How many reunions will it take before weâve finally seen the end of Pink Floyd? Iâm not complaining, mind you, but marveling at how durable an outfit the band has been for their fifty-year, on again, off again history. Yet aside from the occasional charity reunion show, theyâve mostly been off, having supposedly called it quits after 1994âs Division Bell. As the A.V. Club reminds us, âPink Floyd has not really existed since Pulp Fiction was in theaters.â Now, after twenty years of dormancy, theyâre back with a new album, The Endless RiverâDavid Gilmour and Nick Masonâs reworking of Division Bell sessionsâdue out November 10th (see a tracklist and hear teasers here). âItâs a shame,â Gilmour tells Rolling Stone, âbut this [album] is the end.â
Yeah, weâve heard that before. This time, itâll probably stick. Keyboardist Richard Wright died in 2008 (the new album is a tribute to him), Gilmour and Roger Waters have had a mostly icy relationship, and drummer Nick Mason has channeled his passion, and fortune, into classic cars. But it does seem likely that theyâll take the stage again, at least for a one-off performance, as they have a handful of times throughout the years. Today in tribute to their longevity, or their refusal to fade away, we bring you a few of those reunion shows, beginning at the top with their Live 8 reunion concert in Londonâs Hyde Park in 2005, a benefit organized by their old friend Bob Geldof to coincide with the G8 summit. This concert is the last time all four members would play on stage together, joined by a host of guest musicians, and they sound amazing. Gilmour ruled out any further shows after this, but then two years later, he joined Waters onstage at an event for the Hoping Foundation to benefit Palestinian children. See them play for an intimate crowd of just 200 in the video above.
While Roger Waters officially left the band in 1985 on acrimonious terms, he has continued to tour both his solo material and his Floyd music, performing a solo version of the The Wall Live to huge audiences in North America and Europe since 2010. At one of those shows, in 2011 at Londonâs O2 Arena, Gilmour joined him onstageâatop the wallâfor âComfortably Numbâ (above), then returned with a mandolin, and Nick Mason with a tambourine, for âOutside the Wallâ (below).
It seems cynical to call the remaining members’ occasional appearances together opportunistic since they generally only occur at charity events. But given how long itâs been since theyâve released anything new, we might well ask, as the title of their 2011 remaster project has it, âWhy Pink Floyd?â Why new music, and why now? Since their spaced-out psychedelic debut, theyâve made increasingly thoughtful, finely-crafted albums for very patient listeners, veering into rock opera, stretching out into space opera, becoming more and more cinematic in scope. Itâs those long, complex arrangements (like Wish You Were Here and 1977’s Animals), tied together by Gilmourâs soaring guitar lines and Wrightâs moody keyboards, that hold up best, I think, at least for devoted fans, and thatâs exactly what we can expect from The Endless River. See Gilmour and Mason discuss the new album, and hear some stunning audio samples, at the bandâs website.
Related Content:
Hear Lost Recording of Pink Floyd Playing with Jazz Violinist Stéphane Grappelli on âWish You Were Hereâ
Pink Floyd Plays With Their Brand New Singer & Guitarist David Gilmour on French TV (1968)
Watch Documentaries on the Making of Pink Floydâs Dark Side of the Moon and Wish You Were Here
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
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Watch the Rare Reunions of Pink Floyd: Concerts from 2005, 2010 & 2011
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