Nearly 40 years after their main songwriter Roger Waters left the band and nearly 30 after their final real album (1994âs âThe Division Bellâ) Pink Floyd remain one of the most popular rock bands of all time. As their masterpiece – or one of their masterpieces – âThe Dark Side Of The Moonâ turns 50, weâre counting down their greatest songs, from their early Syd Barrett era to their post-Waters days.
We are combining titles here: âBrain Damageâ and âEclipse,â for example, are hard to separate. âPigs On The Wing (Part One)â and âPigs On The Wing (Part Two)â kind of go together, as does the whole âShine On You Crazy Diamondâ suite, and we wish theyâd put out a track that includes all of the segments of the song together. Anyway, check out our list of our favorite Floyd jams.
Like much of âThe Final Cut,â itâs effectively a Roger Waters solo piece: Roger sings, plays acoustic guitar and bass on this song, and is accompanied by Michael Kamen on piano and âorchestrations.â Waters was obsessed with the human cost of war on this album (and many that preceded it, and on his subsequent solo albums). His lyrics here are heartbreaking: âShe stands upon Southampton dock /With her handkerchief /And her summer frock clings /To her wet body in the rain /In quiet desperation knuckles /White upon the slippery reins /She bravely waves the boys âgoodbyeâ again.â
Pink Floydâs greatest song from their post-Waters era. Like most of the songs of that period, David Gilmour worked with outside writers (in this case, Anthony Moore) and lots of outside musicians, including keyboardist Jon Carin, bassist Tony Levin and drummer Jim Keltner. Ex-Floyd keyboardist Rick Wright, who soon rejoined the band, played on this song and most of the album.
The finale of âThe Wall.â It starts with an explosion (the destruction of the wall), and then goes into a short but moving meditation about âthe ones that really love youâ being there for you. Of course, sometimes you (like the titular Pink character in âThe Wallâ story) tire them out. âWhen they've given you their all/Some stagger and fall; after all, it's not easy/Banging your heart against some mad buggerâs wall.â
You can almost imagine the disappointment from the record label when Pink Floyd submitted âAnimals,â following the massively successful âWish You Were Hereâ (1975) and âDark Side Of The Moonâ (1973). âItâs five songs: three are more than ten minutes and the other two are less than a minute a half, each. And theyâre all named after animals.â âAnimalsâ was never going to be a radio behemoth, but itâs still a classic. The music was incredible, and the lyrics featured some of Watersâ sharpest social commentary. Here, Waters compares humans who choose to ignore the world around them to sheep on a farm.
Co-written by Waters with Michael Kamen, who conducted the orchestra on the track, itâs not just a ârock operaâ - it sounds like an actual opera piece. The epic composition concludes Pinkâs story in âThe Wall.â At the trial, Waters plays five different roles: the prosecutor, the schoolmaster, Pinkâs wife, Pinkâs mother, and the judge (who was comically grotesque - if youâve seen the film, you know what we mean).
From the bandâs debut album, it was written by their original leader, Syd Barrett. Who is âLucifer Sam?â Barrettâs cat! The song starts with the singer introducing him: âLucifer Sam, siam cat.â While Floydâs later era is their most popular one, the Barrett era is beloved by many as well: the Black Crowes, the Flaming Lips and Bauhaus covered this song. And these days, you can see Floyd drummer Nick Masonâs band Saucerful of Secrets playing it live.
One of the last songs on âThe Wall,â it sees Pink, the rock star hallucinating about becoming a fascist leader and turning the audience at his concert into an angry mob. The segment in the film is incredibly disturbing. Musically, the song, like âAnother Brick In The Wall, Part 2â is influenced by some of the contemporary disco of the era.
The bandâs first single, it was written by Syd Barrett. It was about a transvestite who enjoyed stealing womenâs clothing - specifically, lingerie. Waters has said that it was based on a real person.
A simple and devastating song. It starts out with Waters pleading, âIs there anybody out there?â over a synthesizer drone and sound effects. The second half of the song is a plaintive classical guitar piece backed by an orchestra. Five words, less than three minutes and it somehow perfectly describes loneliness.
Written and sung by Waters, it sees him exploring isolation and loneliness nearly a decade before âThe Wall.â Back then, he was introspective. âIf I were a good man, Iâd talk to you more often than I do,â is a hell of a line. So is âIf I were a good man, Iâd understand the spaces between friends.â He might have been thinking of Barrett here (the memory of Barrett haunted âWish You Were Hereâ as well). âIf I go insane, please donât put your wires in my brainâ is haunting, in retrospect. As is âIf I go insane, will you still let me join in with the game?â Waters was allegedly the guy who decided to push Barrett out of the band a few years earlier.
A quick song that encapsulates the horrors and effects of war, even for those too young to remember it. Gilmour sings, âDid you see the frightened ones? Did you hear the falling bombs? The flames are all long gone/But the pain lingers on.â Itâs something that Waters addressed often on âThe Wall.â Watersâ father died in World War II when Roger was just a few months old; you can see this influence throughout the storyline of âThe Wall.â David Gilmour plays acoustic guitar, bass and sings over Waters and Richard Wrightâs synths to haunting and mournful effect.
A 17-minute epic that likens the behavior of modern business to the way that wild dogs act. Gilmour sings the first half of the song, detailing an existence that is all about winning and devoid of any sense of honor: âAfter a while, you can work on points for style/Like the club tie, and the firm handshake/A certain look in the eye and an easy smile/You have to be trusted by the people that you lie to/So that when they turn their backs on you,/You'll get the chance to put the knife in.â Of course, eventually âYou gotta keep one eye looking over your shoulder.â Thatâs because âIt's going to get harder, and harder, and harder as you get older.â Finally, âyou'll pack up and fly down south/Hide your head in the sand/Just another sad old man/All alone and dying of cancer.â In the second half of the song, Waters takes the mic and the narrator seems to timeshift back to when he was in the thick of the business world (âI gotta admit that I'm a little bit confused/Sometimes it seems to me as if I'm just being used.â) He concludes with an origin story of sorts: describing the type of person who would end up being drawn into such a cut-throat world: âWho was told what to do by the man/Who was broken by trained personnel/Who was fitted with collar and chain/Who was given a pat on the back/Who was breaking away from the pack/Who was only a stranger at home.â In a catalog of dark songs, this is surely one of the darkest.
There are a lot of rock songs about the loneliness of a rock star, but âEmpty Spacesâ really nails it in just over two minutes and in less than thirty words. Even if youâre not rich and famous, this is a devastating line: âWhat shall we use to fill the empty spaces where we used to talk?â The song then goes into âYoung Lust,â the closest Pink Floyd ever got to AC/DC territory. The narrator is looking for a female companion for the night. But thereâs a cost: at the end of the night, the narrator Pink (âMr. Floydâ) calls his wife and she doesnât take the call.
Co-written by Roger Waters, Richard Wright, David Gilmour and Nick Mason, it was originally released as the b-side to âPoint Me At The Skyâ and later included on the âRelicsâ collection. But this live version, which adds three minutes of jamming, is more fearsome.
Co-written by Waters and Gilmour, the latter played guitar and the fretless bass on the song, as well as singing most of it. Like much of âThe Wall,â the song plays into the album and subsequent filmâs narrative but also stands on its own. Here, Pink has shut himself off from most of the world and is craving connection again, but canât seem to get it. Itâs sadly relatable even if youâre not a big rock star.
Part 1 opens âAnimals,â and Part 2 closes it. Each version features just Roger Waters singing and playing acoustic guitar. Part 1 asks what would happen âIf you didnât care what happened to me, and I didnât care for you.â Thankfully, Part 2 ends the very dark album on an optimistic note: âYou know that I care what happens to you/and I know that you care for me too,â which is about as romantic as Waters ever gets. And he realizes that even in a heartless world, if you have someone to love, you âdonât feel alone.â Because âany fool knows a dog needs a home⌠a shelter from pigs on the wing.â
Another rare Waters/Gilmour/Wright/Mason co-composition, itâs mostly instrumental⌠other than Masonâs only vocal for Floyd. He yells, âOne of these days, Iâm going to cut you into little pieces!â through some wild tape effects. Waters and Gilmour both play bass guitars, giving a creepy effect, and Gilmour also adds slide guitars.
âThe Wallâ opens with âIn The Flesh,â but that song takes place later in the storyline. The story really begins with track two, âThe Thin Ice.â The song starts with Gilmourâs warm detailing of a baby being born into a loving home. But enter Waters, who warns, âDon't be surprised when a crack in the ice appears under your feet/You slip out of your depth and out of your mind with your fear flowing out behind you/As you claw the thin ice.â
Hereâs one you probably havenât heard on the radio: âEchoesâ is twenty-three and a half minutes and took up all of side 2 of âMeddle.â While most jams that go that long feel a bit over-indulgent, âEchoesâ is a trip that youâll want to take over and over, depending on your mood.
Much of âThe Final Cutâ felt like a Waters solo album (it was the first and only album where Waters wrote everything by himself). âNot Now Johnâ was an exception - possibly because it was also the only song on the album that featured David Gillmourâs lead vocals. Itâs much catchier than the rest of the album. But the prolific use of the f-bomb prevented it from being a bigger hit.
âDark Side of the Moonâ is an album with great flow: many of the songs just bleed into the next one. âUs And Themâ and âAny Colour You Likeâ is a good example of that. âUs And Themâ starts out with an anti-war message, decrying that the people making the decisions arenât usually the ones who suffer from them: ââForward,â he cried from the rear/And the front rank died/The general sat and the lines on the map/Moved from side to side.â The song then seems to visit a civil rights protest (ââHaven't you heard it's a battle of words?â the poster bearer criedâ). By the end of the song, the narrator seems to be too busy to help a homeless man in his time of need: âOut of the way it's a busy day/I've got things on my mind/For want of the price of tea and a slice/The old man died.â âAny Colour You Likeâ is an instrumental jam, composed by Gilmour, Wright and Mason. It gives you time to digest what youâve just heard, as youâre transported by Wright and Gilmourâs solos.
Co-written by Syd Barrett, Roger Waters, Richard Wright and Nick Mason, itâs a mind-blowing jam, and it was surely even more mind-blowing in 1967. Call it what you want: psychedelic rock, experimental rock, progressive rock, itâs an amazing song and a great reminder that not all of Floydâs classics came after David Gilmour joined the band (and heâd be the first to co-sign that statement).
Composed by Rick Wright, the instrumental featured wordless vocals from Clare Torry, who â decades later â got a songwriting credit, thanks to her improvisded vocals. Her instructions were that there were no lyrics, but the song was about death, and her vocals needed to convey that. In two takes, she nailed it.
Written by Syd Barrett, it sees him sharing vocals with Richard Wright. The haunted jam saw Barrett looking to the stars, and figuring that other planets would be just as scary as this one: âJupiter and Saturn, Oberon, Miranda and Titania, Neptune, Titan, stars can frighten.â
The opening track from âThe Wallâ really sets the scene: Pink is a major rock star, heâs performing for a huge crowd⌠but heâs not really âthere.â âPink isnât well, he stayed back at the hotel/they sent us along as a surrogate band: weâre gonna find out where you fans really stand!â Part of Roger Watersâ inspiration for the album was how distant he felt from audiences on Pink Floydâs âAnimalsâ tour. He tells the audience that if they want to find out âwhatâs behind these cold eyes, youâll just have to claw your way through this disguise.â And then the story really begins. Later in the album, thereâs a different version of the song that comes as Pink is hallucinating and sees himself as a fascist dictator. Itâs even more chilling today to hear him barking racist epithets and announcing, âIf I had my way, Iâd have all of you shot!â
A slice of classic psychedelic pop written by Syd Barrett. Itâs Floydâs second single. David Gilmour, who was not yet a member of the group, visited the studio while they were working on the song, and was reportedly stunned by how much his boyhood pal had changed. Barrett would, sadly, change even more drastically in the months and years to come. Heâd no longer be part of the band, but heâd inspire some of their greatest songs in his absence.
One of the earliest Floyd songs that was entirely written and sung by Roger Waters; itâs also the only song that features all five members: Waters, Richard Wright, Nick Mason, Syd Barrett and David Gilmour.
The opening tracks on âThe Dark Side Of The Moonâ: âSpeak To Meâ is a sound collage that prepares you for the audio experience of the album. âBreathe (In The Air)â is a chill song⌠but it lays out a lot of the dark themes that Roger Waters would address on not just âDark Side,â but also the next few Pink Floyd albums. At the beginning, he says âdonât be afraid to care.â But he also warns of the consequences of caring: âsmiles youâll give and tears youâll cry.â He also warns of the never-ending rat race: âDig that hole, forget the sun/When, at last, the work is done/Donât sit down, itâs time to dig another one.â And even if youâre successful (âbalanced on the biggest waveâ) youâll ârace towards an early grave.â
The last song written for âThe Wall,â you could almost imagine a down-on-their-luck over-the-hill lounge singer crooning it. The singer has seen and done lots of great things, but he still canât connect with the person who he loves. âOoh, babe when I pick up the phone there's still nobody home.â
Featuring guest vocals by British folk-rock singer Roy Harper, itâs kind of a sequel to âMoney.â Itâs an obvious critique of the greed in the music industry in the â70s: in Pink Floydâs case, their record company was trying to âride the gravy trainâ that started with the huge success of âThe Dark Side Of The Moon.â The line âThe band is just fantastic, that is really what I think/Oh, by the way, which one's Pink?â referred to the fact that record label staffers had nary a clue about who was in the band. Year later, Waters quit the band and toured as a solo act, and played much smaller venues, he sold a t-shirt that read, âWhich oneâs Pink?â
In Roger Watersâ âAnimals,â pigs represent the top of the social ladder: the businessmen (or women) with wealth and power. He laughs at them â âHa, ha: charade you are!â â but he canât deny that they run things. This song inspired one of Floydâs most well-known stage effects: their giant inflatable pig that theyâd fly over the audience. They even used it the late â80s and â90s after Waters was no longer in the band and they stopped playing songs from âAnimals.â â
âMotherâ is an essential part of the narrative of âThe Wall,â but like many of the songs on the album, it stands on its own. It tells Pinkâs story about being overprotected by his single mother who lost her husband in the war (which mirrors Watersâ own story). Gilmour sings the part of the mother, while Waters sings Pink.
Put together, âShine On You Crazy Diamondâ is 26 minutes long, although parts 1-5 open the album and parts 6-9 close it. The song is a tribute to â and almost a memorial to â Syd Barrett, who had been pushed out of the band years earlier, due to his failing mental health (which was not helped by his drug use).
The closing piece to âThe Dark Side Of The Moon,â it almost acted as a preview to âWish You Were Hereâ: Waters was thinking about Syd Barrettâs mental instability on lines like â...and if the band youâre in starts playing different tunes.â
Part 1 is when the storyâs protagonist, Pink, starts building the wall around himself. âThe Happiest Days Of Our Livesâ is a short piece that details the traumas that Pink (and Roger Waters) experienced in school. In the film, the teacher confiscates Pinkâs poetry, dismissively reading a poem⌠which happens to be the lyrics to Pink Floydâs âMoney.â Part 2, reflecting a clear disco influence, was a protest against a rigid education system and strict boarding schools. With an catchy chorus that any kid could learn â âWe donât need no educationâ â the song became Pink Floydâs only U.S. #1 hit single.
Itâs the last time that Waters, Gilmour, Wright and Mason co-wrote a Floyd song. Waters and Wright split the lead vocals, the last time Wright would sing lead for twenty years (until âWearing The Inside Outâ from âThe Division Bellâ). The song is haunted by the passage of time and the idea that youâre not accomplishing enough. At a certain age the lyrics are scarier than anything youâll hear in a punk or metal song: âYou are young and life is long, and there is time to kill today/And then one day you find ten years have got behind you/No one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun.â
A condemnation of the music industry (like âHave A Cigarâ) but it could apply to the business of the arts in general. âYou brought a guitar to punish your ma/And you didn't like school/And you know you're nobody's foolâ surely describes a lot of kids who are smart, but didnât fit in to a rigid school system (a theme Waters revisited in âThe Wallâ). But even when you âmake it,â the realization that âwe told you what to dreamâ rings as sad and true.
Probably David Gilmourâs finest moment. He composed the music while working on his debut solo album. He couldnât figure out what to do with it on his own. Waters wrote lyrics inspired by an experience he had on the bandâs most recent tour, where he needed tranquilizers to deal with stomach cramps.
For all of Roger Watersâ condemnations of big business, on this song about wealth, youâll note that he doesnât criticize anything. Instead, heâs merely observing the way people act when they have money. âMoney/ It's a hit/Don't give me that do goody good bullsâ/I'm in the high-fidelity first-class traveling set/And I think I need a Lear jet,â could apply to Waters or Gilmour today. As Gilmour sings âMoney/So they say/Is the root of all evil today,â but you donât feel like heâs convinced that itâs true.
Waters has said that the song isnât specifically about Syd Barrett. David Gilmour says he canât sing the song without singing about Barrett. But whatever the song means to them, what matters is what it means to you. Itâs probably Pink Floydâs most relatable song: no matter who you are, thereâs always someone that you miss. Even if most of the lyrics are just impressionistic and may not have any deep meaning to you, the line âHow I wish, wish you were hereâ resonates with nearly everyone.