1) Master Of Ceremonies; 2) In The Flesh?; 3)
The Thin Ice; 4) Another Brick In The Wall, Pt. 1;
5) The Happiest Days Of Our Lives; 6) Another Brick In
The Wall, Pt. 2; 7) Mother; 8) Goodbye
Blue Sky; 9) Empty Spaces; 10) What Shall We Do Now?; 11) Young Lust; 12) One
Of My Turns; 13) Donʼt Leave Me Now; 14) Another
Brick In The Wall, Pt. 3; 15) The Last Few Bricks; 16) Goodbye Cruel World; 17)
Hey You; 18) Is There Anybody Out There?; 19) Nobody Home; 20) Vera; 21) Bring
The Boys Back Home; 22) Comfortably Numb; 23)
The Show Must Go On; 24) Master Of Ceremonies; 25) In The Flesh; 26) Run Like
Hell; 27) Waiting For The Worms; 28) Stop!; 29) The
Trial; 30) Outside The Wall.
General verdict: Needs video.
The most awful thing about Floydʼs legendary live
Wall shows from 1980–81 is that,
apparently, no high quality footage was ever captured — whatever remains, as
you can easily see from YT videos, is barely watchable. Of course, Rogerʼs
several solo-based stagings of the album, one of which has already been
reviewed, are a partial remedy for this travesty, but only partial, because it
is one thing to watch The Wall as a
bona fide musical, replete with a motley assortment of musical guests of widely
varying quality, and it would be quite another thing to watch it as the freshest
chapter in the personal history of Pink Floyd while it still existed as a band (despite
Rick Wright being already denominated to the status of «supporting musician»).
The audio tapes from the show did survive;
but it does make sense that they were not released upon the completion of the
project, and I do not even think there were any such plans — as we know all too
well, the classic Floyd line up did not think much of the idea of live albums,
given how important the visual aspect was for their live activities. So it was
not until the year 2000 that these tapes were dug out, brushed off, sorted out,
and transformed into a record that promised to bring you all (well, half) of
the value of the classic live Floyd experience — a reasonable time gap, given
that loyal fans had probably worn off twenty copies of the studio Wall in twenty years and were fully
prepared for something slightly different.
As it happens, my warning is fully
predictable — Is There Anybody Out There?
is a record that will only appeal to the seasoned fan. First, its very nature
is that of a self-contradictory compromise: on one hand, it claims to be a
genuine live experience, but on the other hand, its tracks are put together
from more separate parts than a John Entwistle bass guitar — almost every song
is dated to at least two or three different shows, either because producer James
Guthrie embarked on a typically Floydian perfectionist cruise, looking for
musically ideal bits, or because some parts of the tapes had degraded in
quality. Quality control does take care of that issue — without the
accompanying notes, youʼd never know it wasnʼt all just one show — but the
other issue is that it all sounds largely and inevitably inferior to the studio
version, and that issue cannot be taken care of by any means, be it editing, mixing,
or magic.
On a purely formal level, The Wall Live is a more complete Wall experience than the studio
version, because lack of the 2-LP time limit had allowed the band to reinstate
certain bits that were cut off from the final release. Unfortunately, Roger and
David were pretty good at cutting off, and the reinstated bits feel superfluous.
The short ʽWhat Shall We Do Now?ʼ, bridging the formerly startling and
disturbing sonic gap between ʽEmpty Spacesʼ and ʽYoung Lustʼ, is two minutes of
mediocre arena-rock (ʽYoung Lustʼ is arena-rock, too, but at least it is
parodic / ironic arena-rock, whereas this thing is just a technical interlude).
ʽThe Show Must Go Onʼ restores an earlier cut verse — oh, what a joy. ʽOutside The
Wallʼ is the worst of them all, having become a hillbilly campfire song with
overdubbed pretentious narration, instead of its enigmatic quietness and
looping tricks on the original album. And there are also ʽThe Last Few Bricksʼ,
a medley of several musical themes from the albumʼs first part, played onstage
by the musicians as the wall was being completed, brick by brick — something
that, quite clearly, only works together with the hypnotic spectacle of the
band being gradually hidden from your eyes by all the white stuff. In the end,
none of these tracks make the experience better, and some of them make it
worse.
Of all the performances here, arguably the
only one that made me sit up and take notice was ʽRun Like Hellʼ — "this
is for all the WEAK people in the audience!". Somehow, the level of mean
aggression required for this tune was seriously upped, perhaps due to Gilmourʼs
guitar sounding harsher and crisper than in the studio — and the song gets an
incredibly weird instrumental section here, with elements of almost free-form
jazz chaos as guitars and pianos clash with each other in dissonant madness. ʽComfortably
Numbʼ, on the other hand, did not yet have the proper time to transform itself
into an end-of-the-world anthem that could function separately from the album
itself, and Gilmour, standing on top of the wall, plays it relatively safe and
close to the book (though I am sure many fans will prefer this early, fuzz-drenched
reading of the closing solo to the more straightforward guitar-god-show-off it
would become in the post-Waters years).
Many of the studio nuances are unknowingly or
inevitably lost in transition — for instance, my favorite song on the album, ʽDonʼt
Leave Me Nowʼ, is nowhere near as efficient live, because they cannot reproduce
that hypnotic, climactic sustained guitar-vocal unison in the coda. The solo in
ʽAnother Brick In The Wall, Pt. 2ʼ is extended by having a second guitarist take
after David (Snowy White, I presume), which does not make for a particularly
great contrast. All in all, there are plenty of small differences, but these
are mostly for enthusiasts to spot, and even if some of them turn out to be
more true to the vision of Roger Waters than, say, Bob Ezrin, it still only
goes to show how much of the magic of Pink Floyd was generated inside the
studio and how hard it was to bottle that magic and carry it intact to the
stage.
That said, The Wall is The Wall,
and at the very least you do get to hear it live without all the guest stars — when
you can have Gilmour himself for ʽYoung Lustʼ, whoʼd want Bryan Adams? If you
are a major fan of the album, this live companion is still a must-own. But
ultimately, it will just serve as an indirect memento of one of rock theaterʼs
most important and inventive events, in the absence of a high quality direct
memento of such.
I disagree with you on the merits of "What Shall We Do Now?", although perhaps I am biased, given the fact that the song and its accompanying video made for one of the best sequences in the film. That said, the original transition between "Empty Spaces" and "Young Lust" was certainly superior to the new YL intro, and unfortunately had to be shorn to allow for "What Shall"'s existence.
ReplyDelete"Needs video"
ReplyDeleteIn my dictionary this means the music can't stand on its own and hence is mediocre at best. An analogy is the ballet Giselle by Adolphe Adam. Highly enjoyable in the theatre, but unexpressive on CD, hence not worth listening to. Compare The Who's Tommy; with the exception of Underture it's a masterpiece, even if the perfect version still has to be recorded and filmed. And I'm not a big fan of that band.
I don't think he meant the "needs video" as a comment on the music of The Wall itself but was saying why bother with an audio only live album for a show that was as much a visual spectacle as it was a music concert.
DeletePrecisely. This is a comment on the live album, not the studio album. The studio album is perfect without any video (in fact, I am not a big fan of the Wall movie at all).
DeleteWell as far as the 1980/1981 concert video quality goes. There are miracles to be expected in the future:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzNHpyEHZg0
"This is a comment on the live album"
ReplyDeleteMy comment didn't address the studio album either.
"a show that was as much a visual spectacle"
Exactly my point.
"why bother with an audio only live album"
Because the music on its own is excellent, duh. What else reason could there be?
You guys seem to assume that because one recording (the studio album) has an excellent performance another recording (like this live album) automatically contains excellent music as well.
Obviously any artist can ruin any music, no matter how excellent. Don't look further than my favourites Deep Purple for some fine examples. You can find examples in classical music in abundance as well.
Perfect music doesn't need video. Tommy doesn't. Still its movie has additional value. Not hard, is it?
So I stick to "needs video" is a disqualification. Of this very album. Of the way the music is performed here. Nothing more. Any further interpretation is yours, not mine.
No, sorry. You wrote: "this means the music can't stand on its own and hence is mediocre at best". There is no way to interpret this sentence other than a disqualification of The Wall as a musical piece in general, not as a musical piece that suffered problems when transposed from the studio onto the stage. Of course, this may have been just a problem of inadequate wording on your part, but it's still a problem.
DeleteI do agree that Tommy as a live experience does not need video, because The Who were two vastly different musical entities in the studio and onstage, being in essence an improvisational hard rock band. Pink Floyd, like most other art-rock and prog-rock bands, were not two different entities in the studio and onstage (at least, not after the early psychedelic years). This does not make their music any less perfect - it just diminishes the value of their live output outside of context.
True, "Run like Hell" has a perfect version in here. And I've always been a fan of the longer "Empty Spaces", which had a great impact for me in the movie (indeed the visuals are so important for this song), specially the faster part with the Waters/Gilmour duet.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_vv1XSS_kc
I much prefer this version to the studio album. From the first time I heard The Wall, I found Another Brick Part 3 incredibly disappointing in its brevity. "The Last Few Bricks" adds everything that I was hoping for in that sequence, and more.
ReplyDelete