Showing posts with label syd barrett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label syd barrett. Show all posts

Monday, 22 December 2014

the winter of love

December 22nd 1967 and the last big gig of the year. Some of the biggest names in rock were billed! If only we'd been there then.
The only trouble was things had become a little difficult at London's Olympia and as is born out by one of the few surviving clips of the event, the audience were somewhere between lukewarm and dull. In one of the few surviving clips of the event Traffic do their best to ignite some interest. While some some sombre looking dancing from four males and an audience standing around zombie like signalled a less than exciting atmosphere. Some acts were warmed to, for others the gathered clan were confused. What had been until then a magical period of famous Happenings and Freakouts by the end of 67 the tie die tide was turning. It will also always be remembered as Syd Barret's last gig with Pink Floyd.
Here's some memories by those that were there. What an insight they make.. and as you'll see these views were not seen through rose coloured granny glasses.

    Pre-publicity is hopelessly inadequate and this, plus a particularly severe winter freeze, results in a sparse attendance and financial disaster for the organisers, despite a fabulous line-up of acts—Jimi Hendrix Experience, Eric Burdon, Pink Floyd, The Move, Soft Machine, Tomorrow, Graham Bond Organisation, Sam Gopal and Paper Blitz Tissue. The Who fail to turn up!
    At the concert, Barrett was observed to just stand on stage with his guitar, his arms hanging limp at his side, while Roger Waters played the same bass line over and over again.
    LiberalEngland

    *Jeff Dexter (Punter) also DJ at many events:
    “Pink Floyd: Not a great gig. A sad night for them. People had realised Syd was losing it but that was acceptable, if you were on the underground scene, man! It was all experimental, but it got boring – they carried on with an experimental riff for what seemed like ages".

    *John Newey (punter)
    "It was Syd’s last big gig with Pink Floyd. He just stood there as if he was on another planet. He contributed very little and his arms were hanging limply down. It looked sad and all over the place. They had coloured perspex triangles on stage that lit up. There were long rambling ‘Interstellar Overdrive’ jams. But it was far from Floyd at their best.”

    *John Love (Co-organiser):
    “The real disaster, long term, was the the film was no good. The person who took care of the filming bought outdated film stock.."

    *Andrew King (Co-manager of Pink Floyd)
    "The organisers just got the event wrong. There was no reason why it shouldn’t have sold out. It was too much of an imitation of the 14-Hour Technicolour Dream and events like that. There had been too many of them. Every time you opened Melody Maker, there were adverts for this Happening and that Freakout. It got like that with raves and dance music in the last few years. Some of them did well and some went down the tubes.”

    *Pete Jenner (Co-manager of Pink Floyd):
    “Not a great event. It didn’t develop a head of steam. It reads better than it was, a cash-in plus the horrors of the Olympia acoustics.
    I think it was a disaster. Someone lost a lot of money. Little did they know that we may have all been extremely alternative but even the most ardent hippies went home at Christmas for the presents!”

    * originally published - Record Collector No. 20 Dec 1997. VIA Steve Hoffman Music Forum

So here's Traffic (Jim Capaldi, Steve Winwood, Chris Wood, and Dave Mason) playing "Dear Mr Fantasy" The sound quality is lo-fi (and tinny). There were clips of Hendrix's performance but they've since been pulled due to copyright issues (no surprise there).
However this event is remembered to see just a small extract of that night is a very rare piece of rock history.

Thursday, 28 August 2014

1967 and the arrival of pink floyd

In August 1967 Pink Floyd released their first album 'Piper At the Gate Of Dawn'. It was to be a year that very nearly defined the 60's, for Pink Floyd it most certainly did. These were the highlights of that year and which produced 3 singles alongside the LP and a series of gigs that became legendary with Syd Barrett's songs in the ascendance. Things were to never be quite the same again.

    1967
  • Feb 1st : Pink Floyd spent the day recording parts for the Syd Barrett songs 'Arnold Layne' and 'Candy And A Current Bun' at Sound Techniques Studios, Chelsea, London. Floyd also turned professional on this day after signing a deal
  • March 27 - Sound Techniques Studio, Old Church Street, Chelsea: Pink Floyd begin recording a demo tape of six songs to shop to record labels. Joe Boyd produces with John Wood engineering.
  • March 4 - Pink Floyd: "Arnold Layne" / "Candy and a Currant Bun" [UK release]
  • March 30 - Pink Floyd: "Arnold Layne" [Columbia DB 8156, UK charts #20]
  • May 16 - Pink Floyd: "See Emily Play" / "Scarecrow" [Columbia release UK]
  • May 29-30 - London: "14-Hour Technicolour Dream" at Alexandra Palace: the Who, the Move, Pink Floyd, the Pretty Things, Soft Machine, the Social Deviants, Tomorrow, Alexis Korner, the Creation, the Graham Bond Organization, etc.
  • June 17 - Pink Floyd: "See Emily Play" / "Scarecrow" [Columbia release. US.]
  • June 22 - Pink Floyd: "See Emily Play" [Columbia DB 8214, charts, UK #6]
  • July 6 - "Top of the Pops, BBC Lime Grove Studios, Shepherd's Bush, London 6 July, 1967. A mimed performance of See Emily Play was featured on Top of the Pops. Broadcast on BBC1 at 7:30 PM. (video above)
  • July 29 - London: International Love-In at Alexandra Palace featuring Eric Burdon and the Animals, the Pink Floyd, the Blossom Toes, the Apostolic Intervention, the Creation, the Nervous System, Tomorrow, Sam Gopal, Arthur Brown, and Ginger Johnson
  • Aug 4 - Pink Floyd: Piper at the Gates of Dawn [Columbia LP release]
  • Sept 1 - London: UFO Festival at the Roundhouse begins featuring the Crazy World of Arthur Brown, Tomorrow with Keith West, and Pink Floyd
  • Sept 2 - London: UFO Festival at the Roundhouse continues featuring the Move, Soft Machine, Denny Laine, the Nack, Fairport Convention, and Pink Floyd
  • Oct 1 - Pink Floyd arrives in US for first tour
  • Nov 17 - Pink Floyd: "Apples and Oranges" / "Paint Box" [Columbia release. US]
  • Dec 22 - London: "Christmas on Earth, Continued . . ." at the Olympia Grand Hall featuring Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd, the Animals, etc.

Monday, 19 August 2013

syd barrett's last recordings

The myths and legend still abound over Syd Barrett and his relatively short life in music and abrupt retirement from the music world in 1975. It had been 10 heady years of spiraling experimentation with music, performance and drugs until he disappeared from view.
So naturally it's always going to be intriguing to know what the last recordings were whether finished or not. For years no one knew much.

"In August 1974, Peter Jenner persuaded Barrett to return to Abbey Road Studios in hope of recording another album. According to John Leckie, who engineered these sessions, even at this point Syd still "looked like he did when he was younger..long haired". The sessions lasted three days and consisted of blues rhythm tracks with tentative and disjointed guitar overdubs, Barrett recorded 11 tracks.
WIKI

The most surprising thing when hearing them is considering Syd's previous work and how unusual his approach was to playing and songwriting these short extracts reveal a more conventional approach.
The first track being supported by a double bass player has Syd returning to more or less straight ahead rock and roll in the Bo Diddley style. Was he reminding himself of where he began with guitar or just a bit of a warm up for the session to come? It's all over in a minute and half and is vaguely titled 'Boogie #1'.
Next "Boogie #2", a layered blues and more funky piece with wah guitar and echo.. it wanders and dissolves in similar time.
If "You Go #2" begins with melancholy chords you could hear as potential song material before running to a wandering sad guitar line.
Despite the last take being named "John Lee Hooker" it's something you'd have more likely heard from Marc Bolan's pop records 2 years later on "I Love To Boogie" with it's similar damped string 12 bar turnover. The tape stops and then restarts with the same riff pattern dissolving at the end.
It's all rather curious, but it is also quite charming and personal. Part psychedelic with it's wah guitar overlays and part blues rock and roll.
Whether chucked out of Abbey Road Studios by an impatient record company or just abandoned out of frustration "Once again, Barrett withdrew from the music industry. He sold the rights to his solo albums back to the record label and moved into a London hotel".

The video pictures have caused some discussion as to the identity of two young women but one YT commenter seems to have nailed it -
"The woman shown at 0:26 is Evelyn Rose (Iggy The Inuit). This photo was taken outside Syd's flat at Wetherby Mansions, Earls Court, London by Mick Rock during a photography session for The Madcap Laughs album. The woman shown at 4:02 is Sheila Rock who was then Mick Rock's wife. They have since divorced. This photo was taken in Syd's back-garden a few years later."
Céline Cendrars