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Pink Floyd: Gems from the original soundtrack of ‘More’ (1969)
01.11.2012
04:52 pm
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For one of the top-selling rock groups of all time, there are several albums by Pink Floyd that are virtually unknown to the vast majority of people who would call themselves “big” Pink Floyd fans (but who only own The Wall and The Dark Side Of The Moon).

One album is their 1969 soundtrack recording for German director Barbet Schroeder’s More, an English language film about heroin addicts in Ibiza modeled on the Icarus myth.

As Roger Waters said of the working on More:

“His [Barbet Schroeder’s] feeling about music for movies was, in those days, that he didn’t want a soundtrack to go behind the movie. All he wanted was, literally, if the radio was switched on in the car, for example, he wanted something to come out of the car. Or someone goes and switches the TV on, or whatever it is. He wanted the soundtrack to relate exactly to what was happening in the movie, rather than a film score backing the visuals.”

Speaking of visuals, More was shot by Academy Award- winning cinematographer Nestor Almendros (Days of Heaven).

It might be hard to imagine “The Nile Song,” which is undoubtedly the heaviest song in the entire Pink Floyd canon, taking a backseat to what’s going on onscreen:
 

 
The gorgeous “Cymbaline,” sung by David Gilmour, is only heard in the film on someone’s record player. This slower live performance was filmed in the Abbaye De Royaumont, 30 miles north of Paris, in 1971. This would have been one of the final live performances of this song as they would soon drop it from their concert repertoire in favor of the material that would become Dark Side of the Moon.
 

 
A performance of “Green is the Colour” from French television:
 

 
Another hard rocker, “Ibiza Bar”:
 

 
Below, the trailer for Barbet Schroeder’s More.
 

 
You can see how Schroeder used the Floyd’s music in the film. In the later part of this clip is a song never released elsewhere, “Seabirds.”
 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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01.11.2012
04:52 pm
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