BREAKING NEWS: The Pink Floyd crew has now announced the show date for which David Gilmour will not play owing to….
David Gilmour Might Not Play Roger Waters-Era Pink Floyd Songs at Future Shows
David Gilmour is full of news lately, especially after announcing his first new album in nine years last week.
To begin with, the guitar icon announced six upcoming shows at London’s Royal Albert Hall. According to his website, these shows are his first live gigs in London in eight years. They will take place October 9, 10, 11, 12, 14 and 15 and will go on sale to the general public on Friday, May 10 at 10 AM BST via Ticketmaster.
However, it appears these shows may not feature Gilmour playing some of Pink Floyd’s biggest songs. He told Uncut (h/t Neptune Pink Floyd) in a new interview that he has “an unwillingness to revisit the Pink Floyd of the ‘70s.”
Furthermore, Gilmour expressed he’s more likely to revisit Pink Floyd material from the ’60s, 1987’s A Momentary Lapse of Reason and 1994’s The Division Bell. Gilmour particularly singled out the later album’s closing track, “High Hopes,” which he called “as good as anything we ever did at any time.”
Of course, Gilmour’s resistance to playing ’70s-era Pink Floyd songs may have to do with his ongoing feud with Roger Waters, who was Floyd’s primary creative force during that time. This war of words has also included Gilmour’s wife and longtime collaborator, Polly Sampson.
Details on David Gilmour’s New Album
Gilmour’s new album, Luck and Strange, comes out on September 6. A full tracklist is below, and the album is available for pre-order in a variety of formats at DavidGilmour.com.
The album announcement states Luck and Strange was recorded during a five-month period and produced by Gilmour and Charlie Andrew. Gilmour said of working with Andrew, “He’s very direct and not in any way overawed, and I love that. That is just so good for me because the last thing you want is people just deferring to you.”
As expected, lyrics were written by Polly Samson, Gilmour’s wife and collaborator for the past three decades. The overall theme of the album addresses growing older and how mortality is often top of mind as someone ages.
A number of musicians are featured on Luck and Strange, but Pink Floyd fans will be thrilled to find out the late keyboardist Richard Wright can be heard on the album’s title track. Wright’s recording is from a jam session in a barn on Gilmour’s residential property back in 2007.
The album’s first video for “The Piper’s Call” can be seen below.
David Gilmour – Luck and Strange – Tracklisting
Black Cat
Luck and Strange
The Piper’s Call
A Single Spark
Vita Brevis
Between Two Points (With Romany Gilmour)
Dark and Velvet Nights
Sings
Scattered
40. “Southampton Dock” from ‘The Final Cut’ (1983)
39. “On The Turning Away” from ‘A Momentary Lapse Of Reason’ (1987)
38. “Outside The Wall” from ‘The Wall’ (1979)
The finale of ‘The Wall.’ It starts with an explosion (the destruction of the wall), and then goes into a short but moving meditation about “the ones that really love you” being there for you. Of course, sometimes you (like the titular Pink character in ‘The Wall’ story) tire them out. “When they’ve given you their all/Some stagger and fall; after all, it’s not easy/Banging your heart against some mad bugger’s wall.”
37. “Sheep” from ‘Animals’ (1977)
36. “The Trial” from ‘The Wall’ (1979)
34. “Run Like Hell” from ‘The Wall’ (1979)
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One of the last songs on ‘The Wall,’ 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 “Another Brick In The Wall, Part 2” is influenced by some of the contemporary disco of the era.