Obscured By Clouds
Best song: Stay
Worst song: Absolutely Curtains
Overall grade: 4
Pink Floyd’s last attempt at a film soundtrack went
swimmingly. Apart from the fact that they completely fell out with the film’s
director and so released this album as something that, officially, had nothing
to do with the film. Clearly assuming that anyone who then saw the actual film,
‘La Vallee’, would assume its use of exactly the same songs was a coincidence.
Luckily, this never had to be an issue, because the people in charge actually changed the film’s title (or gave it an
extra title) to fit in with the album. So as you can see, the band had plenty
of experience of petty disagreements before they started their own war in the
80s.
That’s a bit of a history lesson, but it’s got nothing to do
with the album really. What is interesting about this one is that it was
written essentially in tandem with their artistic and commercial breakthrough ‘Dark
Side of the Moon’. That particular piece was already in its early stages of
development when the band were approached and asked to score something for
Barbet Schroeder. Consequently, the whole thing reads like an outtakes and
demos collection from ‘Dark Side’.
I imagine that for someone who worships ‘Dark Side’ and
thinks every record should sound like it, this would be an absolute gem. For
me, it’s a definite poor relation. Some of the ‘Clouds’ songs exactly correlate
with those on ‘Dark Side’ a year later. The most blatant is ‘Childhood’s End’
in its ripoff of ‘Time’: the theme and structure of the lyrics are identical,
the main melody is kind of similar, and at the beginning there’s what is
basically ticking – a clear equivalent of the chiming clocks on the other song.
‘Burning Bridges’ is also the exact equal of ‘Breathe’ in its soft edged vocals
and mellow atmosphere, and out of context I think I’d find it challenging to
tell their openings apart. Lastly, ‘The Gold It’s In The…’ can only be ‘Money’,
the token rocker. They still don’t seem all that comfortable with the style,
but they’re getting better at hiding that fact, which must count for something.
Aside from those three, the other songs don’t have obvious
counterparts, but all bar one would have seemed right at home on ‘Dark Side’.
You could probably create a playlist that structures them into a double album
if you’re a person who doesn’t think messing with the running order of ‘Dark
Side’ is sacrilege (so not me then.) The one song that would feel out of place
is ‘Free Four’, which is almost a throwback to the more lighthearted side of Syd
Barrett musically, with a bouncy rhythm and a carefree demeanour, even during
lines like ‘You are the angel of death’.
The two other vocal tracks are ‘Wot’s… Uh, The Deal?’, a
Gilmour dominated affair that happens to be one of his favourites. I can’t
argue with that. It has lots of guitars and his trademark soothing vocals and a
very pleasant instrumental break in the middle, but is removed from
easy-listening territory by the dark quality of Waters’ lyrics. ‘Stay’ is my
absolute favourite. It gets the strongest emotional reaction from me out of
anything on this album; I can just feel the yearning in that opening section. The
brightly-coloured lyrics are very evocative and though nobody mentions is when
discussing best Gilmour guitar solos, I can’t get enough of his wah-wah solo on
this song.
To round out the album we have a handful of instrumentals. ‘Obscured
By Clouds’ is very Floyd; some weird distorted guitars over an atmospheric
backing, can’t really go wrong. ‘When You’re In’ has more going on and is
pretty cool too, but is it film music? I can’t really imagine it as the backing
track to anything, but who knows? ‘Mudmen’ goes through a lot of changes for
its length and doesn’t really flow. Some of the sections are good – there’s a
part near the end that’s awesome to listen to with headphones on – and some of
them are less good, like the screeching guitar that’s not all that enjoyable to
listen to. Strikes me as more a medley of ideas than a developed track. And the
final ‘Absolutely Curtains’ doesn’t do a lot for me, just wandering around for
a while. Plus, there’s another large-group chant at the end, for at least a
couple of minutes. Is this becoming a thing, the Floyd finishing off their
songs with famous chants? I can’t get into that, it disrupts the flow of a
song.
So, in conclusion: the beta-test version of ‘Dark Side’.
Listen to it for interest’s sake, but it’s hardly essential.
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