luni, 1 noiembrie 2010

Roger Waters – "We Shall Overcome"

Pink Floyd co-founder Roger Waters has made available a new recording of the protest song “We Shall Overcome.” Posted June 3 to YouTube, the video is a call for the end of the blockade of Gaza. Waters is seen in the video singing and playing acoustic guitar. Lead guitar is played by G.E. Smith, with drums by Thor Jonsson, neither of whom are seen in the video.

Waters explains his motivation by referencing the freedom march to Gaza this winter. “The would be Freedom Marchers wanted to peacefully draw attention to the predicament of the Palestinian population of Gaza. The Egyptian government, (funded to the tune of $2.1 billion a year, by us, the U.S. tax payers), would not allow the marchers to approach Gaza,” he writes. “I was moved, in the circumstances, to record a new version of ‘We Shall Overcome.’ It seems appropriate.”



joi, 14 octombrie 2010

Roger Waters Lays First Brick of 'The Wall Live' Tour in Toronto

Getty Images

It's unlikely that any rock 'n' roll roadie works as hard as Roger Waters' roadies. Last night in Toronto -- on the first of three dates kicking off the former Pink Floyd singer's globe-spanning, 30th anniversary 'The Wall Live' tour -- they slowly and steadily constructed a massive, non-metaphorical wall across the Air Canada Centre stadium stage until, by intermission, the band was now completely hidden behind it. And after repleting up the rafters with crashing fighter planes, flying pigs and grotesque three-story tall animatronic puppets, they eventually send that wall a-tumblin' down at the climax of Waters' triumphant return performance.

Several generations have now grown up with Pink Floyd's 1979 magnum opus, chanting that they don't need no education, attending laser light shows, crowding Midnight Madness screenings of the Alan Parker film and listening to the prog-rock double-album epic in their bedrooms with the lights off. Needless to say, for all the many acts who have taken to playing full album concerts in recent years, few have boasted full albums quite as impactful as 'The Wall.' Waters may not be Pink Floyd, but given the '70s legends ongoing irreconcilable differences, there's somewhat more enjoyment in watching a black hoodie-clad Waters front an anonymous Floyd cover band than, say, seeing
David Gilmour play Pink Floyd karaoke. Though to be fair, it did take a full four players to replace Gilmour's contributions onstage, including uneven vocalist Robbie Wyckoff who often faltered on Gilmour's lines, though the crowd often helpfully out-sang him.

What made Waters' state-of-the-art 'The Wall Live' resurrection work so well was that it was ultimately about the album, not the man who wrote it or the men who performed it. But the big question that surrounded the tour lead-up was, Does 'The Wall' still matter? Its core story of youthful alienation -- sparked by the band's dissociation from its fanbase once it reached stadium-size -- certainly continues to reach out to new and old listeners alike. As for the album's additional themes of nationalism, fascism, corporatism and war, they may not ring quite as powerfully as when Waters last performed it on the collapsed husk of the Berlin Wall itself. But the new images from Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and other global hotspots that Waters added to the familiar ones from the album art and cult film make clear that wars certainly haven't stopped being fought, revolutions haven't stopped being quashed and soldiers and civilians haven't stopped dying. This was emphasized by the crowd's roar of support that accompanied the slogan "Bring the Boys Back Home" during 'Vera.'

Waters also made sure to mix old-school sloganeering (Big Brother is Watching You) with new ones (iProfit) and the animated planes dropped bombs made up of Shell Gas and Mercedes-Benz logos alongside the old communist, capitalist and Christian and Jewish symbols. The other question was, How well does Waters hold up? Almost creepily well, actually. At 67, his vocals are shockingly similar to those on the album as they mourn and marvel at the mysteries and inequities of life. 'The Wall' is really purpose-built for this kind of performance -- the double-album is perfect concert length and the songs are confident enough to take their time to set scenes and establish moods as with more traditional theatrical productions.

It was also conceived as a complete piece, so while the Toronto crowds certainly sang along loudest to the album's breakout hits -- 'Another Brick in the Wall (Part II),' which included a chorus of lip-syncing schoolchildren and giant professor puppet; 'Mother,' featuring a sky-high maternal puppet glowering down as Waters sang the acoustic number (marred by an early microphone flub); and 'Comfortably Numb,' performed high atop the now-constructed wall -- there was no feeling of impatience through the lower-key songs. That was equally due, of course, to the unceasing spectacle of the concert, which also involved mind-blowing digital animation projected upon the wall itself, beloved scenes from the movie (marching hammers, anal judge, fornicating flowers) and astounding use of surround sound.

By the end, the crowd, ecstatic that the performance had actually met their sky-high expectations, began chanting "Tear down the wall," until the wall did collapse upon the stage as if it, and the album itself, were alongside Waters taking their own well-deserved bows.
http://www.spinner.com/2010/09/16/rogers-waters-the-wall-live-tour-toront/

The Wall in Toronto

This would be considered a “SPOILER” if you plan on seeing the presentation of THE WALL featuring Roger Waters. This Tour will be remembered for sure. The few photos and videos I took from the 2nd row and what I am about to summarize will for sure remove the surprise element from the experience for anyone who hasn’t see Pink Floyd or any of previous Roger Waters’ Tours.

Pink Floyd The Wall ticket 2010

……I saw the Radio Kaos Tour when Roger Waters stopped into Hamilton, Ontario around 1987 and both Pink Floyd tours after around the same time Delicate Sound, Momentary Lapse, Division Bell era. Music aside the creativity that went into those tours set a new bar for me as a teenager early in my concert career. Now almost 23 years later the anticipation of seeing THE WALL in it’s original format was building by the minute.

When we first walked onto the floor and saw the Wall going up each side of the hockey rink the size of this show started to sink in…. heck if I hadn’t seen KISSjust 6 nights ago it might have seemed even Bigger!.. But this still had a stadium feel at first glance.

Roger Waters in Toronto

“In The Flesh” -- This was probably one of the best opening songs I have seen at a live concert. It was full steam ahead from the men on the bridge with flags, the fireworks, seeing Roger in his hoodie, lights swirling and that buzz under the hood of we’re seeing THE WALL !!!

… and of course the famous… “so ya thought ya might like to so to the show…” was truly electric and almost overwhelming. The lighting stretched back to the far end of the arena with additional speaker arrangements…above, not sure if it was quadraphonic or just for effects… as we were too close to the stage to hear….but as the helicopter sound kicked in this lighting unit above the main stage appeared to have a small speaker stack on it as well and it moved forward with the spot light shooting into the crowd as if to be the light on the front of the helicopter, the sound moved with it…really wicked…

Roger Waters - The Wall - Toronto 2010

Some 25 lucky kids from The Regent Park School of Music ended up on stage to help sing over the track for Another Brick plus got to point at thefloating 40 foot teacher. The overall sound was really good for a 1st show and most of the other musicians including Roger’s son on Keyboards were hard to see or get into with this large production unfolding…. except a little at the end of Run Like Hell as the band were in front of the wall closer to us.

I actually heard “Mother”start with Roger on acoustic and have the video it but I will spare you listening to the faint 1st verse that seemed to fall down with technical difficulties… the song never really got back on track for me. The Wall of course was being built brick by brick as Side 1 Played out and the barrier starts to fill in… to the point yes where you could barely see the band.

After the intermission HEY YOU starts and the entire song almost is play behind the Wall…it’s cool and as the light shines thru the cracks and you hear the band playing it really shows what Roger was thinking about years ago of feeling that distance from some of the audience…those who were not engaged with him as he performed . Speaking of di-engaged…The guy beside me after introducing himself 4 times and asking about doing ACID kept praying for David Gilmour to walk out and join in. I didn’t feel that was going to happen. I didn’t feel it needed too….The Gilmour stand in did fine at most points and this was not Pink Floyd we were seeing… it is and was billed as “The Wall Live…featuring Roger Waters”

The imagery on the circle screen in the back dipped into parts from the Wall movie and the overall scenes on the 200+ foot WALL itself were quite thought provoking weaving in some of todays political issues and visuals from past Tours I had scene…all very cool to watch in a synchronized kinda way

“One Of My Turns” turned out beautiful as you can see below in the video and “Run Like Hell” with the flying pig got the crowd up, dancing and celebrating it seemed… ..as security told the front row to move back… and we all started to chant along with “THE TRIAL”... “bring down the wall, bring down the wall..” the WALL did come down..crashing faux bricks.

No encore, just The Wall and alot of entertainment to go along with an amazing album… I will leave the comments open here for others who visit the shows as the tour unfolds. (Sursa)

Roger Waters - Live At The Air Canada Center on Sept. 15, 2010.

Roger Waters performs "The Wall" Live At The Air Canada Center on Sept. 15, 2010.

Roger Waters performs "The Wall" Live At The Air Canada Center on Sept. 15, 2010.

GEORGE PIMENTEL/GETTY IMAGES
Credit to Roger Waters where credit is due: this 30th anniversary tour in honour of the epochal Pink Floyd opus The Wall is about The Wall, not about Roger Waters.

Waters’s previous resurrections of the paranoid double-album song cycle from 1979 that marked the classic, stadium-era Floyd lineup’s last moment of real greatness and that had effectively blown the group apart by the time The Final Cut rolled around felt a bit like gratuitous, compensatory grandstanding in the wake of some iffy solo efforts – The Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking, anyone? – and his old bandmates’ slide into the comfortable sterility that would yield A Momentary Lapse of Reason and The Division Bell. “You might have the name Pink Floyd,” they seemed to say, “but I’m still the man in charge of the music that made the people care.”

These days, catching Waters alone doing Pink Floyd songs is only one-quarter more “authentic” the experience than one would get if fellow surviving members David Gilmour and Nick Mason bothered to go out on tour again under the Floyd banner. And yet the notoriously self-important Waters himself seems ready to concede that the music he made with Pink Floyd is bigger than him, bigger than petty matters of ego and ownership and worthy of celebration in its own right.

Sure, it’s a cash-in. Watching the expensive, state-of-the-art 2010 production of The Wall that Waters brought to the Air Canada Centre on Wednesday night – the first of three hot-ticket gigs at the 20,000-capacity venue – it was hard not to smirk whenever the word “capitalism” or animated dollar signs raining from the sky made au courant appearances amidst the war-scarred fascist iconography of the original work. Capitalism and capitalism alone is the only reason that a rock ‘n’ roll stage show ambitious enough to completely wall itself off, faux-brick by faux-brick, by the intermission can even exist during one of the shakiest years for the live-music industry in recent memory.

That’s the enduring power of The Wall, though, and The Wall was what the doting ACC throng was there to see on Wednesday night. I say “see” rather than “hear” because it was a high-end presentation built on arresting digital animation, ceiling-high marionettes and a requisite, giant, inflatable wild boar emblazoned with the phrase “EVERYTHING WILL BE OKAY” unleashed to cheers over the arena bowl after “The Show Must Go On” that made this a memorable night out. The music, professionally recreated by Waters and something like a dozen anonymous side players, was actually kind of drab and heartless, not much different from what you’d hear at one of those Classic Albums Live nights at the Phoenix were it not for the production values that permitted, say, a British fighter jet to crash into the titular wall at stage left at the end of “In the Flesh?” or an enormous, grotesque caricature of Waters’s smothering mother to glower at the crowd during “Mother.”

“Mother” was a little wobbly, actually, marred by a mix that left Waters’s vocals completely inaudible for the first verse. Likewise, the band’s attempts to spread out and jam on “Empty Spaces” and “Run Like Hell” sounded more like something you’d hear Paul Schaffer walking the Late Show band through after a commercial break than Pink Floyd at the top of its powers. And the dude Waters has brought in to do Gilmour’s parts on “Hey You,” “Comfortably Numb” and the like is simply not up to snuff and was audibly flat for at least half of his vocal turns on Wednesday.

Again, however, credit to Waters. The night’s most rapturous audience moment – aside from the genuine cheers of anti-war sentiment that erupted during “Vera” when the phrase “BRING THE BOYS BACK HOME” flared up across the backdrop – might have been when the star of the show simply stood alone on a bare stage in front of the aforementioned wall and graciously raised his arms while the audience took Gilmour’s verses to “Comfortably Numb.” The Gilmour stand-in and another Gilmour stand-in on guitar got spotlights at the top of the all, but the song and the love everybody in attendance obviously felt for it were in charge. Good on Roger Waters for recognizing that, and good on Roger Waters for recognizing – and humbly deferring to – what a massive contribution to the rock canon he made in The Wall. (Sursa)

Image
By Ben RaynerPop Music Critic

duminică, 19 septembrie 2010

Roger Waters in concert - Toronto 2010



Roger Waters performs "The Wall" Live At The Air Canada Center on Sept. 15, 2010.



Roger Waters performs "The Wall" Live At The Air Canada Center on Sept. 15, 2010.

GEORGE PIMENTEL/GETTY IMAGES

Credit to Roger Waters where credit is due: this 30th anniversary tour in honour of the epochal Pink Floyd opus The Wall is about The Wall, not about Roger Waters.

Waters’s previous resurrections of the paranoid double-album song cycle from 1979 that marked the classic, stadium-era Floyd lineup’s last moment of real greatness and that had effectively blown the group apart by the time The Final Cut rolled around felt a bit like gratuitous, compensatory grandstanding in the wake of some iffy solo efforts – The Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking, anyone? – and his old bandmates’ slide into the comfortable sterility that would yield A Momentary Lapse of Reason and The Division Bell. “You might have the name Pink Floyd,” they seemed to say, “but I’m still the man in charge of the music that made the people care.”

These days, catching Waters alone doing Pink Floyd songs is only one-quarter more “authentic” the experience than one would get if fellow surviving members David Gilmour and Nick Mason bothered to go out on tour again under the Floyd banner. And yet the notoriously self-important Waters himself seems ready to concede that the music he made with Pink Floyd is bigger than him, bigger than petty matters of ego and ownership and worthy of celebration in its own right.

Sure, it’s a cash-in. Watching the expensive, state-of-the-art 2010 production of The Wall that Waters brought to the Air Canada Centre on Wednesday night – the first of three hot-ticket gigs at the 20,000-capacity venue – it was hard not to smirk whenever the word “capitalism” or animated dollar signs raining from the sky made au courant appearances amidst the war-scarred fascist iconography of the original work. Capitalism and capitalism alone is the only reason that a rock ‘n’ roll stage show ambitious enough to completely wall itself off, faux-brick by faux-brick, by the intermission can even exist during one of the shakiest years for the live-music industry in recent memory.

That’s the enduring power of The Wall, though, and The Wall was what the doting ACC throng was there to see on Wednesday night. I say “see” rather than “hear” because it was a high-end presentation built on arresting digital animation, ceiling-high marionettes and a requisite, giant, inflatable wild boar emblazoned with the phrase “EVERYTHING WILL BE OKAY” unleashed to cheers over the arena bowl after “The Show Must Go On” that made this a memorable night out. The music, professionally recreated by Waters and something like a dozen anonymous side players, was actually kind of drab and heartless, not much different from what you’d hear at one of those Classic Albums Live nights at the Phoenix were it not for the production values that permitted, say, a British fighter jet to crash into the titular wall at stage left at the end of “In the Flesh?” or an enormous, grotesque caricature of Waters’s smothering mother to glower at the crowd during “Mother.”

“Mother” was a little wobbly, actually, marred by a mix that left Waters’s vocals completely inaudible for the first verse. Likewise, the band’s attempts to spread out and jam on “Empty Spaces” and “Run Like Hell” sounded more like something you’d hear Paul Schaffer walking the Late Show band through after a commercial break than Pink Floyd at the top of its powers. And the dude Waters has brought in to do Gilmour’s parts on “Hey You,” “Comfortably Numb” and the like is simply not up to snuff and was audibly flat for at least half of his vocal turns on Wednesday.

Again, however, credit to Waters. The night’s most rapturous audience moment – aside from the genuine cheers of anti-war sentiment that erupted during “Vera” when the phrase “BRING THE BOYS BACK HOME” flared up across the backdrop – might have been when the star of the show simply stood alone on a bare stage in front of the aforementioned wall and graciously raised his arms while the audience took Gilmour’s verses to “Comfortably Numb.” The Gilmour stand-in and another Gilmour stand-in on guitar got spotlights at the top of the all, but the song and the love everybody in attendance obviously felt for it were in charge. Good on Roger Waters for recognizing that, and good on Roger Waters for recognizing – and humbly deferring to – what a massive contribution to the rock canon he made in The Wall.

http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/music/live/article/861996--it-s-the-wall-not-the-roger-waters-show

duminică, 18 iulie 2010

Roger Waters şi David Gilmour in concert la Kiddington Hall din Oxfordshire

Kiddington Hall din Oxfordshire a găzduit recent un concert de caritate, banii fiind destinaţi Fundaţiei Hope and Optimism for Palestinians In the next Generation. 


Spre surprinderea celor prezenţi - care au strâns 350.000 de lire sterline -, pe scenă au urcat Roger Waters şi David Gilmour - cel care a promis că se lasă de muzică, îndurerat de moartea colegului Rick Wright (1943- 2008). 


Syd Barrett (1946-2006) a înfiinţat Pink Floyd (în 1965) împreună cu Waters, Wright & Mason. Sursa

Waters And Gilmour To Work Together Again?

There could be more live collaborations between Roger Waters and David Gilmour
Following their surprise on stage reunion last weekend, in aid of the Hoping Foundation, Waters has said this might not be a one-off. Writing on his Facebook page, the former Pink Floyd leader said the idea for the get together a week ago came from Gilmour (a big supporter of the Hoping Foundation), and that he had taken some persuading to do it. After Gilmour suggested they do the Teddy Bears’ classic To Know Him Is To Love Him, at first Waters felt that this might be beyond his capabilities: “Some weeks passed with David cajoling me from time to time, telling me how easy it would be, but I clung resolutely to my fear of failure until one day he made one final entreaty. I quote, ‘If you do To Know Him Is To Love Him for The Hoping Foundation Gig, I’ll come and do C. Numb on one of your Wall shows”. 


Well! You could have knocked me down with a feather. How fucking cool! I was blown away. How could I refuse such an offer. I couldn’t, there was no way. Generosity trumped fear. And so explaining that I would probably be shite, but if he didn’t mind I didn’t, I agreed and the rest is history. We did it, and it was fucking great. End of story. Or possibly beginning.” http://www.classicrockmagazine.com/news/waters-and-gilmour-to-work-together/

joi, 8 iulie 2010

Any Colour You Like

Chiar daca concertul era programat sa inceapa la 8, din cate imi amintesc, cu intarzierile de rigoare, a inceput cu aproximativ jumatate de ora intarziere. Reactia mea de atunci a fost ca : “uite, si la ei se poate sa existe probleme”. Intarzierea nu a fost totusi intamplatoare. S-a asteptat cat mai mult sa apuna soarele, astfel ca show-ul de lumini sa iasa misto, dar nu prea a mers. Lumea s-a adunat; si pe cat de putina lume era cand am intrat eu, pe atat de 60000 de oameni s-au facut pana la ora 8 si ceva. Era “ceva” lume, da. 

Scena arata bine, mare, cu podeaua foarte inalta, mai inalta decat am vazut vreodata eu la un concert, un ecran maaaare de tot si foarte bun calitativ se afla in spatele ei, 2 ecrane laterale, si un arsenal impresionant de boxe: 2 turnuri laterale in fata scenei si inca 3 perechi de turnuri pe ambele laterale, indreptate atat spre fata cat si spre spate. Impresionant de multe boxe. 
Inca de la intrarea in arena, pe ecranul principal din spatele scenei era deja proiectata o imagine – un radio vechi, un avion de jucarie pe el, gen al 2-lea razboi mondial si o sticla de whisky in stanga. Concertul a inceput intr-o maniera total inedita. Imaginea a prins viata. O mana s-a vazut aparand in fata radioului si deschizandu-l. Timp de aproximativ 10 minute, am ascultat la radio Elvis – Hound Dog, cat si bucati de alte cateva piese clasice; la cateva minute, mana tot aparea pe ecran, interactionand cu obiectele de acolo sau schimband postul de radio. Dupa vreo 3 piese schimbate, radio-ul a fost comutat pe un post care difuza exact inceputul silentios, calm de la “In the Flesh?”. Mi-am dat seama ca avea de gand sa inceapa. Dupa vreo 30 de secunde, a intrat cu o forta ametitoare bass-ul titanic al lui Roger Waters, alaturi de celelalte instrumente bineinteles. Deja ma luasera niste fiori greu de descris. WOW !!! Uite !! E ROGER WATERS !!! cum zicea si prima piesa, in the flesh. 


Sunetul era pur si simplu impecabil. Se auzeau perfect fiecare instrument, in frunte cu bass-ul. Piesa fiind de pe The Wall, pe ecranul din spate incepusera sa fie proiectate niste animatii superbe foarte bine realizate bineinteles, inspirate din cioconele binecunoscute de pe The Wall. In continuare a urmat o piesa de pe acelasi album, Mother, pe care Roger Waters a cantat la chitara acustica. 



In continuare, ne-am intors in 1968, la albumul A Saucerful of Secrets de pe care am avut norocul sa ascult o piesa incredibila, din anii de inceput ai trupei Pink Floyd, Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun. Un bass mult mai puternic decat cel din versiunea de album; piesa a fost insotita de proiectii care erau in acelasi ton psihedelic cu piesa. Daca tot a fost amintita perioada Syd Barret, au urmat piese de pe Wish You Were Here, 1975; Shine On You Crazy Diamond, piesa dedicate in totalitate lui Syd, a avut parte de o interpretare as zice dubioasa, extreme de scurta, de doar 4-5 minute; intre timp, de undeva de sus, au pornit niste aparate care au format un nor de baloane de sapun, care in lumina soarelui care apunea straluceau foarte simpatic; imi pare rau ca nu se vede si in poza acest lucru. 



Sarind peste Welcome to the Machine, piesa care urma pe album si pe care Waters a interpretat-o in turneul precedent, am ajuns la Have a Cigar, care m-am bucurat enorm ca am avut ocazia sa o ascult, mai ales ca a fost una din primele piese pe care le-am apreciat de la Pink Floyd. 

A urmat si superba Wish You Were care a fost deschisa tot de chitara acustica a lui Roger Waters. In continuare au urmat de pe The Final Cut, 1983, Southampton Dock si The Flethcer Memorial Home, cea din urma fiind o piesa cu referiri politice puternice. Concertul a continuat cu doua piese din afara compozitiilor Pink Floyd, Perfect Sense Part 1, de pe Amused to Death si Leaving Beirut. Leaving Beirut este o piesa care a aparut doar ca un single in 2004, pe "To Kill the Child"/"Leaving Beirut”. Piesa a fost cantata doar in cadrul acestui turneu; piesa spune o poveste a lui Roger Waters de pe vremea cand era adolescent si a ajuns prin Liban. Este o piesa foarte buna pe care nu o stiam pana in acel moment dar de care nu mi-a trebuit mult sa ma indragostesc. 

Melodia a fost acompaniata de proiectia unui comic book, in care erau exact versurile piesei, in partile de dialog si imagini din intamplarile pe care piesa le povesteste. Am fost uimit de sincronizarea perfecta a ceea ce se intampla pe scena, cu intamplarile care erau prezentate in comic. Vazand cu luni de zile in urma concertul lansat pe DVD din cadrul turneului In the Flesh, care avusese loc cu cativa ani in urma, stiam, banuiam, speram de fapt sa vad si ceva de pe Animals. In turneul acela, cantase Dogs care iesise foarte bine. In momentul acela eram foarte mare fan Animals si insistam sa aud ceva de pe el, ceea ce s-a si intamplat. Nu a fost chiar mult doritul Dogs, ci a fost Sheep, care a fost cel putin la fel de bun. 




O interpretare impecabila de 10 minute, care a fost insotita de spectaculosul porc gomflabil plin de desene si lozinci care a trecut prin toata arena. Surprinzator a fost ca la sfarsitul piesei, i-au dat drumul si a zburat destul de sus. Probabil ca sperau sa il recupereze de la diversi localnici binevoitori. Dupa Sheep, Waters a anuntat o pauza, dupa care urma sa revina cu The Dark Side of the Moon. Pauza de suc, in care am impartasit impresii cu cei din jurul meu, a fost binevenita. Afara tocmai intunecase in sfarsit. Dupa plecare de pe scena a lui trupei, cele 3 ecrane s-au facut negre cu un punct mic, abia vizibil in centru. Pe tot parcursul pauzei, 15-20 minute, acel punct s-a marit, incepand sa se vada ca este de fapt luna care “venea”. Tipa cu care ma imprietenisem mi-a povestit ca data trecuta, cand a ajuns la pauza, se facuse deja noapte si luna plina rasarise pe cer si inainte sa plece Waters a zis ceva de genul : “We’ll take a break. When we come back we’ll play that” (aratand spre luna). Pauza a trecut greu. Eram plin de emotie, ca inainte de un examen. Vedeam cum luna se apropie din ce in ce mai mult si simteam cum sunt cuprins de lumina ei magica. 



Trupa a revenit pe scena. Tensiunea cresetea cu fiecare secunda. Au inceput sa se auda bataile de inima care precedau inceperea albumului. Eram vrajit. Nu imi venea sa cred ca urmeaza sa vad cel mai bun album din istoria muzicii cantat live, cu Roger Waters la bass. Proiectiile au fost ametitoare. Erai total cuprins de moment, ca si cum traiai fiecare piesa din tot sufletul. In mare parte elementele vizuale au avut loc pe poriunea de ecran circulara din centru, echivalenta cu dimensiunea lunii. Inceputul relaxat al albumului, Speak to Me si apoi Breathe, au pregatit On the Run, o instrumentala total mind-blowing, cantata pe niste sintetizatoare foarte rare, alaturi de o multitudine de efecte. 






Interpretarea a fost pur si simplu perfecta. Imi amintesc ca o vazusem live cantata chiar de Rick in P*U*L*S*E (1994) si acolo a fost cu atat mai spectaculoasa, pentru ca un avion a zburat de-a lungul salii, prabusindu-se langa scena, si creand o explozie spectaculoasa. Cel mai bine am vazut ce fel de monstrii de aparate sunt folosite pentru piesa cand am vazut show-ul tribute al celor de la Dream Theater in care si ei au cantat integral tot albumul. Din cate am vazut Jordan Rudess avea conectate aparatele direc la niste orgi, astfel redand exact efectele de pe albumul orginal Pink Floyd. Revenind, si in acest concert, asemeanea P*U*L*S*E-ului, On the Run s-a terminat cu o explozie care a cuprins tot ecranul si care a creat linistea de care era nevoie pentru a auzi ceasurile ticaind, anuntand astfel urmatoarea piesa, Time. In toata arena s-a auzit superb ceasurile care sunau, urmate de solo-ul de tobe. 


Ecranul din spate a fost cuprins de imagini care din cate stiu eu au fost folosite de Pink Floyd in cadrul altor reprezentatii ale albumului inca de la lansarea lui. Cred ca au fost cam aceleasi si in P*U*L*S*E. Chiar nu imi amintesc exact. La fiecare piesa in care a aparut luna in spate pe ecran, aceasta a fost acoperita de un filtru de culoare diferit. A urmat reluare de la Breathe, Breathe (reprise), asa cum era intitulata pe album, dar care nu aparea ca o piesa separata, fiind inclusa in Time. Totusi, chiar pe vinil, versurile apar separat cu titlul piesei; nu sunt incluse in Time. In continuare a urmat o piesa destul de trista, fara versuri, despre care trupa a zis inca de la compozitie ca este o piesa trista, despre moarte. Chiar daca nu are versuri, piesa este de fapt un solo vocal, in care vocea feminina este exploatata la maxim. Acest solo este precedat de o parte vorbita :
And I am not frightened of dying. Any time will do; I don't mind.
Why should I be frightened of dying? There's no reason for it—you've gotta go sometime.
Cunoscand foarte bine piesa, ca tot albumul de altfel, aveam anumite pretentii sa semene cu versiunea originala, lucru care s-a intamplat doar pana la un punct. Nu a fost cred cea mai reusita interpretare a piesei. A fost una buna indiscutabil dar nu cea mai buna. Dupa terminarea piesei, linistea s-a lasat dar doar pentru cateva secunde, pentru ca ecranul s-a facut verde, sub forma unui disc de vinil care a inceput sa se invarta; in acelasi timp au inceput sa se auda sunetele banilor care au precedat iconicul bass din inceputul piesei. Pe parcusul piesei si o prisma tridimensionala superba care a inceput sa se invarta. Cam in acelasi timp, si mega-prisma de deasupra mea a inceput sa se invarta si sa faca un nor de fum in jurul ei.



A urmat bineinteles Us and Them, care a adus o luna rosie pe ecrane. Piesa a fost mai lunga decat in original, avand cateva parti improvizate si solo-urile putin prelungite, ceea ce nu a stricat cu nimic farmecul ei. In continuare, Any Colour You Like, o piesa bazata in principal tot pe solo de clape, la fel de reusit si de aceasta data. Undeva intre Any Colour You Like si Brain Damage, prisma a prins viata, si prin norul de fum a aparut de-o parte a ei o raza alba de lumina si pe cealalta spectrul razelor formate prin dispersie. In tot acest timp prisma se invartea deasupra scenei. Din pacate putina adiera a vantului a facut ca fumul sa treaca cam repede de zona prismei, neputand reda o imagine perfecta pentru mult timp a imaginii de pe fata albumului. Sfarsitul a fost cat se poate de relaxant. Brain Damage si Eclipse care au fost considerate ca o piesa unitara, au avut parte la randul lor de o interpretare impecabila, incheindu-se exact ca pe album, cu fraza :
There is no dark side of the moon, really. Matter of fact, it’s all dark. 
si cu bataile de inima cu care a fost deschis. 
A fost superb. Nu se poate exprima in cuvinte cum si ce am simtit. Trebuia sa fii acolo ca sa intelegi adevaratul sens al cuvantului UNIC. 



Dupa ce s-a terminat, in mod logic, publicul a izbucnit in aplauze care nu aveau de gand sa se opreasca pana dimineata probabil, daca nu ar fi revenit pe scena. Bineinteles ca a revenit pe scena pentru un bis dupa vreo 4-5 minute de aplauze continue. A cantat din nou piese de pe The Wall, adica The Happiest Days of Our Lives, care a fost un intro pentru Another Brick in The Wall 2. 



In continuare proiectiile au fost la fel de spectaculoase ca pe tot parcursul concertului. Tot de pe The Wall, au urmat Vera si apoi Bring The Boys Back Home, care a fost plina de explozii si efecte pirotehnice. Concertul s-a incheiat glorios cu Comfortably Numb, adica tot cu The Wall. Gata. Se terminase.

Din punct de vedere al vocii, in tot concertul au fost o multitudine de voci care au cantat. In afara de Waters care a cantat mai bine de jumatate din piese, la Dark Side of the Moon au cantat de asemnea si chitaristul si claparul din cate imi amintesc si nu au fost singurele moment cand Waters nu a fost si vocalul pieselor. Instrumentistii au fost buni. S-a vazut clar ca sunt oameni cu experienta si dupa cum au cantat si dupa varsta lor inaintata. Clapele au fost bune, la Hammond si sintetizatoare a fost chiar fiul lui Roger Waters, Harry, iar la celalt set de clape a fost Jon Carin, care are si el o scurta istorie prin Pink Floyd dar si prin alte mari trupe. Chitarile au fost bune, dar nu stralucite. Daca a fost ceva ce a lipsit acestui concert, au fost chitarile. Daca doi chitaristi care sunt sigur ca au o experienta mare in cantare, nu au fost in stare sa duca chitara la nivelul lui David Gilmour, care era o singura chitara, asta in mod clar spune ceva despre cat de bun este Gilmour. Mi-au lipsit solo-urile lui. S-au simtit ca nu sunt in regula. Shine On, Wish, Time, Money, Brick si mai ales Comfortably nu au fost complete parca. Si sunt sigur ca ce le-a lipsit a fost David Gilmour. Este de neegalat. Sunt multe piese care pot fi cantata de doar un membru, cum a fost acest concert in care putine chestii au deranjat si nu au fost asa cum a fost Pink Floyd de-a lungul “secolelor” si anume perfect. Sunt piese care totusi necesita talentele inegalabile a tuturor celor 4. Roger Waters – David Gilmour – Richard Wright – Nick Mason. Nu sunt niste muzicieni. Sunt Pink Floyd. Si sa faci ceva cum face Pink Floyd nu este ceva simplu si de multe ori e de fapt chiar imposibil. 

11 mai 2008, Megaland, Landgraaf, Olanda – The Dark Side of the Moon Live.  Set list-ul concertului a fost pana la urma urmatorul. : 
Partea I : 
1. In the Flesh
2. Mother
3. Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun
4. Shine On You Crazy Diamond
5. Have a Cigar
6. Wish You Were Here
7. Southampton Dock
8. The Fletcher Memorial Home
9. Perfect Sense, Pt. 1
10. Leaving Beirut
11. Sheep

Partea a II-a (The Dark Side of the Moon)
1. Speak to Me 
2. Breathe
3. On the Run
4. Time / Breathe (Reprise)
5. The Great Gig in the Sky
6. Money
7. Us and Them
8. Any Colour You Like
9. Brain Damage
10. Eclipse

Partea a III-a
1. The Happiest Days of Our Lives
2. Another Brick in the Wall (Part II)
3. Vera
4. Bring the Boys Back Home
5. Comfortably Numb

Efectele vizuale – incredibile, sunetul – perfect, spectacolul – incomparabil, sentimentul lasat – nemuritor , Roger Waters – UNIC. Sa vezi live macar o bucatica din Pink Floyd si sa asculti muzica care a scris istorie este ceva cu adevarat special. http://rockopedia.blogspot.com/2009/06/8-any-colour-you-like.html