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Length: 5:39
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Stranger in this town.
Where are all the good times?
Who's gonna show this stranger around?
Ooooh, I need a dirty woman.
Ooooh, I need a dirty girl.
Will some woman in this desert land
Make me feel like a real man?
Take this rock and roll refugee
Oooh, baby set me free.
Ooooh, I need a dirty woman.
Ooooh, I need a dirty girl.
Ooooh, I need a dirty woman.
Ooooh, I need a dirty girl.
"Hello..?"
"Yes, a collect call for Mrs. Floyd from Mr. Floyd.
Will you accept the charges from United States?"
"Oh, He hung up! That's your residence, right? I wonder why he hung up?
Is there supposed to be someone else there besides your wife there to answer?"
"Hello?"
"This is United States calling, are we reaching...
"See he keeps hanging up, and it's a man answering."
So much great original pioneering music in 1979.
and Classic Rock Radio just kept playing Pink Floyd
Probably because Pink Floyd were, and are, the best.
and Classic Rock Radio just kept playing Pink Floyd
BRAVO, Pink Floyd and Radio Paradise!
It was not scripted. Real operators were real people back "in the day" and conversation was involved in connecting a call like this one. That said, it did take more than one try to get the result that the producer was going for.
From Pink Floyd: Through The Eyes Of . . . The Band, Its Fans, Friends, and Foes, edited by Bruno MacDonald. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1996. ISBN 0-306-80780-7:
The dialogue with the operator was the result of an arrangement co-producer James Guthrie made with a neighbour in London, while the album was being recorded in Los Angeles. He wanted realism, for the operator to actually believe they had caught his wife having an affair, and so didn't inform her she was being recorded. The operator heard in the recording is the second operator they tried the routine with, after the first operator's reaction was deemed unsatisfactory.
Also from Comfortably Numb-A History of "The Wall": Pink Floyd 1978-1981 by Vernon Fitch and Richard Mahon:
Chief Engineer, James Guthrie, placed the phone call to his London apt where Chris Fitzmorris, his next-door neighbor, was asked to answer the phone, listen to the operator and simply hang up the phone.
ummh, you can just record someone without informing them, and use their voice on a commercial album without a release etc.? the operator would seem to have a good case for royalties. 'someone else there besides your wife', that's a little sus. even if it's a person-to-person call, they would just say 'person--to-person for xyz', they don't get into your personal business. I don't totally buy it, people will make up anything for a good story or just for the hell of it. maybe they did that and then the record company said, where's the release and then they got an actor.
Look at it this way: In the extra 40 years they're going to have after we're dead, there's a pretty good chance they'll live through an amazing musical period we can't even dream of.
And besides that will be able to enjoy Pink Floyd (like I still do and some of my younger friends)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQn0I5eXQRY
Not sure if BillG is aware of that :)
I downvoted it because I can't abide moving images on this site - animated gifs, whatever. I downvote 'em all.
Fair enough. Most of them bother me as well.
I am pretty sure that if you keep on listening to RP and learning how to love music you will look back as this comment and feel sorry for yourself
Whenever this track comes onto RP I wait to hear the whole telephone conversation - especially the line - 'hello Charlie, is that you?' I 'had' a friend who, like me, loved PF, we went to a number of their concerts in London together - when his son was born we used to joke that he was named 'Charlie' so my friend could phone him and say - 'Hello, Charlie, is that you'!! My friend passed away before Charlie could answer the phone!
:-(
Maybe it's not the only song of Pink Floyd, Radio pardise plays always the same song, change the robot
LOL! You been on the site less than 2 months!!
Maybe it's not the only song of Pink Floyd, Radio pardise plays always the same song, change the robot
You think this is the only Pink Floyd song played on RP?
Can't understand why three people downvoted the post of this animation, as well as one downvoting my experience of having seen this at the concert. I guess you've got to be an artist or have some artistic inclination to appreciate it.
I downvoted it because I can't abide moving images on this site - animated gifs, whatever. I downvote 'em all.
Can't understand why three people downvoted the post of this animation, as well as one downvoting my experience of having seen this at the concert. I guess you've got to be an artist or have some artistic inclination to appreciate it.
I will admit it's a bit disturbing to look at. I remember seeing the movie at the theater and I'll never forget this scene. The sid made the whole thing very intense. Anyway, some people will downvote anything.
Same here.
Just sold mine last week. A first press. Time for someone else to treasure it, enjoy it and keep the flame lit.
Can't understand why three people downvoted the post of this animation, as well as one downvoting my experience of having seen this at the concert. I guess you've got to be an artist or have some artistic inclination to appreciate it.
I don't necessarily feel sorry for them but they certainly did miss the biggest and most important, influential, creative period in modern music history.
The beautiful thing about music is that you can listen to it for the first time the year it's released, or 40 years later, or 80 years later, and if it grabs you, it grabs you. It's a little like magic that way. I know I first heard this in about 1999 when I was in my early 20s, and it's as powerful now as it was then.
One of the best animations ,ever. I actually got to see that at the original concert. When it started I got goose bumps and just froze,mesmerized, and stayed that way for the duration.
The Wall is about the dust settling after the world experienced a threat to freedom similar to today in the US. Stunning music exploring the bad parts.
It was not scripted. Real operators were real people back "in the day" and conversation was involved in connecting a call like this one. That said, it did take more than one try to get the result that the producer was going for.
From Pink Floyd: Through The Eyes Of . . . The Band, Its Fans, Friends, and Foes, edited by Bruno MacDonald. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1996. ISBN 0-306-80780-7:
The dialogue with the operator was the result of an arrangement co-producer James Guthrie made with a neighbour in London, while the album was being recorded in Los Angeles. He wanted realism, for the operator to actually believe they had caught his wife having an affair, and so didn't inform her she was being recorded. The operator heard in the recording is the second operator they tried the routine with, after the first operator's reaction was deemed unsatisfactory.
Also from Comfortably Numb-A History of "The Wall": Pink Floyd 1978-1981 by Vernon Fitch and Richard Mahon:
Chief Engineer, James Guthrie, placed the phone call to his London apt where Chris Fitzmorris, his next-door neighbor, was asked to answer the phone, listen to the operator and simply hang up the phone.
Another interesting tidbit, which ultimately answers the OP's question:
In the Comfortably Numb-A History of "The Wall" book, James Guthrie wonders if the operator ever recognized herself. She's never come forward. Chris Fitzmorris did not ask for a royalty, but Jim Nabors approached the band, asked for a royalty and received it!
Or not seen the live concert when it was just new. What a spectacle!
Look at it this way: In the extra 40 years they're going to have after we're dead, there's a pretty good chance they'll live through an amazing musical period we can't even dream of.
play it all - the whole thing in one shot - with no interruptions.
like old school college radio - I double dare you Bill!
maybe in 2029, for its 50th!
I don't necessarily feel sorry for them but they certainly did miss the biggest and most important, influential, creative period in modern music history.
1979, really? The late '70s and early '80s did have a lot of good, innovative stuff so I guess it's as good a period as any to be named. Still, "modern music" has an awful lot of influential and creative periods; I'm not sure how one could declare just one of them to have all of those superlatives attached to it.
Way
Over
Played
Much as I loved Pink Floyd, I really didn't like The Wall.
Oh yea, just because I haven't said it in a while; Gilmour is God.
Oh yea, just because I haven't said it in a while; Gilmour is God.
yes- definately - there is no better....
Oh yea, just because I haven't said it in a while; Gilmour is God.
Van Halen ain't got nothin on these hippies.
First and only time I've ever seen the words "Van Halen" on RP. Thumbs up for that, regardless of the context!
I feel sorry for people who think Division Bell is the best Floyd
Glad it only cost me about $2.00!
Weird....how the hell can any single 'track' be removed from this album? They all fit together exactly correctly....and I think this was my favorite part of the movie The Wall, when "Pink" is in the hotel room and about to lose it.....LLRP!!
Glad it only cost me about $2.00!
I feel sorry for people who think Division Bell is the best Floyd
Happy 50th, red3! I'll celebrate w/ you and the great playlist you suggested - Long Live RP!!
Gray, depressing, kill-yourself music. I hear the inventiveness and talent, but I can't bear to listen to it.
I don't necessarily feel sorry for them but they certainly did miss the biggest and most important, influential, creative period in modern music history.
Don't feel too bad for us. It's not too hard to love good music :-)
(the second one would be the Requiem from Mozart )
dont forget to bring a cd player!
i feel sorry for the dopey stoners, closed off to all that was happening then, listening to this Pink Floyd crap. A Wall, indeed.
Fixed that for you! The rating is just fine :)
Same here.
It was not scripted. Real operators were real people back "in the day" and conversation was involved in connecting a call like this one. That said, it did take more than one try to get the result that the producer was going for.
From Pink Floyd: Through The Eyes Of . . . The Band, Its Fans, Friends, and Foes, edited by Bruno MacDonald. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1996. ISBN 0-306-80780-7:
The dialogue with the operator was the result of an arrangement co-producer James Guthrie made with a neighbour in London, while the album was being recorded in Los Angeles. He wanted realism, for the operator to actually believe they had caught his wife having an affair, and so didn't inform her she was being recorded. The operator heard in the recording is the second operator they tried the routine with, after the first operator's reaction was deemed unsatisfactory.
Also from Comfortably Numb-A History of "The Wall": Pink Floyd 1978-1981 by Vernon Fitch and Richard Mahon:
Chief Engineer, James Guthrie, placed the phone call to his London apt where Chris Fitzmorris, his next-door neighbor, was asked to answer the phone, listen to the operator and simply hang up the phone.
That is such a neat bit of trivia!
It is a scripted piece of audio for the album/movie. Real operators didn't comment on calls back then.
Dave_Mack wrote:
It was not scripted. Real operators were real people back "in the day" and conversation was involved in connecting a call like this one. That said, it did take more than one try to get the result that the producer was going for.
From Pink Floyd: Through The Eyes Of . . . The Band, Its Fans, Friends, and Foes, edited by Bruno MacDonald. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1996. ISBN 0-306-80780-7:
The dialogue with the operator was the result of an arrangement co-producer James Guthrie made with a neighbour in London, while the album was being recorded in Los Angeles. He wanted realism, for the operator to actually believe they had caught his wife having an affair, and so didn't inform her she was being recorded. The operator heard in the recording is the second operator they tried the routine with, after the first operator's reaction was deemed unsatisfactory.
Also from Comfortably Numb-A History of "The Wall": Pink Floyd 1978-1981 by Vernon Fitch and Richard Mahon:
Chief Engineer, James Guthrie, placed the phone call to his London apt where Chris Fitzmorris, his next-door neighbor, was asked to answer the phone, listen to the operator and simply hang up the phone.
Found this snippet from a Roger Waters interview:
RW: I think it's great; I love that operator on it, I think she's wonderful. She didn't know what was happening at all, the way she picks up on..I mean it's been edited a bit, but the way she picks up, all that stuff about "is there supposed to be someone else there beside your wife" you know I think is amazing, she really clicked into it straight away. She's terrific!
Vicey wrote:
LaurieinTucson wrote:
It is a scripted piece of audio for the album/movie. Real operators didn't comment on calls back then.
Dave_Mack wrote:
I guess none of you are old enough to remember person to person collect phone calls. Minutes were measured in multiple dollars back then.
"congratulations, you have just discovered the secret message, please send your answer to ....."
Found this snippet from a Roger Waters interview:
RW: I think it's great; I love that operator on it, I think she's wonderful. She didn't know what was happening at all, the way she picks up on..I mean it's been edited a bit, but the way she picks up, all that stuff about "is there supposed to be someone else there beside your wife" you know I think is amazing, she really clicked into it straight away. She's terrific!
Vicey wrote:
LaurieinTucson wrote:
It is a scripted piece of audio for the album/movie. Real operators didn't comment on calls back then.
Dave_Mack wrote:
LaurieinTucson wrote:
It is a scripted piece of audio for the album/movie. Real operators didn't comment on calls back then.
Dave_Mack wrote:
Run Like Hell?
Maybe it's very a prog rock thing with a suitable touch of pretence. I think the modern day progrockers such as Steven Wilson still have some theme or story telling to their albums.
I dont think "The Trial" is as easy to listen to as this but with such complicated and "simply" beautiful arrangements and production, the "not so obvious" Floyd tracks are a welcome distraction. Even if some of them are very short, Bill is happy to link a few together.
I was, however, able to digitally record it off the DVD using 'free' (shareware) recording software... I did this about 9 years ago, back when i was OK with 128kbps recordings (i now seek only 320). I'll try to re-record and upload, but i can't be sure that this recording technique will produce a file that RP can actually use.
Zeito wrote:
Relayer wrote:
What shall we use to fill the empty spaces
Where waves of hunger roar?
Shall we set out across the sea of faces
In search of more and more applause?
Shall we buy a new guitar?
Shall we drive a more powerful car?
Shall we work straight through the night?
Shall we get into fights?
Leave the lights on? Drop bombs?
Do tours of the east? Contract diseases?
Bury bones? Break up homes?
Send flowers by phone?
Take to drink? Go to shrinks?
Give up meat? Rarely sleep?
Keep people as pets?
Train dogs? Race rats?
Fill the attic with cash?
Bury treasure? Store up leisure?
But never relax at all
With our backs to the wall.
Relayer wrote:
What shall we use to fill the empty spaces
Where waves of hunger roar?
Shall we set out across the sea of faces
In search of more and more applause?
Shall we buy a new guitar?
Shall we drive a more powerful car?
Shall we work straight through the night?
Shall we get into fights?
Leave the lights on? Drop bombs?
Do tours of the east? Contract diseases?
Bury bones? Break up homes?
Send flowers by phone?
Take to drink? Go to shrinks?
Give up meat? Rarely sleep?
Keep people as pets?
Train dogs? Race rats?
Fill the attic with cash?
Bury treasure? Store up leisure?
But never relax at all
With our backs to the wall.
What shall we use to fill the empty spaces
Where waves of hunger roar?
Shall we set out across the sea of faces
In search of more and more applause?
Shall we buy a new guitar?
Shall we drive a more powerful car?
Shall we work straight through the night?
Shall we get into fights?
Leave the lights on? Drop bombs?
Do tours of the east? Contract diseases?
Bury bones? Break up homes?
Send flowers by phone?
Take to drink? Go to shrinks?
Give up meat? Rarely sleep?
Keep people as pets?
Train dogs? Race rats?
Fill the attic with cash?
Bury treasure? Store up leisure?
But never relax at all
With our backs to the wall.
The live version from Berlin (1990?) with Bryan Adams doing this part is pretty sweet; it's just right in his vocal wheelhouse.
What shall we use to fill the empty spaces
Where waves of hunger roar?
Shall we set out across the sea of faces
In search of more and more applause?
Shall we buy a new guitar?
Shall we drive a more powerful car?
Shall we work straight through the night?
Shall we get into fights?
Leave the lights on? Drop bombs?
Do tours of the east? Contract diseases?
Bury bones? Break up homes?
Send flowers by phone?
Take to drink? Go to shrinks?
Give up meat? Rarely sleep?
Keep people as pets?
Train dogs? Race rats?
Fill the attic with cash?
Bury treasure? Store up leisure?
But never relax at all
With our backs to the wall.
dum, dum, dum, dum, another lame Stoner Anthem from the Void
CLASSIC ROCK RULES. barf.
It is a scripted piece of audio for the album/movie. Real operators didn't comment on calls back then.
Dave_Mack wrote:
Van Halen ain't got nothin on these hippies.
excellent song from one of the best albums of all time...
Playing it as loud as possible...
Thanks!
(the second one would be the Requiem from Mozart )
www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/features/desert-island-discs/find-a-castaway
BTW, this track should really be titled Empty Spaces -> Young Lust.