The Happiest Days of Our Lives/Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2) - Pink Floyd: The Wall Upscaled to HD using Topaz Video Enhance AI, and re-mixed using Ableton Live.
I served in the US Navy with an officer who was one of the kids. He attended a school in London for American kids of Businessmen, Diplomats etc, and somebody at the school knew the band. They didn’t sing, and had no idea what the video was about, they were just happy to get a day off from school. He told me this before YT came around, so I don’t know which one he is.
@@giannisfragos722 it’s been 20 years, but I do remember him saying that they had no idea on the magnitude of what they were doing. But it beat going to school.
In isolation, the solo of Another Brick 2 is so grand and epic that it alone is capable of moving people. But when added to the scenes of anarchy and revolution of the students finally rebelling against the system that imprisons and disempowers them, there really is no way to hold back the lump in your throat. Absolutely fantastic.
@@matt8399well, the magic behind Pink Floyd is that even though he’s clearly singing about his experiences with school in the 1950s, the lyrics are still a universal story that we can all relate to no matter what time you grew up in. The message is still relevant today.
@@matt8399learning that gay people exist in school today is not the same as having your creative mind beat out of you by an oppressive school system. It really is not that difficult.
Saw this at 11 years old. It shocked me. Became a fan just like that. I'm seeing it now, again, with 30 years old, can't help but tear up when that solo comes out of nowhere. Its like all the rage repressed by the kids is finally free when that solo comes. When I saw Roger for the first time, there were kids on stage in this song, and when the solo comes they took off their jackets and they had a t shirt that said "fear builds walls". Couldn't stop crying til the end of the song.
My dad let me watch this when I was 6, and at the time I was still learning English/ didn't know what the song ment, and I sang it during class one day. I went to a Catholic school, I got my ass whooped.
Words can not describe how much legendary is this music, lyrics and the video. The idea of this song is now shaping the world in 21st century. Respect.
1979. I was a freshman in high school. You know, that extremely vulnerable part of an adolescent's upbringing at 15 years of age? I had developed an appreciation for Floyd back at DSOTM, but it hadn't fully developed yet. We had an English teacher (private school) who was from Ireland and spoke in a VERY thick brogue. To my untrained American ears, this broke me. It didn't help that Craig S. behind me used to chant this under his breath during class when he would go ripping off on the football players. :) First time I saw the movie, it moved me in directions I still haven't recovered from. I have seen Floyd live (in one form or another) four times, including Roger's latest worldwide effort. I hope i get to see a few more before I pass. Fantastic music that time will not forget.
I would like to immediately apologize for my English, I translated it into Google Translate. I only read on my own, mostly technical literature. I am your age; I was also 15 years old in 1979. I am from Moldova, then it was the USSR. That year I entered the 9th grade, but in general we had a 10-year school and graduated in 1981. I started listening to Pink Floyd at the age of 12, the first album was The Dark Side of the Moon. We called this album The Far Side of the Moon, and they still call it that. In those days, Pink Floyd was not a very popular group in our country. But when The Wall album came out, it just exploded. Almost all of my classmates had this album on reels. By the way, it appeared with a delay of about a year and not officially. They just copied each other. I first saw the film on the Internet in the early 2000s. Until now, this is practically the only album that I can listen to completely in one sitting. Unfortunately I have never seen the band live. But I still love their music.
I went to high school in America, and in 1978/79 was my freshman year. All through high school I suffered from manic depression. WAS never treated for it. This song represents exactly how I felt all through high school. Thanks. I am now 60, no longer depressed. I got help AFTER I graduated and went to college and got my first job AFTER college. I did start working when I was 13 years old and paying taxes. Which was a good thing, since I wound up disabled by the time I was 36. Very bad thing happened to me. But I have outlived my diagnosis, should have died years ago, but by God's mercy I am still alive! I was depressed for more than 40 years, finally cured of depression. IF I would have gotten married and had children, I would have home schooled them, or put them in private church school which is much more friendly and safer. I would not subject them to public school. Public school was the cause of my depression and the beginning of my sexual abuse and introduced me to a pedhophile who attempted to murder me. It took me decades to get over what that person did to me.
I really do not like using this quality of language, but I feel compelled to: This album is a work of genius, and every household needs this as much as they need a fridge, stove, and dishwasher. This is how important it is to a national culture and a national understanding. This is the British Upper, Middle, and Working Class culture in one album.
A work of Art right up there with Shakespeare, Michelangelo, Da Vinci, Beethoven, Bach, Mozart. I was 10 when I listened to the Album for the first time. Now I am 55, the Cassette changed to CD, to DVD to USB to the Phone. The music grew on me.
@StjernebelystSkogssti sure Pink Floyd is for teen girls🤣🤣 I agree this is a completely overrated song tho. Echoes on the other hand is the best piece of music
Exactly! Simplicity done perfectly. Less is more in this case. Great bass-lines can be simple like this (and Another one bites the Dust) or can be extreme (YYZ- Rush, Teen Town - Jaco etc.) Awesome song.
This sort of comment is always funny to me because music videos like this are still made. The original "mein herz Brennt" video (not the acoustic one). "Beaten in lips". "Falling away from me" Like pink Floyd, it's not pop musicians making this kind of commentary on the treatment of kids & trauma, or intrusive thoughts about rebellion. In reference to "couldn't be shot today," that is. Another brick in the wall part 2 is definitely a classic and sad that it's commentary is still relevant
Criticism and accusation were subjects of talk , reflection and self reflection. People knew to accept they could be wrong and that not everything is necessarily evil intended. Nowaday each word, each action is seen as a mortal offense.
I remember reading somewhere that “Another Brick in the Wall” was banned in South Africa during the racist apartheid regime (which was still going in 1979 when the song came out) because they were worried it might cause rebellions and civil disobedience. By the way, great job on the video. Thank you!
It’s true, my mum said they were banned from singing the song at school- I’d always assumed it was just at that school had no idea it was a nationwide thing
Love the part where the children break a wall with their axes and crowbars. Shows the message early on that kids naturally won't live in isolation, and it's adults who corrupt themselves.
Probably the best music video that exists to this day. I must say that the visuals and practical effects are excellent. Kinda morbid with the grinder one though.
This isn't the original music video, this video is a clip from the movie "The Wall", which came out 3 years after the eponymous album did, and this is the part of the movie that accompanied this song. The original music video was actually half animated in fact. But your point still stands, as a music video it slaps super hard.
@tsunamis82 a nice proprietary blend that came out to be shaped and put into a mold called society with no outlet. (Grow, pay taxes and die) thing is this thing couldn't be more relevant today.
It's the story of indoctrination into a society that sees individuals as part of a machine, the individual characteristics minced to become part of the whole. The meat grinder is just a pictorial analogy of that. Unfortunately that was the case in 1970's Britain just as it is in 2023 Britain for the vast majority.
I had a Latin teacher in the 1960s here in Australia. It was a strict private boys school . He was a tough Yorkshireman. He read passages from Caesars Invasion of Britain and had us enthralled by reading the description of the Legionnaires piling up enemy bodies in a river to a height enough for the chariots and wagons to be driven across. We loved up.
Hence why critical and analytical thinking skills are necessary rather than anti- Acedemia, Science, intellectualism, empirical data and evidence verses say religious grooming, indoctrination, prideful willful ignorance etc.....
The repression and conséquent explosion of feelings, the sence of liberation so accurately described in this video, was a reality of many who grew up and had to attend primary schools in the British Isles in the 1950s and 1960s. Not only where this schools extreamely strict, the level of education was high. English education has allways been considered very good, which is why wealthy parents often send their children to english schools. All great British rock musicians who became famous in the late 1960s and 1970s went to these repressive schools, this includes all members of Pink Floyd, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, and many dozens of other brilliant rock bands of the era that we all rever and admire as truly brilliant. It is my feeling, having myself assisted a boarding school in England at that time, that the success of these bands is to a great extent due to the repressive and yet thorough education they received in childhood. Contemporary rock groups in the USA, Canada, Australia, Europe did not receive this particcular primary education so they had neither the deep rooted strong need to express their liberation and rebellion against the establishment nor did they have the higher level of education to express this liberation and rebellion with. These performers with their very sincere, authentic, unique revelius erreveren revolutionary and yet sofisticated and inteligent music, atire, and attitudes charmed audiences all over the world and drove young girls crazy with delight. Because history never repeats and in particular this unique unusual historical sequence of events will never happen again. Groups as fenomelaly great as these will never again exist, although young people of every following generation have and will continue in vain to try to emulate and surpass them.
I loved this song back in the day. I was at school at the time. Looking back it captures the 70's Britain so well. I had a teacher just like this. I used to lookj on this as a dystopian future. But I now look back with fondness.
انتى فنانه انا متأكد لانكى تفهمين فى الفن ..انا بكل تواظع من كتب كلمات هذه الاغنيه وكذالك لحنتها واعطيتها لصديقى الفنان الذى غناها لان صوتى غير جميل لذالك قلت له غنيها واهديكى هذه الاغنيه عربون محبه وصداقه وشكرا..فتاح
Such a good video. Im 66 now and when I watch this it reminds me of how I felt in high school. I was so lucky I didn't blow my lid, as depicted in this video, but sometimes it felt like I was almost there.
@@bennym1956 So, what do you think makes the kids of today the way they are compared to the kids of 60's/70's? I recall the parents of the kids of the 60's/70's saying that when the kids were much better behaved in their day. They grew up in the 2nd world war erra.
1:06 That part of the poem is the lyrics of the song "MONEY" (Money get back I'm alright, Jack, keep your hands off of my stack, New car, caviar, four star, daydream, Think I'll buy me a football team) from the album "THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON". "
As a younger individual, I originally did not understand the meaning of this video nor the song. Now I do. “All in all you’re just another brick in the wall.” The kids going into the meat grinder after walking the same stride, the kids repeating what the teacher says, “you can’t have any pudding if you don’t eat your meat!” The children are eating the “meat” and repeating the COGs. The system doesn’t want you to be different, they want you to be another cog in the wheel, another brick in the wall and to do what you’re told 24/7 despite their lies. Rodger Waters, lyrical genius. Syd Barrett, helping to create that genius with his vocals. Incredible song.
The schoolmaster is played by Alex McAvoy, who died on 16th June 2005 aged 77. His wife is played by Margery Mason, who died on 26th January 2014 aged 100. She also played the Honeydukes Express lady in Harry Potter Goblet of Fire.
In 1978 there were kids locking arms in large groups singing this song coming in from recess, so they banned the song at the school. Humewood Public School in Toronto nr St Clair and Christie This song, album and movie cut through the lies and abuse that we are seeing come to fruition all around us today.
@@cobblestoone It was playing in rotation on Q107 and other rock stations, I think even 104 CHUM FM, and all over my high school, but they banned it at my brother's gr 1-8 school, my brother's 11 yr old friends knew all the lyrics, totally blew my mind at the time. I gotta wonder now, how much impact those lyrics really had. Not enough, in my opinion, especially relative to how much the album is celebrated. I felt very abused by school my entire life, and found great hope in how many others seemed to absorb the ideas on the record. I know now that all living things are kinesthetic learners, movement being integral to the learning process. Thus forcing kids to sit at a desk half the day is sever psychological and physical abuse. So I feel vindicated - and that much more disappointed that the people who knew all the lyrics back then seemed to dismiss out of hand the idea of actually changing it, or even discussing and trying to articulate what the real flaws and issues are ? Since that album, it has been worse than ever - kids being forcibly medicated for 'Opposition Defiance Disorder' for not wanting to be pushed around all day, now we're at the point where the most important issue of the day is apparently what you do with your weenie in your free time for no reason. But I digress. Such an awesome record and movie. A brutal indictment of our world, without much hope of a happy ending. Roger Waters is a quintessential mad, tortured genius.
Hearing the students say : "¡Hey! ¡Teacher! ¡Leave the kids alone! Makes me feel nostalgic. At the end when kids are done of patience, they show their courage, anguish, anger and demonstration that they are fed up with the bad treatment.
Funny story about this song from my country, Ukraine. We have radio station here, that plays only rock. And every first day of the semester, or the quarter (half of the semester), they'd put this song on air, straight up in the morning, right before studies, when parents were driving theirs children to school. I still have no idea if that's coincidence or not, but that's just hilarious to hear "We don't need no education" on your way to school
that wasn't coincidence, just attempt to verify absence of thoughts of the state cattle on a State farm. Everyone was going to get education certificate to have access to State's feeding trough what ever the words.
@@achatcueilleur5746 of course. This is the philosophy of this song. But it was really nice to understand that people on the radio station were getting this song right, and it was super funny to listen to it when you're driving to school. I was always laughing to guts from this everlasting joke
This came out when I was in 6th grade. It was frequently requested to the DJ during the end of year party at the roller skating rink. Played again and again, about every third song.
надеюсь, вы понимаете, как англо-американская система делает уже более 2 веков болванчиков для укрепления своей системы. и Пинки не смогли преодолеть данную систему, она продолжает выпускать этих болванчиков до сих пор. инсайд из 2023 года.
@@alexsas7575 Ты это сейчас серьёзно?Альбом создан в те времена,когда советскому человеку думать самостоятельно запрещалось вообще.Но система-у англосаксов.Притче о соломинке и бревне в глазу больше двух тысяч лет,но русскому человеку хоть кол на голове теши.
@@alexsas7575 В клипе поднимается проблема.Заведомо преувеличено.Это называется «гипербола».В клипе и альбоме описаны послевоенные годы,малыш Пинки вспоминает отца,погибшего на WWII,значит описаны максимум 50тые.В 70тые всё изменилось и радикально.Но русский человек хочет видеть только то,что он хочет видеть.И если сравнить 50сятые в Совке и те же 50сятые в Британии,то по уровню свобод и мнений Совок был где-то между тюрьмой и психбольницей. Про «оттепель» и «ездили туда-сюда» не неси бред.Получить визу для поездки за кордон в 70сятые,это был ещё тот квест.Ты,ЛИЧНО ТЫ,получал тогда визу?Ездил «туда-сюда»? Я получал.По работе.Это был ещё тот маразм.
This specific music video brings back a lot of memories from my childhood, right now I'm 14 years old but it still brings back memories of when I was like 5 or 6 years old and I'm very happy that my dad taught me what Pink Floyd was, I always played it on the car and I fell very asleep, honestly it is a great band that was a big part of my childhood, this song always made me think about how they teach us to be employees, I quote the song "just another brick in the wall", and it is a great representation of everything that is happening currently, I hope this comment has helped someone, love from Mexico.
Think that is the most important video of these planet!!!! Thank´s sooo much! Sir Jülian Lachet!👍👍👍 Eine der tollsten remarstert Video´s, die ich je gehören und gesehen habe....
I will never forget the first time that I saw this video… it was 1999 on the news was celebrating the 20th anniversary of the album. I was 11 years old. At that time, I did not understand English but I was shocked and so scared when the kids fell into the meat grinder. I remember I could not sleep that night lol. That was the first time that I heard about pink Floyd. Nowadays, it is one of my favorite bands.
1:39 "You speak after me: An acre is the area of a rectangle, who's lenght is one furlong and who's width is one chain" Man findet das nicht unter "lyrics" wenn man danach sucht ... furlong = 10 chains
An amazing song that will never be out of style! Screaming in the school by the teachers was the norm and not the exception. Yet we the students adapted to it! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I love this music video, I love the solo and I love the idea of the idea of the children finally breaking free. But in the end when it cuts back to the child in the classroom, it’s very eerie, almost showing that things will never really change in schools.
Haha I'm in this and looking into camera at 5:30 (tut tut). Wonderful experience for me and my school friends being in this movie. Introduced me to Pink Floyd (obvs) and very thankful for that :)
Anyone who has ever studied would connect to this song. Its a legendary song. I've been listening to this song for 20+ years and yet it touches my heart everytime I listen to it.
quando começa o solo me dá um nó na garganta nao sei se é por ser tão lindo o solo com as cenas, nao sei se é por ser tão sutil e real, mas amo demais o pink floyd, minha banda preferida.
Provavelmente são as 2 coisas, migs. O solo isoladamente já é incrivelmente grandioso e épico, mas, de fato, quando se soma às cenas de anarquia e revolução dos alunos finalmente se rebelando contra o sistema que os aprisiona e desempodera, aí de fato não tem como segurar o nó na garganta. Absolutamente fantástico.
Actually I heard somewhere that the song and video alerted the public to the rigidity of schools and the mistreatment of pupils. It started a conversation that caused the uk government to change school systems for the better
My high school history teacher showed us this.
He was probably the best teacher I ever had.
Thank you Mr. Doyle!
Wow. We only get showed Dune.....
@@EtonDGAch was
My school bus driver played this on the last day of the school year when I was in elementary school. Coolest song I had heard.
i did this song in a play in primary school
the math teacher?
I served in the US Navy with an officer who was one of the kids. He attended a school in London for American kids of Businessmen, Diplomats etc, and somebody at the school knew the band. They didn’t sing, and had no idea what the video was about, they were just happy to get a day off from school. He told me this before YT came around, so I don’t know which one he is.
Cool. What did he say about being part of the film?
@@giannisfragos722 it’s been 20 years, but I do remember him saying that they had no idea on the magnitude of what they were doing. But it beat going to school.
@@Grandizer8989cool
@@Grandizer8989 US Navy is my dream.but Iam russian 🙄😐
@Deja Voodoo way ahead of its time for 1979, 40 plus years old and still epic.oh By the way all the kids came from a school in Islington London .
You can say whatever you want, but this song is and always will be legendary
timeless
Who is saying otherwise?
@@v.a.993 they....hahaha..you know how "they" can be.
Its still relevant in 2023🎉🎉🎉
Culture marmored in history.
what a nice poems this young man writes, they should appear on some album one day
they do.
It took me long enough to spot it.
The schoolmaster describing it as "absolute rubbish" is sacrilege. Clearly a philistine.
@@Focusyn Hook, line, and sinker. LOL!
Sar-chasm (n.) The giant gulf between the sarcastic comment and the person who doesn't get it 🤣
money money money
The most meaningful and expressive song that the music industry could ever have.
That’s not even the case if you limit it to this same album. Not even top 3 for that on the album probably
In isolation, the solo of Another Brick 2 is so grand and epic that it alone is capable of moving people. But when added to the scenes of anarchy and revolution of the students finally rebelling against the system that imprisons and disempowers them, there really is no way to hold back the lump in your throat. Absolutely fantastic.
and how much more do the kids of today need this with the BS, WEF programming they are pummeled with
Is it intentional that the rebellion begins at 4:20?
Probably one of the greatest songs ever written especially if you went to a comprehensive school in the seventies or eighties
Or a public school in the 2020's
If ya know ya know 😬
@@matt8399well, the magic behind Pink Floyd is that even though he’s clearly singing about his experiences with school in the 1950s, the lyrics are still a universal story that we can all relate to no matter what time you grew up in. The message is still relevant today.
@@matt8399learning that gay people exist in school today is not the same as having your creative mind beat out of you by an oppressive school system. It really is not that difficult.
sad@@matt8399
@@RedPandaMoment they werent talking about "learning about gay people" boomer 🤡
Saw this at 11 years old. It shocked me. Became a fan just like that.
I'm seeing it now, again, with 30 years old, can't help but tear up when that solo comes out of nowhere. Its like all the rage repressed by the kids is finally free when that solo comes.
When I saw Roger for the first time, there were kids on stage in this song, and when the solo comes they took off their jackets and they had a t shirt that said "fear builds walls". Couldn't stop crying til the end of the song.
My dad let me watch this when I was 6, and at the time I was still learning English/ didn't know what the song ment, and I sang it during class one day. I went to a Catholic school, I got my ass whooped.
Words can not describe how much legendary is this music, lyrics and the video. The idea of this song is now shaping the world in 21st century. Respect.
1979. I was a freshman in high school. You know, that extremely vulnerable part of an adolescent's upbringing at 15 years of age? I had developed an appreciation for Floyd back at DSOTM, but it hadn't fully developed yet. We had an English teacher (private school) who was from Ireland and spoke in a VERY thick brogue. To my untrained American ears, this broke me. It didn't help that Craig S. behind me used to chant this under his breath during class when he would go ripping off on the football players. :) First time I saw the movie, it moved me in directions I still haven't recovered from. I have seen Floyd live (in one form or another) four times, including Roger's latest worldwide effort. I hope i get to see a few more before I pass. Fantastic music that time will not forget.
I would like to immediately apologize for my English, I translated it into Google Translate. I only read on my own, mostly technical literature.
I am your age; I was also 15 years old in 1979. I am from Moldova, then it was the USSR. That year I entered the 9th grade, but in general we had a 10-year school and graduated in 1981.
I started listening to Pink Floyd at the age of 12, the first album was The Dark Side of the Moon. We called this album The Far Side of the Moon, and they still call it that.
In those days, Pink Floyd was not a very popular group in our country. But when The Wall album came out, it just exploded. Almost all of my classmates had this album on reels. By the way, it appeared with a delay of about a year and not officially. They just copied each other. I first saw the film on the Internet in the early 2000s.
Until now, this is practically the only album that I can listen to completely in one sitting.
Unfortunately I have never seen the band live. But I still love their music.
A wonderful musical masterpiece with one of the great guitar riffs from Dave Gilmour.
I went to high school in America, and in 1978/79 was my freshman year. All through high school I suffered from manic depression. WAS never treated for it. This song represents exactly how I felt all through high school. Thanks. I am now 60, no longer depressed. I got help AFTER I graduated and went to college and got my first job AFTER college. I did start working when I was 13 years old and paying taxes. Which was a good thing, since I wound up disabled by the time I was 36. Very bad thing happened to me. But I have outlived my diagnosis, should have died years ago, but by God's mercy I am still alive! I was depressed for more than 40 years, finally cured of depression. IF I would have gotten married and had children, I would have home schooled them, or put them in private church school which is much more friendly and safer. I would not subject them to public school. Public school was the cause of my depression and the beginning of my sexual abuse and introduced me to a pedhophile who attempted to murder me. It took me decades to get over what that person did to me.
owwww😔🥺👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽💙🙏🏼
I wish you all the best, Sir! (or Ma'am)
Stay Strong Michelle.
i was young when this came out loved it now i am old i still love it
Me too old pard!!!
1979: 20 y o i'm 64 years today 🥸
I'm sure you aren't old
Adyf that isn't old Sweetheart
Advf I was born June 14, 1978
I really do not like using this quality of language, but I feel compelled to: This album is a work of genius, and every household needs this as much as they need a fridge, stove, and dishwasher. This is how important it is to a national culture and a national understanding. This is the British Upper, Middle, and Working Class culture in one album.
A work of Art right up there with Shakespeare, Michelangelo, Da Vinci, Beethoven, Bach, Mozart. I was 10 when I listened to the Album for the first time. Now I am 55, the Cassette changed to CD, to DVD to USB to the Phone. The music grew on me.
If this song is up there with these people, than Echoes is a gift from the divine
imagine comparing this druggie boomer dum dum dum music made for teen girls to mozart
@StjernebelystSkogssti sure Pink Floyd is for teen girls🤣🤣 I agree this is a completely overrated song tho. Echoes on the other hand is the best piece of music
One of the greatest baselines of all time
The line on part one 🤫
So simple yet so iconic and memorable.
Exactly! Simplicity done perfectly. Less is more in this case.
Great bass-lines can be simple like this (and Another one bites the Dust) or can be extreme (YYZ- Rush, Teen Town - Jaco etc.)
Awesome song.
Agree
Still one of the best music vids of all time. Couldn't be shot today.
This sort of comment is always funny to me because music videos like this are still made. The original "mein herz Brennt" video (not the acoustic one). "Beaten in lips". "Falling away from me"
Like pink Floyd, it's not pop musicians making this kind of commentary on the treatment of kids & trauma, or intrusive thoughts about rebellion.
In reference to "couldn't be shot today," that is. Another brick in the wall part 2 is definitely a classic and sad that it's commentary is still relevant
Criticism and accusation were subjects of talk , reflection and self reflection. People knew to accept they could be wrong and that not everything is necessarily evil intended. Nowaday each word, each action is seen as a mortal offense.
This is footage from Alan Parker’s film. It’s not really a music video. It’s an excerpt from an R-rated midnight movie classic.
Of course it could, moron.
im pretty sure this is a movie, Pink Floyd Brick in the Wall
one of the greatest songs in history for sure! all time classics and that solo when the anarchy starts wow!!!
I remember reading somewhere that “Another Brick in the Wall” was banned in South Africa during the racist apartheid regime (which was still going in 1979 when the song came out) because they were worried it might cause rebellions and civil disobedience.
By the way, great job on the video. Thank you!
It’s true, my mum said they were banned from singing the song at school- I’d always assumed it was just at that school had no idea it was a nationwide thing
Yep nation wide. I was propably same era as your mum in SA . Many things were band . We were nieve in many ways.
I'm 98 and I'm still listening laddy 😃
4:22 I really love the guitar solo...
Me too.
Once David Gilmour touches your sole, you'll never be the same again!
@@davidmeakin2610 Touches your "sole"?! 😂
3:52 I love rhythm guitar.
All I have to say is I find the lyrics of songs in the past meaning more and more as time goes on !
Still one of the greatest anti-authoritarian songs till today…not only about bad teachers, but any tyrant or bully.
Love the part where the children break a wall with their axes and crowbars. Shows the message early on that kids naturally won't live in isolation, and it's adults who corrupt themselves.
Ja ja ja. Esfuérzate un poco más
❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉
Crowbars? Half-Life reference?! 😮
Probably the best music video that exists to this day. I must say that the visuals and practical effects are excellent. Kinda morbid with the grinder one though.
They all came out the same, unidentifiable after their education.
This isn't the original music video, this video is a clip from the movie "The Wall", which came out 3 years after the eponymous album did, and this is the part of the movie that accompanied this song.
The original music video was actually half animated in fact.
But your point still stands, as a music video it slaps super hard.
@tsunamis82 a nice proprietary blend that came out to be shaped and put into a mold called society with no outlet. (Grow, pay taxes and die) thing is this thing couldn't be more relevant today.
It's the story of indoctrination into a society that sees individuals as part of a machine, the individual characteristics minced to become part of the whole. The meat grinder is just a pictorial analogy of that.
Unfortunately that was the case in 1970's Britain just as it is in 2023 Britain for the vast majority.
Правда не всегда красива...
I had a Latin teacher in the 1960s here in Australia. It was a strict private boys school . He was a tough Yorkshireman. He read passages from Caesars Invasion of Britain and had us enthralled by reading the description of the Legionnaires piling up enemy bodies in a river to a height enough for the chariots and wagons to be driven across. We loved up.
This will forever be the best song and group ever Period.
said only one person, ever.
@@chaipup7045nah he’s right, this song and Pink Floyd as a whole is fucking awesome.
@@chaipup7045 Then go listen to your nonsense meaningless songs 💩
One of the most well written songs
Mind control.. it was clear many years ago.. wondeful work.
Hence why critical and analytical thinking skills are necessary rather than anti- Acedemia, Science, intellectualism, empirical data and evidence verses say religious grooming, indoctrination, prideful willful ignorance etc.....
The repression and conséquent explosion of feelings, the sence of liberation so accurately described in this video, was a reality of many who grew up and had to attend primary schools in the British Isles in the 1950s and 1960s. Not only where this schools extreamely strict, the level of education was high. English education has allways been considered very good, which is why wealthy parents often send their children to english schools. All great British rock musicians who became famous in the late 1960s and 1970s went to these repressive schools, this includes all members of Pink Floyd, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, and many dozens of other brilliant rock bands of the era that we all rever and admire as truly brilliant.
It is my feeling, having myself assisted a boarding school in England at that time, that the success of these bands is to a great extent due to the repressive and yet thorough education they received in childhood. Contemporary rock groups in the USA, Canada, Australia, Europe did not receive this particcular primary education so they had neither the deep rooted strong need to express their liberation and rebellion against the establishment nor did they have the higher level of education to express this liberation and rebellion with. These performers with their very sincere, authentic, unique revelius erreveren revolutionary and yet sofisticated and inteligent music, atire, and attitudes charmed audiences all over the world and drove young girls crazy with delight. Because history never repeats and in particular this unique unusual historical sequence of events will never happen again. Groups as fenomelaly great as these will never again exist, although young people of every following generation have and will continue in vain to try to emulate and surpass them.
Paul Weller.
I loved this song back in the day. I was at school at the time. Looking back it captures the 70's Britain so well. I had a teacher just like this. I used to lookj on this as a dystopian future. But I now look back with fondness.
This song and message in the song and how the music video is made, is the best music video ever made. no doubt
انتى فنانه انا متأكد لانكى تفهمين فى الفن ..انا بكل تواظع من كتب كلمات هذه الاغنيه وكذالك لحنتها واعطيتها لصديقى الفنان الذى غناها لان صوتى غير جميل لذالك قلت له غنيها واهديكى هذه الاغنيه عربون محبه وصداقه وشكرا..فتاح
@@user-nw2yz1jz1e WHAT? write English
@melissasmith3296
He's saying that he likes the music video and it reminds him of his days before driving a taxicab.
That and a felafel recipe.
@@benwatts3793I laughed too hard at that
@@benwatts3793 what he wrote makes no sense
I haven’t slept in a week because of this music video such a good song
Such a good video. Im 66 now and when I watch this it reminds me of how I felt in high school. I was so lucky I didn't blow my lid, as depicted in this video, but sometimes it felt like I was almost there.
Same age as you and we never lost our shit like pampered socially deviant kids today !!
@@bennym1956 So, what do you think makes the kids of today the way they are compared to the kids of 60's/70's? I recall the parents of the kids of the 60's/70's saying that when the kids were much better behaved in their day. They grew up in the 2nd world war erra.
@@bennym1956 shut up
1:06 That part of the poem is the lyrics of the song "MONEY" (Money get back
I'm alright, Jack, keep your hands off of my stack, New car, caviar, four star, daydream, Think I'll buy me a football team) from the album "THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON". "
When I notice that, I was impressive idk why
As a younger individual, I originally did not understand the meaning of this video nor the song. Now I do.
“All in all you’re just another brick in the wall.”
The kids going into the meat grinder after walking the same stride, the kids repeating what the teacher says, “you can’t have any pudding if you don’t eat your meat!” The children are eating the “meat” and repeating the COGs. The system doesn’t want you to be different, they want you to be another cog in the wheel, another brick in the wall and to do what you’re told 24/7 despite their lies. Rodger Waters, lyrical genius. Syd Barrett, helping to create that genius with his vocals. Incredible song.
This song and videos takes me back to my childhood memories
Anyone still here 2028?
No I'm in 20245
Timeless love for this song ❤❤❤❤
Я из 2027
Wow you are so early I am in 2050
Ainda não cheguei em 2028
The schoolmaster is played by Alex McAvoy, who died on 16th June 2005 aged 77.
His wife is played by Margery Mason, who died on 26th January 2014 aged 100. She also played the Honeydukes Express lady in Harry Potter Goblet of Fire.
The power of these scene is terrific!
Wow - LEGENDARY !!! The sound quality and the video is HQ - amazing work !!!
Never gets old.
What a perfect remaster. Just 100%... thanks
Thank you for this high quality upload
I can’t stay still while listening to this masterpiece.
How many times we felt like that in school.. This was in the 70's
It hasn't changed at all. Even in the 2000s and 2010s it is the same grueling dehumanising experience
my dad got me into pink floyd And this is still my favorite song and comfortably numb Just the music is so much better then the new stuff today
Thank you for posting this in 1080p. You are a supreme amongst mortals.
But the subtitles suck (at least on my laptop -I have 5g service So???)
Always and forever a classic. Thanks.
In 1978 there were kids locking arms in large groups singing this song coming in from recess, so they banned the song at the school.
Humewood Public School in Toronto nr St Clair and Christie
This song, album and movie cut through the lies and abuse that we are seeing come to fruition all around us today.
The song came out in 1979, there is no way that happened in 1978.
@@cobblestoone Ok, so 1979 lol I was 14 - it was my little brother's school.
@@tshirtradical I see lol
@@cobblestoone It was playing in rotation on Q107 and other rock stations, I think even 104 CHUM FM, and all over my high school, but they banned it at my brother's gr 1-8 school, my brother's 11 yr old friends knew all the lyrics, totally blew my mind at the time.
I gotta wonder now, how much impact those lyrics really had. Not enough, in my opinion, especially relative to how much the album is celebrated.
I felt very abused by school my entire life, and found great hope in how many others seemed to absorb the ideas on the record.
I know now that all living things are kinesthetic learners, movement being integral to the learning process. Thus forcing kids to sit at a desk half the day is sever psychological and physical abuse.
So I feel vindicated - and that much more disappointed that the people who knew all the lyrics back then seemed to dismiss out of hand the idea of actually changing it, or even discussing and trying to articulate what the real flaws and issues are ?
Since that album, it has been worse than ever - kids being forcibly medicated for 'Opposition Defiance Disorder' for not wanting to be pushed around all day, now we're at the point where the most important issue of the day is apparently what you do with your weenie in your free time for no reason.
But I digress. Such an awesome record and movie. A brutal indictment of our world, without much hope of a happy ending. Roger Waters is a quintessential mad, tortured genius.
Hearing the students say : "¡Hey! ¡Teacher! ¡Leave the kids alone!
Makes me feel nostalgic. At the end when kids are done of patience, they show their courage, anguish, anger and demonstration that they are fed up with the bad treatment.
As a student teacher watching this now it really brings it home how far the profession has come since the days of corporal punishment in schools
I've always loved the band. I grew up listening to Pink Floyd ❤❤❤❤
Funny story about this song from my country, Ukraine. We have radio station here, that plays only rock. And every first day of the semester, or the quarter (half of the semester), they'd put this song on air, straight up in the morning, right before studies, when parents were driving theirs children to school. I still have no idea if that's coincidence or not, but that's just hilarious to hear "We don't need no education" on your way to school
that wasn't coincidence, just attempt to verify absence of thoughts of the state cattle on a State farm. Everyone was going to get education certificate to have access to State's feeding trough what ever the words.
@@achatcueilleur5746 of course. This is the philosophy of this song. But it was really nice to understand that people on the radio station were getting this song right, and it was super funny to listen to it when you're driving to school. I was always laughing to guts from this everlasting joke
ХОХЛОПИТЕКАМ, УБИВАЮЩИМ ДЕТЕЙ, СМЕРТЬ. НЕНАВИЖУ ВАШЕ ПЛЕМЯ.
We have a station in Nova Scotia, Canada and they do it too!
Vous été en guerre avec la Russie
I loved this song and it would come back to haunt and guide me when I become a teacher.
@uNnHkP8mza obviously not an english teacher
Mister Julian, THIS is by far the BEST SOUND I ever got out of youtube.... my RESPECT
1:14 always gets me😂 "PO-wheems no less"
the ladi reckons himself a poet!
And then bro just slaps in a Dark Side of the Moon reference
Quantas lembranças maravilhosas,que sucesso que nunca se apagará.LINDO,LINDO!!!!
Concordo.
Pode passar décadas e sempre será lembrada
great song awesome video as always
This came out when I was in 6th grade. It was frequently requested to the DJ during the end of year party at the roller skating rink. Played again and again, about every third song.
Música incrível! Saudades ❤
❤❤❤ Мурашки по коже... это шедевр на века !!! ❤❤❤
надеюсь, вы понимаете, как англо-американская система делает уже более 2 веков болванчиков для укрепления своей системы. и Пинки не смогли преодолеть данную систему, она продолжает выпускать этих болванчиков до сих пор. инсайд из 2023 года.
@@alexsas7575 Ты это сейчас серьёзно?Альбом создан в те времена,когда советскому человеку думать самостоятельно запрещалось вообще.Но система-у англосаксов.Притче о соломинке и бревне в глазу больше двух тысяч лет,но русскому человеку хоть кол на голове теши.
@@alexsas7575 В клипе поднимается проблема.Заведомо преувеличено.Это называется «гипербола».В клипе и альбоме описаны послевоенные годы,малыш Пинки вспоминает отца,погибшего на WWII,значит описаны максимум 50тые.В 70тые всё изменилось и радикально.Но русский человек хочет видеть только то,что он хочет видеть.И если сравнить 50сятые в Совке и те же 50сятые в Британии,то по уровню свобод и мнений Совок был где-то между тюрьмой и психбольницей.
Про «оттепель» и «ездили туда-сюда» не неси бред.Получить визу для поездки за кордон в 70сятые,это был ещё тот квест.Ты,ЛИЧНО ТЫ,получал тогда визу?Ездил «туда-сюда»? Я получал.По работе.Это был ещё тот маразм.
Дата выпуска Стены: 30 ноября 1979 г. Экранизации 1982 г. Не надо говорить про 50-е годы
@@user-vu6ip2do4o эта песня основано на воспоминаниях Роджера уотерса о школе. Он родился в 1945г. Подумайте во сколько лет он в ней учился!
This specific music video brings back a lot of memories from my childhood, right now I'm 14 years old but it still brings back memories of when I was like 5 or 6 years old and I'm very happy that my dad taught me what Pink Floyd was, I always played it on the car and I fell very asleep, honestly it is a great band that was a big part of my childhood, this song always made me think about how they teach us to be employees, I quote the song "just another brick in the wall", and it is a great representation of everything that is happening currently, I hope this comment has helped someone, love from Mexico.
“School aint THAT bad!” - 🤓
No it really is
In 1960ish/70ish it was
Es asi ahora en mi epoca, por suerte estouy en mi ultimo amot y puedo escuchar esta cancion
Yes it was we spelt it SKOOL and we were that thick we spelt it FIK
This album came out my freshman year in college. I remember it was a very big deal
excellent work
Think that is the most important video of these planet!!!! Thank´s sooo much! Sir Jülian Lachet!👍👍👍 Eine der tollsten remarstert Video´s, die ich je gehören und gesehen habe....
I will never forget the first time that I saw this video… it was 1999 on the news was celebrating the 20th anniversary of the album. I was 11 years old. At that time, I did not understand English but I was shocked and so scared when the kids fell into the meat grinder. I remember I could not sleep that night lol. That was the first time that I heard about pink Floyd. Nowadays, it is one of my favorite bands.
One of the most powerful bas line in all music history
Это даже не музыка а послание из вселенной😮🔥🔥
Great remastering!
What a Masterpiece....❤
1:39 "You speak after me: An acre is the area of a rectangle, who's lenght is one furlong and who's width is one chain"
Man findet das nicht unter "lyrics" wenn man danach sucht ...
furlong = 10 chains
On est pas en cours de math😂😂
Why did I think he said the n-word?
@@Edward19542 No clue. He did not. He talks about math.
This song never fade
This will never get old.
An amazing song that will never be out of style! Screaming in the school by the teachers was the norm and not the exception. Yet we the students adapted to it! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
My dad used to play this song to spite me because I hated school but the stupid bloke didn't realize the song also spoke of him.
I love this music video, I love the solo and I love the idea of the idea of the children finally breaking free. But in the end when it cuts back to the child in the classroom, it’s very eerie, almost showing that things will never really change in schools.
A masterpiece
Música maravilhosa, um clássico inesquecível. Não conseguem fazer músicas como essa hoje em dia, infelizmente.
O Pink Floyd é único e inigualável, só o Rush se aproxima.
I don’t know what language you speak but you are 100% correct I agree with you songs like this are from my younger days
@@hammerdragon4321 portuguese
As canções não fazem. É isso que se faz com as pessoas.
De tempos em tempos bato cartão aqui... Arrisco dizer que é melhor musica que já ouvi na vida....
I'm seventy years old and this song still gives me a big smile every time I hear it and at the same time memories of school I don't want to re-live.
Watched this in the movie theater on the day it was released, great times!
Nice work man
Classic Pink Floyd ❤
Es una obra de arte total, lástima que los primeros 2 minutos no estén en las canciones de los discos
Si están, forman parte de la canción The Happiest Day of Our Lives
Escucha el álbum completo.
Haha I'm in this and looking into camera at 5:30 (tut tut). Wonderful experience for me and my school friends being in this movie. Introduced me to Pink Floyd (obvs) and very thankful for that :)
Nostalgia pura essa música..top demais
Hands down those kids lived our dreams
Anyone who has ever studied would connect to this song. Its a legendary song. I've been listening to this song for 20+ years and yet it touches my heart everytime I listen to it.
another masterpieces,for ever!
este clipe faz parte do filme The Wall, vi este filme 5 vezes quando saiu no cinema era fantástico coisa de outro mundo na época e ate hoje
quando começa o solo me dá um nó na garganta nao sei se é por ser tão lindo o solo com as cenas, nao sei se é por ser tão sutil e real, mas amo demais o pink floyd, minha banda preferida.
Provavelmente são as 2 coisas, migs. O solo isoladamente já é incrivelmente grandioso e épico, mas, de fato, quando se soma às cenas de anarquia e revolução dos alunos finalmente se rebelando contra o sistema que os aprisiona e desempodera, aí de fato não tem como segurar o nó na garganta. Absolutamente fantástico.
It's breaking My heart that the republican took your babies. I'm on one..... Heart rules.❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
David Gilmore is my favorite guitarist. He gets so much emotion out of his strat. Best solos out there
BANGER! My fav of the album though is the first third, “the happiest days of our lives”!
The guy who created the spng and video...ONE OF THE BEST EVER
Masterpiece
This clip shows how some schools break the psyche of children.
Even after this film the world did the world not wise up, how sad is that? 😢😢😢😢😢😢
Actually I heard somewhere that the song and video alerted the public to the rigidity of schools and the mistreatment of pupils. It started a conversation that caused the uk government to change school systems for the better
Kids like me be complaining these days about school, but man do we have it easy, it was much harder back in the day. We shouldnt be complaining
Timeless masterpiece.
Every student's dream when they were young..
Great Great song. My fav band. The gat solo is just epic.