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Momentary Lapse of Reason album for sale Product Description
Momentary Lapse of Reason album for sale by Pink Floyd was released Sep 27, 2011 on the EMI Music Distribution label. After a protracted legal battle over the rights to the Pink Floyd name, David Gilmour, Nick Mason and Richard Wright released 1987's A MOMENTARY LAPSE OF REASON despite Roger Waters' protests. Retaining collaborators from Floyd's past (like producer Bob Ezrin), this Gilmour-led version of the band crafted a number of songs that were as cerebral and introspective as anything Floyd had done in the past. Momentary Lapse of Reason CD music contains a single disc with 11 songs. ...See Full Description
Pink Floyd - Momentary Lapse of Reason Album Track Listing
Momentary Lapse of Reason buy CD music Customer Reviews
| Average Rating: |  |
| Art Work This is somebody who believes in the FLOYD should have, the artwork of this LP limited edition is one of the best I´ve ever had. By Jlsromero (mexico)  This review is for a different format. |
| Floyd - still truckin' Even without Roger Waters Pink Floyd can still make it happen!! Right up there with their top efforts! I would recommend this to any Floyd fan... especially "On the Turning Away"!! well, the WHOLE album really! By hdcls (Calif. USA)  This review is for a different format. |
| Pink Floyd - Always pleasing..... You can never go wrong with Pink Floyd, I've been a fan for a long time. The first time I heard a song from them was in 1979, I can never get enough now. By Dennis L (New York, NY, USA) This review is for a different format. |
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Momentary Lapse of Reason songs Product Details
| CD Universe Part number | 8533745 |
| Label | EMI Music Distribution |
| Orig Year | 1987 |
| Catalog number | 28959 |
| Discs | 1 |
| Release Date | Sep 27, 2011 |
| Studio/Live | Studio |
| Mono/Stereo | Stereo |
| Producer | David Gilmour; Richard Shaw; Lance Williams; Bob Ezrin |
| Engineer | Guy Charbonneau; Andy Jackson |
| Recording Time | 50 minutes |
| Personnel | David Gilmour - guitar, vocals, keyboards, programming Nick Mason - electric & acoustic drums, sound effects Richard Wright - piano, vocals, Kurzweil, Hammond organ Phyllis Saint James Andy Jackson - sound effects Donnie Gerrard
Also: Jim Keltner, Michael Landau, Tom Scott, Bill Payne, Bob Ezrin, Tony Levin, Carmen Twillie, Steve Forman, Carmine Appice, Jon Carin, Scott Page, Phyllis St, Pat Leonard, Andrew Jackson, Darlene Koldenhaven, John Halliwell |
| Additional Info | Reissue; Remastered; Digipak |
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Momentary Lapse of Reason album for sale Digitally remastered by Doug Sax (The Mastering Lab, Los Angeles, California).
The Wall was Roger Waters' crowning accomplishment in Pink Floyd. It documented the rise and fall of a rock star (named Pink Floyd), based on Waters' own experiences and the tendencies he'd observed in people around him. By then, the bassist had firm control of the group's direction, working mostly alongside David Gilmour and bringing in producer Bob Ezrin as an outside collaborator. Drummer Nick Mason was barely involved, while keyboardist Rick Wright seemed to be completely out of the picture. Still, The Wall was a mighty, sprawling affair, featuring 26 songs with vocals: nearly as many as all previous Floyd albums combined. The story revolves around the fictional Pink Floyd's isolation behind a psychological wall. The wall grows as various parts of his life spin out of control, and he grows incapable of dealing with his neuroses. The album opens by welcoming the unwitting listener to Floyd's show ("In the Flesh?"), then turns back to childhood memories of his father's death in World War II ("Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 1"), his mother's over protectiveness ("Mother"), and his fascination with and fear of sex ("Young Lust"). By the time "Goodbye Cruel World" closes the first disc, the wall is built and Pink is trapped in the midst of a mental breakdown. On disc two, the gentle acoustic phrasings of "Is There Anybody Out There?" and the lilting orchestrations of "Nobody Home" reinforce Floyd's feeling of isolation. When his record company uses drugs to coax him to perform ("Comfortably Numb"), his onstage persona is transformed into a homophobic, race-baiting fascist ("In the Flesh"). In "The Trial," he mentally prosecutes himself, and the wall comes tumbling down. This ambitious concept album was an across-the-board smash, topping the Billboard album chart for 15 weeks in 1980. The single "Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 2" was the country's best seller for four weeks. The Wall spawned an elaborate stage show (so elaborate, in fact, that the band was able to bring it to only a few cities) and a full-length film. It also marked the last time Waters and Gilmour would work together as equal partners.
Recorded at Superbear Studios, Miravel, France; Producer's Workshop, Los Angeles, California; CBS Studios, New York, New York between April and November 1979.
Producers: Bob Ezrin, David Gilmour, Roger Waters.
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Momentary Lapse of Reason CD music Lyricist: Roger Waters.
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Momentary Lapse of Reason songs Digitally remastered by Doug Sax (The Mastering Lab, Los Angeles, California).
The breakthrough success of Dark Side of the Moon made Wish You Were Here a crucial follow-up in strictly commercial terms. Further pressure came from it being Pink Floyd's first recording for a new label, Columbia. Yet the demands on the band only provided Roger Waters more fodder for his lyrics, which glanced at the band's roots as well as their new responsibilities. The mechanized throb of a VCS3 synthesizer, fed through a repeat-echo unit, signals the opening bars of "Welcome to the Machine," a diatribe against an industry more concerned with money than creative music-making. "Have a Cigar" further establishes Waters' contempt by bringing in singer Roy Harper to play the role of a "faceless suit," who none-too-innocently asks, "Which one's Pink?" The remaining songs indirectly look back to the first casualty of Pink Floyd's growing fame, the group's founder, Syd Barrett. The 20-minute-plus "Shine on You Crazy Diamond" has its roots in earlier pieces like "Atom Heart Mother Suite" and "Echoes." But rather than just another Floydian soundscape, its lyrics make it a paean to Barrett's genius and a requiem for his subsequent breakdown. The first five of the song's nine movements open the album with sax player Dick Parry wailing as effectively as he did on Dark Side of the Moon. The final four sections, which close the album, form a reprise that starts with the sound of wind and David Gilmour's guitar screaming and crying. The band then settles into a laid-back jam that ends with Richard Wright's billowing synth delicately fading out. The title track deals also with Barrett, as well as the tension the idealist Waters was feeling in battling the greed that surrounded the band's success. The themes of disillusionment planted throughout Wish You Were Here would eventually sprout full-blown on The Wall.
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Momentary Lapse of Reason CD music MEDDLE was the first album to hint at the musical identity that would define Pink Floyd in the mid- to late-'70s. Whereas prior releases like UMMAGUMMA and ATOM HEART MOTHER announced the presence of new singer/guitarist/songwriter David Gilmour, MEDDLE represents the band's Gilmour-influenced evolution toward a sleek, epic, spacey sound. In "Echoes," an ambitious 23-minute soundscape, the pinging of a synthesizer greets the listener before Gilmour's warm, open guitar and gentle crooning gives way to a repetitious, workmanlike rhythm. From here, the music fades into an abyss of whale calls and eerie sonic reverberations.
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