Truth is, all other cameras had malfunctioned and hadn't recorded. Well,some say "Things happen for a reason" and for I myself (a 62 year-old-drummer) was grateful!
welcome to pink floyd he whole pulse concert is considered to be the best live show ever suggestions from pulse , great gig in the sky , high hopes, one of these days , and the final number using over 1 million dollars of lighting hold onto your seat run like hell and of coarse comfortably numb is David Gilmore the main man is still performing world wide to sell out crowds at 78 yo The pulse concerts featured even more special effects than the previous tour, including two custom designed airships.[2] Three stages leapfrogged around North America and Europe, each 180 feet (55 m) long and featuring a 130-foot (40 m) arch resembling the Hollywood Bowl venue. All in all, the tour required 700 tons of steel carried by 53 articulated trucks, a crew of 161 people and an initial investment of US$4 million plus US$25 million of running costs just to stage. This tour played to over 5 million people in 68 cities; each concert gathered an average audience of 45,000 0
I read somewhere that some of the footage from this song was either damaged or lost. It wasn’t intended to focus on Nick Mason as much as it did, but I think it was a happy accident. This is some of his best drumming and it’s neat to see him be the focus of the video. They also briefly do a nod to the Dr Who theme song, which is much more obvious on the live versions from the 80s and 90s
Unfortunately, the shoot in Pompeii was cut short due to equipment issues, so the videos for One of These Days and a few other songs were actually filmed in a studio in Paris.
The threatening lyric, (One of these days, I'm going to cut you into little pieces), a rare vocal contribution by Nick Mason, was aimed at Sir Jimmy Young, the then BBC Radio 1 and Radio 2 DJ who the band supposedly disliked because of his tendency to babble. At concerts in the early 1970s, they would sometimes play a sound collage of clips from Young's radio show, which had been edited to sound completely absurd, figuratively "cut into little pieces".
I teased my cousin that I’ve seen Black Sabbath more than a few times. Twice with the original lineup. He came back at me that he’s seen Pink Floyd a few times. Bastard😂
The likely reason they focus so much on Nick Mason during this video performance is because it's his voice that actually says "one of these days I'm going to cut you into little pieces"! And unbeknownst to a lot of people they recorded his voice with Nick Mason saying that line very fast in a falsetto, a very high pitched and fast falsetto and then they slowed it way down and recorded it that way which is why it sounds garbled and strange! I saw that on a Pink Floyd documentary so I know it's accurate!!
*The Wall* is really not the kind of ‘good vibes’ experience you want to have on acid. By the way-it’s amazing how similar our childhood stories are-though I was the older brother, I just had an early puberty, and I took advantage of it. I looked 17 or 18 at 14 (I could grow a full beard, and I’d been drinking since 10 (mostly stealing from the folks’ liquor cabinets, but I’d drink whatever I could get wherever I could get it), smoking cannabis with my 15-year-old neighbour up the street (who thought I was 14) at 12; and I took my first psychedelic mushrooms at 14. I lived in an interdimensional void, so I had NO sources for acid ANYWHERE. I had to convince my best mates to drive me up to a university town an hour distant, and let me wander around, looking for likely suspects, casually infiltrate their friend groups, etc., till I finally found a GREAT connection, from whom I would buy multiple sheets of acid at a time-not even to sell, except to my close friends. I just LOVED it. Long story short, I discovered after many years of heavy experimentation, the best Floyd music to put me in a creative, relaxed, meditative mindset was definitely pre-Dark Side. Anything after that made me feel depressed about Syd, whom I considered, like, a spiritual uncle, of sorts, or made me think about politics, because Roger wrote nothing but political lyrics after *Wish You Were Here*, and that was a sure-fire way to get me riled up. I didn’t have ‘bad trips’, but I tried to go into all of my trips with an intention, and anything that steered me off course in a way that was unwelcome would cause me to get up and leave, for sure. Anyway… glad to her you got to really come of age during the best era in recent memory: the early 90s. I assume if you were born in the early 80s like me (1982), you bloomed early inbthe early 90s, like me. That was another fantastic time for music. 1992 and 1994 were big ones for me. It’s so weird that I have an hard time finding people who want to nostalgically listen to *Dirt* by Alice In Chains, or *Superunknown*, from Soundgarden. It’s like everyone else my age has forgotten that we had good music growing up; lol my former friends who have settled into life’s doldrums listen to the abysmal rubbish what’s in TODAY’s pop charts. Are they delusional? Do they believe they arevSTILL teenagers? What’s worse…How can they find this music relatable? We didn’t grow up in this vapid culture. Forgive my rant; you remind me so much of myself, but not so much of a crank and a deliberate contrarian, so I’d hoped perhaps you have some understanding of this. I lost my patience nd just cut everyone out of my life who doesn’t have time for me anymore. I’m still single, childless, self-employed-just enough to not die or lose my flat-and I value almost no material things. I have no worldly ambitions-I thus have nothing in common with anyone.mi just want to play my guitar, write and record music, paint worlds I have seen in visions, and write short stories based loosely upon adventures I had in my youth before being crippled by adult-onset muscular dystrophy. And still take an heroic dose of LSD twice per year, of course, 🤩. P.S.: the experimental era of Pink Floyd was really almost entirely between 1966 and 1973: BEFORE *Dark Side*. It was before they got rich, and the music business started shoving their mucky fingers into the Pink Floyd pie, pissing off Waters, and driving Gilmour to want to quit. He made two great records on his own, as a result of that, in fact. His self-titled, released in 1978, is just stellar. I recommend you have a listen to ‘No Way’ and ‘There’s No Way Out Of Here’, and if you like them, y’know…listen to the rest. I don’t even mention listen for the channel, I just mean I think you’ll like it.
Love this! Love PF and your story too! I was outside the building in Gothenburg (Sweden) where PF was going to play and I chose between buying some "stuff" or pay for the concert. I bought some stuff... How stupid can you be...
9:44 Let's just get to the money part right away! Not going to lie I never really liked this song that much TILL I SAW NICK doing this on Live at Pompeii. Then I changed my mind about this song quite quickly.
The Dog on Pink Floyd Song, belonged to Steve Marriott of The Small Faces and Humble Pie Fame. Seamus, is The Song, From Echoes Album. Keep Rockin'🎸 RONNIE Scotland 🏴
David Gilmour was always handsome soft-spoken gentleman I think he did modeling in the 70s Sid was a handsome lad also I just love hearing David Gilmour speak it’s kind of like Bob Ross makes me calm
...Please don't take thos wrong way because if you are this is the actual Nicole Sullivan from MadTV please know I am a massive fan and I miss MadTV whole heartedly.... ...and if you're not Nicole Sullivan just know, you remind me and now many other dudes of one their first legitimate crushes... Just sayin.....
12:45 loses stick - fastest recovery ever by a drummer without missing a beat. Nick Mason. LEGEND.
always been my favorite part.
and the butterfly shirt 🤣🤣
Truth is, all other cameras had malfunctioned and hadn't recorded.
Well,some say "Things happen for a reason" and for I myself (a 62 year-old-drummer) was grateful!
" Wish you were here ' favorite album
Love it when he drops his drumstick :)
welcome to pink floyd he whole pulse concert is considered to be the best live show ever suggestions from pulse , great gig in the sky , high hopes, one of these days , and the final number using over 1 million dollars of lighting hold onto your seat run like hell and of coarse comfortably numb is David Gilmore the main man is still performing world wide to sell out crowds at 78 yo The pulse concerts featured even more special effects than the previous tour, including two custom designed airships.[2] Three stages leapfrogged around North America and Europe, each 180 feet (55 m) long and featuring a 130-foot (40 m) arch resembling the Hollywood Bowl venue. All in all, the tour required 700 tons of steel carried by 53 articulated trucks, a crew of 161 people and an initial investment of US$4 million plus US$25 million of running costs just to stage. This tour played to over 5 million people in 68 cities; each concert gathered an average audience of 45,000
0
I read somewhere that some of the footage from this song was either damaged or lost. It wasn’t intended to focus on Nick Mason as much as it did, but I think it was a happy accident. This is some of his best drumming and it’s neat to see him be the focus of the video. They also briefly do a nod to the Dr Who theme song, which is much more obvious on the live versions from the 80s and 90s
I love this and the live version by live concert PULSE.
Unfortunately, the shoot in Pompeii was cut short due to equipment issues, so the videos for One of These Days and a few other songs were actually filmed in a studio in Paris.
Cant count how many times I have seen them
The threatening lyric, (One of these days, I'm going to cut you into little pieces), a rare vocal contribution by Nick Mason, was aimed at Sir Jimmy Young, the then BBC Radio 1 and Radio 2 DJ who the band supposedly disliked because of his tendency to babble. At concerts in the early 1970s, they would sometimes play a sound collage of clips from Young's radio show, which had been edited to sound completely absurd, figuratively "cut into little pieces".
I teased my cousin that I’ve seen Black Sabbath more than a few times. Twice with the original lineup. He came back at me that he’s seen Pink Floyd a few times. Bastard😂
Dave Gilmour made a living as a model for a few years in the mid 60s in France before joining Pink Floyd.
Super Song....
Did you spot meet the final climax the drummer loses a drum stick but keeps the beat going whilst he searches for on other drum stick.
The likely reason they focus so much on Nick Mason during this video performance is because it's his voice that actually says "one of these days I'm going to cut you into little pieces"! And unbeknownst to a lot of people they recorded his voice with Nick Mason saying that line very fast in a falsetto, a very high pitched and fast falsetto and then they slowed it way down and recorded it that way which is why it sounds garbled and strange! I saw that on a Pink Floyd documentary so I know it's accurate!!
*The Wall* is really not the kind of ‘good vibes’ experience you want to have on acid. By the way-it’s amazing how similar our childhood stories are-though I was the older brother, I just had an early puberty, and I took advantage of it. I looked 17 or 18 at 14 (I could grow a full beard, and I’d been drinking since 10 (mostly stealing from the folks’ liquor cabinets, but I’d drink whatever I could get wherever I could get it), smoking cannabis with my 15-year-old neighbour up the street (who thought I was 14) at 12; and I took my first psychedelic mushrooms at 14. I lived in an interdimensional void, so I had NO sources for acid ANYWHERE. I had to convince my best mates to drive me up to a university town an hour distant, and let me wander around, looking for likely suspects, casually infiltrate their friend groups, etc., till I finally found a GREAT connection, from whom I would buy multiple sheets of acid at a time-not even to sell, except to my close friends. I just LOVED it.
Long story short, I discovered after many years of heavy experimentation, the best Floyd music to put me in a creative, relaxed, meditative mindset was definitely pre-Dark Side. Anything after that made me feel depressed about Syd, whom I considered, like, a spiritual uncle, of sorts, or made me think about politics, because Roger wrote nothing but political lyrics after *Wish You Were Here*, and that was a sure-fire way to get me riled up. I didn’t have ‘bad trips’, but I tried to go into all of my trips with an intention, and anything that steered me off course in a way that was unwelcome would cause me to get up and leave, for sure.
Anyway… glad to her you got to really come of age during the best era in recent memory: the early 90s. I assume if you were born in the early 80s like me (1982), you bloomed early inbthe early 90s, like me. That was another fantastic time for music. 1992 and 1994 were big ones for me.
It’s so weird that I have an hard time finding people who want to nostalgically listen to *Dirt* by Alice In Chains, or *Superunknown*, from Soundgarden. It’s like everyone else my age has forgotten that we had good music growing up; lol my former friends who have settled into life’s doldrums listen to the abysmal rubbish what’s in TODAY’s pop charts. Are they delusional? Do they believe they arevSTILL teenagers? What’s worse…How can they find this music relatable? We didn’t grow up in this vapid culture.
Forgive my rant; you remind me so much of myself, but not so much of a crank and a deliberate contrarian, so I’d hoped perhaps you have some understanding of this. I lost my patience nd just cut everyone out of my life who doesn’t have time for me anymore. I’m still single, childless, self-employed-just enough to not die or lose my flat-and I value almost no material things. I have no worldly ambitions-I thus have nothing in common with anyone.mi just want to play my guitar, write and record music, paint worlds I have seen in visions, and write short stories based loosely upon adventures I had in my youth before being crippled by adult-onset muscular dystrophy. And still take an heroic dose of LSD twice per year, of course, 🤩.
P.S.: the experimental era of Pink Floyd was really almost entirely between 1966 and 1973: BEFORE *Dark Side*. It was before they got rich, and the music business started shoving their mucky fingers into the Pink Floyd pie, pissing off Waters, and driving Gilmour to want to quit. He made two great records on his own, as a result of that, in fact. His self-titled, released in 1978, is just stellar. I recommend you have a listen to ‘No Way’ and ‘There’s No Way Out Of Here’, and if you like them, y’know…listen to the rest. I don’t even mention listen for the channel, I just mean I think you’ll like it.
'One of these days i'm going to cut you into little pieces'
Which is a line.....
Then dude be wearing the butterfly spirit animal.... awesome
Love this! Love PF and your story too! I was outside the building in Gothenburg (Sweden) where PF was going to play and I chose between buying some "stuff" or pay for the concert. I bought some stuff... How stupid can you be...
9:44 Let's just get to the money part right away! Not going to lie I never really liked this song that much TILL I SAW NICK doing this on Live at Pompeii. Then I changed my mind about this song quite quickly.
The Dog on Pink Floyd Song, belonged to Steve Marriott of The Small Faces and Humble Pie Fame.
Seamus, is The Song, From Echoes Album.
Keep Rockin'🎸
RONNIE
Scotland 🏴
Eres la mejor
No be too scared... "cut you into little pieces" actually referred to a length of audio tape of a BBC DJ😂
David Gilmour was always handsome soft-spoken gentleman I think he did modeling in the 70s Sid was a handsome lad also I just love hearing David Gilmour speak it’s kind of like Bob Ross makes me calm
👁
I don't have tattoos but i have the face of grumpy cat...
I am no fan of this version...I prefer the "puise" version wich is really impressive.
This version is more stuff for hardcore fans.
Everyone has their personal favourite. But each version / performance is special in it's own right. Each is a piece of art imho 🙂
...Please don't take thos wrong way because if you are this is the actual Nicole Sullivan from MadTV please know I am a massive fan and I miss MadTV whole heartedly....
...and if you're not Nicole Sullivan just know, you remind me and now many other dudes of one their first legitimate crushes... Just sayin.....
hey "girl "roger waters was touring in usa this very year 2023 full stadiums
she talks too much
I disagree.
But thank you for your comment!
OMG no offence but what a handsome woman you are.
May you do well into your future.