit of a comedown after the amazing Us and Them and also does a great job in setting us for the astonishing 1-2 punch at the end.
Amazing it is - very curious how high it will rank here.
Not showing up anytime soon.

That’s one that doesn’t rate highly with me. It’s fine but I find it kind of boring
 
I think Any Colour You Like is the only song from Dark Side that didn't make my top 25, probably because it's so hard to judge on its own, but it's still an amazing piece of music. It works great as a bit of a comedown after the amazing Us and Them and also does a great job in setting us for the astonishing 1-2 punch at the end.
Amazing it is - very curious how high it will rank here.
Not showing up anytime soon.

That’s one that doesn’t rate highly with me. It’s fine but I find it kind of boring
Same here, barely made my list.
 
#30 - Pigs On The Wing (Parts 1 & 2) from Animals (1977)

Appeared On: 6 ballots (out of 33 . . . 18.2%)
Total Points: 68 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 8.2%)
Top Rankers: @turnjose7 @ericttspikes @Desert_Power @Just Win Baby @worrierking
Highest Ranking: 2
I agree that it could be difficult to rank as a complete song being bookends to an album, but this checks all the boxes for me as my favorite kind of Floyd music; acoustic guitar, emotive lyrics, Roger singing and a great electric solo. I also think this is an example of a "hopeful" Floyd song, at least that's how it makes me feel, especially in context with the rest of the album.
 
#30 - Pigs On The Wing (Parts 1 & 2) from Animals (1977)

Appeared On: 6 ballots (out of 33 . . . 18.2%)
Total Points: 68 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 8.2%)
Top Rankers: @turnjose7 @ericttspikes @Desert_Power @Just Win Baby @worrierking
Highest Ranking: 2
I agree that it could be difficult to rank as a complete song being bookends to an album, but this checks all the boxes for me as my favorite kind of Floyd music; acoustic guitar, emotive lyrics, Roger singing and a great electric solo. I also think this is an example of a "hopeful" Floyd song, at least that's how it makes me feel, especially in context with the rest of the album.
Probably makes me more hungry than hopeful.
 
I agree that it could be difficult to rank as a complete song being bookends to an album, but this checks all the boxes for me as my favorite kind of Floyd music; acoustic guitar, emotive lyrics, Roger singing and a great electric solo. I also think this is an example of a "hopeful" Floyd song, at least that's how it makes me feel, especially in context with the rest of the album.
As I mentioned, back in the day, I had the Animals 8-track . . . which has the full version of Pigs On The Wing as the lead track. I didn't even know the song was split into two parts on the vinyl album until many years later when I got the CD. So to me, the song being broken into two parts as bookends to the album seems really weird to me. The other difference on the 8-track is Dogs is the song that has a Part 1 and a Part 2 instead of Pigs On The Wing.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top