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"Get
out of the road if you want to grow old ..."
"Animals"
was the first album that Pink Floyd recorded in its own studio:
Britannia Row Studios in London. That the facilities were under-equipped
compared to previous studios the group had worked with, might account
for the 10 months the album took to make during 1976.
While the
album runs five tracks long, there were only really two new songs
here. In concert, the group had been performing "Raving and
Drooling," which would become "Sheep," and "You've
Gotta Be Crazy," later retitled "Dogs,"
as early as 1974. Roger Waters wrote
"Pigs (Three Different Ones),"
to make an animal trilogy, and also came up with "Pigs on the
Wing," a simple, short, acoustic number that begins the album,
and an alternate version that closes it.
The eight-track
tape version of "Animals" sported additional material
not available on any other medium. In 1976, session guitarist Snowy
White was put in touch with the band via Kate Bush's manager. The
word was that Pink Floyd was looking for an axe man to augment its
touring line-up, and had been trying to get ahold of White. Eventually
White visited the band in the studio as it was recording Animals.
Waters suggested they might as well put him to work right then and
there. The result was "Pigs on the
Wing." However, in the end, the song would be split into
two parts: Part one began the album, and the second half ended it.
Only those lucky (?) enough to purchase the album on eight-track
got to hear the song as it was originally recorded, with parts one
and two connected by a soaring guitar solo courtesy of White.
The original
version went unreleased, except on eight-track, until 1995, when
White wisely placed the unedited track on his "Goldtop"
album, a compilation of some of his session work. Clocking in at
3:25, the song was mastered and remixed from the original 24-track
recording with assistance from Floyd engineer Andy
Jackson.
With a somewhat
Orwellian theme of people as animals, the "Animals" album
didn't endear itself to conservatives such as Mary Whitehouse
a British Moral Majority-like figure who is parodied in "Pigs
(Three Different Ones)" especially when the group
used an eerie electronic effect on an altered recitation of the
23rd Psalm during "Sheep."
The album
cover, again by Storm Thorgerson, Aubrey
Powell and other Hipgnosis alum, pictures a 40-foot inflatable pig
suspended above the Battersea Power Station outside London. The
band apparently wasn't content with using a photographic trick to
"strip in" the pig, so a team was assembled to actually
fly the pig by tethers above the power station in December 1976.
In the end,
the photo shoot would take three days, with the pig breaking its
tethers on day two, and drifting through London's Heathrow Airport's
airspace, before it landed in a farmer's field in Kent. A marksman
had been hired for day one, to shoot the pig out of the sky, if
it broke loose. Unfortunately, he wasn't called back to duty on
day two, to save money. In the end, the photo of the pig on day
three was combined with the ominous skies of day one to create the
cover, a photographic montage that could have been done in the first
place, without the time and expense of actually floating the swine.
Perhaps
it would have been a bit easier if the band had agreed to an early
cover concept (right) of a young lad innocently stumbling upon a
couple during an intimate moment. This pencil-drawn rough is taken
from Thorgerson's "The Works of Hipgnosis: Walk Away René,"
a book published in 1978 and now long out of print. (Read our article
about Storm Thorgerson's "The Work of Hipgnosis: Walk Away
René." [438 kb] Full color with rare photos.This PDF
file requires the free Adobe
Acrobat Reader to view and print.)
On a personal
note, one of my more memorable Floyd experiences occurred in February
1991 when I happened upon the Battersea Power Station while riding
the train into London. At the time, I was much less educated in
the Floyd, and wasn't even certain the facility pictured on Animals
actually existed. Imagine my surprise when I happened to look out
the window, and saw its four immense smoke stacks looming in the
distance.
"Animals"
was released on Jan. 23, 1977. It debuted at number 25 in the U.S.
on Feb. 14, and climbed to number two. The album went platinum (a
million units sold) in America on April 16. The only place it made
it to the number one position was in The Netherlands, on March 5.
Altogether, Animals remained in the top 40 for nine weeks in the
U.S., and for 27 weeks in the top 200.
The version
we play on "Floydian Slip" is the 1994 remastered
CD import from Holland. The liner contains many alternate views
of the flying pig photo shoot, as well as complete lyrics.
Written
by Craig Bailey
©1995-2007 Random Precision
Media. All rights reserved.
Updated:
Nov. 29, 2002
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"Animals"

Jan. 23, 1977
(U.K.)
Feb. 10, 1977 (U.S.)

Animals
CD

-
Pigs
on the Wing (Part 1)
01:24
-
-
-
Sheep
10:18
-
Pigs
on the Wing (Part 2)
01:25

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