Description
Pink Floyd trimmed back its orchestral excesses as heard on Atom Heart Mother for Meddle. Opening with a deliberately surging "One of These Days," Meddle spends most of its time with sonic textures and elongated compositions, most notably on its epic closer, "Echoes." If there aren't pop songs in the classic sense (even on the level of the group's contributions to Ummagumma), there is a uniform tone, ranging from the pastoral "A Pillow of Winds" to "Fearless," with its insistent refrain hinting at latter-day Floyd. Pink Floyd were nothing if not masters of texture, and Meddle is one of their greatest excursions into little details, pointing the way to the measured brilliance of Dark Side of the Moon and the entire Roger Waters era. Here, David Gilmour exerts a slightly larger influence, at least based on lead vocals. The album is one of the Floyd's most consistent explorations of mood and it stands as the strongest record they released between Syd's departure and Dark Side.
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Product Details
- Artist
- Pink Floyd
- Recording Environment
- Studio
- Label / Studio
- EMI
- Run Time (minutes)
- 46
- Media Content Format
- Album
- Original year of release
- 1971
- Media Format
- Audio CD
- Year of release
- 1994
- Number of Discs
- 1
- SPARS Code
- AAD
- Cast & Crew
- Pink Floyd (Producer)
- John Leckie (Sound Engineer)
- Peter Brown (Sound Engineer)
- Pink Floyd (Music Performer)
Tracklisting
Disc 1:
-
One of These Days
-
A Pillow of Winds
-
Fearless
-
San Tropez
-
Seamus
-
Echoes
Customer Reviews
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Pros
- Can Listen Over And Over
Cons
Best Uses
- At Home
- In The Car
Comments about EMI Pink Floyd - Meddle:
Meddle meddles with your mind and, like all early Floyd, still packs a punch to the earholes. Not as sophisticated as Dark Side of the Moon or The Wall - but musically magnificent and bonkers by turns. Mind expanding stuff!
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