View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2012 File release of 'The Wall' on Discogs.
Comment by Zer0
- Listen to Pink Floyd Radio featuring songs from The Wall free online. Listen to free internet radio, news, sports, music, and podcasts. Stream live CNN, FOX News Radio, and MSNBC. Plus 100,000 AM/FM radio stations featuring music, news, and local sports talk.
- The Wall is the eleventh studio album by the English rock band Pink Floyd, released on 30 November 1979 by Harvest and Columbia Records.It is a rock opera that explores Pink, a jaded rock star whose eventual self-imposed isolation from society forms a figurative wall.
is there anybody out there?
Comment by User 591818296
for everđđ
Comment by ivanjaramillob
Ha estĂĄ banda la he escuchado desde siempre grande Floyd....
Comment by daouda mbaye
always top
Comment by Alex Smith
I always get chills at this part. Great band and album!
Comment by Olibiliah
I can picture the flowers from the movie đ đ
Comment by Shimul chandra das
Love
Comment by TranceFloyd
Thank you so much for this! No ads! In youtube there are ads between the songs so it really tamper with the flow of the album.
Comment by GiorgiTchigladze
@leo-vtorres: Indeed they were
Comment by GiorgiTchigladze
@user-69456421: Me and my buddies one of the best memories comes with this album <3
Comment by Vanders1967
Watch this movie straight when I was about 14 on Video tape. After though I went Tripping on LSD and it ALL made sense. . . . Love it ALL my fav
Comment by Leo Vtorres
Conciertazo el 17 de noviembre en Lima - PerĂș. Definitivamente de otro planetađ
The Wall is the eleventh studio album by English rock band Pink Floyd, released 30 November 1979 on Harvest and Columbia Records. It is a rock opera that explores Pink, a jaded rockstar whose eventual self-imposed isolation from society is symbolized by a wall. The album was a commercial success, topping the US charts for 15 weeks, and reaching number three in the UK. It initially received mixed reviews from critics, many of whom found it overblown and pretentious, but later came to be considered one of the greatest albums of all time.
Bassist Roger Waters conceived The Wall during Pink Floydâs 1977 In The Flesh tour, modeling the character of Pink after himself and former bandmate Syd Barrett. Recording spanned from December 1978 to November 1979. Producer Bob Ezrin helped to refine the concept and bridge tensions during recording, as the band were struggling with personal and financial issues at the time. The Wall is the last album to feature Pink Floyd as a quartet; keyboardist Richard Wright was fired by Waters during production, but stayed on as a salaried musician. Three singles were issued from the album: âAnother Brick in the Wall, Part 2â (the bandâs only US number-one single), âRun Like Hellâ, and âComfortably Numbâ. From 1980 to 1981, Pink Floyd performed the full album on a tour that featured elaborate theatrical effects.
The Wall was adapted into a 1982 feature film of the same name and remains one of the best-known concept albums. The album has sold more than 24 million copies, is the second best-selling in the bandâs catalog, and is one of the best-selling of all time. Some of the outtakes from the recording sessions were later used on the groupâs next album, The Final Cut (1983). In 2000 it was voted number 30 in Colin Larkinâs All Time Top 1000 Albums. In 2003, Rolling Stone listed The Wall at number 87 on its list of the â500 Greatest Albums of All Timeâ. From 2010 to 2013, Waters staged a new Wall live tour that became the highest-grossing tour by a solo musician.
Pink Floydâs In the Flesh Tour was their first playing in large stadiums. Bassist and songwriter Roger Waters recalled: âI disliked it intensely because it became a social event rather than a more controlled and ordinary relationship between musicians and an audience ⊠The front sixty rows seemed to be screaming and shouting and rocking and swaying and not really listening to anything. And those further back could see bugger-all anyway.â Some audience members set off firecrackers, leading Waters to stop playing and scold them. In July 1977, on the final date at the Montreal Olympic Stadium, a group of noisy and excited fans near the stage irritated Waters so much that he spat at one of them. Guitarist David Gilmour refused to perform a final encore and sat at the soundboard, leaving the band, with backup guitarist Snowy White, to improvise a slow, sad 12-bar blues, which Waters announced to the audience as âsome music to go home toâ. That night, Waters spoke with music producer Bob Ezrin and Ezrinâs psychiatrist friend about the alienation he was experiencing. He articulated his desire to isolate himself by constructing a wall across the stage between the performers and the audience. He said, âI kept saying to people on that tour, âIâm not really enjoying this ⊠there is something very wrong with this.â
While Gilmour and Wright were in France recording solo albums, and drummer Nick Mason was busy producing Steve Hillageâs Green, Waters began to write material. The spitting incident became the starting point for a new concept, which explored the protagonistâs self-imposed isolation after years of traumatic interactions with authority figures and the loss of his father as a child. The Wall would study the performerâs psychological separation from the audience, using a physical structure as a metaphorical and theatrical device.
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In July 1978, Pink Floyd reconvened at Britannia Row Studios, where Waters presented two new ideas for concept albums. The first was a 90-minute demo with the working title Bricks in the Wall. The second was about a manâs dreams across one night, and dealt with marriage, sex, and the pros and cons of monogamy and family life versus promiscuity. The band chose the first option. The second option eventually became Watersâs first solo album, The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking.[14]
By September, Pink Floyd was experiencing financial difficulties and urgently needed to produce an album to make money. Financial planners Norton Warburg Group (NWG) had invested ÂŁ1.3â3.3 million, up to ÂŁ19.1 million in contemporary value, of the groupâs money in high-risk venture capital to reduce their tax liabilities. The strategy failed when many of the businesses NWG invested in lost money, leaving the band facing tax rates potentially as high as 83 percent. âWe made Dark Side and it looked as if weâd cracked it,â recalled Waters. âThen suddenly these bastards had stolen it all. It looked as if we might be faced with huge tax bills for the money that had been lost. Eighty-three per cent was a lot of money in those days and we didnât have it.â Pink Floyd terminated their relationship with NWG, demanding the return of uninvested funds. âBy force of necessity, I had to become closely involved in the business side,â remarked Gilmour, âbecause no one around us has shown themselves sufficiently capable or honest to cope with it, and I saw with Norton Warburg that the shit was heading inexorably towards the fan. They werenât the first crooks we stupidly allied ourselves with. Ever since then, thereâs not a penny that I havenât signed for. I sign every cheque and examine everything.â
To help manage the projectâs 26 tracks, Waters decided to bring in a producer and collaborator, feeling he needed âa collaborator who was musically and intellectually in a similar place to where I was.â At the suggestion of Watersâs then-girlfriend Carolyne Christie, who had worked as the secretary to producer and musician Bob Ezrin, the band hired him on. Ezrin had worked with Alice Cooper, Lou Reed, Kiss, and Peter Gabriel. From the start, Waters made it clear who was in charge, telling him: âYou can write anything you want. Just donât expect any credit.â
Pink Floyd The Wall (film) - Wikiquote
Ezrin and Gilmour reviewed Watersâs concept, discarding what they thought was not good enough. Waters and Ezrin worked mostly on the story, improving the concept. Ezrin presented a 40-page script to the rest of the band, with positive results. He recalled: âThe next day at the studio, we had a table read, like you would with a play, but with the whole of the band, and their eyes all twinkled, because then they could see the album.â Ezrin broadened the storyline, distancing it from the autobiographical work Waters had written, and instead basing it on a composite character named Pink. Engineer Nick Griffiths later said: âEzrin was very good in The Wall, because he did manage to pull the whole thing together. Heâs a very forceful guy. There was a lot of argument about how it should sound between Roger and Dave, and he bridged the gap between them.â Waters wrote most of the album, with Gilmour co-writing âComfortably Numbâ, âRun Like Hellâ, and âYoung Lustâ, and Ezrin co-writing âThe Trialâ.