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"I'm
a poet, don't you know it? And the wind, you can blow it ..."
Harvest/EMI
proved that 30 years of silence from Syd Barrett
didn't imply we'd heard the last from the co-founder of Pink
Floyd. In April 2001, the label issued "The Best of Syd
Barrett: Wouldn't You Miss Me?" yet another repackaging
of Barrett's work, following the extensive "Crazy Diamond"
box set from 1993.
While "Crazy
Diamond" included a number of Barrett outtakes and alternate
takes, "Wouldn't You Miss Me" boasted something better:
a Barrett song recorded 30 years prior that had never been released
in any form. In addition to being the proverbial never-heard-before
track that entices a legion of fans to run out and purchase what
would otherwise be a collection of recycled songs, "Bob Dylan
Blues" is a real gem.
The song is
likely one of the first Barrett ever wrote. Though he likely penned
it shortly after he and future Floyd bandmate David
Gilmour saw Dylan in concert in London in 1963, the track wasn't
recorded until 1970. Syd had left Floyd a couple years prior, and
was now working as a solo act albeit with assistance
from some of his former bandmates. The song was recorded Feb. 27,
1970, by Gilmour, as part of a session that included "Waving
My Arms in the Air," "Living Alone" and "Wolfpack."
(Barrett would later re-record "Waving My Arms in the Air"
and "Wolfpack" for the "Barrett"
[1970] album.) Why Gilmour took the recording following the session
and kept it in his personal collection for more than 30 years, before
he and the Barrett estate granted approval for its inclusion on
"Wouldn't You Miss Me," had been a mystery.
"Those
sessions were done so quickly," Gilmour offered as an explanation
in the Spring 2001 edition of Mojo Collections, Mojo magazine's
periodic collector's publication. "We were rushing off to gigs
every day and we had to fit the recording sessions in-between. I
probably just took it away to have a listen and simply forgot to
take it back." He added, "Obviously it wasn't intended
to be a final mix: Syd knocked it off, I took the tape home."
Accompanying
himself on guitar, Barrett pays homage to the former Bob Zimmerman,
while taking the opportunity to poke a little fun at him as well.
Barrett sings clever references to Dylan songs like "Blowin'
in the Wind" and "Bob Dylan's Dream" in a talking
blues style that is at once tribute to and parody of the famed songwriter.
While the
rest of the tracks on the album can be found on Barrett's previously
released albums, one other standoust is "Two
of a Kind." Recorded
for a BBC radio program just three days before "Bob Dylan Blues,"
"Two of a Kind" was previously
only available as part of a hard-to-find EP title "The
Peel Session." The track originally aired on the "Top
Gear" program May 30, 1970.
"Wouldn't
You Miss Me" features some insightful liner notes by Mojo Collections
editor Mark Paytress, and detailed notes of each song's recording.
Written
by Craig Bailey
©1995-2007 Random Precision
Media. All rights reserved.
Updated:
Nov. 30, 2002
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"The Best
of Syd Barrett: Wouldn't You Miss Me?"

April 16, 2001
(U.K.)

"The
Best of Syd Barrett: Wouldn't You Miss Me?" CD
Crazy
Diamond CD box set

- Octopus
(Barrett)
3:48
- Late Night
(Barrett)
3:14
- Terrapin
(Barrett)
5:03
- Swan
Lee (Silas Lang) (Barrett)
3:14
- Wolfpack
(Barrett)
3:45
- Golden
Hair (Barrett/Joyce)
1:59
- Here I
Go (Barrett)
3:11
- Long Gone
(Barrett)
2:49
- No
Good Trying (Barrett)
3:25
- Opel (Barrett)
6:26
- Baby
Lemonade (Barrett)
4:10
- Gigolo
Aunt (Barrett)
5:45
- Dominoes
(Barrett)
4:06
- Wouldn't
You Miss Me (Dark Globe) (Barrett)
3:00
- Wined and
Dined
2:56
- Effervescing
Elephant (Barrett)
1:53
- Waving
My Arms In the Air (Barrett)
2:07
- I Never
Lied To You (Barrett)
1:49
- Love Song
(Barrett)
3:02
- Two
of a Kind (Barrett)
2:35
- Bob Dylan
Blues (Barrett)
3:14
- Golden
Hair (Barrett/Joyce)
1:50

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