They sure are...Gilmour was a genius at putting the right harmonies together. Rick Wright said David was a brilliant at doing multitrack vocals. I think the harmonies is one part that Roger never gets in his solo albums. Amused To Death tries to be a Pink Floyd record, but it simply lacks the harmonies that Pink Floyd had. I can be preached to if the music is good enough to carry it, but I can't stand it by itself.
Are you familiar with a broadcast by bbc called "multitrack breakdown“? It had a lot of interesting Pink Floyd isolated tracks and David Gilmour harmonies. But it got taken down Do you have it, by any chance?
Only track not deconstructed, as the panning of all the effects didn't allow for a proper deconstruction : it would have been "drums" and all of the rest merged into one
Haha ok! They interviewed various people at Abbey Road Studios if I remember correctly. Even interviewed Paul and Linda, but theirs were too humorous for Floyd's liking.
@@Esperluet OK it's a year ago but I'll answer anyway. The first voce saying 'I've been mad for .......years' is their roadie Chris Adamson. The next is Gerry O'Driscoll, the doorman at Abbey Road who says 'I've always been mad...' and then the laughter is another of their roadies, Peter Watts, father of actress Naomi Watts, pictured on the back of the Ummagumma album cover. It was labelled 'Pete's loony laugh'. His wife Patricia is the one who says 'I never said I was frightened of dying' and 'that geezer was cruising for a bruising' at other points on the album. Another particularly notable voice is Roger 'The Hat' Manifold, another roadie who says 'Live for today, gone tomorrow, that's me' on On The Run and the 'short sharp shock' part on Us and Them. The entire 20 minute interview with Roger the hat is hilarious. Roger Waters: "Do you ever think you're going mad, Roger?"
@@BubbaDoesIsolations Well MP3s don't support surround mixes. As for this mix specifically, I found it on the internet. Can't say much more unfortunately, but it's out there for sure.
It’s mad how good quality this is, thank you so much for this
Roger is so gorgeous OMG
🗿
Still a mind fuck 50 years later.
Those slide guitars are haunting.
They sure are...Gilmour was a genius at putting the right harmonies together. Rick Wright said David was a brilliant at doing multitrack vocals. I think the harmonies is one part that Roger never gets in his solo albums. Amused To Death tries to be a Pink Floyd record, but it simply lacks the harmonies that Pink Floyd had.
I can be preached to if the music is good enough to carry it, but I can't stand it by itself.
Thanks thanks thanks thanks!!! 🙏🙌
One of my favorites
Everything about it is beautiful
One word: "Excellent!"
Lovely!
Are you doing the songs on Dark Side of the Moon? Since the super deluxe version of the album recently released.
Yep! Still using the OG mixes though.
thanks i'm new sub gg
I love you
Are you familiar with a broadcast by bbc called "multitrack breakdown“? It had a lot of interesting Pink Floyd isolated tracks and David Gilmour harmonies. But it got taken down
Do you have it, by any chance?
Never heard of it, might look for it now!
Where is On The Run?
Only track not deconstructed, as the panning of all the effects didn't allow for a proper deconstruction : it would have been "drums" and all of the rest merged into one
Where do the conversations come from?
What do you mean? They're in the track themselves..?
@@rbstems I know 😉 but any information on the sources?
Haha ok! They interviewed various people at Abbey Road Studios if I remember correctly. Even interviewed Paul and Linda, but theirs were too humorous for Floyd's liking.
@@Esperluet OK it's a year ago but I'll answer anyway. The first voce saying 'I've been mad for .......years' is their roadie Chris Adamson. The next is Gerry O'Driscoll, the doorman at Abbey Road who says 'I've always been mad...' and then the laughter is another of their roadies, Peter Watts, father of actress Naomi Watts, pictured on the back of the Ummagumma album cover. It was labelled 'Pete's loony laugh'. His wife Patricia is the one who says 'I never said I was frightened of dying' and 'that geezer was cruising for a bruising' at other points on the album. Another particularly notable voice is Roger 'The Hat' Manifold, another roadie who says 'Live for today, gone tomorrow, that's me' on On The Run and the 'short sharp shock' part on Us and Them. The entire 20 minute interview with Roger the hat is hilarious. Roger Waters: "Do you ever think you're going mad, Roger?"
How do you get the mp3s for the songs?
What do you mean exactly? MP3s of this isolation? MP3s of the 4.1 mix?
Mp3s for the mixes.
@@BubbaDoesIsolations Well MP3s don't support surround mixes. As for this mix specifically, I found it on the internet. Can't say much more unfortunately, but it's out there for sure.