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The Final Cut? |
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DAVID GILMOUR: "I cant see anything in the near future
myself, I've been enjoying doing things on a different scale, downsizing
a bit. I feel no need to do a big tour again-if ever, at my hugely
advanced age." DAVID GILMOUR: "The term working collectively is a
loose one! Threre's been the occasional phone call but no great
brainstorming sessions to get us all together. All our stuff in
conducted through our engineer James Guthrie, who coordinated Echoes
from his place in Lake Tahoe" DAVID GILMOUR: "No, roger and I haven't spoken or been
in the same room since he left in 1987. It obviously feels odd, but I
knew what Roger was like. When Roger cuts off from people, he cuts off
from them" DAVID GILMOUR: We've been talking about doing a best
of for years, and it seamed like the right time to come up with one. Yes,
the record company were very keen on getting this out, but it was not a
pressure we particularly wanted to resist" DAVID GILMOUR: "We've been arguing about it since May.
Nick sent us a list right at the beginning, then he seamed to lose
interest. Rick never seamed to want to get involved in it. It wandered
along rather fitfully until recently, when I thought ide better work out
what we should be trying to do with it, whether we should try and
represent every album or not, and on what basis we should be choosing
songs. In the end we had to get everyone to vote on a list." DAVID GILMOUR: "I agree. When I look at it, its bloody
obvious really. Its amazing how long the process has been getting it
sorted out." DAVID GILMOUR: "I wanted Fat Old Sun on there but none
of the others were having it. In fact the track listing is still not
finalised. It comes down to what I say at this point. Rogers sort of
given up on it. He gets very grumpy because he thinks I tell Nick and
Rick what they've got to do and outvote him. You wouldn't want his list
I don't think 6 tracks from The Final Cut is what people want! Having
said that, among the songs that all 3 of us voted for was The Fletcher
memorial Home. It dates from one of the worst periods of my life. It was
a nightmare working with roger at that time, and I'm heavily disinclined
to listen to The Final Cut or anything to do with it. But it's a great
song. We'd also had arguments about how many Syd tracks to put on. I've
managed to get 5, but some people are still hustling to lose bike" DAVID GILMOUR: "Definitely, in the beginning. Anyone joining any band tries to make what they do try to fit in with what's going on, and what fitted previously was Syd. But there was a large arrogant part of me that thought, I can make this much better. I wouldn't have joined had I not thought that" Was Syd ever seriously considered as a potential, stay-at-home brain Wilson figure? DAVID GILMOUR: "It wasn't like it couldn't have worked if we'd worked on it, but we quickly felt self-sufficient without him. Our popularity, which had gone in a distinct downward spiral, picked up again through 1968 and 1969, so it felt irrelevant to keep Syd." Did you seriously envisage him returning as a significant force? DAVID GILMOUR: "No, given the states of his mind
during the period that I joined and afterwards, it would have been very
hard to convince myself that he was going to 'come right' and turn back
into a capable genius." DAVID GILMOUR: "I think he was trying to keep it all
going. I don't think Roger had any big ego about wanting to be the
writer any more than anyone else. Later, maybe, but not at the beginning.
And he certainly didn't want to sing anything. He got me to sing just
about everything." DAVID GILMOUR: "We didn't know where we were going in
terms of recording, but we were pretty good live. We were very good at
jamming, but we couldn't translate that onto record. Gradually, a
direction revealed itself to us, a line that began with the Saucerfull
of Secrets track all the way to Echoes, via the long piece Atom heart
Mother. That was a good idea but it was dreadful. I listened to that
album recently: God, its shit, possibly our lowest point artistically.
Atom Heart Mother sounds like we didn't have any idea between us, but we
became much more prolific after it" DAVID GILMOUR: "No, it's easy to think that our music
came from that kind of attitude, but it was more experimental than that.
It was a genuine attempt to find a new way forward, something beyond the
dictate of the 3-minute pop song. Po-faced isn't a word I'd use. It
didn't feel that joyless at the time." DAVID GILMOUR: "Its great, there's no pressure. You
just turn up with your guitar and amp, you plug in, and you don't have
to have a song or a thought in your head. But I would hate my life to be
like that all the time. Ones ego, ones desire to create, always returns" DAVID GILMOUR: "I've put myself off the whole idea of
creating much music. I've got 120 scratchy little bits that's im loading
into my new computerised recording system, but they're just snippets.
One has to sit down and start working to turn snippets into something,
and I haven't really done that yet. Instead I've been relaxing, enjoying
family life and bringing up my children. I enjoyed playing that solo
show as part of Robert Wyatt's Meltdown and I'm hoping to do two or
three nights at the Festival hall in January and a couple of nights in
Paris. It'll be more or less unplugged, with a lot of pink Floyd stuff." DAVID GILMOUR: "There are tons of little moments there, on Echoes, Wish You Were here, Shine On You Crazy Diamond, they all have elements of that. But you're never entirely satisfied. I still sit and listen to songs and think, if only." MOJO Magazine, November 2001 |