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Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Pink Floyd: The Division Bell

PINK FLOYD: THE DIVISION BELL (1994)

General verdict: A tired, derivative, and washed-out nostalgic prayer thatʼs as honest and sympathetic as the finest in tired, derivative, washed-out nostalgic prayers go.


Critically slammed upon release with just as much verbal venom as A Momentary Lapse Of Reason, it might look like The Division Bell is one more of those albums in desperate need of a fair reassessment — especially in this new era when Angry Artistic Assholes such as John Lennon or Roger Waters are starting to (at least temporarily) lose the battle to Pleasant Polite Personalities such as Paul McCartney or Rick Wright (Gilmour, I guess, sits somewhere in the middle between these two, though still probably closer to PPP than to AAA). So far, however, I have not seen much activism on the matter; and the main reason, I think, is that The Division Bell simply holds no appeal whatsoever to the younger generations — of all nominally Floyd albums, this one is the most openly «boomer-oriented» of the lot, meaning it would be totally uncool, at best, to defend it around 2020.

Roughly speaking, The Division Bell in its entirety is one long, juicy, self-absorbed nostalgic trip. Recycled musical ideas with slight variations; lyrics almost completely centered on past memories and experiences; guitar solos that weave a near-constant fabric of light nostalgic melancholy — everything here screams, one way or another, that the course has been run and that this bandʼs best days are long, long gone. But at least there is a hint of honesty about it, one that was missing on Momentary Lapse Of Reason, an album whose production values, moments of puffed-up anger and occasional stabs at social relevance gave the illusion of a band ready to move forward with the times. On The Division Bell, Gilmour and Wright are busy doing what they actually want to do and what they can do, freeing themselves from the social obligation to prove that Pink Floyd can continue to be a progressive force even without Waters. If what they want to do is simply shed a tear about how "the grass was greener", we have every right to empathize with that tear.

Except you have to wait a long, long, long time to get around to ʽHigh Hopesʼ, arguably the albumʼs culmination. Before that, you have to sit through ʽCluster Oneʼ, a nice and forgettable instrumental in the vein of ʽShine Onʼ, but with no memorable guitar lines; ʽWhat Do You Want From Meʼ, the albumʼs most energetically aggressive blues-rocker in the vein of ʽHave A Cigarʼ, but without that songʼs bitter sense of sarcastic humour; ʽPoles Apartʼ, seven minutes of pleasant folk rock with a «psychedelic» interlude in the shape of a carousel waltz; ʽMaroonedʼ, another instrumental excuse for an extended Gilmour solo that could have been taken right from the outtakes of his first solo album; ʽA Great Day For Freedomʼ, an ironic anthem whose musical pomp makes it sound like a special coda for The Wall directly commissioned from the likes of Asia (Gilmour even sounds a bit like John Wetton here); ʽWearing The Inside Outʼ, a bona fide adult contemporary number sung by Rick Wright but featuring no interesting keyboard work from him whatsoever; ʽTake It Backʼ, a very strange attempt by the band to go all utterly U2 on our asses — I mean, Gilmour did invent The Edgeʼs style of playing, but did he actually have to adapt it back, and try to sing like Bono at the same time?... and oh God no, there are still three more songs here before ʽHigh Hopesʼ, and I have already exceeded my limits on these mini-assessments.

Arguably the main weakness of all these songs is that they all go on for way too long, but thatʼs Pink Floyd to you: you know it donʼt work if it donʼt have an epic or atmospheric intro, and a solid Gilmour solo, and these things take time. But another weakness is the production — even if it is cleansed of the usual Eighties excesses, most of the album still sounds surprisingly lifeless, to the extent that even the live renditions of these tunes on Pulse are somewhat preferable to their studio counterparts. Gilmourʼs guitar tones are thin, and the melodicity is often lost in the dense forest of keyboard overdubs and echo effects. Even something as forgettable by itself as ʽComing Back To Lifeʼ actually does come back to life for a brief while during the live performance at Daveʼs Pompeii concert in 2016, with sharper and crisper guitar tones, louder and prouder vocals, and a band that seems way more willing to get into it than the session musicians were in 1994. It is almost as if Gilmour gave everybody a warning — "listen, guys, we are making this brooding melancholic album about how everything sucks, you are not allowed to bring any emotional sharpness or power into the proceedings".

ʽHigh Hopesʼ is a different story, though. It isnʼt nearly as killer as ʽSorrowʼ, simply because it delivers a smoother, compromising message — but it does feature the albumʼs most (if not only) memorable chorus, it does contain its most beautiful slide solo, and it does deliver its general message more efficiently in seven minutes than the rest of the album does in one hour. In the lyrical department, I admit that it can make one uneasy to sing along with lines like "the grass was greener, the light was brighter", even while fully grasping their irony — but one should not also overlook the titular line of "the ringing of the division bell had begun", which, in the context of the song, certainly referred to Sixtiesʼ counter-culture, but in these days could just as easily ring true with the social and generational rifts of the 21st century. I am not a big fan of the main piano-led melody — its chords are more post-peak Camel than Floyd in nature — but boy does David ever shine on that solo outro, maybe his best since ʽComfortably Numbʼ, though, once again, he does an even sharper and shriller job on subsequent live performances.

In any case, I think that at the very least, The Division Bell does good as a proper swan song for Floyd — who knows, maybe it would have earned a little more respect had Gilmour, Wright, and Mason expressly stated at the time that there would be no more Pink Floyd after this release, instead of leaving everybody hanging on in obscurity and letting things just go their natural way. It is definitely no Abbey Road, an album that managed to nicely sum up things while at the same way pointing several distinct paths to musical future; but neither is it an Itʼs Hard, an album that had to fake creativity and enthusiasm where there was none in sight. It is a record that honestly says it — we are tired and weary, we are through, we have no perspective on the future, we are only inspired by our past, and we are not ashamed of it. No wonder that the message was ignored or ridiculed back in 1994 — but as you look back on it from 2020, it is actually hard not to get some respect for this position.

11 comments:

  1. I find myself going back to this one for Wearing the Inside Out more than any other track, and it does epitomize the weary, nostalgic longing you ascribe to the rest of the album. I just like Rick Wright's voice a whole lot. I find him much more identifiable than Dave, whose lyrics are often embarrassing. I'd pay special attention to that one. Aside from that, only High Hopes (and, maybe, Keep Talking) have any artistic merit.

    But I'm curious to hear your opinion of The Endless River. It's hardly a "Pink Floyd album" but it's the most enjoyable post-Waters listening experience to have the Pink Floyd name, as far as I'm concerned.

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    1. Agree with you on both counts, that Rick song is magical, my favourite of the album (I know many feel the same). Endless River is something different, as it's mostly instrumental, it's got a great quiet vibe, and I find myself loving it for what it is, an unexpected gift, a coda.

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  2. I still enjoy this, and it's one of the first things I play every spring when the weather's nice enough to have the windows open, just as when it came out all that time ago.

    It works for me because it's a Pink Floyd album, not a David Gilmour solo project gussied up to seem like a Floyd album. Each of his actual solo albums in name are better than Momentary Lapse.

    More of what I think here:
    https://everybodysdummy.blogspot.com/2011/03/pink-floyd-17-division-bell.html

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  3. I agree with most of the observations, though I’m with the commenter on my appreciation of ‘Wearing the Inside Out.’ It was good to hear Rick Wright’s voice again after so many years in the wilderness. Even if some of the material he sang on was daft, his voice and phrasing are just as much a part of the classic Floyd sound as his keyboards. He was there from the start, harmonizing with Syd on ‘Arnold Layne’, ‘See Emily Play’ and ‘Astronomy Domine.’ And it’s his larger presence that really makes this a proper, if underwhelming, Floyd album for me.
    As for Gilmour, I think he was still a few years away from his artistic ‘breakthrough.’ While I’d never raise his latter day solo albums, ‘On an Island’ or ‘Rattle that Lock’ to “classic” status, they are certainly more adventurous and interesting than the two Gilmour-era Floyd albums. Perhaps, having laid Floyd to rest and struck out confidently under his own name brand, he didn’t feel subservient to the “Pink Floyd sound” (heh), allowing him to do more whimsical and diverse pieces like ‘Smile’, ‘This Heaven, and ‘The Girl in the Yellow Dress.’ On these albums you hear someone stretching themselves, and playing more interesting lead lines than he has in decades. And frankly, when listening to his two live albums from these periods, he seems much more willing to play “loose” than before. You’ve highlighted his solos from ‘Sorrow’ and ‘Comfortably Numb’ during this period. I would also point to his playing throughout ‘Echoes’ and ‘Astronomy Domine’ on ‘Live in Gdańsk’ that demonstrate an aggressiveness that I haven’t heard from him since The Final Cut.

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  4. I asked for this review (and other reviews of later PF) a long time ago, and you have remembered it. (Or maybe it hasn't anything to do with my request, but..) Thank you, George!

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  5. The best song on this album is Wearing the Inside Out. To me, this song is about Wright himself.

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  6. I remember hurrying back home with the bought cassette of the album expecting something huge, listening to it in its entirety and feeling utterly disappointed by its lack of interesting melodies and overall lifelessness. Never warmed up to it with the exception of Marooned, which video divided between the Earth view from the orbit and mysterious Chernobyl sequence I liked a lot.

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  7. I still quite enjoy this album, but share your reservations on the unnecessary length of most of the tracks. There's nothing wrong with long songs - of which Floyd had many - but unlike Animals where Gilmour doesn't waste a single note, providing in my opinion his most creative work, this album is full of fairly boring, derivative Gilmour solos.

    If someone was there to counter Gilmour's excesses, such as Roger Waters for example (!), The Division Bell would have been a far better album. It could easily be shortened by a good 10-15 minutes, providing more punch. It's a shame, as the material on this is far superior to A Momentary Lapse of Reason. While AMLOR was deeply flawed, Gilmour deserves some praise for at least attempting something approaching Floyd's usual experimentation. Of course this failed but at least he tried to push himself creatively. The Division Bell lacks daring IMO and suffers quite a bit for it.

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  8. "Take It Back" isn't so much Pink Floyd doing U2 but Pink Floyd doing Marillion. Listen to "The Release", it's basically the same song. And there are more cases like that. "Marooned" and "Keep Talking" both rip off aspects of Alan Parsons' "Sirius". By this point, Pink Floyd were copying the Pink Floyd copyists (your comment about Camel fits right in).

    I don't agree at all with you when it comes to studio vs. live recordings. The Division Bell has one of the best sound productions I've ever heard, and the live versions usually suffer in some way (as opposed to A Momentary Lapse of Reason, where the songs sounded livelier live). "Coming Back to Life" is the best example. It's a vocally demanding song and Gilmour never quite managed to recreate its ethereal feel, *especially* not on the 2016 tour where his voice was often pretty rough (at least in Pompeii and Wiesbaden) and he couldn't sustain the notes anymore. I'll make exception for the PULSE version of "What Do You Want from Me", which takes it up a notch.

    But the problem with the album is that Rick Wright was severely underused. On AMLOR it was understandable, but here it's almost inexcusable. They really should have allowed him to contribute more to the concept and the eventual playing. Jon Carin is a good sideman but there is no reason he should be the only keyboardist on "Marooned", "A Great Day for Freedom", "Lost for Words" and "High Hopes". That is the reason why I find The Endless River much more Floyd-sounding, simply because Rick's playing is finally put front and center, and there is less of that "must sound mainstream and inoffensive" that (as Andy Jackson also attests) really kept The Division Bell from sounding like prime Floyd.

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