Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Goodbye Blue Sky" Song by Pink Floyd; from the album The Wall; Published: Pink Floyd Music Publishers Ltd: Released: 30 November 1979 (UK) 8 December 1979 (US) Recorded: April – November 1979: Genre: Progressive rock: Length: 2: 45: Label: Harvest (UK) Columbia (US) Songwriter(s) Roger Waters: Producer(s) Bob Ezrin; David Gilmour; James ...
A 12" single of "Run Like Hell," "Don't Leave Me Now" and "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" peaked at #57 on the Disco Top 100 chart in the U.S. [3] To date, it is the last original composition written by both Gilmour and Waters, the last of such under the Pink Floyd banner, and the last composition recorded by all four members of the 1970s ...
Pink Floyd: 1945 "At Mail Call Today" Gene Autry: 1964 "The Ballad Of Ira Hayes" Johnny Cash: 1979 "Bring The Boys Back Home" Pink Floyd: 1968 "Corporal Clegg" Pink Floyd: 1986 "Dieppe" Vilain Pingouin: 1980 "Enola Gay" Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark: 1979 "Goodbye Blue Sky" Pink Floyd: 1979 "In The Flesh" Pink Floyd: 1982 "Kristallnaach ...
"Goodbye Blue Sky" Roger Waters David Gilmour The Wall: 1979 [4] "Goodbye Cruel World" Roger Waters Roger Waters The Wall: 1979 [4] "The Grand Vizier's Garden Party" (Parts 1–3) † Nick Mason Instrumental Ummagumma: 1969 [9] "Grantchester Meadows" Roger Waters Roger Waters Ummagumma: 1969 [9] "A Great Day for Freedom" David Gilmour Polly ...
The song is split into distinct segments: a groupie (Trudy Young) performs a monologue ("Oh my God, what a fabulous room!") while a television plays, under which a synthesizer makes atonal sounds, which eventually resolve into a quiet song in C major in 3/4 time ("Day after day / Love turns grey / Like the skin of a dying man."
CBS representative Stephen Ralbovsky hoped for a new Pink Floyd album, but in a meeting in November 1986, told Gilmour and Ezrin that the music "doesn't sound a fucking thing like Pink Floyd". [24] By the end of that year, Gilmour had decided to make the material into a Pink Floyd project, [ 9 ] and agreed to rework the material that Ralbovsky ...
While receiving surgery they hoped would cure intractable seizures, Pink Floyd’s 1979 single “Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1” played in the operating room. ... the sky’s the limit ...
"Let There Be More Light" includes cryptic references to science fiction stories, the 11th century rebel Hereward the Wake, The Beatles' song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" and one of Pink Floyd's early light show operators. While the oblique lyrics contrast with the more direct style that Waters would later adopt, the historical and popular ...