Dwayne Hoover
Footballguy
How can I play spoiler, I don't know the order?@Dwayne Hoover , that is not cool to play spoiler like that. It is better to let the thread runner reveal the songs, even if they are obvious ones.
How can I play spoiler, I don't know the order?@Dwayne Hoover , that is not cool to play spoiler like that. It is better to let the thread runner reveal the songs, even if they are obvious ones.
How can I play spoiler, I don't know the order?@Dwayne Hoover , that is not cool to play spoiler like that. It is better to let the thread runner reveal the songs, even if they are obvious ones.
My rank: 2
As we get closer to the top ten, I just want echo (wink wink) everyone’s appreciation for all the work you’re doing @Anarchy99
The song/band info has been incredible and all the links and other info must take a lot of time to pull together.
This has been a really fun and informative thread. Thanks!
As we get closer to the top ten, I just want echo (wink wink) everyone’s appreciation for all the work you’re doing @Anarchy99
The song/band info has been incredible and all the links and other info must take a lot of time to pull together.
This has been a really fun and informative thread. Thanks!

Yes, colour me shocked that Echoes fell this far down (it was #1 with a bullet for me), but I understand that size/length matters to many. And yes, that original Pompeii version is what instantly made this my favorite Floyd tune the first time I saw it.My rank: 2
Amazingly, the first time I heard this was in a live performance. DG's PF opened their set with this when I saw them on 9/19/87 (one of the last concerts at JFK Stadium in Philly, site of Live Aid, which was condemned a few months later). I did not have Meddle and given its length had never heard Echoes on the radio. But my friends and I deduced pretty quickly what this had to be. We didn't quite know what to make of it and nor did much of the rest of the crowd, which was probably why it was removed from the setlist a few shows later. Once I got Meddle, however, Echoes quickly became one of my favorites. It's an extremely inventive and evocative work, trying all kinds of experiments but never killing the momentum of the song while doing so. The vocal sections are gorgeous, the guitar work is sublime and the "funky section" that lasts from about 7:00 to about 11:30 is one of the most thrilling passages any band ever laid down. And the Pompeii version is AMAZING.
I'm a little surprised that one-third of us did not have this on our lists, but I get that the length can be intimidating for some.
He's got to be crazy. Gotta have a real need.As we get closer to the top ten, I just want echo (wink wink) everyone’s appreciation for all the work you’re doing @Anarchy99

Sorry if I spoiled the last 12 songs somehow. I have no idea of the final order, thought we all knew what they would be. Maybe I misjudged that part.
I think we guessed at the end of the LZ countdown.
Just watched the Pompeii film performance again of Echoes. The 5:36-11:10 mark is just insane.
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Yup - love the Beasties homage there. We should have gotten Mike D’s and Ad-Rock’s votes here (RIP MCA). I’m sure they would have helped push Echoes higher.Just watched the Pompeii film performance again of Echoes. The 5:36-11:10 mark is just insane.
- YouTube
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.youtu.be
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Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.www.youtube.com
I thought this looked familiar!
Saw the Beasties in a club on the Check Your Head tour in 92. Still blown away. The venue put seats out for some reason, and the everyone on the floor folded them up, passed them back and chucked them in a big pile in back. Before the show, the Beasties got into a fight with openers House of Pain, lol. Think they got bounced from the tour shortly after that. One of the best shows I've ever seen. Will never forget it.Just watched the Pompeii film performance again of Echoes. The 5:36-11:10 mark is just insane.
- YouTube
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.youtu.be
- YouTube
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.www.youtube.com
I thought this looked familiar!
I saw the Beasties on that tour with Rollins Band opening back to back nights at Roseland Ballroom in NYC. Great shows.Saw the Beasties in a club on the Check Your Head tour in 92. Still blown away. The venue put seats out for some reason, and the everyone on the floor folded them up, passed them back and chucked them in a big pile in back. Before the show, the Beasties got into a fight with openers House of Pain, lol. Think they got bounced from the tour shortly after that. One of the best shows I've ever seen. Will never forget it.Just watched the Pompeii film performance again of Echoes. The 5:36-11:10 mark is just insane.
- YouTube
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.youtu.be
- YouTube
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.www.youtube.com
I thought this looked familiar!
Really like the JRAD cover. I hadn't heard that before. Thanks.#11 - Pigs (Three Different Ones) from Animals (1977)
Appeared On: 25 ballots (out of 33 . . . 75.8%)
Total Points: 348 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 42.2%)
Top Rankers: @Anarchy99 @zamboni @Mt. Man @Desert_Power @Dwayne Hoover @Dan Lambskin @Ridgeback @BrutalPenguin
Highest Rankings: 3, 5
Alternate Version, 2018 Remix, Oakland - 1977, New York - 1977, Berlin - 1977, Montreal - 1987, Mexico City - 2016, Amsterdam - 2018
Live Performances: PF: 55, RW: 200
Covers: James LaBrie, Ruby The Hatchet, Les Claypool, Sara Ardizzoni, Experience Group, Joe Russo's Almost Dead, Yonder Mountain String Band, Atomic Bitchwax
#11 - Pigs (Three Different Ones) from Animals (1977)
Using a pig as a symbol - or even an avatar - is classless.In recent years, RW has shown images of Trump during Pigs. It garnered cheers and boos. Some people actually were very offended and walked out. American Express was one of Roger’s sponsors and dropped him once they found out.
JRAD is probably my third favorite band. They do a cool Atlantic City. 10/3/15 is the goat show imo. Atlantic City>I Know You Rider was one highlight of many. Opened with Born Cross Eyed.Really like the JRAD cover. I hadn't heard that before. Thanks.#11 - Pigs (Three Different Ones) from Animals (1977)
Appeared On: 25 ballots (out of 33 . . . 75.8%)
Total Points: 348 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 42.2%)
Top Rankers: @Anarchy99 @zamboni @Mt. Man @Desert_Power @Dwayne Hoover @Dan Lambskin @Ridgeback @BrutalPenguin
Highest Rankings: 3, 5
Alternate Version, 2018 Remix, Oakland - 1977, New York - 1977, Berlin - 1977, Montreal - 1987, Mexico City - 2016, Amsterdam - 2018
Live Performances: PF: 55, RW: 200
Covers: James LaBrie, Ruby The Hatchet, Les Claypool, Sara Ardizzoni, Experience Group, Joe Russo's Almost Dead, Yonder Mountain String Band, Atomic Bitchwax
I have zero Animals on my list.Pigs was my highest rated Animals song and the only one to make my list of 25. I am not as big of an Animals guy as most other Floyd fans...I know sacrilege.

I saw Rogers shortly after Trump was elected, and seeing this live, with all the visuals was something else. Like we had the perfect president deserving of this song. Here's a clip from the same tour - Pigs#11 - Pigs (Three Different Ones) from Animals (1977)
#9 on my list, but could have been a touch higher. Its my favorite song on an album full of very strong tunes, so that's saying something. And my opinion is always right, so I've got that going for me as well.
For years I also assumed that Waters was taking a shot at the US President in the third stanza, but that didn't negatively affect my opinion. And let's be honest, no matter what your political views are, our government has quite honestly earned some scorn at various times over the years.
Both are stellar. I had Pigs at #7 and Dogs at #8.Hoping the last animal fares much higher - woof.
Definitely need another less political song here stat.Let’s not do anything that’ll get this awesome thread get shut down folks.
That Vulture dude needs to be cut into little pieces.Vulture Ranking (19 out of 165 songs): Meddle is a poorly produced record, but this — credited to all four members of the band — is another signature PF song, one that boasts sounds that no other band was producing. The band finally revisits the elemental force Barrett found on Interstellar Overdrive and Astronomy Dominé; harnessing that to an electronically altered piano noise makes this a high point of ’70s progressive rock. Gilmour steps up, too. It’s big and focused, grand and rocking.
A Dead cover band is your third favorite band?JRAD is probably my third favorite band.
Maybe second now.A Dead cover band is your third favorite band?JRAD is probably my third favorite band.
One of these days ..That Vulture dude needs to be cut into little pieces.Vulture Ranking (19 out of 165 songs): Meddle is a poorly produced record, but this — credited to all four members of the band — is another signature PF song, one that boasts sounds that no other band was producing. The band finally revisits the elemental force Barrett found on Interstellar Overdrive and Astronomy Dominé; harnessing that to an electronically altered piano noise makes this a high point of ’70s progressive rock. Gilmour steps up, too. It’s big and focused, grand and rocking.
Well there it is.#10 - One Of These Days from Meddle (1971)
Appeared On: 26 ballots (out of 33 . . . 78.8%)
Total Points: 357 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 43.3%)
Top Rankers: @worrierking @DocHolliday @Yo Mama @Pip's Invitation @New Binky the Doormat
Highest Rankings: 4, 4, 5
Demo #1, Demo #2, French Windows (Short FIlm), BBC - 1971, Pompeii, Washington - 1971, Zurich - 1972, Boblingen - 1972, Sapporo - 1972, DSOT, Pulse, Pompeii - 2016, Amsterdam - 2018, NM Version
Live Performances: PF: 162, DG'S PF: 307, RW: 161, DG: 18, NM: 157
Covers: Metallica, Blue Man Group, Brit Floyd, Dream Theater, Vespero, Gov't Mule, Velocihamster, Domkraft, Haldolium
We wave goodbye to the Meddle album, leaving only songs from 4 albums. DG has stated that he considers the song the most collaborative piece ever produced by the group. At one point, the song was called One Of These Days I'm Going To Cut You Into Little Pieces. The single spoken line in this song is a rare vocal contribution by Nick Mason. The title and 'lyrics' to this song were created by Roger. When asked just who it was that he wanted to cut into little pieces, he replied it had been an English disc jockey named Jimmy Young. During this period, Roger was in the habit of cutting tapes of Young’s show into little pieces — and then reassembling them in a nonsensical order to play at PF shows.
The song benefited from the atmosphere of experimentalism that was prevailing at the time. Roger was messing about with an echo unit when he discovered the sound. At the time, PF was intrigued by minimalist composers who were experimenting with electronic patterns. They used a pattern this type of pattern throughout the song. The riff was first created by DG on guitar with effects, then RW had the idea of using bass instead of guitar, so they recorded the song on two different bass guitars.
DG: "It evolved from some of my experiments with the delay unit. One day, Roger decided to take some of the techniques that I was developing and try them out himself on bass. And he came up with that basic riff that we all worked on. The opening section is me and Roger. For some reason, we decided to do a double track of the bass. You can actually hear it if you listen in stereo. The first bass is me. A bar later, Roger joins in on the other side of the stereo picture. We didn't have a spare set of strings for the spare bass guitar, so the second bass is very dull sounding. We sent a roadie out to buy some strings, but he wandered off to see his girlfriend instead. For the middle section, another piece of technology came into play: an amp with vibrato. I set the vibrato to more or less the same tempo as the delay. I just played the bass through it and made up that little section, which we then stuck on to a bit of tape and edited in. The tape splices were then camouflaged with cymbal crashes."
The only vocal was spoken by drummer Nick Mason, and was digitally warped to give it an evil sound to it. Mason said he liked how it sounded when it was all finished up. The final addition, which made the piece complete, was the howling wind at the beginning and end of the song, adding to the sinister atmosphere of terror. Roger: "The simplest things are often the best. For example, the sound of wind at the beginning of One of These Days is bloody effective." The song was released as a single in some countries but failed to chart.
Vulture Ranking (out of 165 songs): 19
UCR Ranking (out of 167 songs): 10
Louder Ranking (out of 50 songs): NR
WMGK Ranking (out of 40 songs): 24
Ranker Ranking (out of 132 songs): 21
Billboard Ranking (out of 50 songs): 6
Vulture Ranking (19 out of 165 songs): Meddle is a poorly produced record, but this — credited to all four members of the band — is another signature PF song, one that boasts sounds that no other band was producing. The band finally revisits the elemental force Barrett found on Interstellar Overdrive and Astronomy Dominé; harnessing that to an electronically altered piano noise makes this a high point of ’70s progressive rock. Gilmour steps up, too. It’s big and focused, grand and rocking.
UCR Ranking (10 out of 167 songs): Meddle’s first track turns Nick Mason into a monster, employing studio wizardry to make the song’s sole vocal line (“One of these days I’m going to cut you into little pieces”) more garbled and upsetting. But all the Floyd members sound like monsters on this big, bold instrumental, with its twin galloping basses from Waters and Gilmour, lightning strike organ whooshes by Wright and cellar-door batterings from Mason. After Nick’s threat, David kicks it into overdrive, burning down the highway on long stretches of rampaging guitar lines that squeal out past the vanishing point. One of These Days is relentless.
WMGK Ranking (24 out of 40 songs): Another rare group co-composition, it’s mostly instrumental… other than Mason’s only vocal for Floyd. He yells, “One of these days, I’m going to cut you into little pieces!” through some wild tape effects. Waters and Gilmour both play bass guitars, giving a creepy effect, and DG also adds slide guitars.
Billboard Ranking (6 out of 50 songs): The true starting gun for ’70s Floyd, a spectral voyage into the great art-rock unknown, entirely instrumental except for a heavily altered “One of these days I’m going to cut you into little pieces” bellow from drummer Mason. One heavily delayed, single-note bass riff shouldn’t be nearly enough to build a song this mighty around, but that kind of studio ingenuity would prove the group’s greatest weapon in the decade going forward — and here, the band surrounds the anti-hook with sweeping wind noises, growling guitars, extraterrestrial organs, racing drums and reversed percussion until it poses as much of a threat as Mason’s garbled title intro.
They could have done a much bigger/better cover, but I respect any band that shows that kind of admiration for Floyd.Well there it is.#10 - One Of These Days from Meddle (1971)
Appeared On: 26 ballots (out of 33 . . . 78.8%)
Total Points: 357 points (out of 825 possible points . . . 43.3%)
Top Rankers: @worrierking @DocHolliday @Yo Mama @Pip's Invitation @New Binky the Doormat
Highest Rankings: 4, 4, 5
Demo #1, Demo #2, French Windows (Short FIlm), BBC - 1971, Pompeii, Washington - 1971, Zurich - 1972, Boblingen - 1972, Sapporo - 1972, DSOT, Pulse, Pompeii - 2016, Amsterdam - 2018, NM Version
Live Performances: PF: 162, DG'S PF: 307, RW: 161, DG: 18, NM: 157
Covers: Metallica, Blue Man Group, Brit Floyd, Dream Theater, Vespero, Gov't Mule, Velocihamster, Domkraft, Haldolium
We wave goodbye to the Meddle album, leaving only songs from 4 albums. DG has stated that he considers the song the most collaborative piece ever produced by the group. At one point, the song was called One Of These Days I'm Going To Cut You Into Little Pieces. The single spoken line in this song is a rare vocal contribution by Nick Mason. The title and 'lyrics' to this song were created by Roger. When asked just who it was that he wanted to cut into little pieces, he replied it had been an English disc jockey named Jimmy Young. During this period, Roger was in the habit of cutting tapes of Young’s show into little pieces — and then reassembling them in a nonsensical order to play at PF shows.
The song benefited from the atmosphere of experimentalism that was prevailing at the time. Roger was messing about with an echo unit when he discovered the sound. At the time, PF was intrigued by minimalist composers who were experimenting with electronic patterns. They used a pattern this type of pattern throughout the song. The riff was first created by DG on guitar with effects, then RW had the idea of using bass instead of guitar, so they recorded the song on two different bass guitars.
DG: "It evolved from some of my experiments with the delay unit. One day, Roger decided to take some of the techniques that I was developing and try them out himself on bass. And he came up with that basic riff that we all worked on. The opening section is me and Roger. For some reason, we decided to do a double track of the bass. You can actually hear it if you listen in stereo. The first bass is me. A bar later, Roger joins in on the other side of the stereo picture. We didn't have a spare set of strings for the spare bass guitar, so the second bass is very dull sounding. We sent a roadie out to buy some strings, but he wandered off to see his girlfriend instead. For the middle section, another piece of technology came into play: an amp with vibrato. I set the vibrato to more or less the same tempo as the delay. I just played the bass through it and made up that little section, which we then stuck on to a bit of tape and edited in. The tape splices were then camouflaged with cymbal crashes."
The only vocal was spoken by drummer Nick Mason, and was digitally warped to give it an evil sound to it. Mason said he liked how it sounded when it was all finished up. The final addition, which made the piece complete, was the howling wind at the beginning and end of the song, adding to the sinister atmosphere of terror. Roger: "The simplest things are often the best. For example, the sound of wind at the beginning of One of These Days is bloody effective." The song was released as a single in some countries but failed to chart.
Vulture Ranking (out of 165 songs): 19
UCR Ranking (out of 167 songs): 10
Louder Ranking (out of 50 songs): NR
WMGK Ranking (out of 40 songs): 24
Ranker Ranking (out of 132 songs): 21
Billboard Ranking (out of 50 songs): 6
Vulture Ranking (19 out of 165 songs): Meddle is a poorly produced record, but this — credited to all four members of the band — is another signature PF song, one that boasts sounds that no other band was producing. The band finally revisits the elemental force Barrett found on Interstellar Overdrive and Astronomy Dominé; harnessing that to an electronically altered piano noise makes this a high point of ’70s progressive rock. Gilmour steps up, too. It’s big and focused, grand and rocking.
UCR Ranking (10 out of 167 songs): Meddle’s first track turns Nick Mason into a monster, employing studio wizardry to make the song’s sole vocal line (“One of these days I’m going to cut you into little pieces”) more garbled and upsetting. But all the Floyd members sound like monsters on this big, bold instrumental, with its twin galloping basses from Waters and Gilmour, lightning strike organ whooshes by Wright and cellar-door batterings from Mason. After Nick’s threat, David kicks it into overdrive, burning down the highway on long stretches of rampaging guitar lines that squeal out past the vanishing point. One of These Days is relentless.
WMGK Ranking (24 out of 40 songs): Another rare group co-composition, it’s mostly instrumental… other than Mason’s only vocal for Floyd. He yells, “One of these days, I’m going to cut you into little pieces!” through some wild tape effects. Waters and Gilmour both play bass guitars, giving a creepy effect, and DG also adds slide guitars.
Billboard Ranking (6 out of 50 songs): The true starting gun for ’70s Floyd, a spectral voyage into the great art-rock unknown, entirely instrumental except for a heavily altered “One of these days I’m going to cut you into little pieces” bellow from drummer Mason. One heavily delayed, single-note bass riff shouldn’t be nearly enough to build a song this mighty around, but that kind of studio ingenuity would prove the group’s greatest weapon in the decade going forward — and here, the band surrounds the anti-hook with sweeping wind noises, growling guitars, extraterrestrial organs, racing drums and reversed percussion until it poses as much of a threat as Mason’s garbled title intro.
I saw the Metallica cover and was very psyched because I had never seen that before. Then I watched it, what a letdown
They can't all be winners. Like many other bands, Metallica has some good covers but a lot that fall flat or don't quite work. This one was a dud. In general, I am not finding a lot of known / established bands taking a shot at many Floyd songs. For starters, the chances of it doing justice to the original are slim. And whatever anyone does isn't going to be better than the original. Very few bands have a guitarist anywhere in the league of DG (or a vocalist that sounds like him). IMO, lesser-known bands that try to put a different spin on things have the best chance of success in the cover category.I saw the Metallica cover and was very psyched because I had never seen that before. Then I watched it, what a letdown
Yup - the best covers are almost always among the PF cover bands that spend countless effort at recreating the sound (Brit Floyd, Aussie Floyd, The Machine, etc.). Everyone else is pretty much dabbling in Floyd, mostly to little success. Although the Claypool Lennon Delirium posted way upthread can sure bring it.They can't all be winners. Like many other bands, Metallica has some good covers but a lot that fall flat or don't quite work. This one was a dud. In general, I am not finding a lot of known / established bands taking a shot at many Floyd songs. For starters, the chances of it doing justice to the original are slim. And whatever anyone does isn't going to be better than the original. Very few bands have a guitarist anywhere in the league of DG )or a vocalist that sounds like him). IMO, lesser-known bands that try to put a different spin on things have the best chance of success in the cover category.I saw the Metallica cover and was very psyched because I had never seen that before. Then I watched it, what a letdown
Here's the thing. The professional PF cover bands do a decent job sounding similar to the real enchilada. I've seen some of them and enjoyed their concerts. They are talented musicians, and the concerts provided a "this is what a PF concert would have looked and sounded like". Props to them for that. But the rest of the time, why on earth would I pick to listen to them? I would just play the actual PF tracks. Some of the newer bands or jam bands have some interesting takes on the originals, so I think I like those better than the PF cover bands just recreating the originals. Some of the covers have been epic fails and just plan terrible, but I can at least get a laugh from them.Yup - the best covers are almost always among the PF cover bands that spend countless effort at recreating the sound (Brit Floyd, Aussie Floyd, The Machine, etc.).