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"Dedicated
to Syd Barrett ..."
This disc
contains just a portion of the results of two sessions recorded
Jan. 11 and 12, 1967, at Sound Techniques in London. The band line-up
at the time was Syd Barrett, Nick
Mason, Roger Waters, and Rick
Wright.
The sessions
were co-funded by filmmaker Peter Whitehead as part of a documentary
he was making about the London social scene, called "Tonite
Let's All Make Love in London," named after a line in an Allen
Ginsberg poem. According to the CD's liner notes, Whitehead was
having an affair with Barrett's then-girlfriend, who convinced him
to include the Floyd in his film.
Whitehead
ended up using portions of "Interstellar Overdrive" and
"Nick's Boogie" in his movie.
Unfortunately, the soundtrack album released in 1968 included three
truncated versions of "Interstellar Overdrive," and nothing
else from Floyd. Producer Joe Boyd took the two other songs recorded
during the sessions, "Arnold Layne"
and "Candy and a Current Bun," to EMI. EMI signed the
band and issued the songs as a single March 11, 1967, on its Columbia
label. Despite a radio ban in England "Arnold
Layne" documents the silly, sordid tale of a thieving cross-dresser
it reached number 20 in the U.K., but didn't break the chart
in the United States.
It wasn't
until 1990 that the complete version of "Interstellar Overdrive,"
considered by many to be the ultimate recording of that instrumental
classic, was added to the soundtrack, along with the previously
unreleased "Nick's Boogie,"
an all-out cerebral instrumental along the lines of "A Saucerful
of Secrets" and "Careful With That Axe, Eugene."
In 1995, the
two lost tracks were issued together as the "London '66-'67"
EP, including a brief history of the band up to the time of the
recordings, and several photos of the session and the like.
Written
by Craig Bailey
©1995-2007 Random Precision
Media. All rights reserved.
Updated:
Nov. 29, 2002
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"London
'66-'67"

1995

London
'66-'67 CD
London
'66-'67 video

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Interstellar
Overdrive (Pink Floyd)
16:46
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