My first exposure to Pink Floydâs rock opera The Wall left me feeling nothing less than astonishment. And though I never had the chance to see the outrageous stage show, with its very literal wall and giant inflatable pig, the film has always struck me as a suitably dark piece of psychodrama. Over a great many subsequent listens, the melodramatic double-album can still blow my mind, but Iâve come to feel that some of the strongest material are those songs penned jointly by Roger Waters and David Gilmour, and those are relatively few. (Mark Blake quotes Gilmour as saying âthings like âComfortably Numbâ were the last embers of mine and Rogerâs ability to work collaboratively together.) The bulk of the album belongs to Waters, its autobiographical details and personal themes, and the album and film can sometimes feel as stifled and claustrophobic as its protagonist does. This is either a creative failing or a brilliant melding of form and content.
Inspired by an incident in which an exasperated Waters spat on a rowdy fan at a stadium show in Montreal during the bandâs 1977 âIn the Flesh Tour,â The Wall documents the painful rise and even more painful fall of a fictive rock star named, of course, Pink (played by Bob Geldof in the film version), whose life closely parallels Watersâ, down to the spitting. It has always seemed an odd irony that Waters responded to the alienation of touring massive stadiums by creating a stadium show bigger than anything the band had yet done, but it speaks to the bassist and singerâs grandiose personality and obsessive desire to turn his angst into theater. Oftentimes the results were spectacular, other times bombastic and confusing (at least to critics, some of whom are easily confused). The recording of the album, as many well know, strained the band almost to breaking, and by many accounts, Watersâ imperiousness didnât help matters, to say the least.
All of the behind-the-scenes drama may or may not eclipse the drama of the album itself, depending on your level of fandom and interest in Pink Floyd biography. Lovers of Watersâ epic rock dramaturgy will find edification at the extensive online critical commentary Pink Floyd The Wall: A Complete Analysis, an online work in progress that delivers on its title. For a very brief account of the story behind the story, co-producer Bob Ezrinâs interview with Grammy.com offers perspective from someone involved in the project who wasnât a member of what came to seem like The Roger Watersâ Band. Ezrin describes The Wall as âRogerâs own project and not a group effort,â and his own role as âa kind of referee between him and the rest of the band.â
In the beginning we had a very long demo that Roger had written. We started to separate out the pieces, and when we looked at the storyline we realized what we needed was a through line, something to get us from start to finish.
Ezrin recounts that he âclosed [his] eyes and wrote out the movie that would become The Wall,â handed the script out to the band, and marked songs missing from Watersâ demo as ââTBWâââto be written.ââ (Among those songs was âComfortably Numb.â)
The recordings at the top of the postâwhich surfaced in 2001 with the title Under Constructionârepresent a step in The Wallâs evolutionary development between Watersâ rudimentary demos (short excerpts above) and the completed album. (See the Youtube page for a complete tracklist. Contrary to the uploader’s description, Roger Waters certainly does not play all the instruments.) While Under Construction has generally been referred to as a âdemo,â Rick Karhu of Pink Floyd fanzine Spare Bricks expresses his doubts about the use of a term he takes to denote âa fairly polished recordingâ: âDemos are not rough recordings or works-in-progress [â¦]. I doubt very much that Under Construction is a demo of The Wall.â
It’s too rough around the edges—at times shockingly so—to be strictly considered a demo recording. At points, things are haphazardly edited together. Songs cut off abruptly, fade unexpectedly or drop out entirely for a moment as if someone at the mixing desk hit the wrong button at some point. Vocal tracks peak-out, often causing anguish to the listener’s ear drums. Some instrument lines (mostly the bass guitar) meander through the background as if the person playing is making up the part as they go. Equalization is nonexistent on most tracks. Overall, most of it sounds like a 4-track recording by a band who has only the vaguest notion of how the equipment works.
Lest we take this description as disparagement, Karhu clarifies: âIt is precisely for those reasons [â¦] that I love them dearly and consider them one of the most valuable, unauthorized Floyd recordings to be unearthed. Ever.â Many Youtube commenters agree, some even arguing that these rough sketches are superior to the final polished product. Itâs a debate I wonât weigh in on, though I will say that like Karhu, I enjoy the lo-fi raggedness of this version of The Wall. It seems to convey the emotionally frayed edges of these songs in a way the slick production of the studio album may not at times. Either as a mere document of the albumâs early history or an alternate, fragmentedâand hence more traumatizedâtake on The Wall, this unofficial version is haunting and strange. Does it perhaps better represent Watersâ desire to make his psychic unease into art? We invite you to judge for yourselves. And if, like me, you can listen to “Comfortably Numb” (and that incredible guitar solo) on repeat for hours on end, you may be interested to hear David Gilmour discuss the song’s composition in the interview below.
Related Content:
David Gilmour & David Bowie Sing âComfortably Numbâ Live (2006)
Watch Documentaries on the Making of Pink Floydâs Dark Side of the Moon and Wish You Were Here
Hear Lost Recording of Pink Floyd Playing with Jazz Violinist Stéphane Grappelli on âWish You Were Hereâ
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
Hear Roger Waters’ Early, Work-in-Progress Recordings of Pink Floyd’s The Wall is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
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Hear Roger Watersâ Early, Work-in-Progress Recordings of Pink Floydâs The Wall
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