Release:

UK 30. November 1979

USA: 8. December 1979

Members: Roger Waters, David Gilmour, Nick Mason, Rick Wright
Producer: Bob Ezrin, David Gilmour, Roger Waters


Songs:

Disc 1
1. In The Flesh?
2. The Thin Ice
3. Another Brick In The Wall, Part 1
4. The Happiest Days Of Our Lives
5. Another Brick In The Wall, Part 2
6. Mother
7. Goodbye Blue Sky
8. Empty Spaces
9. Young Lust
10. One of My Turns
11. Don't Leave Me Now
12. Another Brick In The Wall, Part 3
13. Goodbye, Cruel World
Disc 2
1. Hey You
2. Is There Anybody Out There?
3. Nobody Home
4. Vera
5. Bring The Boys Back Home
6. Comfortably Numb
7. The Show Must Go On
8. In The Flesh
9. Run Like Hell
10. Waiting For The Worms
11. Stop
12. The Trial
13. Outside The Wall


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Lyrics:

 

Chart Info:

LP debuts in USA charts on 16/12/79 at #51. LP goes #1 in the USA on 19/1/80 and stays at #1 for 15 weeks! Total time on US charts: Top 40 for 35 weeks and stays in the Top 299 for 72 weeks. Album "Shipped Gold" and went Platinum on 22/3/80. Highest charting for the LP on UK charts was only #3. Never made #1 in the UK. The Wall goes #1 in almost every country in the world. This includes Canada (LP at #1 here first), USA, West Germany, Italy, Australia, Netherlands, Sweden, Belgium, New Zealand, Israel, Norway, Spain, and Portugal. The LP goes on to sell greater than 12.000.000 copies in USA alone!!!

Album Info:

"The Wall" is hugely impressive as a construction job, and there are some excellent songs lurking in the morass (notably "Comfortably Numb" and the sparkling cock-rock parody "Young Lust"). The band went tho the south of France in 1978, after the loss of 2 millions of pounds in investments, to
record a double concept album which proved to be their Rogerest project yet. While there, the Pink Floyd Mark two partnership finally started to dissolve.

David Gilmour: "I still think some of the music is incredibly naff, but The Wall is conceptually brilliant. At the time I thought it was Roger listing all the things that can turn a person into an isolated human being. I came to see it as as one of the luckiest people in the world issuing a catalogue
of abuse and bile against people who'd never done anything to him. Roger was taking more and more of the credits. In the songbook for this album against Comfortably Numb it says Music by Gilmour and Waters. It shouldn't. He did the lyrics. I did the music. I kept finding hundreds of little
things like that. Shouldn't bitch, but one does feel unjustly done."

Nick Mason: "The recording was very tense, mainly because Roger was starting to go a bit mad. This was the record when he fell out badly with Rick. Rick has a natural style, a very specific piano style, but he doesn't come up with pieces easily, or to order. Which is a problem when other
people are worrying about who did what and who should get the credit. There was even talk of Roger and Dave elbowing me out and carrying on as a duo. There were points during The Wall when Roger and Dave were really carrying the thing. Rick was useless, and I wasn't very much help to anyone either."

David Gilmour: "Generally Nick worked hard and played well on The Wall. He even worked out a way of reading music for the drums. But there was one track called Mother which he really didn't get. So I hired Jeff Porcaro to do it. And Roger latched on to this idea, the way he always did with my ideas, and began to think, is Nick really necessary?"

During the sessions for The Wall, Richard Wright was basically forced out of Pink Floyd.

Rick Wright: "Roger came up with the whole album on a demo, which everyone felt was potentially very good but musically very weak. Very weak indeed. Bob [Ezrin], Dave and myself worked on it to make it more interesting. But Roger was going through a big ego thing at the time, saying that I wasn't putting enough in, although he was making it impossible for me to do anything. The crunch came when we all went off on holiday towards the end of the recording. A week before the holiday was up I got a call from Roger in America, saying come over immediately. Then there was this band meeting in which Roger told me he wanted me to leave the band. At first I refused. So Roger stood up and said that if I didn't agree to leave after the album was finished, he would walk out then and there and take the tapes with him. There would be no album, and no money to pay off our huge debts. So I agreed to go. I had two young kids to support. I was terrified. Now I think
I made a mistake. It was Roger's bluff. But I really didn't want to work with this guy anymore."

David Gilmour: "We had a studio in the south of France where Rick was staying. There rest of us had rented houses 20 miles away. We'd all go home at night, and we'd say to Rick, Do what you like, here all these tracks, write something, play a solo, put some stuff down. You've got all evening
every evening to do it. All the time we were there, which was several months, he did nothing. He just wasn't capable of playing anything."

It is rumoured to be the biggest-selling double CD set of all time (over
750,000 in the U.K. alone).

The live shows for The Wall were from 07/02/1980 to 06/17/1981. The movie
was released on 07/14/1982, and Roger Waters' Berlin Show was on
06/21/1990.

Co-produced & Engineered by James Guthrie
Other Engineers: Nick Griffiths, Patrice Quef, Brian Christian, Rick Hart
Sound Equipment: Phil Taylor
Orchestra arranged by Michael Kamen and Bob Ezrin
Backing Vocals: Bruce Johnston, Toni Tennille, Joe Chemay, John Joyce
Sleeve Design: Gerald Scarfe and Roger Waters
Recorded at: Superbear & Miravel, France
CBS, New York
Producer's Workshop, Los Angeles

 

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