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Pink Floyd – A Fleeting Glimpse

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pink floyd tour 1980

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Pink Floyd – The Wall Earls Court 7 & 8 August 1980

pf6

The following account is based on a good memory and is fairly accurate of the emotions I felt on the times I witnessed Floyd’s Opus Magmas live. I happened to be fortunate enough to attend 2 of the six 1980 shows the band performed at Earl’s Court, England on 7 & 8 August. I also managed to catch them again the following year at the same venue.

‘All in all’ the third time in 1981 was musically the best of the performances I witnessed, mainly because I knew what to expect. I was also able to absorb more of the special effects rather than being completely awe struck and inspired by what was actually happening on and off stage. I am now going to recollect with the aid of photo’s and notes I made of the concert at the time. Here’s how I remember the 7 August 1980.

The journey down to London was pretty uneventful and having arrived early afternoon we found a parking space at the rear of Earls Court and quickly ventured into a nearby pub. A few hours (and several cold ones) later we made our way to Earls Court and proceeded to queue with a few thousand others until the doors opened early evening.

Once inside it is difficult to appreciate the shear size of Earls Court. Hung from the ceiling, seemingly half a mile away and setting the scene were huge flags emblazoned with the crossed hammer motif. The stage stretched across the full width of the auditorium between the tied seats on either side. The part construction of a wall had already taken place on the stage. After finding our seats about 25 -30 metres from the stage I could make out the various pieces of kit and equipment at the front of the stage framed behind a large black back backdrop and a 10 metre circular film screen surrounded by stage lights.

At 8.00pm with the Auditorium seething with 18,000 people, a compare entered the stage and proceeded to welcome the audience as well as pointing out to us all that ‘No flash pictures were to be taken and anyone found doing so would have their equipment confiscated.’ – oh yeah!

We were also told. ‘Please no fireworks, believe me, there will be in enough explosions in your mind. Well I think the band is about ready to go now – pause – No not quite yet’. He spent 5 minutes whipping the crowd up with eager enthusiasm as well as delayed frustration until the gradual sound of a keyboard built in intensity before it was accompanied with a series of blinding flashes and the introduction of drums, bass and guitar.

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‘In the Flesh?’ where the ‘surrogate’ band are playing and not Pink Floyd themselves.

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IN THE FLESH – I took a quick photo. The surrogate band was in full view on the stage banging out a pretty good rendition of the opening track. Suddenly a large model skimmed above our heads and exploded stage right from the audience viewpoint. It turned out to be a model plane, which had flown the full 150-metre length of Earls Court. As the crowd applause died down, the sound of a gentle piano rippled from the banks of speakers overhead and from the other satellite speakers placed around the sides and to the back of the hall. This was quadraphonic sound at its best.

THE THIN ICE – by now the real band had taken to the stage and was dimly lit by a vast array of lights from either side of the stage. Dave Gilmour’s voice reaches out from the stage; the sound balance almost too perfect, followed by Roger Water’s vocal before we’re holding onto our seats with the shear volume of drum’s, bass and guitar booming out from all speakers. It takes a little time to adjust your ears to the volume but it sure adds to the atmosphere in the place. The keyboards roll out the end of thin ice and a synth merges us into:

ANOTHER BRICK IN THE WALL PART 1 – a beautiful choppy guitar laden with delay and reverb creeps out from the speaker system, slowly gaining in volume. It’s crisp somewhat slutchy sound echoing from all corners and sides of the vast auditorium. ‘Daddy’s flown across the ocean’ sings Roger rather menacingly adding to the sombre chords. The song ebbs and flows into Dave’s guitar solo complete with echo effects. As the track nears the end, soft mellow piano notes running up and down the keyboard drift over the audience, amongst the tapes of distant children playing in a playground. The track slowly, but distinctively fades away and the ever increasing sounds of a helicopter’s engine fills the air. Suddenly two lighting rigs ascend from out of the stage on either side of the band and a large spotlight catches a huge slumped up puppet of a teacher which is slowly raised aloft.

pf3

THE HAPPIEST DAYS OF OUR LIVES – the track is finely produced on stage with some nice backing vocals and drum rolls and drops wonderfully into:

floyd-1

MOTHER – This is not one of my favourite songs on the wall, however the song lifts itself in the middle when Dave’s guitar enters and the whole thing enters a nicely worked out chord sequence which doesn’t show on the studio album. In the middle of this track a huge inflatable (of a Mother) appears to the right of the stage peering out over the top of the wall. The song drifts into the last few bars and the tapes of birds together with the sound of an old warplane rumble out from the speakers. A girl’s voice blossoms ‘Look mummy, there’s an aeroplane up in the sky,’ and we are treated to the delightful acoustic sound of Dave’s guitar picking out the notes to:

pf5-(2)

YOUNG LUST – The song is a wonderful aptly performed version from the album but with more significance due to the shear volume. The song is slightly longer than the studio version because a keyboard solo is added towards the end. Rogers base playing on this particular track was pretty impressive as well. The song finishes and the tapes of a woman walking into an apartment and proceeding to undress for the tub washes around the hall in wonderful quadraphonic.

ONE OF MY TURNS – The wall being built across the stage now is taking dramatic shape where pockets and bricks have been left out at the base so that Roger can stand in front of the wall as he is singing. The lights from the manoeuvrable rigs behind casting their lights at the back of him and outwards and upwards into the hall adding a great effect. The song is very much like the album before it runs into

pf8

GOODBYE CRUEL WORLD.- Roger appears through the hole in the wall as he sings the lyric complete with a bright white light behind him. The final word Goodbye and the last brick slips into place and silence for a second or two.The audience goes wild and the house lights dimly appear. It’s interval time. There is approximately a 10 / 15 minute break at this point.

Not much to do other than gaze at the immense wall which has been erected across the front of the stage. It must be about 200 or even 300 feet long and about 30 feet high. I didn’t like the idea of counting how many bricks were used to construct it. Suddenly the house lights dimmed and the opening guitar chords of Hey You rolled out from the speaker system. We are into Part 2.

HEY YOU.- The band is nowhere in sight, hidden by the wall. It was very strange to hear the music yet not see the band or any light effects for the whole of this song. It sounded very much like the album but Dave’s guitar solo in the middle was quite special. As the song ended to the echo “Divided we fall”. A loud synth emanates around the hall together with the tapes of seagulls calling in the background. A voice booms out “Is there anybody out there”

IS THERE ANYBODY OUT THERE – During this song before the acoustic guitar section comes in. Two bricks are removed on the right hand side of the wall about midway up. Through the opening Dave can be seen sat on a stool illuminated by some lights at the back of him which cast their beams out through the wall and into the hall. His acoustic picking at this point is excellent. As Dave is playing a section of the wall on the left hand of the stage is starting to hinge down. Attached to it, is a set of a small hotel room showing a lamp, armchair and a tv in the corner, which is actually working. The track finishes and tape effects as per the album introduce us to:

NOBODY HOME – Rick’s piano is playing the opening bars as Roger climbs through the whole in the wall to sit on the armchair in front of the flickering tv screen. The whole effect is brilliant. The song is just as the studio version complete with brass. At the end the tape effects as per the album lead us into

pf3-(2)

COMFORTABLY NUMB – As Roger comes to the end of the opening verse the spotlight on him dies and a bank of lights to the left hand side illuminate over the top of the of the wall. Dave starts to sing the chorus; he is stood on a platform level with the top of the wall 30 feet up in the air, with this bank of lights behind him shining out into the audience. The seen is actually electrifying and the crowd unleash their appraise. Dave performs his nice little solo at the end of the chorus and the lights die behind him. A spotlight picks out Roger at the foot of the wall as he is singing the second verse and as the chorus is sung once more. Dave once again is caught in the banks of light astride the top of the wall. The whole song and treatment is absolutely mesmerising. Dave then treats us to a wonderfully extended solo at the end of this song before it finishes and again the lights are dimmed. A delicate keyboard is playing the opening melody line of:

2nd-set-pf1-(2)

The M.C. then walks onto the stage in front of the wall. For the next 10 minutes or so he is talking in a deep voice and reciting the exact words as when he first introduced the show. It sounds like playing a record at a slower speed. “Well I think the band is ready to go now” – pause – “No, No Not quite yet”. In the meantime roadies can be seen erecting equipment in front of the wall. Apparently the band are performing on platforms which disappear below stage and are then pushed forward under the line of the wall above stage, to be then raised into position above stage in full view of the audience. As it takes some time to achieve this, the compare is deliberately stalling proceedings regarding introducing the band back onto stage again. “Please during the course of the show no flash pictures”. “Well I think the band is about ready to go now – pause again – No No Not yet” You can imagine the noise from the crowd at this tactic. “No unauthorised recording equipment is to be used and anyone found doing so will have their equipment confiscated and will be removed from the auditorium. Well I think the band is just about ready to go now” Huge long lighting rigs are descending from the ceiling above and then there is a loud explosion as the band rip into

pf

Taken on the 8th behind the mixing desk towards the back of the auditorium about 100 metres from stage. The band had just started to play In The Flesh part 2 in the 2nd half of the set.

pf7-(2)

During the end of this song large slide images are projected onto the wall at the back of the band. The song is brought to a thunderous end and Roger asks “Do you like our pig” – It’s not a very nice pig but it’s a big pig. – Home piggy, home.” The pig makes it way back to the stage and behind the wall and Roger says, “This is a song for all the paranoids in the audience.” Dave is playing the choppy rhythm to Run Like Hell in the background. “This is called Run like F***” announces Roger and Dave’s guitar complete with loads of reverb and echo is now in full swing booming out from the speakers at all corners.

pf2-(2)

WAITING FOR THE WORMS – A film is projected onto the wall at the rear of the band as they are performing. It depicts a Union Jack Flag at some points together with hammers. The track is brilliant live in contrast to the studio version and Dave’s guitar riff at the end builds up incredibly loud. The depth and tone of the drums really add to the atmosphere as the hammers start to march across the wall in rows rather like soldiers on parade day. The song suddenly terminates into

STOP – Which is the same as the studio version. As the keyboard comes to an end and the band members have disappeared under the stage. A film is rolling on the wall again as Roger sits on the stage in front of the wall and starts to sing the lyric to

pf7

Shine on – Paul Wightman

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Pink Floyd Live - 1980-02-28 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, New York

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  • [introduction]
  • In the Flesh?
  • The Thin Ice
  • Another Brick in the Wall (Part 1)
  • The Happiest Days of Our Lives
  • Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)
  • Goodbye Blue Sky
  • Empty Spaces What Shall We Do Now?
  • One of My Turns
  • Don't Leave Me Now
  • Another Brick in the Wall (Part 3) The Last Few Bricks
  • Goodbye Cruel World
  • Is There Anybody Out There?
  • Nobody Home
  • Bring the Boys Back Home
  • Comfortably Numb
  • The Show Must Go On
  • [master of ceremonies]
  • Run Like Hell
  • Waiting for the Worms
  • Outside the Wall

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Published: July 6, 2012

1980 review of pink floyd performing ‘the wall’.

IMAGES

  1. 40 years ago on February 7th, 1980, Pink Floyd began their "The Wall

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COMMENTS

  1. Pink Floyd's 1980 Concert & Tour History

    Pink Floyd's 1980 Concert History. 21 Concerts. Pink Floyd was an English rock band formed in London in 1965. Gaining an early following as one of the first British psychedelic groups, they were distinguished by their extended compositions, sonic experimentation, philosophical lyrics and elaborate live shows.

  2. The Wall Tour (1980-1981)

    The Wall Tour was a concert tour by the English progressive rock band Pink Floyd throughout 1980-1981 in support of their concept album The Wall. [1]The tour was relatively small compared to previous tours for a major release, with only 31 shows performed across four venues. Concerts were only performed in England, the United States and Germany.

  3. A Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour

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  5. Pink Floyd 1980 The Wall Tour Documentary

    Documentary about the 1980 "The Wall" Earls Court concerts in London.Includes setup of stage and equipment, along with interview footage with the band and r...

  6. Pink Floyd The Wall Tour (1980-81)

    The Pink Floyd "The Wall" Tour, conducted from 1980 to 1981, was one of the most ambitious and significant concert tours in rock history. This tour was in support of their 1979 double album "The Wall," a rock opera that tells a semi-autobiographical story about isolation and abandonment. The album, largely conceived by Roger Waters, was ...

  7. The Pink Floyd Archives-Pink Floyd Concert Index

    Welcome to the Pink Floyd Concert Performances Page. Here you will find listings of every concert ever performed by Pink Floyd, and it's members. Any comments, corrections or additions to these listings would be appreciated. Table of Contents [Reference Directory] [Pink Floyd Archives home page] Pink Floyd Concert Appearances.

  8. Pink Floyd

    The Floyd performed The Wall there with 6 dates in 1980 (Aug 4-9 inc) and a further 5 dates in 1981 (June 13-17 inc). Today we can recapture some of the spirit of the concerts, with a collection of photographs from two of the 1980 shows. (Aug 7th & 8th). These photographs are brought to you by long time fan Paul Wightman whom we sincerely thank.

  9. Pink Floyd news :: Brain Damage

    Pink Floyd, David Gilmour, Nick Mason's Saucerful Of Secrets, and Roger Waters news as it happens, information, exclusive interviews, reviews, pictures, tour news, downloads and more!, THE WALL PERFORMANCES An indepth and fascinating look at the live 1980 and 1981 concerts by Paul Pow...

  10. In the Flesh (Pink Floyd tour)

    The Wall Tour. (1980-1981) The In the Flesh Tour, also known as the Animals Tour, was a concert tour by the English rock band Pink Floyd in support of their 1977 album Animals. It was divided in two legs: one in Europe and another in North America. The tour featured large inflatable puppets, as well as a pyrotechnic "waterfall", and one of ...

  11. Pink Floyd Live

    Pink Floyd Live - 1980-02-28 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, New York by Pink Floyd. Publication date 1980-02-28 ... Item Size 2703789376. The last of five shows in New York to 'tour' for The Wall, a 24/96 recording here with astonishingly good audio quality and some hard hitting performances before they took a few months off to prepare for the ...

  12. The Official Site

    7 February 1980 Pink Floyd played the first of seven consecutive nights at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena. The show comprised The Wall album in its entirety plus an additional instrumental titled The Last Few Bricks. The band were supplemented on stage by 'The Surrogate Band' made up of Andy Bown (bass guitar), Snowy White (guitar ...

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    Pink Floyd Full Concert, 1980-08-09, Earls Court 1980 Final Night, The Wall Live

  14. The Pink Floyd Archives-Pink Floyd Concert Appearances

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  15. Pink Floyd Concert Setlist at Earls Court, London on August 7, 1980

    Use this setlist for your event review and get all updates automatically! Get the Pink Floyd Setlist of the concert at Earls Court, London, England on August 7, 1980 from the The Wall Tour and other Pink Floyd Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

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    01. Master Of Ceremonies (Part 1) - 0:0002. In The Flesh - 01:1403. The Thin Ice - 04:1404. Another Brick In The Wall (Part 1) - 7:0405. The Happiest Days Of...

  18. Pink Floyd Concert Map by year: 1980

    Atom Heart Mother World Tour (94) British Winter Tour 1974 (20) Dark Side of the Moon (118) French Summer Tour 1974 (7) Games for May (1) In the Flesh (55) Meddle - U.S. Tour 1971 (27) Pink Floyd World Tour 1968 (134) Roland Petit Ballet (13) The Division Bell (111) The Man and The Journey (31) The Wall (31) Wish You Were Here (29)

  19. Pink Floyd Tour Dates 1968-2024

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  20. 1980 Review of Pink Floyd Performing 'The Wall'

    John Rockwell reviewed Pink Floyd's performance of "The Wall" in concert at Nassau Coliseum in The Times of Feb. 26, 1980. He followed the review with a critical assessment a few days later. Both articles are below. Related Article ».

  21. Is There Anybody Out There? The Wall Live 1980-81

    The Wall Live 1980-81 is a live album released by Pink Floyd in 2000. It is a live rendition of The Wall, produced and engineered by James Guthrie, with tracks selected from the August 1980 and June 1981 performances at Earls Court in London. The album was first released in the United Kingdom on 27 March 2000, [5] and a US/Canadian release by ...

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