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And the drop is sheer and very high
The ravens all are watching
From a vantage point nearby
Apprehension creeping
Like a tube-train up your spine
Will the tightrope reach the end?
Will the final couplet rhyme?
And it's high time, Cymbaline
It's high time, Cymbaline
Please, wake me
A butterfly with broken wings
Is falling by your side
The ravens all are closing in
There's nowhere you can hide
Your manager and agent
Are both busy on the phone
Selling coloured photographs
To magazines back home
And it's high time, Cymbaline
It's high time, Cymbaline
Please, wake me
The lines converging where you stand
They must have moved the picture plane
The leaves are heavy around your feet
You hear the thunder of the train
Suddenly it strikes you
That they're moving into range
And Doctor Strange
Is always changing size
And it's high time, Cymbaline
It's high time, Cymbaline
Please, wake me
And it's high time, Cymbaline
It's high time, Cymbaline
Please, wake me
I love that I keep discovering Pink Floyd, thanks to RP.
I Agree! That is why we come here. Thanx RP!
I recall seeing the film ( which was dire).
Is there a heavier rock track than 'The Nile Song'?
Interesting time in PFs development; can't imagine having the floyd do your movie soundtrack
There are actually a bunch that I found once, surfing the torrent world. A BUNCH
This is Pink Floyd? I love this.
This is why we love Pink Floyd.
The first time I dropped acid, Ummagumma was on the turntable, followed by The Soft Machine.
200 micrograms for this lil piggy if you wanna go anywhere
Nee Frank... we laten je lekker slapen...
Fukengruven vit dem nincompoopenz!
Nee Frank... we laten je lekker slapen...
Play track one for once..."Cirrus Minor" with a beautiful mavis, I love it!
Roll fwd from the 2:00 mark:
Was she stoned every time she called? That's dedication.
This song sounds like the B-side to Traffic's "40,000 Headmen."
Indeed. I thought this might be the live version of "40,000 Headmen". I guess it's the tablas.
havent heard of the album either? 1
Play Misty for me.
Nonsense, I must say. I have an old bootleg LP with this tune as part of a live performance and it has always stood out as a fine example of what this band could do in concert in their early days, not in their bombastic period. This reminds me of their show in Cleveland in 1970; truly transforming music. Also, the alleged Moody Blues similarity is all in your mind.
I also thought this was the Moody Blues the first time I heard it!
Was she stoned every time she called? That's dedication.
This song sounds like the B-side to Traffic's "40,000 Headmen."
Nonsense, I must say. I have an old bootleg LP with this tune as part of a live performance and it has always stood out as a fine example of what this band could do in concert in their early days, not in their bombastic period. This reminds me of their show in Cleveland in 1970; truly transforming music. Also, the alleged Moody Blues similarity is all in your mind.
Well, the LP I've loved since it came out. Just saw the movie in the last year or so, though, and realize that—bare breasts aside—I didn't miss a whole lot.
I'd like to see it again, if only for the scene near the begining where the American woman meet's our hero and makes him a margarhita. When she licks the rim of the glass and dips it in the salt you know she's going to do him wrong! IMO one of the most sensual movie scenes ever.
From Wiki:-
The Mellotron is an electro-mechanical, polyphonic keyboard originally developed and built in Birmingham, England in the early 1960s. It superseded the Chamberlin, which was the world's firstsample-playback keyboard. The heart of the instrument is a bank of parallel linear magnetic audio tape strips. Playback heads underneath each key enable the playing of pre-recorded sounds. Each of the tape strips has a playing time of approximately eight seconds, after which the tape comes to a dead stop and rewinds to the start position.
Very unreliable and almost impossible to tour with, needed continuous TLC.
Originally used to provide string sounds with out having an orchestra.
Thanks rcurrier.
The wiki-page has an interesting description. I paste one paragraph:
Richard Wright's use of the Farfisa Compact Duo was integral to the sound of Pink Floyd's early albums, such as The Piper at the Gates of Dawn. However, Wright came to more heavily utilize the Hammond organ on later albums, such as The Dark Side of the Moon. Still, Wright continued to use a Farfisa, even on David Gilmour's 2006 tour.
Is that a melletron?
I think it's a Farfisa organ through Leslie rotating speakers.
I always felt real sorry for the roadies who had to hump Leslies around on tour back in those days. They are big and heavy!
Personally, I don't associate the Mellotron with Floyd and Rick Wright; it was more popular with King Crimson, (Wakeman-era) Yes, and (early, good) Genesis.
AMEN to that Brother!
Lovely
P.S. islander, that is an hilarious story!
Nor the furious winter's rages;
Thou thy worldly task hast done,
Home art gone, and ta'en thy wages:
Golden lads and girls all must,
As chimney-sweepers, come to dust.
- Shakespeare, Cymbeline, Act IV, Scene 2
Yes, that song from Cymbeline. It was later highlighted in Sondheim's The Frogs, an hilarious musical takeoff on the original by Aristophanes. In the modern one, none other than Dionysius stages a competition between Shakespeare and G.B. Shaw, who hurl quotes and invectives at one another taken directly from their plays. Toward the end, Shakespeare breaks out the secret weapon and sings "that song from Cymbeline," which is the above poem beautifully set to music. Shaw responds, "A hit, a very palpable hit!" (now quoting Shakespeare, from the death scene in Hamlet) and concedes defeat.
Great post, Dio.
I probably already heard this once or twice on RP but didn't realize that it was Pink Floyd.
I like. Is that a mellotron?
Actually, I did overlook PF and Zep in high school and college, and I truly regret it. Now I'm going back and rediscovering all of their old stuff and realizing that I missed a hell of a lot.
Yes, I stopped listening to FM radio 6 years ago because all they would play is "Money" and "Another Brick In The Wall Part 2"....thank Radio Paradise!!!
Well, the LP I've loved since it came out. Just saw the movie in the last year or so, though, and realize that—bare breasts aside—I didn't miss a whole lot.
Your loss!
fav song off fav album of pf, luv it
MORE!