PINK FLOYD: WISH YOU WERE HERE (1975)
1) Shine
On You Crazy Diamond (parts 1-5); 2) Welcome To The Machine; 3) Have A
Cigar; 4) Wish You Were Here; 5) Shine On You Crazy Diamond (parts 8-9).
General verdict: The most elaborate and
heartfelt funeral for a living friend in rock history.
In almost any account of Pink Floyd
history, the genesis of Wish You Were Here is inextricably linked to The
Dark Side Of The Moon — usually in the context of a question like «what do
you do when you have just released one of the most commercially succesful and
critically revered albums of all time?». Somewhat ironically, the original
plan could not have been more different from the final results: in 1974, perhaps
somewhat confused and dismayed by the enormity of their own success, the band took
the decision to go back to their avantgarde-experimental roots and release an
album of musique concrète,
all of which would be played on various household objects, from wine glasses to
hand mixers. Although some of the explored effects made their way onto WYWH
in the end, ultimately the idea did not work — and perhaps it could not have
worked: after all, once you cross the line that separates esoteric intellectual
underground from accessible mass acclaim, going back like nothing happened is
not a realistic option. However, the attempt was not totally wasted: it did manage
to put them in a special kind of creative-imaginative mood that helped a lot
once they started working on the real thing.
Although by 1974-1975 the «progressive»
streak in popular music was beginning to wear thin, with critical admiration
for bands like Yes and Jethro Tull gradually turning to disappointment, the
immense success of Dark Side pretty much guaranteed to make Floyd an
exception to the rule — that is, only as long as their epics «made sense»,
which meant having lyrics that ordinary people could relate to and melodies that would not stray too
far away from the basic blues idiom at the heart of the rock culture. So then, what
do you do when you have all these invisible constraints imposed on you, including
the obligation to prove that your recent masterpiece was not just a happy fluke,
but a significant claim for the title of the Best Band of the Decade?
In
historical terms, Wish You Were Here and its follow-up, Animals, began at the same
time: ʽShine On You Crazy Diamondʼ was premiered live in 1974, along with ʽRaving
And Droolingʼ and ʽYou Gotta Be Crazyʼ that would go on to become ʽSheepʼ and ʽDogsʼ
in 1977. However, conceptually the three were found not to belong together —
the mournful nature of the former did not merge well with the aggressive
dynamics of the latter two, and so, over the course of the 1975 sessions, ʽShine
Onʼ, written as a tribute to Syd, was incremented by several other new tunes,
all of which had to do with either the perils and humiliations of the music
business or with nostalgia and sorrow, turning the whole thing into a much
tighter conceptual piece than even Dark Side itself. The sessions marked
the return of Dick Parry on
saxophone, and also featured Roy Harper
as guest lead vocalist on ʽHave A Cigarʼ, which somehow neither Waters nor
Gilmour decided was suitable for their voices (a strange decision, since there
is not a great deal of vocal difference between it and, say, ʽMoneyʼ, but they
probably knew better). Alan Parsons was too busy with his new band to engineer
the project, but Brian Humphries, his replacement, did a fine enough job. And,
of course, one can never write about this album without mentioning the June 5,
1975 visit of the ghost of Syd Barrett into the studio: although they were
already finalizing the mix of ʽShine Onʼ at the time, I have no doubt that
some of the feelings experienced by everybody on that day must have
somehow, in some way rubbed off on at least some parts of the album.
Commercially, the record stood
little chance of ever outselling Dark Side Of The Moon — with but
five songs on it and a smaller variety of covered topics, its appeal would be
less obviously universal. Nevertheless, unlike Dark Side, it
actually reached No. 1 both in the UK and in the US, and garnered almost as
much praise as its predecessor. Part of this should probably be credited to the
mysterious influence of the Hipgnosis album cover, but essentially Wish You
Were Here sways us over so much because it is the closest that rock music
ever came to producing a meticulously structured and engineered, yet also
totally heartfelt requiem mass — and that, I think, is the angle under
which one should always judge it.
As in any large, multi-part piece
of music, there will be parts that stun you and parts that let you breathe;
climactic melodies that hit every nerve and auxiliary melodies that are not so
great by themselves, but are content to simply play their bridging roles in the
overall story arc. But it really does come across as a single powerful
piece — the didactic tale of the rise and fall of a great hero. You can give
the great hero a restraining name if you like, such as Syd Barrett, yet I
suppose that a huge number of people who cherish and love this album do not
even have the faintest idea of who Syd Barrett was (fuck 'em, of course, but ultimately
that is irrelevant to our subject matter here). The factual side of the story,
like a flashback, is inserted right in the middle of the requiem — ʽWelcome
To The Machineʼ, using an industrial factory as an all-too obvious metaphor for
the musical business, and ʽHave A Cigarʼ, a sneery-ironic conversation
with the Uberboss, take care of that — and the rest takes place in the now, as
we pay our last respects to The Piper, whoever he was. A morality play, no
less!
None of that would matter per se,
of course, if ʽShine On You Crazy Diamondʼ — all the 25 minutes of it, split in
two — weren't one of the most quintessential musical pieces of the 20th
century. If I were to compile a personal «Top 10 Most Aching Moments in
Pop History» list, that moment in 2:08 where Gilmour's guitar enters stage
dramatically to the subdued, respectful tones of the VCS3 and the Hammond organ
played in unison would be among the first candidates for inclusion. That first
solo, concluding part 1, without a single wasted note, still makes me shiver every
time, no matter how much I relisten to it — and it is certainly not just the
notes themselves: formally, Gilmour does not seem to be playing anything
particularly outside of the standard Claptonesque blues idiom. Rather, it is
the fatherly care that goes in each single note — the tone, the duration, the
reverb, the relative strength of the pick; this is true mournful bliss that is
all built on cliches and overcomes every one of it. The same goes for the
famous four-note «Syd theme» that follows. Its timing is perfect — give a
little time for the previous solo to soak in and the keyboards to slowly fade
out a little, then make a second grand entrance with a laconic musical
phrase that sounds like a triumphal fanfare, a warning alarm, and a meditative
mantra all at the same time. It is one of those "everybody rise!"
moments where a minimal, but genius effort is made to let you know that this is
going to be important, as in really important — a tale of
something grand and terrifying, even if you are not aware of the factual details.
Some people have complained that
the composition is stretched out too much — that the vocals come in much too
late, for one thing (a complaint that Gilmour partially recognized by agreeing
to delete one of the guitar solos on most of Floyd's post-Waters live shows).
Maybe it is, and maybe two similar-sounding guitar solos, interrupted by a
keyboard solo, give undue advantage to Gilmour's guitar voice over the rest of
the band — but there is not another track in Floyd's entire repertoire that
would be comparable in human sentiment and transcendental majesty at the
same time (ʽComfortably Numbʼ is, after all, an arena rocker first and
foremost, and does not have as much «internalized emotion»). Besides, it's not
as if he were noodling all over the place for hours or anything, and both
Wright (on keyboards) and Waters (on vocals) pay their equally comparable
share of the tribute, not to mention Parry's sax solo.
The idea to split ʽShine Onʼ in two
did not have Gilmour's initial approvement — but in the end, it turned out to
be an excellent move, because of the possibility to arrange those following two
songs as «flashbacks». ʽWelcome To The Machineʼ, due to the nature of its
metaphor, is as close as Floyd ever came to creating an «industrial» piece of
music — of course, it uses all of its noisy ideas as a setting for the
dark-folksy melody rather than a goal in itself, but isolate the synth loops
and all the steamy explosions and you get yourself quite a scary experimental
track that could easily hold its ground against any Cabaret Voltaire or
Throbbing Gristle track. ʽHave A Cigarʼ, on its own, is not a great song —
it has a fairly common blues-rock riff, Harper's vocals aren't
particularly affected by any kind of emotion, and on the whole, this sort of
aggressive-frustrated blues railing would only be perfected by the band for Animals.
But it is still decent enough, and it obviously works as part of the story — in
fact, I like to picture ʽWelcome To The Machineʼ as a long, creepy, but
breathtaking elevator journey to the top of The Factory, with the souls of
miriads of unfortunate victims trapped on the countless stories; and then, at
the very top of it all, you are greeted by the Uberboss, a somewhat ignorant
("by the way, which one's Pink?"), but totally efficient Lucifer
model in its own right. (Maybe they should have brought in Alice Cooper to sing
the song instead... or Meatloaf?..)
Ideally, the transition from the «flashbacks»
back to ʽShine Onʼ, I think, should be made before ʽWish You Were
Hereʼ rather than after it — it is just so natural when The Fallen Hero's
journey to the top segues right into the chilly wintery winds of Part 6, and
how we have that ominous part, highlighted by the reverberating bass and
Gilmour's Evil-Joker-style slide solos and representing the devilish fate that
awaits The Hero, finally seguing into the last reprise of the vocal section:
"Nobody knows where you are, how near or how far...". In my own (if I
may be so bold) ideal vision of the album, the title track is the post-scriptum
— something to be quietly hummed to the soft strum of the acoustic after the
ceremony has ended and the last of the stunned spectators has left the
building. Then comes the moment when, out of nowhere (or, to be more
precise, out of the lo-fi crackle of a radio transmitter), you get this last
bit of homely, cozy, intimate respect for the departed. I guess there must be a
certain logic to the sequencing that we have, but I have a harder time
perceiving it; not that it's a big problem or anything.
A final special mention should
probably be made for the «effects» — in particular, the use of the glass harp
on the opening segments of ʽShine Onʼ, which went all the way back to the
failed «Household Objects» project, but fit in so wonderfully here: clearly,
the tinkling glass effects are in agreement with the «diamond» thing, adding
one more sonic allegory on top of everything else. When you listen to those
bits in headphones, as loud as possible, you can actually picture yourself in
some sort of majestic funeral chamber, with dazzling-sparkling riches
everywhere and the proverbial Napoleon's Tomb in the middle. Also, there is no
other Floyd album on which they would put the VCS3 to better use — their
electronics now are alternately God-like and Devil-like whenever they choose:
more generally God-like on ʽShine Onʼ, totally Devil-like on ʽWelcome To The
Machineʼ — remember the creepy whizz at the end of the ascending acoustic
guitar solo? You're going up there, floor after floor after floor, and then the
industrial wind hits you flat in the face at the top, as you get your general
view of the grim robotic panorama. Ultimately, all these gimmicks have their
proper purpose, and remain inseparable from the melodic base of the album.
Other than the not-too-satisfactory
track listing (like I said, I would prefer to see the acoustic title track as a
post-scriptum, even at the expense of a slight violation of the symmetry), the
only problem with Wish You Were Here is that it is... well, too short.
Where their second concept album about the unfortunate fate of a musical loner
would arguably suffer from an overabundance of musical ideas, good and
bad, this one finds itself obliged to allocate so much space to the proper
unfurling and development of its musical themes that, in the end, these musical
themes are reduced to but a small handful; and this is also considering that
the theme of ʽHave A Cigarʼ, though similar in purpose, structure, and
execution to ʽMoneyʼ, does not have that song's immediacy or originality, and
that it is all too easy to even not properly notice the theme of ʽWelcome To
The Machineʼ behind all the industrial hustle-bustle.
Conceptually, the record also loses
to both Dark Side and Animals in terms of scope: where Dark
Side was dealing with nothing less than the meaning of human life in
general (yay, pretentious!), and Animals laid out a whole
socio-political vision (hardly an original one, but very originally encoded in
animalistic and musical metaphors), Wish You Were Here relates to a more
narrow, specific situation. But then again, so did Citizen Kane, which
never prevented it from becoming a masterpiece not only for conceptual reasons —
and besides, who'd really want to put down a musical record merely because it
is less conceptually ambitious than any of the surrounding pieces?.. Not
really. Much more problematic is the fact that the vocals throughout aren't all
that good, be it Roy Harper or Roger Waters, yet even that can sometimes turn
to the band's advantage (for instance, Waters' somewhat annoying wailing on ʽMachineʼ
is perfectly suitable if you imagine that it is being collectively delivered by
all the miserable souls trapped in The Factory, communicating with our hero
telepathically as he rides up in that goddamn elevator: warning given, but not
heeded).
In the end, there is a very special
place for Wish You Were Here in that near-perfect streak of «intelligent
art-rock with mass appeal» records that Floyd delivered throughout the 1970s. Dark
Side Of The Moon had its share of tragic notes, but it was not a tragic
album as a whole; Wish You Were Here marked the band's transition into
the bleakest, most cynical period of their creativity. Stunned horror, cruel
cynical irony, and deep, incurable sorrow are the record's chief, if not only
emotions — the last verse of ʽShine Onʼ, with its "pile on many more
layers and I'll be joining you there" bit shows that bliss and rest exist
only beyond this world, never within it. At the same time, though, it is
relatively free of anger as a basic emotion: many people tend to turn
away from Animals and The Wall simply because they find it hard
to stand Waters' never-ending streams of bile and poisoned spit (and let us not
even begin talking about his post-Floyd career). Sorrow is the base word
here, not anger; and the music uses stateliness and solemnity to
convey that sorrow, with such finesse and delicacy that I really cannot think
of anything comparable. (Much later on, in The Division Bell, Gilmour
and Wright tried to recapture some of that magic — but it was already too
intentional, too manipulative, too nostalgic, too predictable to work with the
same efficiency). Overall, I would say, this is an album that every one of us
wishes (or should wish) he/she could have it played in its entirety at
our funeral ceremony — but then most of us probably have to deserve that
right, and if the necessary pre-requisite is getting a welcome from The Machine
and a cigar from Roy Harper, then maybe we'd rather not.
Technical post-scriptum: predictably,
the album has been re-released in various anniversary editions, and in 2011,
like Dark Side, it also received the expanded treatment with a 2-CD «Experience»
package and a huge «Immersion» box set.
Compared to Dark Side, however, these packages offer comparatively less
material — if you are a potential buyer, I would probably advise hunting for
the Experience set, which adds an enjoyable and historically significant
live sub-set from the 1974 Wembley concert (with the three abovementioned early
tracks performed in a row); an excerpt from the Household Objects project, which will help you see how the wine
glass experiment was eventually woven into the textures of ʽShine Onʼ; a
Waters/Gilmour sung version of ʽHave A Cigarʼ; and a ʽWish You Were Hereʼ with
none other than Stephane Grappelli himself guest-playing a violin part that
they later erased because it did not fit in with the overall mood of the song.
(Amusingly, Grappelli was recording with Yehudi Menuhin in an adjacent studio
on that day, but when challenged to improvise, Yehudi declined — classical players
are such party poopers next to jazzmen, right?).
In the original review http://starling.rinet.ru/music/pink.htm#Here you've rated WYWH significantly lower than DSotM — I wonder how that changed since now "the only problem with Wish You Were Here is that it is... well, too short". How did it grow on you?
ReplyDeleteFrom my side I'd say that I learnt to appreciate a general album integrity and in the end it doesn't matter that WYWH is less stuffed with hits than DSotM. It's a great tale, anyway — "requiem mass", yes, a complete work in its' own world. It's sincere yet artful and tuneful. I don't think it needs to be compared with anything at all.
But how I used to hate this record. This was the second CD to appear in our house back in 1999 (the first one being 'Momentary Lapse of Reason'), my father got hooked up on it quick and played it over and over again while smoking and drinking. I must have heard this record around several hundred times, 3-5 times a day for half a year. I hated 'Welcome to Machine' and 'Have a Cigar' — both sounded very cruel to me, don't know why, really. And the main themes played bad tricks with my imagination, too. The record cover was alternative one with two robots shakings hands http://www.nuclearblast.de/static/articles/193/193863.jpg/1000x1000.jpg (the CD was made in Bulgaria — weird) and at that point it really painted Pink Floyd as some soulless band full of human-like machines. I hated the band, hated it with all my guts until I learnt about Syd Barrett-period and that this album was dedicated to him.
"The idea to split ʽShine Onʼ in two did not have Gilmour's initial approvement"
ReplyDeleteI believe you meant to say "approval" here?
"I would prefer to see the acoustic title track as a post-scriptum, even at the expense of a slight violation of the symmetry"
The broken symmetry was hardly a problem for the Beatles on Sgt. Pepper. Definitely like this idea of WYWH at the end of the LP.
Still only two comments on this one? Very strange.
ReplyDeleteI don't really have a whole lot to add myself, which is why I didn't commment either, but I do love how airy and open this album is. It's a bit too slight and meandering for me to prefer it over those before and after, but it complements them beautifully as part of a kind of trilogy: After the prologue of Meddle, the '70s band's dark drama is focused to microscopic precision on The Dark Side of the Moon, then pushed to extremes, split into the lightness of Wish You Were Here and the heaviness of Animals. It's fascinating to hear such a uniquely constructed musical world explored so cohesively on ostensibly unrelated albums.
I guess I had something to say after all.
Please give the new Roger Waters record a whirl. It's Nigel Godrich trying to recreate Dark Side's production while Roger tries to use his old man voice to merge the venom of Animals with late period Leonard Cohen. It's interesting stuff
ReplyDeleteOne thing I don't like about this record is, in the second half of "Shine On...", towards the end, there is a keyboard solo, I think it is played on a clavinet. It just sounds kind of cheesy and dated in my opinion. Other than that it's a great record.
ReplyDeleteAn masterpiece of album...heartfelt and powerful.
ReplyDelete