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From MOJO magazine, May 1994 issue
From MOJO magazine, May 1994 issue. Several articles on floyd and some
very cool pictures of them I've never seen. The cover is an old press
photo of the old PF, everyone is wearing satiny-paisley-type clothes.
Syd is the farthest back, looking like he's having a bad acid trip.
Some of the bracketed [..] material out my comments, some are from
the magazine. The typos are all mine...
Tim Meekins

THE THIRD COMING
And it came to pass that the Syd Barrett Group became the Roger Waters
Quartet, whoe became the David Gilmour Trio. And many various were
the evils that befell them upon the highway.
Pink Floyd by Robert Sandall
Three decades and 140 million albums later, the sheer familiarity of the
Pink Floyd phenomenon obscures the strangeness of it all. Unlike any of their
contemporaries, for whom drastic changes in line-up have normally spelled
disaster, The Floyd are well into their third coming. They opened their
account as the Syd Barrett band, hoisted themselves into the international
superleague as the Roger Waters quartet, and having survived the successive
departures of two inspirational leaders and principal songwriters, are now
continuing to hold their own as the David Gilmour trio. Small wonder the
accepted wisdom holds that with Pink Floyd it is the sights and the sounds
that matter; that for them, personnel are little more than technicians
servicing a vast, high-tech _son et lumiere_ spectacle, or perpetuating
a brand name. The band endorse and encourage this view of themselves as a
personality-free zone, to the point of giving only one interview to mark the
release of their new album, The Division Bell. "We don't have to promote a
Bono or a Mick Jagger," drummer Nick Mason tells me. "The thing you have to
remember is, we're so wonderfully boring."
What this thoroghly English remark conceals though is an equally English
history of childhood friendships and teenage alliances, casting long shadows
over the lives and careers of a group of young, now middle-aged, men.
Most accounts of the origins of Pink Floyd begin at Regent Street
Polytechnic, London in 1964, where three architectural students, Roger Waters,
Nick Mason and Rick Wright, formed a college R&B band, later recruiting a
student from Camberwell Art school, "Syd" -- real name, Roger -- Barrett. The
true foundations of Pink Floyd though had been laid much earlier.
It is no coincidence that the band's three leaders, Barrett, Waters and
David Gilmour grew up together in Cambridge, in fairly comfortable middle-
class circumstances. Their mothers, according to Gilmour, all had connections
with Homerton, the nearby teacher's training college. But the key to their
knowing each other was the man whose ghost still hovers above the band: Syd
Barrett. Waters and Barrett shared the same primary and grammar schools, and
were drawn to each other, despite the age difference, partly because each had
lost his father. Gilmour and Barrett, both a couple of years younger than
Waters, became friendly aged 14, and ended up at Cambridge Tech together,
studing 'A' levels. "We would hang around the Art Department, playing guitars
every lunchtime. Teaching each other basically," Gilmour recalls.
In the summer of 1964 the pair went busking in San Tropez, playing
Beatles songs from the Help album on the streets of the fashionable resort,
before getting thrown in gaol by the French police. "The thing with Syd was
that his guitar playing wasn't his strongest feature. His style was very
stiff. I always thought I was the better guitar player. But he was very
clever, very intelligent, an artist in every way. And he was a _frightening_
talent when it came to the words, and lyrics. They just used to pour out."
There was never any doubt that Syd Barrett constituted the guiding spirit
of the early Pink Floyd. The year after St. Tropez trip, he was down in London
painting and studying fine art when Waters asked him to join a blues band
called, rather unpromisingly, The Tea Set. At the time, Waters was an all
purpose strummer, more interested in the idea of the group than in mastering
any specific instrument, let alone the bass guitar. Mason, the drummer, was
his best mate at college. Wright supplied what little musical expertise they
had. One of Barrett's first contributions was a proper name, decided at half
time during a gig at RAF Uxbridge, there being two Tea Sets on the bill that
night. With a typically swift and esoteric flourish, Barrett combined the
Christian names of a couple of is favourite bluesman, Pink Anderson and Floyd
Counsel. [gee, what about the Abdabs and other incarnations? -tm]
Particularly delighted to have Barrett aboard was Rick Wright, the group's
keyboard player, who had dumped architecture and was now moonlighting at the
London College Of Music. "It was great when Syd joined. Before him we'd play
the R&B classics, because that's what all groups were supposed to do then. But
I never liked R&B very much. I was actually more of a jazz fan. With Syd the
direction changed, it became more improvised around the guitar and keyboards.
Roger started playing the bass as a lead instrument, and I started to
introduce more of my classical feel."
Together, they led Pink Floyd into the swirling psychedelic dawn of 1966,
where the band's reputation for uncompromising weirdness soon turned them into
the darlings of the English underground, then centered on clubs like Joe
Boyd's UFO, located in the basement of an Irish pub on Tottenham Court Road.
The idea of incorporating a light show Mason attributes to a lecturer from
Regent Street Poly, Mike Leonard, whose house in Highgate they all lived in.
"Mike thought of himself as one of the band. But we didn't, because he was too
old basically. We used to leave the house to play gigs secretly without
telling him."
Syd permed his hair and they all took to wearing patterned satin-y shirts.
By the summer of 1966, Pink Floyd had acquired a couple of young managers,
Peter Jenner and Andrew King, and a strong London-based following. "You must
never underestimate hown unpopular we were around the rest of England," Mason
insists. "They hated it. They would throw things, pour beer over us. And we
were terrible, though we didn't quite know it. Promoters were always coming up
to us and saying, I don't know why you boys won't do proper songs. Looking back
on it, I can't think why we persevered."
Syd was much of the reason. Encouraged by Jenner, he was beginning to
write songs which adapted the melodic approach of The Beatles to the harsher
sounds and spacey electronic atmospheres that dominated Pink Floyd's rambling
live shows. Early in 1967 EMI signed the band for an advance of 5,000 [pounds],
a princely sum by the standards of the day, but less significant than a
contract which, for the first time, required the artistes to deliver albums
rather than just singles. And whatever they did, Pink Floyd could, for a
while, do no wrong. Their Games For May concert at the Festival Hall
introduced the world's first quadrophonic sound system, built for the group
by the boffins at EMI. Arnold Layne, See Emily Play, and the first album The
Piper At The Gates Of Dawn were all rapturously received.
Six months later, the brightest hopes of the British psychedelic movement
were in trouble. Barrett's fondness for LSD had always been a little worrying,
since he wasn't the most stable character to start with. "You could see the
occasional girlfriend with bruises," one old friend recalls. By the end of
1967 he had been made virtually catatonic through a regime of daily tripping.
The Floyd had had to field substitutes before, notably when Dave O'List, the
guitarist of The Nice, stepped in to cover for Barrett on a couple of dates
during their British tour with Jimi Hendrix. As 1968 came around, the were
looking for a full-time replacement. Jeff Beck was considered, but rejected on
the grounds that he would be too expensive and couldn't sing. The only other
serious candidate was Dave Gilmour, whose Cambridge-based band Jokers Wild had
previously supported the Floyd, at Syd's request.
The original plan was for the Floyd to continue as a five-piece, on the
model of the Beach Boys, with Barrett cast in the roll of Brian Wilson, mainly
staying home to write songs. Syd, in his more lucid moments, had other ideas,
urging his partners to hire two sax players and a girl singer. [ouch!] By the
spring, and after a number of chaotic appearances as a quintet, it became
clear that Pink Floyd had a new line up, and that Syd Barrett wasn't part of
it.
"I loved the first album, but I thought the gigs were pretty interminable,"
Gilmour recalls. "It was too anarchic. I was all for musicking things up a
bit. I definately considered myself a superior musician and I remember
thinking that I could knock them into some sort of shape." The problem was
Roger Waters. The pattern of the next 12 years, according to Mason, the
band's resident diplomat, boiled down to "Dave's desire to make music, versus
Roger's desire to make a show". In the early stages thought, the relationship
was even simpler; it was pure Cambridge: "I was the new boy. Not only that, I
was two years younger than the rest of them, and you know how those playground
hierarchies carry over. You never catch up. Roger is not a generous spirited
person. I was constantly dumped on. And to get my point across I had to make
increasingly histrionic, stubborn gestures."
Wright, who was to become progressively isolated from the other members of
Pink Floyd during the 1970s, felt Barrett's departure more keenly than was
ever recognized. As well as losing a musical foil, he lost his only ally in a
band which, as Gilmour robustly points out -- and he should know -- "was never
a jolly bunch of friends. Things between the four of us were always pretty
rocky". Long before Waters called for Wright's resignation in 1979, the two
were at loggerheads. They began arguing at college. "We would never have been
friends if it weren't for the band." As personalities, the two were clearly
ill matched. Waters, abrasive and assertive; Wright, sensitive and slightly
dithery. In addition, as Peter Jenner points out, "Rick was Roger's real
rival. He was better looking and he had the better voice." The other
non-Cambridge Floyder, Mason, stuck close to Waters, the college friend whose
bolshy spirit of independence he, initially anyway, admired.
That left Gilmour, considerably more reasonable than Waters but equally
hardheaded. All in all, the discovery that Wright nearly left the band when
invited to do so in the spring of 1968 seems hardly surprising. "Peter and
Andrew (Jenner and King, Floyd's managers) thought Syd and I were the musical
brains of the group, and that we should form a break-away band, to try to
hold Syd together. He and I were living together in a flat in Richmond at the
time. And believe me, I would have left with him like a shot if I thought Syd
could do it."
The most telling evidence of the enduring power of Barrett's charsimatic
talent and personality lies in the intense respect he still inspires in his
childhood friend, Roger Waters. "Syd was the only person I know who Roger has
ever really liked and looked up to," says Peter Jenner. Long after Waters had
stopped talking to the others, and was attempting to claim the credit for most
of what Pink Floyd accomplished in the '70s, he was unstinting in his praise
for Barrett. "I could never aspire to Syd's crazed insights and perceptions,"
he told Q in 1987. "In fact for a long time I wouldn't have dreamt of claiming
any insights whatsoever. I'll always credit Syd with the connection he made
between his personal unconscious and the collective group unconscious. It's
taken me fifteen years to get anywhere near there. Even thought he was clearly
out of control when making his two solo albums, some of the work is
staggeringly evocative. It's the humanity of it all that's so impressive. It's
about deeply felt values and beliefs. Maybe that's what Dark Side Of The Moon
was aspiring to. A similar feeling."
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