Please enable javascript in your browser to view this site!

DARK SIDE OF THE MOON

LAMONT’S MUSIC NOTES-MARCH 1, 2019…46 YEARS AGO PINK FLOYD RELEASED DARK SIDE OF THE MOON

HERE ARE 30 FACTS ABOUT DARK SIDE OF THE MOON TAKEN FROM THE OFFICIAL PINK FLOYD WEBSITE

  1. Dark Side has sold approximately 34 million copies worldwide.
  2. The album hit number one on the US charts for one week in 1973. David Gilmour had had a bet with manager Steve O’Rourke that the album wouldn’t crack the US top 10.
  3. In the UK the album made it to the number two spot. When it was re-mastered and re-released for the 20th anniversary in 1993 with special packaging it made it to number 4.
  4. In Belgium and France it was No. 1, No. 2 in Austria, No. 3 in Australia, and No. 4 in Holland; it was No. 5 in Spain, Finland and Germany but not at the same time, and made it to No. 8 in Brazil in August 1973.
  5. The album is listed in the Guinness Book of World Records for being on the charts longer than any other album in history, namely 591 consecutive weeks or 11.4 years in Billboard top 200! A total of approx 14 whole years (741 weeks) in and back in top 200, and a staggering 26 years in some Billboard chart or other.
  6. SoundScan, the chart tabulators in the US, recently listed the top 200 selling albums of the year 2002. Dark Side was again on that list. It sold roughly 417,000 copies in the US last year, making it the 200th top selling album. It is by far the oldest album on the list.
  7. The original title for the album was Eclipse (A Piece for Assorted Lunatics). The band were upset to find out that the progressive folk rock act Medicine Head had released an album with the title of “Dark Side of the Moon” as recently as 1972 on John Peel’s Dandelion label. Since the release was less than successful sales-wise, the band decided go ahead with their plans.
  8. The music and lyrics for the entire album were written during a seven week period in which the band were preparing for a tour in which they desperately wanted to premier new material.
  9. Cue Cards with generic questions were written up by Roger and given to roadies, anyone at Abbey Road, doormen, and members of Wings including Paul and Linda McCartney. Approximately 20 questions were asked along the lines of, “Are you afraid of dying?”. “When was the last time you were violent and were you in the right?”, and “What does the phrase ‘The Dark Side of the Moon’ mean to you?”. The most spontaneous answers to these questions appeared on the album. Paul and Linda didn’t make the cut but Wings’ guitarist Henry McColluch did providing the “I don’t know I was really drunk at the time” response to the question regarding violent behaviour used at the fade out of Money.
  10. The “stoned” laughter used in the background of Speak to Me and Brain Damage is from Peter Watts, a road manager for the Floyd pictured on the back of the Ummagumma sleeve. His daughter, Naomi Watts, is a famous actress that has appeared in several films and was named one of the 50 Most Beautiful People by People Magazine in 2002. Sadly, Peter Watts died of a drug overdose in 1976.
  11. Studio time would be typically interrupted for one of two reasons, either soccer or Monty Python television broadcasts. In fact, Pink Floyd were such Python fans that they used some of the money they made from the initial success of the album to help fund Monty Python’s The Holy Grail film.
  12. The album was recorded at Abbey Road on then state of the art 16-track equipment. Roger created the tape loops necessary to achieve the rhythmic chiming of the sound effects for Money. Due to the technology of the time, this meant physically cutting and mending bits of tape together in precise measurements using a ruler and feeding these manually into a tape machine for duplication.
  13. The slide guitar heard on Breathe was a pedal steel that David Gilmour purchased in a pawnshop in Seattle back in 1968.
  14. Alan Parsons recommended Claire Torry for vocal duties on The Great Gig in the Sky. At the time Torry was an EMI staff songwriter who wanted to branch into vocals. Torry was paid double the standard session wage at the time for this particular session since it was on a Sunday. At the time, she was very happy with what she received. No one could foresee the impact and longevity the resulting album would have.
  15. Parsons received a Grammy as the record won the “Best Engineered Album” award.
  16. Australian radio listeners voted the album the best album to have sex to in 1990.
  17. The album marked the first time that Roger Waters wrote all of the lyrics. He has stated that he made a conscious effort to employ words that were very straightforward and easy to understand.
  18. The album was first performed live at the Dome in Brighton, England on the 20th of January 1972. Due to a tape malfunction, the concert only made it as far as ‘Money’ that evening, but the band continued to perform the suite at almost every show after that date right up until a performance at Knebworth on the 5th of July 1975.
  19. Hipgnosis studio suggested the album be issued as a gatefold with inserts of two posters, one for fans (photos of the band) and one for art (photo of pyramids), and two stickers, day and night, which refer to the touring aspect in the lyrics . All this was to be housed in a card box. EMI agreed to everything except the box. Hipgnosis provided the outer cover design, the prism against black, which referred to the band’s inventive use of lights on stage, the triangularity symbolising mad ambition, and the cool graphic in answer to a request from Richard Wright for something less pictorial and more iconic.
  20. The design of the inner spread of the gatefold, featuring the spectrum heartbeat, echoing the audio heartbeat at the beginning of the album, was an idea from Roger Waters.
  21. Us and Them was originally written by Richard Wright in 1969 as an instrumental piano solo intended for use in Michelangelo Antonioni’s Zabriskie Point film which the band had been commissioned to score. The piece, then known as The Violent Sequence, was to be used over slow-motion scenes of student / police riots at UCLA. It was rejected for the film and resurrected for Dark Side after Waters penned the lyrics. Tapes exist of the band performing it as The Violent Sequence early in 1970.
  22. The Great Gig in The Sky was originally known as The Mortality Sequence. It featured a similar piano introduction but no female vocals. Instead, taped readings from the Book of Ephesians, a recital of The Lord’s Prayer, and a narrative from Malcolm Muggeridge, a controversial host of a religious program on the BBC, were used.
  23. A rough version of Brain Damage was written around the time of Meddle and was actually known as “The Dark Side of the Moon”.
  24. The inspiration for Breathe was from a song Roger Waters had written and recorded in 1970 as part of the soundtrack for a film about human biology called “The Body”. The opening lyric is the same in both songs. The original song was a protest of man’s destruction of nature for profit, a theme that has appeared on more than a few Waters’ compositions.
  25. Although the band made a point of not releasing any singles in Great Britain for ten years after 1969’s Point Me at The Sky failed to make an impression, two singles from the album were issued in the States. An edited version of Money was issued in May of ’73 backed with Any Colour You Like. This peaked at number 13 on the Billboard Top 40. An edited Us and Them backed with Time (“severely” edited with the rotatoms spliced unnaturally onto the end of the song in place of the Breathe reprise) was also issued in February of ’74. Despite heavy FM airplay, the track wasn’t AM radio friendly enough and the record only made it to 101 on the chart.
  26. The album has been released in various audiophile pressings and limited collector’s editions including coloured vinyl editions. Colour completists would need to find a German pressing on white vinyl from 1977, both blue and clear vinyl versions from France also pressed in the late 70’s, an Australian pink vinyl version (of the quad mix!) from 1988, and another white one from Holland also from 1977. In addition, there are two official picture discs of the vinyl version still circulating the collector’s markets, one from the US on Capitol, and one from the UK only briefly available as part of a box set “The First XI” that was released in 1979 (only 1000 were made available to the public).
  27. EMI organized a launch of the album for the press at the London Planetarium. An interesting choice since at this time the band was trying hard to shed their image as a space-rock band. The quadraphonic mix, supervised by Alan Parsons, was to be used for this reception but instead the band learned that the record would be played back in stereo and through an inferior sound system. Only Richard Wright showed up. Life size cardboard cut-outs of the other band members were used in their absence.
  28. Pink Floyd were excited to be able to develop new material on the road but were horrified to learn of a bootleg album that was released of a complete performance of the piece recorded in February of 1972 at the Rainbow Theatre. The bootleg was issued a mere six weeks after the concert, about a full year prior to an official release. Professionally packaged, the unit reportedly sold in excess of 100,000 copies, many thinking it was the real thing.
  29. Throughout the 1990’s rumours persisted that the album was intended to be played back while watching The Wizard of Oz. Many similarities were depicted between the music, lyrics, and the film. The band have denied that the classic film made an impression on them while recording the album, but if you want to judge for yourself be sure to start the CD at the third roar of the MGM lion at the start of the film!
  30. A little known fact about the album is that at the end of Eclipse, just as the final voice states that “there is no dark side of the moon really, as a matter of fact it’s all dark”, if you listen very closely, perhaps with your headphones on and the volume full blast (preferably with the new 5.1 SACD), you will hear an instrumental, muzak version of Ticket to Ride by the Beatles being played in the background. It was probably being played in the main offices of Abbey Road where the record was recorded and picked up by the microphones, perhaps while conducting the interview with Jerry Driscoll, the doorman at Abbey Road, which led to the response heard.

HERE’S THE OFFICIAL PROMO VIDEO FOR ‘MONEY’

photo thanks-Lawren

ROGER DALTREY’S BIRTHDAY

LAMONT’S MUSIC NOTES-MARCH 1, 2019…BORN IN 1944, TODAY SINGER ROGER DALTREY TURNS 75. DALTREY IS A FOUNDING MEMBER OF THE WHO. HOWEVER, HE WAS KICKED OUT OF THE BAND FOR BEATING UP KEITH MOON WHEN MOON WAS SUPPLYING TOWNSHEND AND ENTWHISTLE WITH DRUGS. DALTREY ALSO FLUSHED MOON’S DRUGS DOWN THE TOILET BECAUSE HE FELT IT WAS AFFECTING MOON’S PERFORMANCE. THIS WAS IN 1965. HE APOLOGIZED 3 DAYS LATER, AND THE BAND HAD A VOTE AND DECIDED TO LET HIM BACK IN, BUT HE WAS ON DOUBLE SECRET ON PROBATION.

A GOOD MOVE ON THE BAND’S PART, WITH DALTREY AT THE HELM THE WHO HAS SOLD OVER 100 MILLION ALBUMS

HERE’S DALTREY FRONTING THE WHO WITH A LIVE PERFORMANCE OF ‘WON’T GET FOOLED AGAIN’

photo-the great jim sheehan https://www.facebook.com/jimmyosheehan/

RUSH’S DEBUT ALBUM

LAMONT’S MUSIC NOTES-MARCH 1, 2019…45 YEARS AGO RUSH RELEASED THEIR DEBUT ALBUM. THIS IS THE CANADIAN RELEASE DATE. IT WAS RELEASED IN AMERICA IN JULY OF 1974. THE ORIGINAL DRUMMER FOR RUSH WAS JOHN RUTSEY, AND HE PERFORMED ALL DRUM PARTS ON THE RECORD. HOWEVER, THE BAD NEWS FOR RUTSEY WAS HE WAS UNABLE TO GO ON EXTENDED TOURS BECAUSE OF COMPLICATIONS WITH HIS DIABETES, SO HE RETIRED FROM THE GROUP AFTER THE ALBUM WAS RELEASED. RUTSEY WAS SOON REPLACED BY NEIL PEART, AND THE REST IS, AS THEY SAY, HISTORY.

HERE’S RUSH IN 1974 WITH THE ORIGINAL DRUMMER PERFORMING WORKING MAN

AC/DC’S T.N.T.

LAMONT’S MUSIC NOTES-MARCH 1, 2019…ON THIS DATE IN 1976 AC/DC RELEASED THE SINGLE ‘T.N.T.’

THE SONG FIRST APPEARED ON THE BAND’S AUSTRALIAN ALBUM ‘T.N.T’, AND THEN AGAIN IN 1976 ON THE INTERNATIONAL ALBUM RELEASE ‘HIGH VOLTAGE’ AND WAS WRITTEN BY BON SCOTT, ANGUS YOUNG, & MALCOLM YOUNG. THE SONG IS ACTUALLY THE FIRST SINGLE WITH BON SCOTT ON LEAD VOCALS. BON TOOK OVER LEAD VOCALS FOR THE BAND WHEN THE GROUP’S ORIGINAL LEAD SINGER DIDN’T SHOW UP FOR A GIG. BON WAS A ROADIE FOR THE BAND AT THE TIME.

HERE’S AC/DC AND BON SCOTT WITH A LIVE TV PERFORMANCE

GET YOUR WINGS IS 45 YEARS OLD

LAMONT’S MUSIC NOTES-MARCH 1, 2019…ON THIS DAY IN 1974, AEROSMITH RELEASED ON OF MY FAVORITE ALBUMS. ‘GET YOUR WINGS’ IS THE BAND’S SECOND STUDIO ALBUM, AND IT’S PURE, IN YOUR FACE ROCK N’ ROLL. SURPRISINGLY, THE FIRST AEROSMITH ALBUM WAS CONSIDERED A DISAPPOINTMENT BY THE RECORD COMPANY (DUE TO CRAPPY PROMOTION BY THE RECORD COMPANY) AND THE LABEL WAS CONSIDERING DROPPING THE BAND. ALONG CAME ‘GET YOUR WINGS’. THE FIRST SINGLE WAS ‘SAME OLD SONG AND DANCE.’ IT DIDN’T PLACE HIGH ON THE CHARTS, BUT IT DID STAY ON THE CHARTS FOR OVER A YEAR, AND HELPED SELL THE ALBUM. ANOTHER NOTABLE TRACK WAS ‘TRAIN KEPT A-ROLLIN’, WHICH REMAINS A STAPLE IN THE BANDS LIVE SHOW TO THIS DAY. ALL IN ALL, THIS ALBUM IS A FREAKIN’ GEM. HERE’S SOME VINTAGE AEROSMITH FROM THE TV SHOW ‘THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL’ FROM 1974.

PLEASE SUPPORT ST. JUDE CHILDREN’S RESEARCH HOSPITAL

St. Jude is leading the way the world understands, treats and defeats childhood cancer and other life-threatening diseases. Their purpose is clear: finding cures, and saving children. Families never receive a bill from St. Jude for treatment, travel, housing or food – because all a family should worry about is helping their child live.

On Thursday, February 28th and Friday, March 1st, your friends at 107.7 The Bone are hosting a St. Jude RadioThon from 6am – 7pm to raise money for this very special cause!

Tune in to donate, or click here for more info. Thanks for your support!

Become a “Partner In Hope” by pledging just $20 a month to helps kids at St. Jude fight cancer.

Please call:

1-800-592-3449

Or text “CURE” to 785833

1077thebone.com/hope

STIFF UPPER LIP

LAMONT’S MUSIC NOTES-FEB 28, 2019…19 YEARS AGO TODAY AC/DC RELEASED THE CD STIFF UPPER LIP. THIS WAS THE 13TH INTERNATIONALLY RELEASED AC/DC ALBUM. IT WAS PRODUCED BY ANGUS AND MALCOLM’S OLDER BROTHER GEORGE YOUNG, AND WAS THE LAST AC/DC ALBUM HE PRODUCED BEFORE HIS DEATH IN 2017. MOST OF THE SONGS WERE WRITTEN WITH MALCOLM ON GUITAR AND ANGUS ON DRUMS !! THE ALBUM WAS SUPPOSED TO HAVE BEEN PRODUCED BY BRUCE FAIRBURN, WHO PRODUCED RAZOR’S EDGE, BUT FAIRBURN DIED IN MAY OF 1999.

ANGUS AND MALCOLM QUICKLY GOT THEIR BROTHER GEORGE TO STEP IN.

HERE’S THE TITLE TRACK FROM THE CD

RUSH-TOM SAWYER

LAMONT’S MUSIC NOTES-FEB 28, 2019…IT WAS 1981 AND ON THIS DATE RUSH RELEASED THE SINGLE TOM SAWYER. TOM SAWYER IS THE FIRST

TRACK ON THE ALBUM ‘MOVING PICTURES’. ACCORDING TO GEDDY LEE, WHEN THE BAND FIRST RECORDED THE SONG, HE WAS DISAPPOINTED IN THE GROUP’S EFFORT IN THE STUDIO, BUT IT CAME TO LIFE IN THE MIX.

GEDDY LEE CALLED IN IN MANY WAYS THE “QUINTESSENTIAL RUSH SONG’.

IT HAS BEEN PLAYED AT EVERY SINGLE RUSH CONCERT SINCE IT WAS RELEASED. THIS SONG HAS BEEN USED IN A TON OF MOVIES AND TV SHOWS.

THE SONG WAS FEATURED ON AN EPISODE OF ‘FUTURAMA’ WHEN FRY PLAYS HIS “RUSH MIX-TAPE” WHEN PLAYING VIDEO GAMES. IT WAS ALSO FEATURED ON ‘FAMILY GUY’ WHEN CHESTER CHEETAH SNORTED CHEETOS WHILE LISTENING TO THE SONG. WHEN HE FINISHED HE YELLED OUT “THERE’S NO FU***NG DRUMMER BETTER THAN NEIL PEART.”

MOVIES THAT HAVE USED THIS SONG ARE ‘I LOVE YOU,MAN’ ‘THE WATERBOY’ ‘FREAKS AND GEEKS’ AND ‘THE SOPRANO’S’

HERE’S A VERY YOUNG LOOKING RUSH WITH TOM SAWYER

THE ALBUM THAT KNOCKED THRILLER OFF THE TOP OF THE CHARTS

LAMONT’S MUSIC NOTES-FEB 28, 2019…IT WAS 1983 AND U2 RELEASED IT’S

THIRD STUDIO ALBUM ‘WAR’. THE RECORD BECAME THE GROUP’S FIRST #1 ALBUM IN THE UNITED KINGDOM, KNOCKING ‘THRILLER’ OUT OF THE TOP SPOT. ‘WAR’ WAS U2’S FIRST OVERTLY POLITICAL ALBUM.

THE SONG NEWS YEARS DAY BY U2 WAS THE FIRST VIDEO FROM THE BAND TO GET HUGE AIRPLAY ON MTV ( REMEMBER WHEN MTV PLAYED VIDEOS)

ON THE VIDEO, YOU SEE WHAT’S SUPPOSED TO BE THE BAND RIDING HORSES. IT’S ACTUALLY 4 TEENAGED GIRLS DRESSED IN WINTER CLOTHES DOUBLING FOR U2. THE GUYS IN U2 WEREN’T EXPERIENCED RIDERS, AND BEING THE BAND WAS IN THE MIDDLE OF A TOUR PROMOTING THE ALBUM, IT WAS DEEMED NOT WORTH THE RISK TO PUT THEM ON HORSES.

A LITTLE TRIVIA, THE BOY ON THE COVER OF THE ALBUM IS PETER ROWEN. PETER WAS THE YOUNGER BROTHER OF BONO’S FRIEND GUGGI FROM THE BAND ‘THE VIRGIN PRUNES’.

HERE’S A GREAT ARTICLE ON WHAT HE LOOKS LIKE NOW

ultimateclassicrock.com/see-u2s-boy-cover-model-all-grown-up/

DAVID BYRON URIAH HEEP

LAMONT’S MUSIC NOTES-FEB 28, 2019…ONE SINGER THAT LEFT US WAAAAAAY TOO SOON IS DAVID BYRON, THE ORIGINAL LEAD SINGER FOR URIAH HEEP. BYRON DIED ON THIS DATE IN 1985 AT THE AGE OF 38. HE DIED OF ALCOHOL RELATED COMPLICATIONS AT HIS HOME.

BUT MAN, THIS GUY COULD SING. HERE’S BYRON FRONTING URIAH HEEP IN A VIDEO FROM A TV SHOW IN 1972

FANS OF URIAH HEEP SHOULD CHECK OUT DAVID BYRON’S OFFICIAL WEBSITE

davidbyron.net