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


I wasn't expecting this to be so polarizing. I don't hate it, but I prefer most of the other songs on Disc 1 of The Wall to it. As with many things Floyd, the best part is the guitar solo.
To be honest, I didn't want to say it after Anarchy posted about how connected he was to the song but I have never connected with it myself.

I am probably closer to @PIK95 viewpoint about this particular song.
It's all good. There are plenty of songs by lots of performers I just never connected with, figured out why people loved, or otherwise cared for. Nearly 80% of people voted for Mother. Clearly amongst us, the huge majority of people like it. I only voted for one of our Top 7 Floyd songs. Doesn't make them bad songs, and I won't trash them. But to me they were overplayed / overrated / or otherwise didn't click with me. It happens.
 
I know this is a Floyd thread, but this popped on YouTube and was a trip down memory lane for me. I saw all three of the bands in question here back in the 80's . . . Vandenberg, Tesla, and Whitesnake. Cause we all need some big hair / hard rock every now and again. Still Of The Night from a couple of months ago.
 
I know this is a Floyd thread, but this popped on YouTube and was a trip down memory lane for me. I saw all three of the bands in question here back in the 80's . . . Vandenberg, Tesla, and Whitesnake. Cause we all need some big hair / hard rock every now and again. Still Of The Night from a couple of months ago.
Still of the night is an underrated song
Tesla is an underrated band. They were lumped into the hair bands but weren’t pretty enough and way more talented than most. Their guitar work is top notch.
 
I know this is a Floyd thread, but this popped on YouTube and was a trip down memory lane for me. I saw all three of the bands in question here back in the 80's . . . Vandenberg, Tesla, and Whitesnake. Cause we all need some big hair / hard rock every now and again. Still Of The Night from a couple of months ago.
Still of the night is an underrated song
Tesla is an underrated band. They were lumped into the hair bands but weren’t pretty enough and way more tale than most. Their guitar work is top notch.
Frankie Hannon is a beast on the axe.
 
#15 - Mother from The Wall (1979)
I ranked it 7. It's tops for me because of the combination of vocals, the guitar work, the importance to the storyline of the Wall, everything. This is a defining Pink Floyd song IMO.
I ranked Mother at 22 but should have ranked it much higher. The guitar solo by Gilmour is one of my favorites. It’s not flashy but is so melodic. I don’t have a personal connection to the song but the emotion of the song still woks extremely well for me.
 
Actually I think there is going to be a surprise in the last 14. By my calculations we should have 15 songs left and I think I know what got left off by looking at my list
 
Well we definitely know the last 14 songs here.

Still surprised that One of These Days is still on the board. Predicting within next two picks.
If you are a betting man, I’ll bet you on it. How much do you want to wager? What odds would you like?

:stirspot:
Haha, you won. I don't know why Im surprised. Its a good song, i guess im more surprised that others revere it than how I think about it
 
Anarchy, was there a tie in the final 14? I feel like there has to be (although that wouldn't make sense in how ties normally work)

If not, a surprise was not ranked at all
 
Well we definitely know the last 14 songs here.

Still surprised that One of These Days is still on the board. Predicting within next two picks.
If you are a betting man, I’ll bet you on it. How much do you want to wager? What odds would you like?

:stirspot:

I'll take some of that action, too (i.e., disagree that it is within the next two picks). I expected coming into this that it would be top 10, and deservedly so.
 
Anarchy, was there a tie in the final 14? I feel like there has to be (although that wouldn't make sense in how ties normally work)

If not, a surprise was not ranked at all
What song was your surprise?
Well I have 15 songs written down that would be pretty shocked that one of them could not have appeared on anyone's list

My surprise song that was left out is Eclipse
Not left out. Merged with Brain Damage.
 
Forgot to post this the other day for a this day in Pink Floyd history kind of a thing . . .

20 June 2019
The sale of the David Gilmour Guitar Collection at Christie's New York, in aid of the charity ClientEarth, took place. The sale of over 120 of David's guitars was very successful, raising $21,490,750. It was the most valuable musical instrument sale in auction history, and took place in a pair of packed salesrooms (a second room opening due to sheer volume of people). Of the 126 lots sold, there were a few record breakers. In particular, the Black Strat achieved $3,975,000, setting a world auction record for any guitar, at the time. Christie's noted that, in the lead up to the auction, over 12,000 fans booked hour-long time slots at the tour stops in London, Los Angeles and New York to get up-close to the guitars. In excess of 500,000 people viewed the content around the sale on Christies.com, and more than 2,000 bidders from 66 countries registered for the sale.
 
I had Mother at 11 as well.

It doesn't have the personal ring with me either. My parents were much closer to negligent than overbearing. Steadfastly apathetic . But I still love the song. It's important to for Pink's story on the album/movie, but it's also a beautifully well-written, well-performed standalone.
 
This track is about the character Pink’s relationship with his mother: him looking to her for guidance and advice, her responding by helping him to build the metaphorical wall that will serve to both protect and isolate him from the world.
"Of course Mama's gonna help build the wall" is just such a devastatingly brilliant line. Always love how it leads into the guitar solo on this one.
 
#14 - Have A Cigar from Wish You Were Here (1975)

Appeared On: 22 ballots (out of 33 . . . 66.7%)
Total Points: 318 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 38.5%)
Top Rankers: @Desert_Power, @BroncoFreak_2K3, @Grace Under Pressure, @Dan Lambskin, @BassNBrew
Highest Rankings: 1, 4, 4, 5, 5

Original Version, Alternate Version, Work In Progress, Los Angeles - 1975, Oakland - 1977, RW & Paul Carrack - 1987, RW In Studio, RW - Pittsburgh - 2022

Live Performances: PF: 84, RW: 284

Covers: Foo Fighters & Brian May, Rosebud, Primus, Onetwo, John Foxx, Gov't Mule, Cinema Face, James LaBrie, Hände Frei, Jimmy Winchell, Bobby Kimball, IRA, Year Of The Cobra, Mondo Naif, Corey Taylor, FIDLAR & Dr. Dre

The song's lead vocals were performed by Roy Harper. Waters intended to sing but strained his voice while recording SOYCD. Harper was recording an album in a neighboring studio. After learning of the band's dilemma, Harper offered to sing lead. RW later said that he hoped the others would refuse the suggestion. He was surprised when they immediately accepted. Harper claims he requested a lifetime ticket to the nearby Lord's Cricket Ground as payment. He felt insulted when he was sent a one-time check instead (which he says was never cashed).

RW: "I wanted to write something to do with succumbing to the pressures of life and rock in particular... we'd just come off an American tour. The line 'By the way, which one's Pink?' came from real experience. We always look at it as a joke, but it used to be a fairly common line that got asked to us by interviewers and joe-publics. They really used to ask that."

On Roy Harper doing the lead vocal: "A lot of people think I can't sing, including me a bit. I'm very unclear about what singing is. I know I find it hard to pitch, and I know the sound of my voice isn't very good in purely aesthetic terms, and Roy was recording his own album at the time, he's a mate, and we thought he could probably do a job on it. I sort of expected them to say 'No, you do it, Roger' but they didn't, they said 'Great idea!' I now wish that I had done it... just one or two little things that I'd have done a bit differently."

DG: "We did have people who would say to us "Which one's Pink?" and stuff like that. There were an awful lot of people who thought Pink Floyd was the name of the lead singer and that was Pink himself and the band. That's how it all came about, it was quite genuine. Roger had a go at singing it and one or two people were unkind about his singing. They then asked me to have a go at it. I did, but I wasn't comfortable. I had nothing against the lyrics. Maybe the range and intensity wasn't right for my voice. I can distinctly remember Roy leaning on the wall outside Abbey Road, while we were nattering away and (growls) 'Go on, lemme have a go, lemme have a go.' We all went, 'Shut up Roy.' But eventually we said, 'Go on then, Roy, have your bloody go.' Most of us enjoyed his version, though I don't think Roger ever liked it."

Waters has since said he dislikes Harper's version, saying he would have liked it to emerge "more vulnerable and less cynical", adding that Harper's version was too parodic while Gilmour loved Harper's vocal delivery and called it the "perfect version".

Vulture Ranking (out of 165 songs): 49
UCR Ranking (out of 167 songs): 17
Louder Ranking (out of 50 songs): 13
WMGK Ranking (out of 40 songs): 11
Ranker Ranking (out of 132 songs): 17
Billboard Ranking (out of 50 songs): 20

Vulture Ranking (49 out of 165 songs): A bruising commentary on the music business. I love how the amiable funk laid down by the band is overwhelmed by the (impressive) electronic washes of sound in the intro, just as our lonely artiste is swamped by the industry. The soundscape here in its own way is as brutal as that of Welcome to the Machine. And it’s funny all the way through; choose your own favorite line. (Mine is “We’re so happy we can hardly count.”) DG’s fantastic and the chorus is epic, and the outro to WYWH is one of the most touching pieces of studio manipulation of the era. Docked 20 notches because the band, worldwide superstars on the heels of what would become the second-largest-selling album of all time, stiffed Harper, who wasn’t rich, on payment. (Harper himself never cashed in on the track either; it’s not on any of his live albums.) And docked another 20 for the irony.

UCR Ranking (17 out of 167 songs): RW has said he regretted the decision to ask Roy Harper to sing lead on this classic, because he played the lines for laughs instead of sniveling commentary. But for a band that lacked for humor after Syd left (with the exception of Waters’ dark sarcasm), Cigar is an oasis of fun in a sea of seriousness. While RW’s bass and DG's telephone cord guitar tangle themselves into a funk-rock mass of sinew, Harper interprets his record executive as a buffoon, a clueless cartoon of avarice and empty encouragement. Roy’s performance doesn’t make the caricature any less deplorable, but it’s more entertaining as a send-up, rather than hearing yet another rock band get bitter about the villains in the industry.

Louder Ranking (13 out of 50 songs): When the time came to record Have A Cigar, Waters’s singing was showing its limitations. Roy Harper was drafted to sing. “Roy was recording in the studio anyway,” recalled RW, “I can’t remember who suggested it, maybe I did, probably hoping everybody would go: ‘Oh no, Rog, you do it’. But they didn’t. They all went: ‘Oh yeah, that’s a good idea.’ He did it, and everybody went: ‘Oh, terrific!’ So that was that.” It was an instantly regrettable decision, and although Waters reluctantly conceded a credit on the album, there was certainly no question of payment. RW said Harper must get paid for his efforts. Roy said: ‘Just get me a life season ticket to Lord’s.’ He kept prompting RW, but it never came. About 10 years later, Roy wrote RW and decided that, due to the success of WYWH, £10,000 would be adequate. And heard nothing at all.” Have A Cigar is Waters’s cynical take on the music industry, and contains the immortal line: ‘Oh by the way, which one’s Pink?’ “We did have people who would say to us: “Which one’s Pink”’ and stuff like that,” Gilmour recalled. “There were an awful lot of people who thought Pin Floyd was the name of the lead singer, and that was Pink himself and the band. That’s how it all came about. It was quite genuine.” In many respects Waters was biting the very hand that was feeding him.

WMGK Ranking (11 out of 40 songs): Featuring guest vocals by British folk-rock singer Roy Harper, it’s kind of a sequel to Money. It’s an obvious critique of the greed in the music industry in the ‘70s: in Pink Floyd’s case, their record company was trying to “ride the gravy train” that started with the huge success of DSOTM. Years later, Waters quit the band and toured as a solo act, and played much smaller venues, he sold a t-shirt that read, “Which one’s Pink?”

Billboard Ranking (20 out of 50 songs): The definitive mid-tempo PF lurch, sleazy quasi-funk that sets the perfect stage for the surfeit of empty promises and self-skewering ignorance offered by the song’s music-exec narrator, portrayed with delectable vulgarity by guest singer Roy Harper. And no matter how many times you’ve heard it, nothing ever really prepares you for that shocking whoosh near song’s end that sonically transports the band - in the middle of one of Gilmour’s all-time closing shreds - into a tinny FM radio, leaving them seemingly trapped inside the dial, as they no doubt felt they were by that point in the mid-’70s.
 
#15 - Mother from The Wall (1979)

Appeared On: 26 ballots (out of 33 . . . 78.8%)
Total Points: 311 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 37.7%)
Top Rankers: @jabarony @Ghost Rider @Joe Schmo @Rand al Thor @Dr. Octopus
Highest Rankings: 3, 4, 4


Covers: , Guns N' Roses, My Morning Jacket,
NOT filler. It's the best song on The Wall!

A nice thing as we move closer to #1 is the increased likelihood of interesting cover versions. GnR took a few liberties with this one, including some very Axl lyrical edits. :P

And I love seeing MMJ covering this. They are the best cover band out there. They always seem to a couple covers to their shows, and the picks are always great.
 
I’m actually not sure why I left Have a Cigar off my list really. It’s some of Gilmour’s most “rocking” playing - great concept as well.
Guess call in 26.
There is one from the album that’s left that I don’t seem to like as much as most.
 
#13 - Hey You from The Wall (1979)

Appeared On: 25 ballots (out of 33 . . . 75.8%)
Total Points: 322 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 38.5%)
Top Rankers: @worrierking @Just Win Baby @Ghoti @Yambag @Joe Schmo
Highest Rankings: 5, 5

Original Demo, Demo #1, Demo #2, Film Version (Restored), Live, Berlin, Pulse, RW - The Wall

Live Performances: PF: 31, DG'S PF: 89, RW: 244

Covers: Aussie Floyd, Yoga Pop Ups, David Ari Leon, Aysedeniz Gokcin, Hydria, Furnace, Mystery, Dream Theater, Colony Of None, Midge Ure, Kitchen Dwellers, Hurtin' Buckaroos, S.A.M.

RW: "It's about the break-up of my first marriage, all that misery and pain and being out on the road when the woman declares over the phone that she's fallen in love with somebody else. It's a complete disaster, especially if you're someone like I was. I was flotsam on the turgid seas of women's power. Hopeless, really, I could do nothing but go fetal and weep. But the song is also partly an attempt to make connections with other people, to say that maybe if we act in consort, some of the bad feelings will go away. In community, there is comfort. The line, 'Hey you, out there beyond the wall / Breaking bottles in the hall'- that is an exhortation to come closer where I live, so we can help each other."

"Hey You is a cry to the rest of the world, you know saying hey, this isn't right; but it's also, it takes a narrative look at it, when it goes. Dave sings the first two verses of it and then there's an instrumental passage and then there's a bit that goes 'but it was only fantasy' which I sing, which is a narration of the thing. 'The wall was too high as you can see, no matter how he tried he could not break free, and the worms ate into his brain.' The worms. That's the first reference to worms... the worms have a lot less to do with the piece than they did a year ago; a year ago they were very much a part of it, if you like they were my symbolic representation of decay. Because the basic idea the whole thing really is that if you isolate yourself you decay."

"Once the character is completely bricked in, he becomes susceptible to the worms. The worms are symbols of negative forces within ourselves, decay. The worms can only get at us because there isn't any light or whatever in our lives. So at the end of Hey You, he makes this cry for help, but it's too late... he's only singing it to himself, you know, it's no good crying for help if you're sitting in the room all on your own, and only saying it to yourself. All of us I'm sure from time to time have formed sentences in our minds that we would like to say to someone else but we don't say it, you know, well, that's no use, that doesn't help anybody, that's just a game that you're playing with yourself."

Hey You was cut entirely from the movie. The footage was cut after the film was finished and the footage used elsewhere in the film. Director Alan Parker talked about why the track was cut: “It wasn’t that we didn’t like Hey You. I mean, Hey You is brilliant I think, particularly Gilmour’s guitar piece within it. It’s just that it seemed that it interrupted the narrative flow, and therefore that’s the reason it went out. It’s to do with the film more than the music. I always liked it as a piece of music. These images then were adapted into ABITW3. They were too good to lose and they still said a great deal.” RW felt the lyrics didn't fit chronologically with the story (and they needed to keep the running time down). A rough, black and white cut of the footage is available in the bonus features of the 25th anniversary edition of the DVD.

Vulture Ranking (out of 165 songs): 28
UCR Ranking (out of 167 songs): 37
Louder Ranking (out of 50 songs): 6
WMGK Ranking (out of 40 songs): 26
Ranker Ranking (out of 132 songs): 3
Billboard Ranking (out of 50 songs): 19

Vulture Ranking (28 out of 165 songs): One of the better second-tier songs on The Wall; RW has to drive home the point that the wall is now pretty much blocking Pink off from the world. This has the lilt of great PF on it, including some (over-amplified) pings à la Echoes. RW’s voice is always better when DG’s is in the mix as well, as here. The best part is when Pink/Waters is speaking to his audience: “Hey you, standing in the aisles / With itchy feet and fading smiles …”

UCR Ranking (37 out of 167 songs): With few exceptions, PF are at their best when they collaborate and one member doesn’t dominate too much. Even though Hey You is the creative vision of RW, it wouldn’t have achieved its uneasy mood without his bandmates. DG doesn’t just lend his sad-eyed vocals to the first 2 verses, he delivers the guitar break and plays the song’s distinctive, liquidy bass part. Wright adds midnight cool to the buzzing yearning while Mason gives just enough push, letting his fills tumble like hammers. As RW cries in the final line: “Together we stand, divided we fall.”

Louder Ranking (6 out of 50 songs): Though having much more of a DG stamp on it than others, not least in the soaring solo, it’s RW’s middle-eight vocal entry after it that centers the song then jumps ups the octave to add the bite. The essential DG/RWs dynamic in a nutshell. The lyrics reflect RW's pain, his desperation increasingly apparent with each verse, emphasising his growing distance from his wife and the emotional wall building between them: "Can you feel me?" "Would you touch me?" "Can you help me?" When the band toured the album it was the first song performed behind the onstage wall after it was fully built, but it didn't make the ensuing film at all, as Waters felt the lyric didn't fit the updated narrative.

WMGK Ranking (26 out of 40 songs): Co-written by RW and DG, the latter played guitar and the fretless bass on the song, as well as singing most of it. Like much of The Wall, the song plays into the album and subsequent film’s narrative but also stands on its own. Here, Pink has shut himself off from most of the world and is craving connection again, but can’t seem to get it. It’s sadly relatable even if you’re not a big rock star.

Billboard Ranking (19 out of 50 songs): The opener to side three of The Wall, and early proof that PF had the stuff to maintain two LPs worth of enthralling riffs and structural imagination. Doesn’t exactly kick the record off with a bang — the slithering mix of acoustic guitar and fretless bass (by Andy Bown from Status Quo on the live version) makes for one of the band’s most disquieting intros — but by the time RW leaps in an octave higher on the third verse, it’s demonstrated itself as a ballad powerful enough to raise the emotional stakes for the set’s back end, setting the tone for all the bitter isolation and chilling emptiness to follow.

Coming up, still no One Of These Days, but a next-door neighbor called The Return Of The Son Of Nothing.
 
I've always loved the Primus version of this. Not usually a "covers" fan, but Miscellaneous Debris is a great EP and one of my favorite Primus releases. Intruder and Making Plans for Nigel are also great.
 
I had Hey You at 23, which feels like more of a nostalgia placement since I rarely listen to it anymore. Still a great tune.

Have a Cigar just missed my top 25, I never minded Roy Harper singing it, as I always thought his lead vocal on this song sounded like an interesting combo of Roger and David's voices.
 
Harper is perfect for this. As much as I love DG's voice, it would have been totally wrong for this character, as would Wright's, and it sounds like RW wasn't capable of singing anything after straining his voice recording SOYCD. The funky lurch of the music is very appealing.


A great composition with excellent vocals from both DG and RW and wonderous guitar and bass work from the former. Even taken outside the context of the storyline, the lyrics resonate with people who are feeling lost. If only more of Disc 2 of the Wall was like this instead of Gilbert & Sullivan on crack.

Both of these would have surfaced on my list soon afterward had we kept going after 25.
 
I had Hey You at 23, which feels like more of a nostalgia placement since I rarely listen to it anymore

This is pretty much how I feel about Have a Cigar. I had it for 17, but in retrospect, I should have had it a bit lower, or even off my list altogether. It's a good tune, but it doesn't move me in the way that many other PF songs do.

Hey You, on the other hand, I LOVE. Had it as my #10, but could easily be higher depending on the day. I had totally forgotten that it was cut from the movie, but the reasoning makes sense.
 
Below is my top 25 with the songs not in the top 100 yet missing.

01
02
03
04 Mother (RANKED 15TH BY FBG)
05
06
07
08 The Great Gig in the Sky (RANKED 23RD BY FBG)
09 Poles Apart (RANKED 52ND BY FBG)
10 Shine On You Crazy Diamond VI-IX (RANKED 16TH BY FBG)
11
12 Money (RANKED 19TH BY FBG)
13
14 Sheep (RANKED 20TH BY FBG)
15 Sorrow (RANKED 51ST BY FBG)
16 Another Brick in the Wall II (RANKED 17TH BY FBG)
17 Keep Talking (RANKED 65TH BY FBG)
18 Speak to Me/Breathe in the Air (RANKED 18TH BY FBG)
19
20 On the Run (RANKED 40TH BY FBG)
21 Nobody Home (RANKED 36TH FBG)
22
23 Hey You (RANKED 13TH BY FBG)
24 Learning to Fly (RANKED 26TH BY FBG)
25 High Hopes (RANKED 27TH BY FBG)

With 12 songs left, I suspect my missing 10 are in there, and I can guess which are the other two (one of which would have been my 25th ranked song had Shine On been counted as just one song).
 
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  1. On the Turning Away (#22 FBG)
  2. Shine On You Crazy Diamond 2 (#16 FBG)


  3. One of My Turns (#34 FBG)


  4. Hey You (#13 FBG)
  5. Mother (#15 FBG)

  6. Learning to Fly (#26 FBG)

  7. Coming Back to Life (#52 FBG)
  8. The Trial (#68 FBG)
  9. Have a Cigar (#14 FBG)
  10. Money (#19 FBG)
  11. Your Possible Pasts (#68 FBG)
  12. Another Brick in the Wall (part 2) (#17 FBG)
  13. The Great Gig in the Sky (#23 FBG)
  14. Nobody’s Home (#36 FBG)

  15. Young Lust (#24 FBG)
  16. .
Only two left that I don't have on my list as well. I know for certain what one of them is ... the other I'm not sure. I'm sure it will be obvious once revealed.
 
I have 11 songs not yet revealed:




  1. Hey You - FBG 13

  2. Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts VI-IX) - FBG 16
  3. Speak To Me/Breathe - FBG 18


  4. Mother - FBG 15


  5. Sheep - FBG 20
  6. Another Brick in the Wall (Part 1) - 32T
  7. Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2) - FBG 17

  8. Goodbye Blue Sky - FBG 29
  9. Sorrow - FBG 51
  10. Nobody Home - FBG 36

  11. Is There Anybody Out There? - FBG 38T
  12. Pigs on the Wing (Parts 1 & 2) - FBG 30
  13. Don't Leave Me Now - FBG 78T
  14. Learning to Fly - FBG 26
The remaining song not on my list just missed my cut. I waffled about including it instead of Learning to Fly and probably should have gone the other way with it.
 
My rankings so far

1 -
2 -
3 -
4 -
5 -
6 - Speak to Me / Breathe - FBG 18
7 -
8 -
9 - Sheep - FBG 20
10 - Goodbye Blue Sky - FBG 29
11 -
12 - One Slip - FBG 42
13 - Hey You - FBG 13
14 -
15 - Dogs of War - FBG 49
16 -
17 -
18 - Shine On You Crazy Diamond VI-IX - FBG 16
19 - Money - FBG 19
20 - Young Lust - FBG 24
21 - Another Brick in the Wall pt 2 - FBG 17
22 - Mother - FBG 15
23 - Learning to Fly - FBG 26
24 - On the Turning Away - FBG 22
25 -


Two of my picks were ranked the same as consensus (13 and 19).

Seven of my picks are within five spots of consensus (13, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23, 24).

All twelve of the remaining songs on my list.
 
12 left. Including 5 of my top 6 and 8 of my top 10. Not the most Chalky McChalkerson, but up there.
Left: 1,2,4,5,6,8,9,10,13,14,16,20
Have A Cigar was my #7, but my list has been pretty untouched the last handful of selections.
 

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