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Home Home Again I Like to Be Here When I Can Song After Time

1973 song by Pinkish Floyd

"Time"
Pink Floyd - Time (label).png

The states Harvest Records single

Single by Pink Floyd
from the album The Night Side of the Moon
A-side "Us and Them"
Released 4 February 1974 (1974-02-04) (United states of america)
Recorded iii June 1972 – 1 February 1973[1]
Studio Abbey Road, London
Genre Progressive rock[2]
Length
  • 3:33 (single edit)
  • 6:52 (album version)
Label Harvest
Composer(due south)
  • Roger Waters (single edit)
  • Pink Floyd (album version)
Lyricist(southward) Roger Waters
Producer(s) Pink Floyd
Pink Floyd United states of america singles chronology
"Coin"
(1973)
"Time"
(1974)
"Have a Cigar"
(1975)
Audio
"Fourth dimension" on YouTube

"Fourth dimension" is a song by the English language progressive rock band Pink Floyd. It is included equally the fourth track on their 8th album The Dark Side of the Moon (1973) and was released as a single in the United States. Bassist Roger Waters wrote the lyrics, and the music is credited to all four band members. Keyboardist Richard Wright shares lead vocals (his last until "Wearing the Within Out" on The Partitioning Bell) alongside guitarist David Gilmour.

The lyrics deal with the passage of time. Waters got the idea when he realised he was no longer preparing for anything in life, only was correct in the heart of it. He has described this realisation taking place at ages 28 and 29 in various interviews.[3] It is noted for its long introductory passage of clocks chiming and alarms ringing. The sounds were recorded in an antique shop made as a quadrophonic exam by engineer Alan Parsons, non specifically for the album.[four]

The album track likewise includes a reprise of the song "Breathe". It is the only vocal on album to credit all 4 principal members for songwriting, and last to do so in the band's discography.

Limerick [edit]

"Time" is in the primal of F♯ minor. Each clock at the beginning of the vocal was recorded separately in an antiques store. These clock sounds are followed past a two-minute passage dominated past Nick Mason's drum solo, with rototoms and backgrounded past a tick-tock audio created by Roger Waters picking two muted strings on his bass. With David Gilmour singing lead on the verses and with Richard Wright singing atomic number 82 on the bridges and with female singers and Gilmour providing backup vocals, the song's lyrics deal with Roger Waters' realization that life was non about preparing yourself for what happens next, only about grabbing control of your own destiny.[iii]

He [Alan Parsons] had just recently before we did that album gone out with a whole set of equipment and had recorded all these clocks in a clock shop. And we were doing the song Time, and he said "Listen, I simply did all these things, I did all these clocks," and then nosotros wheeled out his record and listened to it and said "Great! Stick information technology on!" And that, really, is Alan Parsons' idea.

The drums used on the Time rails are roto-toms. I think we did some experiments with another drums called boo-bans, which are very pocket-size, tuned drums, but the roto-toms actually gave the all-time effect.

According to an interview by Phil Taylor in 1994, David Gilmour had been using a Dictionary PCM-70 to store the circular filibuster sounds heard in "Time", which could indistinguishable the kind of repeat he used to get from his sometime Binson echo unit.[6]

The verse chords bike through F♯ small, A major, E major, and F♯ modest again. During this section, Gilmour's guitar and Wright's keyboards are panned to the extreme correct and left of the stereo spectrum, respectively. Gilmour sings lead during this department.[7]

The bridge section, with Wright singing lead, has a notably "thicker" texture, with the female person backing vocalists singing multi-tracked "oohs" and "aahs" throughout, and Gilmour singing harmony with Wright in the second one-half. The chords of this department are D major seventh to A major ninth, which is repeated. The D major seventh, with the notes of D, F♯, A, and C♯, can be heard equally an F♯ pocket-sized chord with a D in the bass, fitting the song's overall key. The 2d one-half progresses from D major 7th to C♯ small, so B small to East major.[7]

The first bridge leads to a guitar solo by Gilmour, which plays over the poetry and span progressions. The solo is followed past another verse sung by Gilmour. When the bridge is repeated, information technology does not conclude on E major as before. Instead, the B minor leads to an F major chord, while Waters'due south bass stays on B, resulting in an unusual racket every bit a transition to the key of Eastward small-scale for "Exhale (Reprise)".[7]

Pinkish Floyd performed the song alive from 1972 to 1975, and after the departure of Waters, from 1987 to 1994. Waters began performing the song in his solo concerts, singing the verses himself, beginning in 1999 with In the Flesh and again with The Dark Side of the Moon Live from 2006 to 2008 (occasionally featuring guest appearances from Nick Mason) and the Us + Them Tour from 2017 to 2018. Gilmour has performed the vocal alive on every one of his solo tours since Pink Floyd's Pulse tour, with the belatedly Richard Wright sharing vocals until his death.

Reception [edit]

In a contemporary review for The Nighttime Side of the Moon, Loyd Grossman of Rolling Rock gave "Fourth dimension" a positive review, describing the rails equally "a fine land-tinged rocker with a powerful guitar solo past David Gilmour".[viii]

Motion picture [edit]

During live performances, the ring dorsum-projected a particularly-commissioned, blithe film past Ian Emes.[ix] [10] The film was subsequently included as an actress on the Pulse DVD.[9]

Personnel [edit]

  • David Gilmour – electric guitars, lead (verses and "Breathe (Reprise)") and backing vocals (bridges and "Exhale (Reprise)")
  • Richard Wright – Farfisa organ,[xi] Wurlitzer electronic piano,[eleven] Ems VCS 3, co-atomic number 82 vocals (bridges)
  • Roger Waters – bass guitar, EMS VCS iii[1]
  • Nick Mason – drums, rototoms

with:

  • Doris Troy – backing vocals
  • Lesley Duncan – backing vocals
  • Liza Strike – backing vocals
  • Barry St. John – backing vocals

Live versions [edit]

  • Live versions of the song are on the Pink Floyd albums Delicate Sound of Thunder and Pulse. The Delicate Audio Of Thunder version does non feature the reprise of "Exhale".
  • A Roger Waters solo version is on the album In the Mankind: Live, sung by Waters, Doyle Bramhall II and Jon Carin.
  • Live versions with Richard Wright appear on the David Gilmour solo Remember That Dark DVD and Alive in Gdańsk album.

In pop culture [edit]

Television, films and video games [edit]

Fourth dimension was used in the opening of the Curiosity Cinematic Universe product of The Eternals. [12]

Certifications [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Guesdon, Jean-Michel (2017-10-24). Pink Floyd : all the songs : the story behind every runway. Margotin, Philippe,, Elliott, Richard George,, Smith, Jackie (Translator) (Outset English-language ed.). New York. p. 306. ISBN9780316439244. OCLC 972386567.
  2. ^ Murphy, Sean (22 May 2011). "The 25 Best Progressive Rock Songs of All Time". PopMatters . Retrieved 31 July 2016.
  3. ^ a b "PINK FLOYD'S DARK SIDE OF THE MOON 4". Utopia.knoware.nl. Archived from the original on 7 December 2012. Retrieved 10 September 2012.
  4. ^ Schaffner, Nicholas (2005). "The Amazing Pudding". Saucerful of Secrets: The Pinkish Floyd Odyssey (New ed.). London: Helter Skelter. p. 157. ISBN1-905139-09-8.
  5. ^ a b Kendall, Charlie (1984). "Shades of Pink - The Definitive Pink Floyd Profile". The Source Radio Bear witness. Archived from the original on 2012-09-11. Retrieved 2011-07-26 .
  6. ^ Tolinski, Brad (September 1994). "Welcome to the Machines". Guitar Globe. Archived from the original on 2012-05-24. Retrieved 2011-07-29 .
  7. ^ a b c Pink Floyd: The Dark Side of the Moon (1973 Pink Floyd Music Publishers Ltd., London, England, ISBN 0-7119-1028-six [U.s.a. ISBN 0-8256-1078-viii])
  8. ^ Grossman, Loyd (24 May 1973). "Dark Side of the Moon". Rolling Stone . Retrieved 14 August 2017.
  9. ^ a b Mabbett, Andy (2010). Pink Floyd - The Music and the Mystery. London: Omnibus. ISBN978-one-84938-370-seven.
  10. ^ Jackson, Lorne (2010-08-06). "The wild ideas of Birmingham motion-picture show-maker Ian Emes". Birmingham Mail . Retrieved vii August 2010.
  11. ^ a b "Wrightish | Watersish.com".
  12. ^ "The Eternals". Curiosity. Retrieved Nov 8, 2021.
  13. ^ "Italian single certifications – Pink Floyd – Time" (in Italian). Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana. Retrieved 26 November 2020. Select "2017" in the "Anno" drop-down menu. Select "Time" in the "Filtra" field. Select "Singoli" under "Sezione".
  14. ^ "British single certifications – Pinkish Floyd – Fourth dimension". British Phonographic Industry. Retrieved 8 Feb 2021.

External links [edit]

bensonbobject1990.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_(Pink_Floyd_song)

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