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Granny Takes A Trip

Format: CD
Catalog: WMCD/117 (wonder music, the great pink hope)
Misc.: GEMA
Produced: 1993
Date: 721115
Cover:
Lovely photo of Syd and the boys lifted from the Visual Documentary (Look
in the October 1966 section. It's a full page color photo.) The best part is
that the jewel case is tinted slightly green. From a distance, sitting next
to other CDs, it almost seems to glow. Very cool. Back cover contains
track-listing and the line "All tracks are early studio demos featuring SYD
BARRETT" - "The Great Pink Hope" Mine didn't come with a green-tinted
case.
Sources:
15 Nov 1972, and singles Track 1 : ? Track 3,4,5 : early singles Track 6 :
15 Nov 1972, Boeblingen
Tracks:
1. One Of These Days 11:53
2. Interstellar Overdrive (includes Zabriski Point Announcement) 16:34
3. Interstellar Overdrive 3:05
4. It Would Be So Nice 3:45
5. Remember A Day 4:30
6. Looking Through The Knotholes In Granny's Wooden Leg 26:43
Total Time: 66:32
Band:
Syd Barrett
Roger Waters
Rick Wright
Nick Mason
David Gilmour
Xref:
The Return Of The Sons Of Nothing (Track 6) Sophisticated Colours, Feed
Your Head (?)
Comments:
The demo version of 'One Of These Days' is really weird. It seems more
like two demos. The first part contains a deejay talking (there was
somewhere mentioned that the song was 'dedicated' to some deejay, some
member(s) of the floyd disliked). The second part starts of with the
wind-sounds. The line chanted by Nick Mason 'one of these days I'm going
to cut you into little pieces' is repeated over and over again.
It is 2 demos. The voice-over is Jimmy Youngs voice, to whom OotD is
'dedicated'.
The 'Zabriski announcement' really is an extract of 'Flaming' (just the
first verse).
The first 'Interstellar' track seems to be taken from TLAMLIL. The second
is probably an early single.
'Looking Through ...' is really 'echoes' but Roger does announces it as
'looking through ...'. v
The statement on the back-side 'all track are early studio demos
featuring Syd Barret' is a joke. Only track 2 and 3 will feature Syd and
track 6 is a live-performance, not a studio demo.
All of the tracks on this disc were mastered from vinyl.
Tracks: (as they really are)
1. One Of These Days - This sounds like a very elaborate fake. It uses
pieces of guitar and organ from the original song, adds several nifty new
sound effects (including someone endlessly repeating the title
throughout), and just generally sounds little like the original. It is a
dandy cover version, though.
2. Interstellar Overdrive - Although I haven't made it my business to
memorize all of the various versions of this song that have appeared over
the years, I would suggest that this cut is most likely the same as the
one appearing on the Tonight Let's All Make Love In London soundtrack CD. The mysterious phrases on the booklet "(Includes) Zabriski Point
Announcement" actually seem to refer to a few seconds of "Flaming"
which appear on the end of this track. Don't ask me why - I haven't the
slightest idea.
3. Interstellar Overdrive - One of the segments of IO appearing on the
original vinyl version of the TLAMLIL soundtrack.
4. It Would Be So Nice - This is the main reason that I bought this disc. I
thought that perhaps someone had finally located a mix of this tune
which contained the alternate lyrics. For those of you who don't know,
there is a phrase in the song which mentions the "Daily Standard".
However, there is (supposedly) a version in which the phrase is "Evening
Standard". The versions on the Shine On Box, the Total Eclipse Box, Early
Singles (RoIO, pre-Shine On), Last Screams, and Granny Takes A Trip all
say "Daily Standard". If you know of any way of locating the "Evening
Standard" version, please let me in on the secret.....
5. Remember A Day - This is probably the best song on the CD.
Unfortunately, it's the same version that appears on A Saucerful of
Secrets. Personally, given the choice, I'd go with ASoS any day.
6. Looking Through The Knotholes in Granny's Wooden Leg - This is really
Echoes. Roger introduces it in jest. It is from a near classic RoIO
recording taken from the November 15, 1972 gig in Boblingen (Germany).
This is a superb Echoes. It's probably worth buying the CD for if you can't
get the whole 15 Nov 1972 gig on a disc.
To the best of my ability to say, Syd Barrett actually does appear on
tracks 2,3 and 5. However, the only place we hear his voice is in the
snippet of "Flaming" at the end of track 2.
Syd clearly did not have anything to do with "One Of These Days" (which
was written at least two years after he'd left the band). He had nothing
to do with "It Would Be So Nice", regardless of the lyrical content. It
should be obvious to anyone that Syd had nothing to do with a concert
that took place in late 1972.
This disk, even with it's cool green jewel case and excellent choice of
Echoes, fails to live up to it's promise. When I first tried to order this
CD, it had already gone out of stock. I called back, figuring that I'd be
laughed at again. Luckily, they'd gotten a new shipment. I was overjoyed! I
counted the days until it finally arrived, ripped it out of the package,
slapped it into my CD player, and settled back to listen to my new-found
"early demos". I am now pretty disappointed. I suppose I'll just have to
listen to Magnesium Proverbs and forget about my $30 green turkey.
Here's the description from the catalog: "features rare studio outtakes of
"One Of These Days", Original Tonite... version of "Interstellar Overdrive"
w/ fade-out, BBC version of "It Would Be So Nice" with different lyric;
plus more"
In reference to One of These Days:
I don't know why Scott thinks it's probably fake. There are aspects of the
production that suggest it's PF - access to the required backing tapes, for
instance.
I don't think they are fakes. Though, you never know do you?
Again, I seriously doubt that the two versions of One of These Days are
fake. They way they are mixed correlates well with descriptions of how
it was played live in the early days. It is cool that they include two
versions of OOTD on the same track - an unexpected bonus. The second
mix is closer to the final one. There is no evidence of audience noise, so
maybe OOTD is actually a studio demo. And, Echoes was actually called
"Looking...." at one stage of its evolution. Another bonus is track 2 is
roughly 10 minutes longer than the time listed in the liner notes. IO is
taken from TLAMLIL vinyl (popping in the background) but is faded out
less than half way through). The complete pristine copy (17 minutes) is
available on ROLO.
This roio appears to be a bad attempt at copying the Sophisticated
Colours roio, or possibly even a vinyl roio that may have originated both
CDs. Going on timing info, Interstellar Overdrive, OOTD, and Looking
Through the Knotholes in Granny's Wooden Leg are the same as on SC. SC
also contains tracks called "Zabriskie Point" and "Announcement". Granny
Takes a Trip says Interstellar Overdrive, contains Zabriskie Point then it
says Announcement on the next line (inferring that it is part of IO) of the
liner notes.
The first Interstellar (the long one) is not from TLAMLIL but from the
soundtrack to the 1968 movie 'A Day In The Live Of San Fransisco'. Same
track can be found on the roios : Rhamadam - Syd Barret And The Dawn Of
Pink Floyd, Dark Globe - Syd Barret And The Dawn Of Pink Floyd).
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