| "Echoes" |
 | | Song by Pink Floyd | | from the album Meddle | | Released | October 30, 1971 (US) November 5, 1971 (UK) | | Recorded | January 1971 Abbey Road, London March, April 1971 AIR Studios, London May 1971 Morgan Studios, London June, July 1971 Morgan Studios, London AIR Studios, London August 1971 AIR Studios, London | | Genre | Progressive rock | | Length | 23:30 | | Writer(s) | Roger Waters Richard Wright Nick Mason David Gilmour | | Meddle track listing | Seamus (5) | "Echoes" (6) | | - This article is about the Pink Floyd song. For other meanings see Echoes.
"Echoes" is a song by Pink Floyd, including lengthy instrumental passages, sound effects, and rock improvisation. Written by all four members of the group (Roger Waters, Richard Wright, David Gilmour, and Nick Mason), "Echoes" provides the extended finale to Pink Floyd's album Meddle. The track has a running time of 23:31 and takes up the entire B-side of the vinyl recording. It also appears in shortened form as the fifth track on the compilation album which took its name, Echoes: The Best of Pink Floyd. "Echoes" is the third-longest song in Pink Floyd's catalogue, after Atom Heart Mother (23:44) and the combined segments of Shine On You Crazy Diamond (26:01). Unlike those pieces, it is not explicitly divided into separate parts; however, the composition was originally assembled from separate fragments, and was later split in two parts to serve as both the opening and closing numbers in the band's film Live At Pompeii. Image File history File links MeddleCover. ...
For other uses, see Song (disambiguation). ...
Pink Floyd are an English rock band that initially earned recognition for their psychedelic rock music, and, as they evolved, for their avant-garde progressive rock music. ...
Alternate cover U.S./Canadian releases cover Meddle is an album by English progressive rock band Pink Floyd. ...
is the 303rd day of the year (304th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1971 (MCMLXXI) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display full calendar) of the 1971 Gregorian calendar. ...
is the 309th day of the year (310th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1971 (MCMLXXI) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display full calendar) of the 1971 Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1971 (MCMLXXI) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display full calendar) of the 1971 Gregorian calendar. ...
This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
This article is about the capital of England and the United Kingdom. ...
Year 1971 (MCMLXXI) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display full calendar) of the 1971 Gregorian calendar. ...
AIR Studios is a professional audio recording facility in Central London. ...
This article is about the capital of England and the United Kingdom. ...
Year 1971 (MCMLXXI) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display full calendar) of the 1971 Gregorian calendar. ...
This article is about the capital of England and the United Kingdom. ...
Year 1971 (MCMLXXI) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display full calendar) of the 1971 Gregorian calendar. ...
This article is about the capital of England and the United Kingdom. ...
AIR Studios is a professional audio recording facility in Central London. ...
This article is about the capital of England and the United Kingdom. ...
Year 1971 (MCMLXXI) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display full calendar) of the 1971 Gregorian calendar. ...
AIR Studios is a professional audio recording facility in Central London. ...
This article is about the capital of England and the United Kingdom. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
For the Swedish political music movement, see progg. ...
A songwriter is someone who writes the lyrics to songs, the musical composition or melody to songs, or both. ...
George Roger Waters (born September 6, 1943) is an English rock musician; singer, guitarist, bassist, songwriter, and composer. ...
Richard William Rick Wright (born July 28, 1943 in Hatch End, London, England) is a self-taught pianist and keyboardist best known for his long career with Pink Floyd. ...
Nicholas Berkeley Nick Mason (born January 27, 1944 in Birmingham, England) is the drummer for Pink Floyd. ...
David Jon Gilmour CBE (born March 6, 1946 in Cambridge) is an English musician best known as a guitarist, singer, and songwriter in the band Pink Floyd. ...
Alternate cover U.S./Canadian releases cover Meddle is an album by English progressive rock band Pink Floyd. ...
Seamus is the fifth song on Pink Floyds Meddle and also the name of a dog, owned by close associate of the band Steve Marriott. ...
Echoes: The Best of Pink Floyd, a boxed set of music by Pink Floyd Echoes, a song by Pink Floyd Echoes, a radio programme The plural of echo This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
Pink Floyd are an English rock band that initially earned recognition for their psychedelic rock music, and, as they evolved, for their avant-garde progressive rock music. ...
Improvisation is the practice of acting and reacting, of making and creating, in the moment and in response to the stimulus of ones immediate environment. ...
George Roger Waters (born September 6, 1943) is an English rock musician; singer, guitarist, bassist, songwriter, and composer. ...
Richard William Rick Wright (born July 28, 1943 in Hatch End, London, England) is a self-taught pianist and keyboardist best known for his long career with Pink Floyd. ...
David Jon Gilmour CBE (born March 6, 1946 in Cambridge) is an English musician best known as a guitarist, singer, and songwriter in the band Pink Floyd. ...
Nicholas Berkeley Nick Mason (born January 27, 1944 in Birmingham, England) is the drummer for Pink Floyd. ...
Alternate cover U.S./Canadian releases cover Meddle is an album by English progressive rock band Pink Floyd. ...
Alternate uses: Echoes (disambiguation) Echoes: The Best of Pink Floyd is a compilation album by Pink Floyd. ...
This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
Atom Heart Mother is a six-part suite by progressive rock band Pink Floyd, composed by the whole band and Ron Geesin. ...
Shine On You Crazy Diamond is an epic nine-part Pink Floyd composition with lyrics written by Roger Waters, in tribute to former band member Syd Barrett, and music written by Waters, Richard Wright, and David Gilmour. ...
Composition "Echoes" ranks among the most ambitious and musically diverse Pink Floyd songs. The lyrics begin with a marine theme, inspired by the sonar-like sound created by Wright when his grand piano's high B (C in some live performances) was sent through a Leslie rotating speaker (this was reportedly done as an experiment at the very beginning of the Meddle recordings). Ad lib notes on the same Leslie-inflected piano fade in and gradually build up from seemingly random notes into a backing harmony. Gilmour then enters with a soft, mid-tempo guitar solo that features extensive use of his trademark expressive bends. Bass and then drums enter, as guitar and the Leslie-piano continue through the vocal passages of the first verse. These are harmonized by two voices, Gilmour's and Wright's, and assume a leisurely delivery. The opening lyrics place the listener at an underwater location where 'everything is green and submarine'. A chord progression of C♯m, G♯m, F♯m, G♯ hints at musical themes explored in later albums. This article is about underwater sound propagation. ...
The Leslie speaker is a specially constructed amplifier/loudspeaker used to create special audio effects utilizing the Doppler effect. ...
The guitar is used in many genres to provide rhythmic and harmonic accompaniment to a voice or other instrument, or to fill in the harmony in a ensemble. ...
The electric bass guitar (or electric bass) is a bass stringed instrument played with the fingers by plucking, slapping, popping or using a pick. ...
A chord progression (also chord sequence and harmonic progression or sequence), as its name implies, is a series of chords played in order. ...
Gilmour plays a chromatic riff between verses, accompanied with A and C♯m chords, which eventually segues into his second solo. This contains more of his conventional trademarks, featuring multiple guitars harmonizing at various points. The drumming becomes more energetic and the guitar is in a higher register than in the introductory passage. This second solo eventually gives way to the song's first break. The guitar solos and backing riffs are replaced by a drum and bass groove with an almost funk-like chordal backing. In music, a register is the relative height or range of a note, set of pitches or pitch classes, melody, part, instrument or group of instruments. ...
In popular music a break is an instrumental or percussion section or interlude during a song derived from or related to stop-time â being a break from the main parts of the song or piece. ...
For other uses, including related musical genres, see Funk (disambiguation). ...
The third guitar solo begins over this with a less controlled feel and more prominent improvisation. Then, a distant second guitar starts accompanying the first with distortion, feedback, wah pedal and whammy bar effects. The latter technique provides this solo with exaggerated pitch bends that resemble those of a slide guitar (Gilmour did use some slide for sound effects on the studio recording and for the intro in live performances from 1971 to 1975). Wright plays brief phrases on the Hammond organ, which slowly increase in intensity. A distortion is the alteration of the original shape (or other characteristic) of an object, image, sound, waveform or other form of information or representation. ...
Audio feedback (also known as the Larsen effect) is a special kind of feedback which occurs when a loop exists between an audio input (for example, a microphone or guitar pickup) and an audio output (for example, a loudspeaker). ...
Wah-wah is an imitative word for the sound of bending or altering musical notes to improve expressiveness, sounding much like a human voice saying the syllable wah for each note. ...
An electric guitar is a type of guitar with a solid or semi-solid body that utilizes electromagnetic pickups to convert the vibration of the steel-cored strings into electrical current. ...
Example of a bottleneck, with fingerpicks and resonator guitar. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
These organ fills, along with the bass and drum groove, begin fading away as the lead guitar gradually becomes more distant. A throbbing wind-like sound is introduced, created by Waters vibrating the strings of his bass guitar with a steel slide and feeding the signal through an Italian tape echo unit called the Binson Echorec. This starts increasing in volume as high pitched guitar 'screams' enter, resembling the distorted whale song. They were inspired when Gilmour discovered the sound by accidentally reversing the cables to his wah pedal[1]. Early live recordings of Pink Floyd performing the song "Embryo" in 1970 also feature this noise. This section in "Embryo" seemes to have inspired the "seagull" section. The whale noise was also used as a background noise in Is There Anybody Out There?, a song which would appear 8 years later on The Wall. Binson was an early manufacturer of echo machines. ...
This article is about the animal. ...
Is There Anybody Out There? is a mostly instrumental song on the Pink Floyd album, The Wall. ...
For other Pink Floyd works based around this album, see The Wall (Pink Floyd). ...
In the second half of the "Echoes" interlude, the screams die down to become background noises under the sound of rooks, which were added to the music from a tape archive recording (as had been done for some of the band's earlier songs, including "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun"). Eventually, the entire ensemble is faded into a sustained Farfisa organ chord underneath a reprise of the sonar-like 'pings' from the introduction. Volume swells on the guitar accompanied by sustained organ chords combine to create a stark contrast to the screams of the previous interlude. This texture strongly suggests the feeling of clearing air and receding winds after a violent storm. Gilmour starts strumming muted notes from B to F♯ to D to E (rhythmically reminiscent of Another Brick in the Wall) on a guitar tuned to drop D over a slowly-building organ solo (this distinctive guitar part was reportedly inspired by the Beach Boys song "Good Vibrations"[2] where similar muted triplets are used, albeit played by cellos.) The drumming becomes a combination of quick ride cymbal work and tom-tom fills. Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun is a song by art rock band Pink Floyd, and is featured on their second album, A Saucerful of Secrets (1968). ...
Another Brick in the Wall is the title of three songs set to variations of the same basic theme, on Pink Floyds 1979 concept album, The Wall, subtitled Part I, Part II, and Part III, respectively, all of which were written by Pink Floyds bassist and then- lead...
The Beach Boys, originally the Beech Boys, a small team of four brothers from the south of Poland, emigrated to America in the early 1950s in search of a fortune to be made in the Arizonian logging industry. When it soon became evident they had been the victims of...
Good Vibrations is a pop single produced by Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys. ...
Eventually, a glissando guitar riff with echo and distortion create a massive buildup of melodic tension, and in an anticlimactic moment, this segues into the soft vocal strains of the third verse. Unlike the previous verses, this is accompanied by intermittent guitar fills. After a final refrain, the song recedes into another wind-like noise: a tape loop of multi-tracked ascending male voice glissandos, similar to the effect of a Shepard tone. A soft call-and-response passage between guitar and keyboards retreats into more improvised phrases, before the chaotic 'winds' finally take over to end the song (and the album). Figure 1: Shepard tones forming a Shepard scale, illustrated in a sequencer A Shepard tone, named after Roger Shepard, is a sound consisting of a superposition of sine waves separated by octaves. ...
In music, a call and response is a succession of two distinct phrases usually played by different musicians, where the second phrase is heard as a direct commentary on or response to the first. ...
Early versions The piece had its genesis in a collection of musical experiments written separately by each band member, referred to as "Nothing, Parts 1-24". Subsequent tapes of work in progress were labelled "The Son of Nothing" and "The Return of the Son of Nothing"; the latter title was eventually used to introduce the as-yet unreleased work during its first live performances in early 1971[3]. During this stage of its development, the song's first verse had yet to be finalized. It originally referred to the meeting of two celestial bodies, but perhaps because of Waters' increasing concerns that Pink Floyd was being pigeonholed as a space rock band, the lyrics were rewritten to use underwater imagery instead. For space rocks, see asteroid. ...
The title "Echoes" was also subjected to significant revisions before and after the release of Meddle: Waters, a devoted football fan, proposed that the band call its new piece "We Won the Double" in celebration of Arsenal's 1971 victory, and during a 1972 tour of Germany he jovially introduced it on two consecutive nights as "Looking Through the Knothole in Granny's Wooden Leg" and "The March of the Dam Busters", respectively. [3] Image File history File links Aphrodite-1971-08-06_Echoes. ...
A player (wearing the red kit) has penetrated the defence (in the white kit) and is taking a shot at goal. ...
The Double is a term in football, which refers to winning a countrys top division and its main cup competition in the same season. ...
Arsenal Football Club (also known as Arsenal, The Arsenal or The Gunners) are an English professional football club based in Holloway, north London. ...
The Dam Busters is a 1954 British war film, set during the Second World War, and documenting the true story of the RAFs 617 Squadron, the development of the bouncing bomb, and Operation Chastise - the attack on the Ruhr dams in Germany. ...
Live performances The song, then entitled "The Return of the Son of Nothing", was first performed in public on April 20, 1971 with the unrevised 'planetary' lyrics. These remained in place until September of that year, when they were replaced by the more familiar 'albatross' lyrics. The song was first introduced as "Echoes" on the sixth of August, 1971, at a performance in Japan. It was a staple of Pink Floyd's live performances from then until 1975 and was also played eleven times in 1987, near the beginning of the A Momentary Lapse of Reason tour. Most recently, David Gilmour has performed the song on his 2006 solo tour. Genera Diomedea Thalassarche Phoebastria Phoebetria Albatrosses, of the biological family Diomedeidae, are large seabirds allied to the procellariids, storm-petrels and diving-petrels in the order Procellariiformes (the tubenoses). ...
Alternate cover US remaster cover A Momentary Lapse of Reason is Pink Floyds 1987 album, the bands first release after the official departure of Roger Waters from the band in 1985. ...
Unlike the Atom Heart Mother suite, it was relatively easy for Pink Floyd to reproduce "Echoes" onstage (as can be seen in the Live at Pompeii film) without requiring additional musicians, though the swapping of keyboard sounds during the piece sometimes proved problematic in live performances. Originally, Wright would start the song by playing his grand piano through a Leslie speaker, then switch to the Hammond organ just before the first verse, switch again to the Farfisa organ during the 'seagull' middle section, back to the Hammond again for the last verse, and finally to piano for the outro. This required Roger Waters to provide the piano 'pings' at their re-entry after the middle section. The Farfisa was later dropped from the band's live keyboard setup and all its parts were played on the Hammond instead. The 1987 performances had synthesizers replacing the Farfisa. Unlike Pompeii, regular live performances played the song as a whole - the bridge between "Part 1" and "Part 2" was simply done by Waters stopping the bass riff of the jam section in the former and starting to play the wind sounds of the latter. The rest of the band would just play quieter and quieter until silent. Live performances featured Roger playing his bass for the intro, rather than Gilmour's guitar. Pink Floyd: Live at Pompeii is a 1973 Adrian Maben film featuring Pink Floyd performing six songs, at the ruins of the empty ancient amphitheatre in Pompeii, Italy. ...
Farfisa is a brand name for a series of electronic organs and later multitimbral keyboards, made in Ancona in the Marche region of Italy. ...
Starting in 1974, the musical arrangement was augmented by backing vocals from Venetta Fields and Carlena Williams and saxophone solos by Dick Parry added directly after the second verse and at the song's finale. All three of these additional artists joined Pink Floyd's touring party to take the latter Dark Side of the Moon performances, and added their own parts to the remainder of the concert (largely because the former artist was reluctant to leave and re-enter the stage throughout the show). [4] The last time the song would be played by all four members of Pink Floyd was at the concert in Knebworth closing their 1975 world tour. During performances given by the 'three-man' Pink Floyd in 1987, "Echoes" was played in a much shorter form than usual (with Gilmour singing the higher harmonies instead of Wright and Wright singing Gilmour's original harmonies). It was ultimately dropped from the set (and replaced with "Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts 1-5)") because Gilmour did not feel 'right' about singing the lyrics at the time, and his backing artists played its music without the touches of improvisation that make "Echoes" a powerfully affecting piece. This article is about the album by Pink Floyd. ...
This article details all the concerts held to date in the grounds of Knebworth House in the village of Knebworth. ...
On Gilmour's 2006 tour in support of On An Island, Wright plays a key part in the touring band, performing the vocals and keyboard parts on "Echoes" (he sang in the same pitch as Gilmour originally did (this time melding with Gilmour) and Jon Carin singing the higher harmonies that Rick originally sang in 1970s performances). This new arrangement of the song is close to full-length (Often clocking at 22 minutes at the beginning of the tour, later performances even outlengthed the studio version by sometimes three minutes.) It also saw the return of Rick's Farfisa organ, which was pulled out of storage and brought on tour specifically for "Echoes." On an Island is the third solo album by David Gilmour, best known as the lead vocalist and guitarist for Pink Floyd. ...
Synchronization It is rumoured[5] that "Echoes" synchronizes with Stanley Kubrick's 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey when played concurrently with the final segment (entitled "Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite"). âKubrickâ redirects here. ...
"Echoes" was released 3 years after the film and is 23 minutes and 31 seconds in length, similar to the "Infinite" segment. Sounds in the middle part of the song suggest to some listeners the feeling of travelling through an alien world. The drone vocalizations heard in the final scenes of 2001 seem to match with the discordant bass vibrations in the middle of "Echoes" as well the choral glissandos of its finale. Some argue that there are moments when the song and film soundtrack are nearly indistinguishable. Another notable link occurs during a change in scene at precisely the moment when guitar and keyboards crescendo as the lyrics re-enter for the final verse. Almost as a bonus, the early lyrics contain references to planets, which seems entirely suitable for the film's depiction of Jupiter and its moons. Adrian Maben re-created this marriage of music and image in his director's cut of Live at Pompeii using CGI. Computer-generated imagery (commonly abbreviated as CGI) is the application of the field of computer graphics (or more specifically, 3D computer graphics) to special effects in films, television programs, commercials, simulators and simulation generally, and printed media. ...
Although no member of the band has ever declared the synchronization intentional and the technology to play back film in a recording studio circa 1971 would have been expensive and difficult for the band to acquire, Roger Waters is sometimes quoted as saying that the band's failure to contribute music on 2001's official score was his "greatest regret"[5]. Kubrick would later ask the band if he could use portions of the Atom Heart Mother Suite in his film A Clockwork Orange. Pink Floyd turned him down on the grounds that the music would sound silly if excerpted out of context; nevertheless, a copy of Atom Heart Mother is displayed behind the counter of a record shop in the film. This article is about the film. ...
Atom Heart Mother is a 1970 (see 1970 in music) progressive rock album by Pink Floyd. ...
Years later, in an interesting postscript to the Kubrick/Floyd connection, Roger Waters asked the filmmaker's permission to include sound clips from Space Odyssey into his 1992 album Amused to Death. Waters' intention was to sample the dialogue and breathing sounds from the scene immediately prior to "Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite", when Dave Bowman deactivates the computer HAL 9000. These were to be mixed in during the instrumental introduction to "Perfect Sense, Part One". After much deliberation, permission was declined in the interest of upholding Kubrick's own precedent of not granting such requests. Instead, Waters inserted his own shouting, whispering and breathing in a backwards message that refers to Kubrick by his Christian name. However, a live recording from his 2000 solo tour uses the original film dialogue as Waters intended. Amused to Death is a solo album by former Pink Floyd member Roger Waters, released in 1992 (see 1992 in music). ...
HAL 9000 (Heuristically programmed ALgorithmic computer) is a fictional character in Arthur C. Clarkes Space Odyssey saga. ...
A hidden message is information that is not immediately noticeable, and that must be discovered or uncovered and interpreted before it can be known. ...
Returning from a 12 year long hiatus from the road, the In The Flesh tours were a showcase of Roger Waters best known work from his days with Pink Floyd to his recently released solo album Amused to Death. ...
The 1973 George Greenough film "Crystal Voyager" concludes with a 23 minute segment in which the full length of "Echoes" accompanies a montage of images shot by Greenough from a camera mounted on his back while surfing on his kneeboard. George Greenough is a surfer from Santa Barbara, California who now resides in Byron Bay in N.S.W Australia. ...
Plagiarism In interviews promoting Amused to Death, Waters asserted that Andrew Lloyd Webber had plagiarized themes from "Echoes" for sections of the musical The Phantom of the Opera; nevertheless, he decided not to file a lawsuit regarding the matter. Amused to Death is a solo album by former Pink Floyd member Roger Waters, released in 1992 (see 1992 in music). ...
Andrew Lloyd Webber, Baron Lloyd-Webber (born 22 March 1948) is a highly successful English composer of musical theatre, and also the elder brother of Julian Lloyd Webber. ...
The Black Crook (1866) is considered the first musical comedy Musical theatre is a form of theatre combining music, songs, spoken dialogue and dance. ...
The Phantom of the Opera is a musical by Andrew Lloyd Webber, based on the novel by French novelist Gaston Leroux. ...
Yeah, the beginning of that bloody Phantom song is from Echoes. *DAAAA-da-da-da-da-da* [sic]. I couldn't believe it when I heard it. It's the same time signature - it's 12/8 - and it's the same structure and it's the same notes and it's the same everything. Bastard. It probably is actionable. It really is! But I think that life's too short to bother with suing Andrew fucking Lloyd Webber.[6] Waters did, however, respond by adding a reference to Webber in the song It's a Miracle on the Amused to Death album ("Lloyd Webber's awful stuff runs for years and years and years / An earthquake hits the theatre but the operetta lingers / Then the piano lid comes down and breaks his fucking fingers. It's a Miracle").
Parody The final song ("Ooby-Scooby Doomsday Or The D-day DJ's Got The D.D.T. Blues") on the CD version of Gong's 1973 album Angel's Egg ends with an ascending glissando of male voices that is exactly like the finale of "Echoes". However, in Gong's rendition the glissando, beginning with "Ahhhhh", ends with "choooo", thus mimicking a long sneeze. This is only on the CD version of Angel's Egg. Gong is a progressive/psychedelic rock band formed by Australian musician Daevid Allen. ...
A jazz-rock / psychedelic / space rock album by Gong, recorded and originally released in 1973. ...
Personnel Piano, a well-known instance of keyboard instruments A keyboard instrument is any musical instrument played using a musical keyboard. ...
For other uses, see Singer (disambiguation). ...
For other uses, see Singer (disambiguation). ...
The classical guitar typically has nylon strings. ...
The electric bass guitar (or electric bass) is a bass stringed instrument played with the fingers by plucking, slapping, popping or using a pick. ...
The electric bass guitar (or electric bass) is a bass stringed instrument played with the fingers by plucking, slapping, popping or using a pick. ...
For other kinds of drums, see drum (disambiguation). ...
âPercussionâ redirects here. ...
References is the 241st day of the year (242nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 2006 (MMVI) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 2006 (MMVI) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
is the 153rd day of the year (154th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
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