Track Listing 1. Astonomy Domine 2. Careful With That Axe Eugene 3. Set the Controls For the Heart 4. Saucerful of Secrets, A 5. Sysyphus Part 1 6. Sysyphus Part 2 7. Sysyphus Part 3 8. Sysyphus Part 4 9. Grantchester Meadows 10. Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together 11. Narrow Way Part 1, The 12. Narrow Way Part 2, The 13. Narrow Way Part 3, The 14. Grand Viziers Garden Party Part 1 - Entrance, The 15. Grand Viziers Garden Party Part 2 - Entertainment, The 16. Grand Viziers Garden Party Part 3 - Exit, The
| Details | | Distributor: | Phantom Import Distributi | | Recording Type: | Mixed | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes UMMAGUMMA features a set of live performances on Disc 1 and a collection of solo studio projects by various band members on Disc 2. Pink Floyd: David Gilmour (vocals, guitar); Richard Wright (vocals, keyboards); Roger Waters (vocals, bass); Nick Mason (drums). Disc 1 was recorded live at Mothers, Birmingham, England and live at The Manchester College Of Commerce, England in June 1969. The remastered Japanese special-edition release features a vinyl-inspired design. Party-liners may favor DARK SIDE OF THE MOON, but diehard space cadets recognize UMMAGUMMA as the pinnacle of post-Barrett Floyd's achievement. Originally released as a double LP, the first record is a live recording from 1969, while the second features four extended cuts written by (and featuring) each of the four band members in turn. Eschewing the catchy, Kinks-influenced pop kaleidoscope of the band's first album, the live portion focuses on extended, spacy near-instrumentals, heavy on acid-fueled jamming and atmospheric electronic textures. From the Eastern-tinged "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun" to the over-the-top psychosis of "Careful With That Axe, Eugene," UMMAGUMMA's first half is ground zero for the genre that would come to be known as space rock. The solo efforts on the second half are undoubtedly the band's most experimental, unconventional efforts ever. They make good use of the avant-garde techniques that were a key early influence, like musique concrete-style tape collage and sound effects. Along the way, there's some lovely folk-tinged balladry, courtesy of Roger Waters ("Grantchester Meadows"), and some proto-prog keyboard wizardry (Richard Wright's multi-part "Sysyphus").
Editorial Reviews 3 Stars - Good - ...something of a bravely flawed gambit combining a side of Floyd live and archetypally spacey, with a studio set full of mad but appealing individual experiments... Q (01/01/1995)
...Based on the principle that groups are often at their best when they don't know what they're doing, this is Pink Floyd at their most adventurous....genuinely sounding exploratory... Mojo (09/01/2000)
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