Dark Side of The Moon. Syd Barrett read about two old bluesmen in the liner notes of something else he had his hands on at the time.

But the sound…. oh, the sound! if magic had a sound, then this would be it.
We don’t need to see the band, we know who they are already. The Come Together Supergroup is just as well known by its core as it is by the extended cohort of vocalists who shine on the stage like crazy diamonds.
Jol Mulholland, Brett Adams, Mike Hall, Matthias Jordan, Alastair Deverick, Nick Atkinson, Finn Scholes form the band, and I also know you know by now where they fit.
This homage to Pink Floyd is as close as you will get to 1994’s The Pulse, at Earls Court in London. Where your writer sat in the sound and lighting box, in the middle of the arena, and chatted to Mike Rutherford during the interval, thanks to a serendipitous encounter with a certain Mr. Sal Monella, which, for now, belongs to another story.
Back then, a compete run through of Dark Side of the Moon came in the second half.
Tonight the heartbeat speaks to us from the outset and parenthesizes the offering 42 minutes later in an Eclipse. Which incidentally became the working title of the album, commenced as demos in Roger’s garden shed, before the original title was reinstated after Medicine Head’s album of the same name flopped.
So it came to be. The greatest Rock album of all time (apart from half a dozen others I could mention) was conceived as a concept, and piloted live to rapt audiences who also believed in magic after being overwhelmed by the effects of demonic laugher, bird song, cash registers, quirky voices*, tape loops, synthesizers, and, who’d have thought, musical instruments.
*Did you know that one of the voices in the background is that of Peter Watts, Pink Floyd’s Road Manager, who died in 1976 of a heroin overdose, leaving behind a 7-year-old daughter, the actress Naomi Watts? Every day’s a school day (leave those kids alone).
A collection of songs which entrance and enhance no matter the impairments you have administered, and even without them.
In 1973 this album, at the age of 19, changed my life. And cemented Pink Floyd amongst the greatest of all times.
Tonight, the album is not interrupted by old technologies. It’s all there, seamless, with exquisite musicianship and matching vocals.
Bullshit, not true. Ask Jenny Skulander who is awesome in vocal dexterity. Be very afraid. Clare, meet Jenny, 53 years on.
And what about Nick Atkinson, sax perfect in introducing Us and Them, which in turn segues into Any Colour You Like, as long as it’s dark.
It’s over in a heartbeat, but a rate within perfect variability range, heralding the notion of immortality in song. This is an album of the ages, for all ages, and timeless to infinity.
Alright, second set underway with a blissful Brett as Gilmour solo, and the opening sequence from 1975’s Wish You Were Here. The crazy diamond shines on.
The musical feature above all else tonight is the intertwining, interlocking, harmony of three guitars. Brett, Jol and Luke for the most part, and the second half highlight is probably the intro to the title track (Wish You Were Here), which is pitch perfect and immaculate to watch, if you are close enough, which I’m not.
A nod to the post Waters era, from A Momentary Lapse of Reason and a rather surprising dive into The Final Cut.
The choice of albums and songs tonight can be seen as firstly a homage to Syd, with all its undercurrents of mental anguish and illness, all its themes of a hard life on the road, morphing into the dark side of the worldview of Roger Waters.
All over the place Syd, whose descent into insanity has a pathological impact on the band until partially exorcised by Wish (you might argue that A Momentary Lapse is a return to the trauma of Syd).
Speaking of trauma, the latter part of Pink Floyd the originals (before he left) can be seen as dominated by the wrath of Waters.
This includes the Orwellian Animals (no songs tonight), the magnificent but cutting Wall and the indifferent Final Cut, whose two songs tonight highlight the descent of Roger Waters into his dark, jingoistic, imperialist ranting phase.
But back to the music. Not Now John could be funny, but the evening is saved by the final sequence of Pink Floyd bangers (almost a contradiction in terms) and the final brick making a virtue of the Waters’ Wall.
The long-haired chap in the toilets I reckon that was a bloody good night beats all I can think of understating.
Roger Bowie
Photography by Leonie Moreland
Set List
- Speak to Me
- Breathe
- On the Run
- Time
- Great Gig in the Sky
- Money
- Us & Them
- Any Colour You Like
- Brain Damage
- Eclipse
- Shine On You Crazy Diamond parts 1-5(Wish You Were Here)
- Echoes (Meddle)
- Have A Cigar (Wish You Were Here)
- Wish You Were Here
- Learning To Fly (Momentary Lapse of Reason)
- Hey You (The Wall)
- Young Lust (The Wall)
- Final Cut
- Not Now John (Final Cut)
- One of These Days (Meddle)
- Comfortably Numb (Wall)
- Run Like Hell (Wall)
- Another Brick in the Wall (Wall)