0:03 Learning to Fly 0:07 Dogs 0:18 On the Turning Away 0:22 Sheep 0:24 Sorrow 0:27 Pigs (Three Different Ones) 0:29 Learning to Fly 0:30 Dogs 0:31 On the Turning Away 0:32 Sheep 0:33 Dogs 0:34 Sorrow Funny, the songs are mostly all about Animals and going on vacations, trips and journeys. While Goofy and Max are a couple of animals going on a journey of their own.
@@MrAzazel666 goofy is a cow. I know the Wikipedia says dog but just look into it. He wears a bell around his neck and his girl is very much a cow like him.
:D :D yeah :D it would fit just perfectly :D .or maybe only..."so hiiiiigh" would work, to hook PF people to appreciate joke---but maybe that sigh is a joke ment this "mother" way too :D :D
@@mikijunior5339 Yeah, that's a very popular urban myth. I saw one of many versions out there, and it synced up in quite a humorous way. The track Time begins literally the moment Miss. Gulch appears on-screen riding a bicycle, the old lady that threatens to kill Toto after he bit her.
I’d say Waters but then again Gilmour played some of the greatest guitar parts on all of their songs, and he did write one of their best - Comfortably Numb. So I guess 🎸= 🗿
True. I mean the division bell didn't have that classic punch of the earlier albums when waters was in the band, but I still rock out to it now and again
@Lolo that's called being human lol. You're gonna have opinions on what's your favorite music from someone based on your objective and criteria and what you like from music. You can explain it any way you want. With depth or not. Everyone has a bias, everyone has an opinion and everyone has likes and dislikes. If people prefer the waters Era over the Gilmour Era or vice versa that doesn't make them dumb, less objective or have little criteria than someone who likes all of pink Floyd. I really don't understand your comment.
And would’ve made that 8-Track Unbelievably valuable well until it was eaten then again I guess it could’ve been a homemade 8-Track they put there own music on but that was kinda rare in itself
@@demonfox1995 I didn’t either until I inherited a 8-Track collection of about roughly 45-60 so tapes from my great grandfather and at least 5 of them were Ones he had put his own music own even crazier was that they were from RadioShack and they were roughly Mid 70s they even had the original RadioShack 8-Track package he had like stored them in
@@tahamohammedi5898 big disagree, the first two records were way more interesting than anything being put out by any other band during that time… but I could agree with you on that with ummagumma.
@@HDitzzDH I couldn't stand the final cut. It was just so slow, and gloomy. Pretty much just all the melancholy war songs that didn't make it In the wall
Imagine this: the radio fails. There is only silence. In the distance you start to hear the sound of wind slowly getting louder. Then kicks in a steady rhythmic beat. Suddenly you notice the whole world is playing One of These Days.
You know, this reminds me of the best song ever created by man: Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict
Great meme. I’m one of the odd balls that actually likes all of PF’s tracks, no matter if it was led by Gilmour, Waters, or Barrett. It’s all great sound in my book!
Agreed. There's some of both I like more than others all depends on the mood of the day. However if were talking solo career I tend to lean more towards Gilmour
If my son were to insist playing Learning To Fly, I couldn't be happier! I couldn't care less if it's Waters or Gilmour. Having a son into Pink Floyd would have me patting myself on the back.
My dad has put on pink floyd music as long as i can remember and they have slowly come to be my favorite band. Funnily enough, learning to fly and a momentary lapse of reason are what stuck to me the most.
@@antonymous9196 they are pretty catchy songs though. Their discography is enough to get into for a few years or better honestly. I couldn’t turn them off for a long time!
This is one of the few instances i'm glad i discovered a band relatively late to have an unbiased appreciation of most of their music regardless of the era and band's history. Both frontmen are great in their own right and i honestly believe that only the animosity between a lyrical genius and a musical genius gave way to some of the best songs in this past century.
That turning away solo..... is a sight to behold. Yes a sight, not a sound, Pink Floyd paints pictures with their music, no matter who was at the lead of the album/song
Sheep was the first song I heard off of Animals. I asked my roommate what his favorite song of all time was and he responded that it was that one. As such, I listened to it.
@@russell9378 Sameeee! Dark side of the moon is my favorite album, even though all of them are really great! It's just that I love vibing to dissociation rock! 8')
The 1967 - 1975 Pink Floyd fans sitting in the back of the car with the headphones on, temporarily leaving the phisical plane of existence, as they experience the most extraordinary and unearthly pieces of music ever written by human kind.
@Raylan Givens I can definitely see that. I usually see this time referred to as "The Water's Era" because he was the principle songwriter at that time. That always seems to carry more weight than instrumentation. Probably not how it should be but nonetheless.
Honestly I'd say it's pretty close to the same even without Syd. Syd was too influential for the band to get rid of all his hallmarks just because he left. You don't really see his influence start to fade away noticably until Division Bell and even then it kinda bounced back with Endless River anyways.
I think Syd leaving was necessary for the band to become what they eventually became. There'd be no 'The Wall', no 'Dark Side of the Moon', and definitely no 'Wish You Were Here' if Syd hadn't left. Would be interesting to see how they would've developed if Syd stayed, but honestly I don't think they turned out half bad
Since Waters left lyrics changed drastically, but music was still quite great. I mean, what did you expect? And since Roger left the band, his amazing lyrics lacked a proper musical support. Again, what did you expect? Shit happens. Y’all should get over it. In the meantime they left quite a footprint...
music was very different though. david never had the emotion that roger did when it came to writing songs. I think this is the most obvious on The Wall, which for all intents and purposes was almost entirely written by waters, of course with the band adding aditions like guitar solo, but the songs and chord progressions all that is roger, the thin ice to me is the best example of the difference between david and roger. david gets the first verse, and he sings it wonderfully, but it doesnt have much more substance than it being technically good, when roger comes in with "if you should go skating, on the thin ice of modern life, dont be surprised when there's a crack in the ice!" contrasts davids approach. a more commercially successful example is hey you. because it has such a classic gilmore style solo in it and the guitar tone is so present but rogers voice just is really raw, and his lyrics are some of the best in rock history. notably the closing lines of "Hey you, don't tell me there's no hope at all. Together we stand, divided we fall" displays levels of just total anger/desperation and then the losing of hope.
@@TheFamousMockingbird agreed, the Roger part on hey you is just inimitable, even Jon Carin on Pulse can't deliver it like Roger. And albums without Roger just lacks "his punch", especially Division Bell. And don't get me wrong, I love that album from Cluster One to High Hopes, but it's the most tame sounding album compared to Animals.
TH-cam wants me to listen to Animals and pretty much nothing else but Animals. Play Dogs. Autoplays Pigs. Then Dogs. Then the full album. Then Sheep. etc.
@@reidheidler5138 Yeah I was just listening to Pink Floyd. David Gilmour and his songs. For the first time in my life. Lots of fans were addicted to his music, though.
@@rage_dj I know, right? I've been listening ever since Doug Walker (ugh, I know) brought The Wall to my attention, so it's been months and I've been hooked since, but it still feels like I'm just getting into it!
@@reidheidler5138 Well I liked Dark Side of The Moon but it isn't music that grew on me. I really liked the single "Wish You Were Here" by Gilmour or Floyd. It didn't really matter to me. But I remember watching the Goofy movie when I was a kid.
Ummagumma is the fourth album by English rock band Pink Floyd. It is a double album and it was released on 7 November 1969 by Harvest Records.[4] The first disc consists of live recordings from concerts at Mothers Club in Birmingham and the College of Commerce in Manchester that contained part of their normal set list of the time, while the second contains solo compositions by each member of the band recorded at EMI Studios (now Abbey Road Studios).[5][6] The artwork was designed by regular Floyd collaborators Hipgnosis and features a number of pictures of the band combined to give a Droste effect. It was the last album cover to feature the band. Ummagumma A room with the doors open with the outside showing trees and a grass field with one person sitting in a chair and the rest of the band outside. The text reading "PINK FLOYD" is placed on the floor. On the floor, a vase and a vinyl album of Gigi leaning against the floor. Hanging on the wall is a looping image of the same scene but with the persons in different positions. Studio album / Live album by Pink Floyd Released 7 November 1969 Recorded 27 April and 2 May 1969 (live album) Venue Mothers Club, Birmingham Manchester College of Commerce, Manchester Studio EMI, London Genre Experimental[1]avant-garde[1]psychedelic rock[2]progressive rock[3]space rock[1] Length 86:32 (in total) 39:36 (live album) 46:56 (studio album) Label Harvest Producer Pink FloydNorman Smith Pink Floyd chronology More (1969) Ummagumma (1969) Atom Heart Mother (1970) Pink Floyd live albums chronology Ummagumma (1969) Delicate Sound of Thunder (1988) Although the album was well received at the time of release, and was a top five hit in the UK album charts, it has since been looked upon unfavourably by the band, who have expressed negative opinions about it in interviews. Nevertheless, the album has been reissued on CD several times, along with the rest of their catalogue.
I'm on Goofy's side. Even amongst Floyd's other works, Animals just naturally rises to the top. I've developed quite a heavy bias on the subject, though. That's been my favorite album for my entire adult life.
@@antonymous9196 while I thought that was the best post-Roger album, I found both Momentary Lapse of Reason and The Division Bell were missing that overarching theme that qualifies it as a genuine concept album. Not that there's anything wrong with an album not being a concept album. But I think that Learning To Fly was the best their lyrics ever were after Roger was out. But for as powerful a creative force as Roger was in the band,I certainly don't blame Dave and company for wanting him gone. By all accounts,he was absolutely insufferable. He was an integral part of a perfect functioning whole,but it seems that he couldn't accept that. It all HAD to be just him. We have The Final Cut as evidence that he was incorrect about that. You can just FEEL David's disinterest and lack of participation on that album. And I don't blame him in the least.
@@coopdville855 I see what you mean. A momentary lapse of reason is, while it does have a few transitioning songs, definitely not a full concept album. I have never really seen that as a negative though, since it enables the album to have a great diversity. Most of all, I believe, it is the large amount of memories i have to songs from a momentary lapse of reason that gives it a very special place in my heart. While this is my current view of things, this has lots of possibility for change since in my short lifetime i have certainly not been able to appreciate everything pink floyd has to offer.
@@antonymous9196 man,my lifetime has gone on long enough that I can safely say that my days of carefree youth have come and gone. And yet still, I don't and will never fully appreciate ALL of Pink Floyd's discography. For one thing,I don't particularly care for the sound of the band that Syd Barrett founded. And even when he was gone with David in his place,it took several albums before everything really started coming together. By Dark Side they were hardly recognizable as the original Pink Floyd. And I don't see Momentary Lapse not being a concept album as a negative either. It just puts it at a slight disadvantage compared to their output throughout the '70s,and Animals in particular. But my thing with their Animals album is how pessimistic it is about human nature and how much more primarily guitar driven it is than their other albums. Those things coupled with the fact that Floyd is my favorite band makes me feel like it was somehow tailored to my specific tastes. And what can compete with an album that makes you feel like that!?
@@coopdville855 all of that is very true. I agree that the earlier albums are certainly very different from their later music and, except for a few songs, those more psychedelic tunes are strange to my ears. Since pink floyd has come to be my favorite band i have spent a good amount of time listening to all of their different albums and try to, every now and then, come back to the first few albums so that one day i might find enjoyment in listening to those as well. Having said that, my favorite albums remain a momentary lapse of reason, the dark side of the moon, wish you were here and animals. Those albums are just connected with so much. I vividly remember driving with my dad when i was a little boy and listening to learning to fly. Or after i discovered my dad's old box of vinyls and CDs and listening to a momentary lapse of reason for hours on end. Even back then I found pink floyd to be something very special.
the true pink floyd fan that play the guitar knows echoes, dogs, shine on your crazy diamond, another brick in the wall and the dark side of the moon all entire.
I like most of their tracks. Some of the very early experimental style stuff I could pass on, but they have held the title of my favourite band since I was a young kid and are unlikely to ever be surpassed.
I think PF hit a natural peak with DSOTM and WYWH, when the music was a more democratic, collaborative process. The music just gels together in a much more organic way, which it kind of missed in all the more Gilmour or Waters-led albums, until (hot take) the Division Bell. That was their return to more band-led composition and imo it really shows. Also Rick Wright was the hidden gem of Pink Floyd. Broken China sounds more like Pink Floyd than the Final Cut.
Barrett, Waters, Gilmour all rock. Every album has something special to offer. Yes, even A Momentary Lapse of Reason and Ummagumma. edit: I'm not saying the albums are bad, just amongst their least popular. I personally love them both :) It's been great to hear your opinions!
In this house, we love and appreciate Ummagumma. The album really shows off the experimental side of the band from when they were still trying to find their footing after they canned Syd
@@jerrysgardentractorsengine2243 honestly, I wish they didn't have to do that. I really wonder what the dark side of the moon would've sounded like if syd was there
I had no idea there was such a divide, A Momentary Lapse of Reason and The Final Cut are probably my two favourite Pink Floyd albums, and they’re probably the most Gilmour and the most Waters albums respectively
As much as I love Pink Floyd, I honestly don’t understand why so many people find it necessary to divide themselves over a certain member of a band. It’s the same problem that plagues Genesis. Why do we need to spend so much time comparing two guys when we can just shut up and admit that all of their music is amazing. By the way Wish You Were Here is my favorite Pink Floyd album.
This is highly accurate except Goofy and Max are both split personalities in my head and I broke the vinyl record by frisbeeing it into the wall after going insane from listening to it. Anyone who has heard Pink Floyd ever can relate.
This is basically me and my dad Even though I love all the discography of Pink Floyd i like better the Roger era but my dad loves the post roger era We always fight of which era will hear in a road trip This happened even when we went to see roger live😂😂
I used to hate the album (especially when it came out) but now it's grown on me I recently got the new one, the remixed/updated one and I love it! learning to fly, on the turning away and sorrow are not to be missed by real PF fans!
@@xsm5525 facts, the original release was just poorly produced idk. Too 80s even for 80s standards. This 2019 version makes me appreciate the album much more
That's me and Dad trying to perfectly relate about 60s-90s music! ...NEW fans of 'Floyd, vs. older fans Vs. even OLDER FANS VS. ORIGINAL 60s-ERA FANS! LOLLLLLLLLL! I'm 38. :P
0:03 Learning to Fly
0:07 Dogs
0:18 On the Turning Away
0:22 Sheep
0:24 Sorrow
0:27 Pigs (Three Different Ones)
0:29 Learning to Fly
0:30 Dogs
0:31 On the Turning Away
0:32 Sheep
0:33 Dogs
0:34 Sorrow
Funny, the songs are mostly all about Animals and going on vacations, trips and journeys. While Goofy and Max are a couple of animals going on a journey of their own.
Jesus, I can imagine how long it took to listen frame by frame to figure out the last ones
Why did he choose all songs from momentary lapse of reason and animals?
@@HuwmungusWillers2 He had a momentary lapse of reason
@@Corner-for-Assorted-Oats lol
@@HuwmungusWillers2 because some fans like more Roger Waters and other prefer David Gilmore both are great but there always a preference I guess
The idea that Goofy rocks out to Pink Floyd's Animals is absolutely hilarious.
'Dogs' really speaks to him.
It's almost as good as the idea of goofy taking shrooms while listening to Echoes or Atom Heart Mother
True
Stone
@@MrAzazel666 goofy is a cow. I know the Wikipedia says dog but just look into it. He wears a bell around his neck and his girl is very much a cow like him.
The true Pink Floyd fan listens to all 23 minutes of Atom Heart Mother and likes it
I'm more Queen girl, didn't even listen to Animals, but I freaking love Atom Heart Mother. And Echoes
But most importantly to all 23 minutes of echoes, bonus points if you're high
esp at 10:45 into it!
The whole album is more like it.
it's unironically one of my favorites! wish I ran into more fans
We don't skip Pink Floyd songs. We listen to it fully
Lit
That's why I listen to full album
fall asleep tutorial
When I was a kid I use to fall asleep listening to Animals on CD
I don't skip cause I don't listen to that shit
the way he made a breathe'y sigh noise at the end made me think the other character was gonna start singing Mother lol
Damn, that's what I should've done lol
:D :D yeah :D it would fit just perfectly :D .or maybe only..."so hiiiiigh" would work, to hook PF people to appreciate joke---but maybe that sigh is a joke ment this "mother" way too :D :D
do you not know goofy's name
"Mother do you think they'll drop the bomb?"
I see that
The way Goofy's singing syncs up to Animals' tracks near flawlessly is just spot-on.
0:13 perfect
0:22
Pink Floyd did this on purpose
Did you know that Dark side of the moon and Wizzard of Oz syncs perfectly?
Try it. If it doesnt work, try weed.
@@mikijunior5339 Yeah, that's a very popular urban myth. I saw one of many versions out there, and it synced up in quite a humorous way. The track Time begins literally the moment Miss. Gulch appears on-screen riding a bicycle, the old lady that threatens to kill Toto after he bit her.
Gilmour-fans🎸 vs Waters-fans🗿
I like both
I’d say Waters but then again Gilmour played some of the greatest guitar parts on all of their songs, and he did write one of their best - Comfortably Numb. So I guess 🎸= 🗿
Is everything alwright here?
what about barrett?
@@adriantheromanian doesn’t compare to the other 4 members of Pink Floyd
I never knew people had this divide over Gilmour and Waters. Honestly I just enjoy the band and all the music
Me too! I love both Gilmour and Waters, and it's not the same if one is missing! :
True. I mean the division bell didn't have that classic punch of the earlier albums when waters was in the band, but I still rock out to it now and again
@Lolo that's called being human lol. You're gonna have opinions on what's your favorite music from someone based on your objective and criteria and what you like from music. You can explain it any way you want. With depth or not. Everyone has a bias, everyone has an opinion and everyone has likes and dislikes. If people prefer the waters Era over the Gilmour Era or vice versa that doesn't make them dumb, less objective or have little criteria than someone who likes all of pink Floyd. I really don't understand your comment.
Same
Like em both. Sometimes I want cynical Floyd and other times I want soaring floyd.
"we'll just have to entertain ourselves"
(Sigh) "hello, is there anybody in there?"
😂
Goofy starts barking, like The Animals album.
Mother, do you think they'll drop the bomb?
Lol. "Hid behind a canopy of blue/Shade my eyes, and I can See You..."😘
just nod if you can hear me
The fact that there's two different era Pink Floyd on a single 8-track makes that 8-track is from another Universe.
And would’ve made that 8-Track Unbelievably valuable well until it was eaten then again I guess it could’ve been a homemade 8-Track they put there own music on but that was kinda rare in itself
@@darksideofthetube3027 didn't know you could do that.
@@demonfox1995 I didn’t either until I inherited a 8-Track collection of about roughly 45-60 so tapes from my great grandfather and at least 5 of them were Ones he had put his own music own even crazier was that they were from RadioShack and they were roughly Mid 70s they even had the original RadioShack 8-Track package he had like stored them in
Cade they're literally anthropomorphic animals.
@@Lagomization I noticed that too
All of those songs are freaking amazing.
Funny how all the songs the dad puts on are from the album Animals
Floyd's best album.
Notice how the sun keeps turning off the songs. This really shows that Animals is underrated TBH
and all the songs the son puts on are from A Momentary Lapse Of Reason lol
@@martykehoe8510 cap
@@TAJMofficial another pfcj user???
All Pink Floyd music is good in my book
Heavily agreed
Everything up to the final cut (with the exception of Ummagumma and More) is amazing, the rest is ”ok”.
Their first few albums are absolutely horrible
@@tahamohammedi5898 big disagree, the first two records were way more interesting than anything being put out by any other band during that time… but I could agree with you on that with ummagumma.
@@HDitzzDH I couldn't stand the final cut.
It was just so slow, and gloomy.
Pretty much just all the melancholy war songs that didn't make it In the wall
Imagine this: the radio fails. There is only silence. In the distance you start to hear the sound of wind slowly getting louder. Then kicks in a steady rhythmic beat. Suddenly you notice the whole world is playing One of These Days.
Ok now that would be lowkey scary
I would be afraid that one of these days someone IS going to cut me into little pieces
The song that introduced me to Meddle. Amazing.
Learning to Fly has one of the best intros I’ve ever heard.
It’s super catchy honestly. I can’t get myself to turn it off even though I’m super into their 60s-70s era songs.
Reminds me of my dad
You should hear lowdown by boz scaggs that intro is awesome
"We'll just have to entertain ourselves"
*starts singing Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together In A Cave And Grooving With A Pict*
Imagining this is funnier than the video
That song is so boring 😂
That has to be the longest title to a song I have ever fricking heard.
🗿 vs 🎸
🛏🗿 vs 🐷🐶⚒️
I like all these songs. I just remember being 17 and listening to a good chunk of their discography while doing work in school
is work another word for drugs?
You know, this reminds me of the best song ever created by man: Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict
👆
THAT SONG IS THE MEANING OF LIFE
I dislike that song. I love weird shit but that one is just too much for me.
I feel like I listened to Ummagumma way too much lol
The tape unraveling as they try to play both Animals and A Momentary Lapse in Reason is essentially my stance on the whole endeavor. 😆
Basically Gilmour fans vs Waters fans
Great meme. I’m one of the odd balls that actually likes all of PF’s tracks, no matter if it was led by Gilmour, Waters, or Barrett. It’s all great sound in my book!
Im in this camp. Its all good to me
Agreed. There's some of both I like more than others all depends on the mood of the day. However if were talking solo career I tend to lean more towards Gilmour
Me too
All three shine on as their own crazy diamonds.
Same
Why not both
Literally me. 😆
Both is good.
@@reidheidler5138 no shit
Animals is a fantastic album.
And by the same metric, "Sorrow" is one of my favourite songs, period.
If my son were to insist playing Learning To Fly, I couldn't be happier! I couldn't care less if it's Waters or Gilmour. Having a son into Pink Floyd would have me patting myself on the back.
Imagine playing Minecraft or Terraria with Dark Side of the Moon playing in the background, with your son or daughter. Together. :')
My dad has put on pink floyd music as long as i can remember and they have slowly come to be my favorite band. Funnily enough, learning to fly and a momentary lapse of reason are what stuck to me the most.
@@antonymous9196 they are pretty catchy songs though. Their discography is enough to get into for a few years or better honestly. I couldn’t turn them off for a long time!
Agreed!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@remmie6744 both games are mid ngl
This is one of the few instances i'm glad i discovered a band relatively late to have an unbiased appreciation of most of their music regardless of the era and band's history.
Both frontmen are great in their own right and i honestly believe that only the animosity between a lyrical genius and a musical genius gave way to some of the best songs in this past century.
As a Pink Floyd fan I can confirm that I have conveyed every single one of these emotions whilst listening at some point.
That turning away solo..... is a sight to behold. Yes a sight, not a sound, Pink Floyd paints pictures with their music, no matter who was at the lead of the album/song
Setlist:
1. Learning To a Fly
2. Dogs
3. (?)
4. Sheep
5. (?)
6. Pigs
7. (?)
8. Dogs (again)
Yeah, I’m definitely a Roger guy
3. On the turning away
5. Sorrow
7 is Learning to Fly again
Thank you
Imagine being a Rodgers fan
didnt know animals was so divisive. their best album imo, dogs got me into the band and is one of my favourite songs of all time
Sheep was the first song I heard off of Animals. I asked my roommate what his favorite song of all time was and he responded that it was that one. As such, I listened to it.
My fave is dark side of the moon that album takes me places
@@russell9378 same. animals is good too though
@@russell9378 Sameeee! Dark side of the moon is my favorite album, even though all of them are really great! It's just that I love vibing to dissociation rock! 8')
Hear hear on animals and dogs!
All of these are excellent songs
And then there's the weird kid at the back that likes Ummagumma.
Ian. When he's tripping on acid
Shit... It's me...
The chad
For some reason the most hilarious was the huge "SIIIGH" at 0:47 as response to dads eager proposal that they can entertain themselves without music.
0:21 love how that synced
Rogers-Gilmour-Wright-Mason
That's Pink Floyd. Everything else was tuning up and then not knowing when to quit.
"Oh Maxie, all you gotta do to get in shape is run. Run. Run. Run. Run."
Yeah, in fact the best thing is to run all day and run all night
The true Pink Floyd fan listens to all 23 minutes of Echoes and likes it
The song at 0:07 is called "Dogs" and it's actually from the very underrated album "Animals" from 1977!
Underrated tbh 🗿
Yeah no shit Sherlock
@@aio7566 wooosh
@@aio7566 wooosh
@@federruchi6147 double woosh
The 1967 - 1975 Pink Floyd fans sitting in the back of the car with the headphones on, temporarily leaving the phisical plane of existence, as they experience the most extraordinary and unearthly pieces of music ever written by human kind.
Waters is definitely intense while David's calm
The Wall is just one of my favorite Albums I also loved the movie for it too
“It’s not so bad, we’ll just have to entertain ourselves”
*- r/pinkfloydcirclejerk, 202X*
"we'll just have to entertain ourselves"
*rythmic rubberbands from the household album starts playing*
Several small furry creatures
"Radio???? HA! who needs a radio???!!! REady Lloyd?" - Dumb and Dumber
"Oh Maxey, it's not so bad"... yeah, you should check what's happening in Genesis family car
A tug of war between Invisible Touch and Selling England by the Pound I presume?
@@Biscuit-Triscuit mostly because of Gabriel and Collins 😊👌
Ah fucking hell you think THATS bad, look at the Fleetwood Mac bus
@@bjtgaming Winner
Steve Hackett gang
It's really hard to top the Waters era of Pink Floyd. In my opinion, that's when Pink Floyd was at their peak.
The Waters/Gilmour era was easily the best
@Raylan Givens I can definitely see that. I usually see this time referred to as "The Water's Era" because he was the principle songwriter at that time. That always seems to carry more weight than instrumentation. Probably not how it should be but nonetheless.
My dad and I are Pink Floyd fans and I got into Pink Floyd when he played it in the car 😀
That’s neat.
I am the only fan in the world that his favorite stage of the band is when he was syd Barrett and that without syd pink floyd it is not the same :(
There is definitely a subsection of the Pink Floyd fandom that prefers the first two albums above all else.
But he left in 1968, so you Just like 4 albuns
@@heisenberg4330 Two albums and a few singles.
Honestly I'd say it's pretty close to the same even without Syd. Syd was too influential for the band to get rid of all his hallmarks just because he left. You don't really see his influence start to fade away noticably until Division Bell and even then it kinda bounced back with Endless River anyways.
I think Syd leaving was necessary for the band to become what they eventually became. There'd be no 'The Wall', no 'Dark Side of the Moon', and definitely no 'Wish You Were Here' if Syd hadn't left.
Would be interesting to see how they would've developed if Syd stayed, but honestly I don't think they turned out half bad
"We just have to entertain ourselves"
Starts playing the intro to Time perfectly
me and my dad are true floyd fans, and we would never skip the songs, but if we did this would certainly be us.
One Slip is honestly one of the most underrated Pink Floyd songs.
Agreed. Every time I hear OT I'm like "dang what a bop". Interesting lyrics too.
The dark side of the moon hits while happy, sad, stoned, sober, drunk, of even methed out. Just its a perfect album for anytime
STONE STONE STONE
Pink Floyd are two of my favorite bands.
Gilmourish and Waterish... ahhah
Classic stuff
Other people: why is there a bloody whale sound
Pink Floyd fans: This is art
Since Waters left lyrics changed drastically, but music was still quite great. I mean, what did you expect? And since Roger left the band, his amazing lyrics lacked a proper musical support. Again, what did you expect? Shit happens. Y’all should get over it. In the meantime they left quite a footprint...
music was very different though. david never had the emotion that roger did when it came to writing songs. I think this is the most obvious on The Wall, which for all intents and purposes was almost entirely written by waters, of course with the band adding aditions like guitar solo, but the songs and chord progressions all that is roger, the thin ice to me is the best example of the difference between david and roger. david gets the first verse, and he sings it wonderfully, but it doesnt have much more substance than it being technically good, when roger comes in with "if you should go skating, on the thin ice of modern life, dont be surprised when there's a crack in the ice!" contrasts davids approach. a more commercially successful example is hey you. because it has such a classic gilmore style solo in it and the guitar tone is so present but rogers voice just is really raw, and his lyrics are some of the best in rock history. notably the closing lines of "Hey you, don't tell me there's no hope at all. Together we stand, divided we fall" displays levels of just total anger/desperation and then the losing of hope.
@@TheFamousMockingbird agreed, the Roger part on hey you is just inimitable, even Jon Carin on Pulse can't deliver it like Roger. And albums without Roger just lacks "his punch", especially Division Bell. And don't get me wrong, I love that album from Cluster One to High Hopes, but it's the most tame sounding album compared to Animals.
That sigh at the end was the perfect cue for "Mother do you think they'll drop the bomb?"
The fact that I am on Goofy's side is causing me to evaluate some things about myself.
Bro saame, and I’m 19. It’s just that Animals is so good
Everything gets worse and worse
@@dr.shivago2404 animals is underrated
Goofy rocks in general. We should all be on his side more in many ways.
Have listened to Animals more times than I can count.... that album rocks so hard, and I wish it got more credit.
TH-cam wants me to listen to Animals and pretty much nothing else but Animals.
Play Dogs. Autoplays Pigs. Then Dogs. Then the full album. Then Sheep. etc.
Damn it. If there is any way to make the Pink Floyd shine again.
Those Crazy Diamonds...
@@reidheidler5138 Yeah I was just listening to Pink Floyd. David Gilmour and his songs. For the first time in my life. Lots of fans were addicted to his music, though.
@@rage_dj I know, right? I've been listening ever since Doug Walker (ugh, I know) brought The Wall to my attention, so it's been months and I've been hooked since, but it still feels like I'm just getting into it!
@@reidheidler5138 Well I liked Dark Side of The Moon but it isn't music that grew on me. I really liked the single "Wish You Were Here" by Gilmour or Floyd. It didn't really matter to me. But I remember watching the Goofy movie when I was a kid.
@@noahmarkow867 Oh damn. I actually hadn't heard that last one until now.
This reminded me of how many good Pink Floyd songs exist
I'm a simple man: I hear Gilmour's voice/guitar, I tune in. Who cares who wrote the song?
Ummagumma is the fourth album by English rock band Pink Floyd. It is a double album and it was released on 7 November 1969 by Harvest Records.[4] The first disc consists of live recordings from concerts at Mothers Club in Birmingham and the College of Commerce in Manchester that contained part of their normal set list of the time, while the second contains solo compositions by each member of the band recorded at EMI Studios (now Abbey Road Studios).[5][6] The artwork was designed by regular Floyd collaborators Hipgnosis and features a number of pictures of the band combined to give a Droste effect. It was the last album cover to feature the band.
Ummagumma
A room with the doors open with the outside showing trees and a grass field with one person sitting in a chair and the rest of the band outside. The text reading "PINK FLOYD" is placed on the floor. On the floor, a vase and a vinyl album of Gigi leaning against the floor. Hanging on the wall is a looping image of the same scene but with the persons in different positions.
Studio album / Live album by Pink Floyd
Released
7 November 1969
Recorded
27 April and 2 May 1969 (live album)
Venue
Mothers Club, Birmingham
Manchester College of Commerce, Manchester
Studio
EMI, London
Genre
Experimental[1]avant-garde[1]psychedelic rock[2]progressive rock[3]space rock[1]
Length
86:32 (in total)
39:36 (live album)
46:56 (studio album)
Label
Harvest
Producer
Pink FloydNorman Smith
Pink Floyd chronology
More
(1969) Ummagumma
(1969) Atom Heart Mother
(1970)
Pink Floyd live albums chronology
Ummagumma
(1969) Delicate Sound of Thunder
(1988)
Although the album was well received at the time of release, and was a top five hit in the UK album charts, it has since been looked upon unfavourably by the band, who have expressed negative opinions about it in interviews. Nevertheless, the album has been reissued on CD several times, along with the rest of their catalogue.
Okay
Nice Copy+Paste of the Wikipedia article.
@@DeviemTwen r/youmissedthejokedumbass
I'm on Goofy's side. Even amongst Floyd's other works, Animals just naturally rises to the top. I've developed quite a heavy bias on the subject, though. That's been my favorite album for my entire adult life.
While i agree that animals is an amazing album, for me personally a momentary lapse of reason will always be the best.
@@antonymous9196 while I thought that was the best post-Roger album, I found both Momentary Lapse of Reason and The Division Bell were missing that overarching theme that qualifies it as a genuine concept album. Not that there's anything wrong with an album not being a concept album. But I think that Learning To Fly was the best their lyrics ever were after Roger was out. But for as powerful a creative force as Roger was in the band,I certainly don't blame Dave and company for wanting him gone. By all accounts,he was absolutely insufferable. He was an integral part of a perfect functioning whole,but it seems that he couldn't accept that. It all HAD to be just him. We have The Final Cut as evidence that he was incorrect about that. You can just FEEL David's disinterest and lack of participation on that album. And I don't blame him in the least.
@@coopdville855 I see what you mean. A momentary lapse of reason is, while it does have a few transitioning songs, definitely not a full concept album. I have never really seen that as a negative though, since it enables the album to have a great diversity. Most of all, I believe, it is the large amount of memories i have to songs from a momentary lapse of reason that gives it a very special place in my heart.
While this is my current view of things, this has lots of possibility for change since in my short lifetime i have certainly not been able to appreciate everything pink floyd has to offer.
@@antonymous9196 man,my lifetime has gone on long enough that I can safely say that my days of carefree youth have come and gone. And yet still, I don't and will never fully appreciate ALL of Pink Floyd's discography. For one thing,I don't particularly care for the sound of the band that Syd Barrett founded. And even when he was gone with David in his place,it took several albums before everything really started coming together. By Dark Side they were hardly recognizable as the original Pink Floyd.
And I don't see Momentary Lapse not being a concept album as a negative either. It just puts it at a slight disadvantage compared to their output throughout the '70s,and Animals in particular. But my thing with their Animals album is how pessimistic it is about human nature and how much more primarily guitar driven it is than their other albums. Those things coupled with the fact that Floyd is my favorite band makes me feel like it was somehow tailored to my specific tastes. And what can compete with an album that makes you feel like that!?
@@coopdville855 all of that is very true. I agree that the earlier albums are certainly very different from their later music and, except for a few songs, those more psychedelic tunes are strange to my ears. Since pink floyd has come to be my favorite band i have spent a good amount of time listening to all of their different albums and try to, every now and then, come back to the first few albums so that one day i might find enjoyment in listening to those as well. Having said that, my favorite albums remain a momentary lapse of reason, the dark side of the moon, wish you were here and animals. Those albums are just connected with so much. I vividly remember driving with my dad when i was a little boy and listening to learning to fly. Or after i discovered my dad's old box of vinyls and CDs and listening to a momentary lapse of reason for hours on end. Even back then I found pink floyd to be something very special.
Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day!!!!
I know that's not in there but I'd have turned it on
The best Floyd medley ever.
It’s ironic that Goofy likes listening to the song Dogs
This is me and my dad… but we can both agree Pink Floyd is one of the greatest bands of all time.
the true pink floyd fan that play the guitar knows echoes, dogs, shine on your crazy diamond, another brick in the wall and the dark side of the moon all entire.
I laughed louder and harder than I should've. I'm still laughing.
I completely forgot about this movie!
Pink Floyd isn't devisive, the fans are.
It all tells a story that I've enjoyed from the band's start to finish.
Okay but like... Sorrow absolutely bangs. So does Learning To Fly.
I like most of their tracks. Some of the very early experimental style stuff I could pass on, but they have held the title of my favourite band since I was a young kid and are unlikely to ever be surpassed.
Come on, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn has quite a number of good songs!
Meanwhile I'm listening to Piper At The Gates Of Dawn on my walkman in the backseat
Animals is my favorite album because there's no white noise/long silent introduction bs
I literally just discovered Learning To Fly two days ago and have been listening to it nonstop then I find this video
I think PF hit a natural peak with DSOTM and WYWH, when the music was a more democratic, collaborative process. The music just gels together in a much more organic way, which it kind of missed in all the more Gilmour or Waters-led albums, until (hot take) the Division Bell. That was their return to more band-led composition and imo it really shows.
Also Rick Wright was the hidden gem of Pink Floyd. Broken China sounds more like Pink Floyd than the Final Cut.
Fucking facts right here
Bro you just nailed it
me and my dad fr...I love old Pinks and he loves the new ones
Barrett, Waters, Gilmour all rock. Every album has something special to offer. Yes, even A Momentary Lapse of Reason and Ummagumma.
edit: I'm not saying the albums are bad, just amongst their least popular. I personally love them both :) It's been great to hear your opinions!
ESPECIALLY momentary lapse
I personally fucking LOVE Ummagumma.
In this house, we love and appreciate Ummagumma. The album really shows off the experimental side of the band from when they were still trying to find their footing after they canned Syd
I think that Division Bells has some good tracks but it’s got a lot of meandering songs I don’t love.
@@jerrysgardentractorsengine2243 honestly, I wish they didn't have to do that. I really wonder what the dark side of the moon would've sounded like if syd was there
A real Pink Floyd man would listen to the full song no matter what
Just the basic facts
@@remsi2208 can you show me where it hurts?
I used to literally hate Pink Floyd until it accidentally came on in the middle of a shroom trip, I’ve been an avid listener since
Their albums before Dark Side of the Moon are the best.
I had no idea there was such a divide, A Momentary Lapse of Reason and The Final Cut are probably my two favourite Pink Floyd albums, and they’re probably the most Gilmour and the most Waters albums respectively
That’s how I feel about the final cut and division bell
"We'll just have to entertain ourselves!"
That heavy sigh. Lol.
🛌 VS. 🐖
Shine on, you crazy diamonds
As much as I love Pink Floyd, I honestly don’t understand why so many people find it necessary to divide themselves over a certain member of a band. It’s the same problem that plagues Genesis. Why do we need to spend so much time comparing two guys when we can just shut up and admit that all of their music is amazing. By the way Wish You Were Here is my favorite Pink Floyd album.
They do the same with John and Paul too.
@@ANDROLOMA I’d never fight over something silly like that but Paul is better
Together we stand. Divided we fall
@@ANDROLOMA I don’t want to fight or anything but Paul is definitely better
@@ohnobro1424 John is definitely deader.
Pink Floyd is one of the rock bands of all time.
This is highly accurate except Goofy and Max are both split personalities in my head and I broke the vinyl record by frisbeeing it into the wall after going insane from listening to it. Anyone who has heard Pink Floyd ever can relate.
This is basically me and my dad
Even though I love all the discography of Pink Floyd i like better the Roger era but my dad loves the post roger era
We always fight of which era will hear in a road trip
This happened even when we went to see roger live😂😂
My name is NOT my favourite album I'm NOT biased I swear
I used to hate the album (especially when it came out) but now it's grown on me
I recently got the new one, the remixed/updated one and I love it! learning to fly, on the turning away and sorrow are not to be missed by real PF fans!
@@xsm5525 facts, the original release was just poorly produced idk. Too 80s even for 80s standards. This 2019 version makes me appreciate the album much more
That's me and Dad trying to perfectly relate about 60s-90s music!
...NEW fans of 'Floyd, vs. older fans Vs. even OLDER FANS VS. ORIGINAL 60s-ERA FANS! LOLLLLLLLLL!
I'm 38. :P
This is so true… although animals is the best in my opinion
the city in the background and general animation style is actually quite suitable for pink floyd songs.
A true Pink Floyd fan listens to Comfortably Numb for least 5 times straight and likes it Lol
??? no
I have a feeling this meme spawned from the fact that Goofy sings a song called “High Hopes” in the original clip.
And I'd just be sitting in the back with my headphones on badly singing along to nothing but Syd Barrett songs.
Cool. As the early psychedelic albums go, I like Saucerful of Secrets.
Close our eyes to the octopus ride
I love both types of floyd
me too
🗿
I totally agree
If I just knew who the Pink Floyd fan of the two was...