BBC Review
Roger Water's tribute to Syd - the recording was attended by Syd himself!
Jon Lusk2007
As the follow-up to the Floydās iconic, record-breaking 1973 concept album The Dark Side Of The Moon, this album is often unfairly overlooked. With the benefit of hindsight, Wish You Were Here has the same faultless pacing and sequencing of its predecessor, but a more coherent musical narrative, structure and tone, as well as greater lyrical sophistication. Here, the āconceptā is more down-to-earth, since much of the record is an extended tribute to the late Syd Barrett Ā the genius behind their early works, who flew too high and burned too bright, becoming one of rockās most infamous drug casualties before Pink Floyd emerged from London¹s psychedelic underground scene to become one of the biggest success stories of the 1970s. Itās also the last great album by a band that would produce something as adolescently puerile as The Wall by the end of that decade.
Barrett is the subject of the epic āShine On You Crazy Diamond, parts One and Twoā of which take up more than half the playing time and bookend just three other shorter tracks. Despite some questionable keyboard tones from Richard Wright, the majestically unhurried instrumental intro is a triumph of suspense. It¹s nearly nine minutes before Roger Waters starts singing and the effect is startling, as are the words: āRemember when you were young?/ You shone like the sun / Shine On You Crazy Diamond!/ Now thereās a look in your eye / Like black holes in the skyā. Itās debatable whether the āiPod generationā will get all of the eerie, almost visual sound detail in the more melodramatic āWelcome To The Machineā, which presages some of the pomp of their later work. Guest vocalist Roy Harper is a gritty presence on the music industry-bating āHave A Cigarā and the breathless title track finds Watersā lyrics at their most soul searching. Some may baulk at Dave Gilmourās long, bluesy guitar workouts, which form the backbone of āShine On You Crazy Diamondā and crop up throughout the album. Hey, these were the dying days of prog. rock. Punk was just around the corner and itās easy to see why, but mid-seventies post-psychedelic angst seldom sounded so chilled.




