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The Dark Side of the Rainbow – also known as Dark Side of Oz or The Wizard of Floyd – is the pairing of the 1973 Pink Floyd album The Dark Side of the Moon with the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz. This produces numerous moments of apparent synchronicity where the film and the album appear to correspond.
Clare Torry was born in November 1947 in Marylebone, London, [1] to Geoffrey Napier Torry (1916–1979), who combined careers as Lieutenant-Commander in the Fleet Air Arm and Flight Lieutenant in the RAF, and his wife Dorothy W. Singer (1916–2017), who was secretary to six BBC Directors-General.
Dark Side of the Moon: A Piece for Assorted Lunatics, as it was then known, [7] was performed for an assembled press on 17 February 1972 at the Rainbow Theatre, more than a year before its release, and was critically acclaimed. [18] Michael Wale of The Times described the piece as "bringing tears to the eyes. It was so completely understanding ...
Beyond the Black Rainbow is a 2010 Canadian psychedelic science fiction horror film written and directed by Panos Cosmatos [2] in his feature film debut. It stars Michael Rogers and Eva Allan. Beyond the Black Rainbow was distributed by Mongrel Media in Canada, and by Magnet Releasing , a sub-division of Magnolia Pictures , in the United States ...
"On the Dark Side" is a song by fictional American rock band Eddie and the Cruisers, released as a tie-in to the 1983 film of the same name. When initially released in September 1983, the song peaked at No. 64 on the Billboard , while the film itself was pulled after three weeks in the theaters.
As the ship grows colder, they find themselves drifting toward the dark side of the Moon. An old NASA shuttle, the Discovery , drifts toward them, although NASA has not been operating for 30 years. Two of the crew members board the ship, hoping to salvage parts to repair their ship, but instead they find a dead body.
"Money" is the only song from The Dark Side of the Moon to make its appearance on the Billboard Top 100 list of 1973, [38] where it was ranked 92. [38] In 2008, Guitar World magazine listed David Gilmour's solo on "Money" as No. 62 among readers' votes for "The Greatest 100 Guitar Solos."
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