There's
only one person on earth who doesn't love Dave Gilmour, a man who very much
likes to walk smiling among the masses, to entertain and charm the pants off
all he surveys. Gilmour is unflappable; he is approachable, gorgeous and gorgeously
well-heeled.
for Roger Waters, the world's staunch holdout, that probably translates as smug, opportunistic and mercenary, which just shows the extent to which the central theme of Pink Floyd-disillusioned idealism turned rage-could direct the lives of the men behind it.
Waters' lyrics, brutal pleas for basic human values, drew the sight lines of Floyd's vision; Gilmour's untortured delivery drew for waters a pop-viable frame. Waters quit in 1986, taking with him the standoffish, surreal half of the band's identity, and when he learned that Dave, drummer Nick Mason and keyboardist Rick Wright intended to continue as Pink Floyd, the battle lines practically drew themselves. a breakup riddled with sentimentality for millions of listeners became an unsentimental battle between Waters' Pink Floyd ideal and Gilmour's tenacious pragmatism.
Gilmour has been fortunate; the mollifying familiarity of his singing and playing was the title deed to Pink Floyd. Gilmour is a guitarist first and an orchestrater second, maybe third; the lengthy sessions for post-Waters a momentary lapse of reason confirmed this. He's not quite as motivated a lyricist as a conversationalist-he's an improviser, not a resolute ponderer. The Waters concepts that built pink Floyd were themselves built on small moments, on details of everyday confrontation; Dave's lyrics toy with generalities, though they are rendered somewhat less pointedly than his personal views of his life and band.
Floyd's video La Courier Pan Americana, documenting an auto race he and Mason drove across Mexico last year, is cause to wonder if Dave still has a bead on his audience-and whether fans in middle America awaiting their first hit of Floyd in five years could appreciate a rich man's interest in driving around with bad radio reception on hot sticky seats for a week. Is this the Gilmour idealism? maybe, but in the final account, Dave is a fabulous musician, and if he can't-or won't-hang the world out to twist in the wind for its own folly, he'll at least have it filling arenas to watch him not do it.
Yes, there's only one person in the world who doesn't love David Gilmour, and he shares with Dave the one thing neither shares with anyone else: the right to determine what, or if, Pink Floyd is. Waters ultimately had too much respect for the band-and for himself-to expect Floyd to survive him; Gilmour had too much concern for his career to let a good thing go. But stealing your own legacy is no crime. Waters always made the plea to connect, but never actually made the connection. Gilmour was his conduit; now the conduit has become the whole. isn't rebirth pressure enough? Even Roger Waters, who asserted for 20 years that humans are bound undignifiably to human nature, would concede that Dave is just doing his job.
MUSICIAN: A Momentary Lapse of Reason didn't seem to attempt a dramatic
overhaul of the band's style. Did you feel pressure to create a new direction
or breathe something new into Pink Floyd? Or did you have something to prove?
GILMOUR: I obviously had something to prove in that Roger was no
longer a part of it and obviously I had the view that people may have misunderstood
or misread the way it had been with him within our history. It was quite important
to me to prove that there was something serious still going on there. It was
"Life After Rog," you know. I don't know about any particular change of direction.
MUSICIAN: The standout track was "A New Machine, "at the end (4
which you suggest that we're caught, trapped by ourselves. I wasn't clear
if it was an optimistic comment about self-acceptance or a cry o] imprisonment.
That ambiguity-and that very message-is something Pink Floyd. with or without
Waters, has never abandoned.
GILMOUR: That's right.
MUSICIAN: Was the message positive or negative?
GILMOUR: I don't know if I want to get into that. Whether you want
to take it as optimistic or not... I mean, a lot of people didn't use it as
an excuse to go and jump off a cliff or something, did they?
MUSICIAN: On "Sorrow, "where everything "flows to an oily sea, "I
was thinking of your friend Pete Townshend's river motif You guys both own
floating recording studios that moor on the Thames, and the river figures
in pretty prominently. In "Sorrow" the sea is dark and troubled, while Pete's
was a welcoming sea.
GILMOUR: "The Sea Refuses No River." Yeah, yeah. "Sorrow" was a
poem I'd written as a lyric before I wrote music to it, which is rare for
me. The river's a very, very common theme; rivers are a very symbolic, attractive
way of expressing all sorts of things. There's a Randy Newman song, 'In Germany
Before the War' where he talks about a little girl who gets killed by an old
pervert. "I'm looking at the river but thinking of the sea." The chorus I
just love; the river has nothing directly to do with it, but sums it up perfectly.
MUSICIAN: Is your boat near Townshend's?
GILMOUR: Yeah, a couple of miles up the river. Peter's boat is a
big steel-hull barge. His main studio is not on the boat, his Eel Pie Studio
is right by the mooring. In my case, I just happened to find this beautiful
boat that was built as a houseboat and was very cheap, so I bought it. And
only afterward did I think I could maybe use it to record. The control room
is a 30-toot x 20-foot room. It's a very comfortable working environment-
three bedrooms, kitchen, bathroom, a big lounge. It's 90 feet long.
MUSICIAN: Might you record the next Pink Floyd record there?
GILMOUR: We would do a lot of it, yes. We did a lot of early work
on the last album there. And I'd like to work with people playing together
in a room next time, so if I need to add the vocals I can do all the incidental
bits there. Things like the solo at the end of "Sorrow" were done on the boat,
my guitar going through a little Gallien-Krueger amp.
MUSICIAN: Townshend wrote lyrics to two songs on your solo album
About Face. You and he have both alternated between doing your own records
and being the force behind a very successful band.
GILMOUR: I think Pete feels some restrictions on what he likes to
do with the Who, as I guess we all feel restrictions within everything we
~attempt, just because of the types of personalities and role you've created
for yourself. I know he's felt uncomfortable about certain things- things
he could express in solo stuff. For me, the restriction was the scale of what
Pink Floyd had become more than anything. It's nice to get out and do something
on a slightly different scale; go out and do theaters, which is not really
a possibility with Pink Floyd, until we get a lot less popular.
MUSICIAN: So the grand scale is important to you?
GILMOUR: I like the grand scale of Pink Floyd. A lot of people want
to buy tickets and see that stuff. And that carries a responsibility which
doesn't fall on me when I go out on my own. It's a change, it's nice.
MUSICIAN: But even so, you did most of the work on Momentary Lapse.
Nick Mason admits to being an ancillary part of the band and Rick Wright had
for all intents and purposes been gone since 1980. That last Floyd album was
a project you cooked up and realized with the help of session musicians and
one other lyricist. Aside from the name Pink Floyd and the business considerations,
it was a David Gilmour solo album.
GILMOUR: Well, I don't know what is a solo album and what isn't,
really. I approached that album like I would have approached a Pink Floyd
album and I approach a solo album as I would approach a solo album. There's
a difference in thought process in the way you go into these things. But yeah,
in some ways it could have been. Yeah. And one could say that on my last solo
album I could have steered more towards Pink Floyd than I did. Maybe it would
have sold a few more, who knows?
MUSICIAN: "Murder, "from About Face, certainly had the elements.
GILMOUR: I steered those things away from the Pink Floyd because...
I don't know why, I just felt like doing that at the time. But there's nothing
within the Pink Floyd sound that I don't like. I'm not faking or having to
do anything any different to do a Pink Floyd record. And we never sat down
and said, "God, this doesn't sound Pink Floyd enough-let's do this to make
it sound more Pink Floyd."
MUSICIAN: If there was a formula for the Floyd, 'Murder "fits it:
a plaintive acoustic section, a statement, a sudden band entry, some kind
of guitar solo and a restatement of a more universal theme based on the first.
Yet that formula was not as present on Momentary Lapse. Did you find that
during the conception of the record you were fumbling with the idea of what
Pink Floyd should or shouldn't be once you took over?
GILMOUR: No. I didn't do that at all. I simply thought, 'Are these
songs good?" and worked on trying to make the ones I thought were good into
a record. It can't help sounding quite a bit like Pink Floyd if it's got my
voice and my guitar playing on it anyway. Why my second solo album and this
one should have a different sound to them, I don't really know. I think it's
just in my attitude towards it. On the solo one, I was actually steering a
bit away from it, a little more rock 'n' roll.
MUSICIAN: The beginning of "Short and Sweet, "]from your first solo
record, sounds like the germ of "Run Like Hell."
GILMOUR: Yes, it's a guitar with the bottom string tuned down to
1), and thrashing around on chord shapes over a D root. Which is the same
in both. [smiling] It's part of my musical repertoire, yes.
MUSICIAN: For a "progressive rocker" you don't play atonally; the
only time I've noticed it is in the fadeout on "You Know I'm Right." You rarely
get anarchic.
GILMOUR: I have a keen sense of melody. I don't want to be experimental
to the extent of doing things I don't like. I do do a lot of that stuff in
the studio when I'm mucking about; you just don't get to hear it, 'cause that's
when I'm searching. By the time they get out as finished product I've ironed
them into stuff I like. New Machine" has a sound I've never heard anyone do.
The noise gates, the Vocoders, is opened up something new which to me seemed
like a wonderful sound effect that no one had done before; it's innovation
of a sort. But exploring live in front of an audience, the way we did in the
'60s and very early '70s, you make as many mistakes as you get things right.
A lot of it was awful, [chuckles] and I just don't feel like being that person
anymore. That was then, and that part is done.
MUSICIAN: Coming from R&B cover bands, were you disconcerted by
the wayward improvising of those shows, or did you relish the challenge?
GILMOUR: I had a large background in improvisation, but I didn't
think ~slot of it that the Pink Floyd were doing was very good. And yes, it
took me a while before I felt I understood where they were trying to get to
and it took a while for me to try and change it into something I liked as
well. It was a process working two ways after I joined: me trying to change
it, and it trying and succeeding in changing me.
MUSICIAN: You opened the sound up; it was initially very dense late'60s
English pop music.
GILMOUR: The band felt we achieved something with the title track
of A Saucerful of Secrets. I can't say as I fully understood what was going
on when it was being made, with Roger sitting around drawing little diagrams
on bits of paper. But throughout the following period I tried to add what
I knew of harmony and bring it slightly more mainstream, if you like. And
the way they worked certainly educated me. We passed on all our individual
desires, talents and knowledge to each other.
MUSICIAN: Was Roger an effective bassist back then?
GILMOUR: He had developed his own limited, or very simple style.
He was never very keen on improving himself as a bass player and half the
time I would play the bass on the records because I would tend to do it quicker.
Right back to those early records; I mean, at least half the bass on all the
recorded output is me anyway.
MUSICIAN: This is not a widely acknowledged fact.
GILMOUR: Well, I think it's been said, but it's certainly not something
we go around advertising. Rog used to come in and say "Thank you very much"
to me once in a while for winning him bass-playing polls.
MUSICIAN: Did you play the fretless bass on "Hey You"?
GILMOUR: Yeah. Hmm. Roger playing fretless bass? Please! [laughs]
MUSICIAN: Do you think any of the aberrations in his lyrical ideas
were an attempt to contrive the kind of madness Syd Barrett communicated?
GILMOUR: I think there's something to that. How far you want to
go I don't really know, but yes, I think there's certainly something to that.
MUSICIAN: Did you find any of the stranger lyrics tough to stomach?
GILMOUR: No, very few. Once in a while I would find something uncomfortable
to sing. The first lot Roger wrote for "Dogs," when it was called "You Gotta
Be Crazy," were just too many words to sing. But most of the ideas were ideas
I felt good about, and encapsulated a lot of the thinking that I had as well.
I often wished I had been able to express them as well as he did.
MUSICIAN: The potency of your creative relationship would lead an
outsider to think that maybe his not wanting you to continue Pink Floyd was
simply because he didn't want to see it exist without the Roger Waters/David
Gilmour collaboration-nor just because he thought it shouldn't go on without
him.
GILMOUR: He didn't want it to continue with the Roger Waters/David
Gilmour collaboration; he wanted it to continue with the Roger Waters-only
writing force. He didn't want me to be part of it, which is why it got so
difficult in the end. And the reason he didn't want us to carry on was because
he wanted to go out as "Roger Waters of Pink Floyd" in rather large letters
and kind of purloin the name for himself. MUSICIAN: Yet looking at his solo
records, he doesn't seem egomaniacal: He doesn't proselytize, he doesn't have
any photos of himself on the sleeve.
GILMOUR: Hmm. He is an egomaniac, whatever particular wax it wants
to manifest itself.
MUSICIAN: But he eventually relented and let you he.
GILMOUR: I think his lawyers advised him that he wasn't going to
have any prayer of winning, and in the end we paid him off anyway. It was
not a court ease he had any chance of winning whatsoever. I mean, in what
basis could someone leave something that had been successfully operating for
a large number of years and then say the other people in it couldn't carry
on? That isn't the way the world works. Fortunately.
MUSICIAN: Some would say the band's magic existed in the interplay.
GILMOUR: That is suggesting that if it carried on, it would be a
good thing. No one is really arguing that point. The point is that I hadn't
had enough of it, it was my career. Nick hadn't had enough of it. Why should
we be forced not to do it anymore? Whether it's as good or not afterwards
is really kind of beside the point. To me.
MUSICIAN: Really?
GILMOUR: Yes. Whether it's as good to as many people's taste is
beside the point. It they doesn't like it as much, they don't have to buy
it. But no one can tell me to stop doing it. I do my very, very best to make
it as well as I can, to make the records and put on a show. I still fail to
see why morally I should be persuaded to give up something I've given most
of my adult life to, just 'cause one guy doesn't feel like doing it anymore.
MUSICIAN: Except simply the fact that you could both have gone on
to solo careers and left Pink Floyd, the creative dynamic between you, as
a very pleasing piece of history.
GILMOUR: Yeah, yeah, that's quite true; one could have done that.
But why? Why would I want to do that? It's very, very hard work to struggle
a solo career up to the level that Pink Floyd stands at.
MUSICIAN: But even so, wasn't the effort inputting on the last tour-
traveling, fighting Roger's injunctions, worrying about re-acceptance- as
draining as pushing on alone?
GILMOUR: I didn't want to! I like the Pink Floyd very much. I don't
want to get over-defensive about what I felt like doing, but it is what I
do and I feel I should carry undoing it. And bring back into it the people
who were pushed out. It would take a book to tell what went on within our
hand, and Roger's later megalomaniac years, and precisely what psychologically
he was attempting to do to all of us. Because he is a megalomaniac. He really
is. His thirst for power is more important than anything else-more important
than honesty, that's for certain.
MUSICIAN: Well, he donated a lot of money to charity. And one symptom
of megalomania is all-possessing greed.
GILMOUR: Well, yeah. What money did he donate to charity?
MUSICIAN: The Berlin Wall proceeds.
GILMOUR: You think that donated a lot of money to charity?
MUSICIAN: Certainly the TV rights, and the record sales, which were
respectable, brought it in. It was a mammoth thing.
GILMOUR: It was a mammoth thing, from what I understand. And from
what I understand the costs of putting it on were absolutely enormous, and
the receipts in were nothing like enormous, and the record didn't sell terribly
well. TV rights were sold at the very last minute for very low money, because
TV rights are not very easy to sell, I can tell you. [chuckles] There's lots
of stories about people not having been paid. Sorry, I don't want to get too
heavily into that, but I suspect that the motivation for putting the Wall
show on in Berlin was not charitable. I don't think that was Roger's motivation
at all.
MUSICIAN: Were your two or three songs' worth of publishing royalties
from that record paid to you after the broadcast?
GILMOUR: I have no idea. I don't know, I didn't check whether money
for performing rights came my way or not. [laughs]
MUSICIAN: Have you been writing for a new Floyd record?
GILMOUR: I've been writings hit. I've spent time in the studio fiddling
,around, lint lot really doing anything serious. Until it feels right. That
last Pink Floyd project took a lot out of me. I haven't been in any great
hurry to do it all again. I'm not a big workaholic. I've written quite a few
things, but a lot is not complete-which really requires me to sit down in
a studio and start finding a direction and the desire to do it, which has
been lacking in me. I'm beginning to feel it starting to trickle back. The
last tour was a very long hard road and it took away my taste for it for a
while. I've been busy flying airplanes and driving cars and enjoying those
things. I'm 46, and being in Pink Floyd is not something I wish to take up
all my waking hours or take up all my life.
MUSICIAN: Was it always all-consuming?
GILMOUR: Yeah. Really, all the things we've done have been all-consuming
affairs for a while, but have never been quite as high-pressure; it was hard
to put the last one together because it was a lonelier task. I mean, I don't
know what it was like for Roger because I'm not Roger, but he may have felt
the same pressures doing things like The Wall. When Roger was writing The
Wall he had a band and experience, including my abilities, to help him achieve
those things. Making this last one, it was very much me on my own. There was
quite a lot of weight on my shoulders, as s you would imagine.
MUSICIAN: There's the corporate pressure...
GILMOUR: There's no real corporate pressure.
MUSICIAN: When you brought in A Momentary Lapse of Reason, there
was absolutely no concern that it echo the Pink Floyd sound?
GILMOUR: Oh, well, I don't take any notice of record companies,
they just make the records. They never get any say in it. They don't usually
get to listen to any of it until it's finished, and until such a day comes
as they make a loss on one of our records, which they've never done, it'll
stay that way. [laughs]
MUSICIAN: Does the fact that it's almost a guaranteed smash take
away some of the more desirable uncertainty about being a rock musician~
GILMOUR: It's not a guaranteed smash. I mean, The Wall certainly
did very well. The follow-up to it, The Final Cut, didn't, and following on
from that one, with Roger gone, and the previous album having not done terribly
well, I don't think any of us were thinking we were onto any guaranteed sales
whatsoever. Certainly, I would have been surprised if it had sold less than
a million around the world. My two solo records sold three-quarters of a million
each, and the Pink Floyd name on top of that would have added a little. But
we had no serious guarantees in undertaking this project. A lot of people
didn't buy The Final Cut.
MUSICIAN: It was a good record.
GILMOUR: Yeah, but it only sold about fifth of The Wall, really.
I'm not talking about quality, although I personally don't like it; there
were three good songs, then just rather average filler. In terms of numbers,
it was the worst sales we had since before Dark Side of the Moon.
MUSICIAN: Have you given thought to what kind of production the
next album will be? I would personally rather listen to an album like I)avid
Gilmour than one like A Momentary Lapse of Reason; my taste goes away from
bombast and towards the sound created by a smaller number of musinans, doing
it in an apparently spontaneous way. Now that you've established that Floyd
can continue, is the possibility of what Floyd could do.
GILMOUR: I don't see any change in the philosophy of where it comes
from. The way of recording, the way we go through it, I suspect may change
a hit. I'm very, very keen on doing it much more live, in-the-studio with
people actually playing together. But when we get half a dozen people in the
studio and playing together it does tend to start getting weighty and big.
So I guess that's just the way I like it. On the Momentary Lapse of Reason
album Nick's belief in himself was pretty well gone, and Rick's belief in
himself was totally gone. And they weren't up to making a record, to be quite
honest about it.
MUSICIAN: You mean the physical act of keeping time, or playing
piano?
GILMOUR: Yeah, I mean, Rick really just didn't believe he could
play. You see, this is part of what had been going on for years. Roger's very
good at belittling people, and I think over the years he managed to convince
Rick completely that he was useless and more or less had convinced Nick of
the same thing. And they both did not play a major part on that record. But
we put a touring band together, and I got Gary [Wallis] to back up Nick on
percussion and drums, and I got Jon Carin to help out on keyboard stuff, and
at the beginning, they played strong roles-in playing drum parts, in Gary's
case, and keyboard parts in Join's. But by halfway through the first leg of
the tour, Nick was starting to believe in himself again. And by the time we
did the live album at the end of the first year, they were both playing absolutely
great, and the drumming on the live album is all straight Nick. And Rick's
playing is great. Now, two years later than that, we went into the studio
at Christmas to do these tracks [for the video] and they just picked up and
played fantastic. There's been a rehabilitation through the touring and the
project that has been not far short of miraculous, in my view. It has been
a great thrill and has given me the confidence to make the next album the
way we did these things at Christmas.
MUSICIAN: So on the new record you'll take a freer approach?
GILMOUR: I don't know. You are putting words into my mouth there.
I said I want to do it with a band playing in a studio; how much work it'll
take before we get to that point, I don't know. Now that I've got Rick and
Nick rehabilitated and playing as well as they've ever played, and I've got
these good, younger characters to help fill it out and do stuff with me, we
can go in with a sense of fun and still get to the end product.
MUSICIAN: Are you considering a concept record?
GILMOUR: Concept, [hippie accent] a concept record. Umm. I'm considering
all sorts of things, and that's one of the things under consideration, yes.
I've kind of got one, but I'm certainly not going to tell you about it. [laughs]
It's premature for any announcements.
MUSICIAN: You envision another tour?
GILMOUR: Yeah. I don't think I could handle another tour doing the
same material. And having moved from a Pink Floyd that did basically the newest
album on all our old tours to a sort of greatest-hits show last time, I couldn't
do that same show. And we did pick all the numbers we liked-more than we felt
justified in doing-that I had sung or had major involvement m.
MUSICIAN: If Nick decided he didn't want to do it, would you still
do it as Pink Floyd?
GILMOUR: Yeah, I think so. But I don't think that's a problem. I
want Nick and Rick to do it. You can never quite tell what makes something
have its magic, and the more you fuck with it, the more you get away from
that. And I don't want to fuck with it. I like it as is. I liked it when Roger
was there too, but that's outside my control. What I can do to maintain it
is what I'm doing.
MUSICIAN: "Money" is in 7/4 time. Initially, Roger's sense of song
form was somewhat elastic.
GILMOUR: He was always a big fan of John Lennon, and was very keen
on changing rhythms in the middle of songs. And Syd. Syd used to sing a lyric
till he finished it and then change. There are old songs of Syd's in which
you can't count how many beats are in the bar- drummers would have hell trying
to get through these things. I was always keen on changing from 4/4 time to
a triplet 3 time, which were considered against each other. I don't know where
Roger came up with the 7 time for "Money"; I've got the demo tape of it someplace.
It's funny. It's just him and a double-tracked acoustic guitar. On "Mother"
the timing follows the words: "Mo-ther-do-you-think-they'll-drop-the bomb?"
How many beats is that? Nine. It was very, very difficult to get it to work.
You can't [mimes standard Floyd 4]-there's no rhythm that carries on straight
through like that. You've got to find a way of floating through it, which
[session drummer] Jeff Porcaro did immediately.
MUSICIAN: I had no idea session musicians played on The Wall. Nobody
other than singers was credited.
GILMOUR: Yeah, there were quite a few on there. There's a guy playing
the Spanish guitar on "Is There Anybody Out There?"; I could play it with
a leather pick but couldn't play it properly finger style. I got a rhythm
player in on "One of My Turns" because I couldn't think of a good part to
play. [laughs] Lee Ritenour played that part on the last half of that, and
we had a Hammond organ player, Freddie Mandell, on 'In the Flesh." Don't ask
me why. [laughs] Who else was on there? Loads of singers, Toni Tennille and
Bruce, from the Beach Boys. From Dark Side of the Moon on we had backing singers
and a sax player added. On the Animals tour we had singers, a sax and a guitar
player. And on the Wall tour we had everyone doubled up. It's been moving
at a steady progression since Dark Side. I have no pride about this sort of
thing. I've thought of parts that I can't play. If I can't play it I'll get
someone else to. Why not? I don't worry about that stuff, really. You're trying
to get something that's in your head out into other people's heads. Any way
of doing that is cool with me. Like I say, the objective is to achieve what
you're trying to do on tape, and if that involves using other musicians, then
so be it. I have no shame about it whatsoever.
MUSICIAN: What was challenging about setting Roger's lyrics to music?
Did you work with him or bring together individual ideas?
GILMOUR: Usually the music got written and the lyrics came afterwards.
On "Wish You Were Here," he wrote the song to the rhythm of the intro. We
changed things until they started sounding nice. "Dogs" had so many words,
I physically couldn't get them all in. [We] just cut out two-thirds of his
words, to make it possible rather than impossible. We had few big arguments
or disagreements. We argued over "Comfortably Numb" like mad. Really had a
big fight, went on for ages. We recorded two versions. We took a drum fill
from one take and had to cut the 16-track tape in half-we'd edit like this-run
the razor along the middle and then insert a piece of tape one inch wide into
the other piece to put a drum fill in on another track. That's what we used
to call a window edit.
MUSICIAN: What part of the song?
GILMOUR: I can't remember. These things that seem so important at
the time, I can hardly remember why one thought they were. [laughs] I doubt
if I could even tell the difference these days. I mean, they were exactly
the same tempo; one was just a little looser-I'd call it a sloppier version
myself, and I liked it slightly tighter. Roger liked the looser one. They
were both recorded to the same demo; we had a demo of it on a four-track tape.
We would get a basic drum track. Then we'd have an acoustic guitar, a guitar
and a vocal, and a drum machine pumping, and we'd just play away to that guide
and record.
MUSICIAN: Do you think your being the only vocalist in Pink Floyd
works, and can work as a rule? A cynic could say that your highly processed
vocals on "A New Machine" are an attempt to sound eccentric and shrill, perhaps
like Waters at his more theatric trying to create variety.
GILMOUR: Would you say so? I don't know. I don't think so. I mean,
I sang 'Money," that's fairly strident. I sang most of the early stuff, on
Meddle, Dark Side of the Moon, Wish You Were Here. It's never occurred to
me to think about that. I think it's harder to sit through a whole album of
Roger's voice than of mine. I always felt our two voices worked very well
as counterpoints, but we don't have that option, so...
MUSICIAN: So things are unpatchable between the two of you.
GILMOUR: Yeah. You could safely say that.
MUSICIAN: And even after Roger, Rick's not been reinstated as an
equal.
GILMOUR: No, Rick's in there. There are one or two legal things
slightly unresolved from Rick's agreement when Roger threw him out in 1979,
and there are other reasons of his. Mostly that he didn't want to get involved
in the lawsuits, so he was not involved in the risk, in any possible loss
financially, and consequently reaped less of the profits, which Nick and I
took more of, as we were the ones who put all the money up to put the record
and the tour together. The record company gave us an advance when we delivered
the record, which covered all the recording costs. And then the tour was a
load of money to) put together under threat of lawsuit and the injunctions
from Roger which could save stopped the whole thing. And if we couldn't get
the receipts in from the shows, our accounts were shot down and we could have
lost everything. A waste. I'm sure we could have gotten someone else to put
up the money, but anyone who puts up money wants a large slice of the profits.
And I believed in it totally. I knew we were going to do well, so screw it.
MUSICIAN: Your prospects are better now.
GILMOUR: Yeah. As I'm not under any imminent threat of a lawsuit,
it's not a problem.
MUSICIAN: And Rick's not involved even after the disposal of those
problems?
GILMOUR: Well, I'm a really selfish person, and Rick is not realistically
going to put in as much effort next time as I do. I'm very happy for Rick
to be part of it all, but I can't see any point... it's still my Idea, and
a lot of my life, and I didn't fight my way through all that lot just to start
handing out larger chunks than they deserve to anyone who comes around. [laughs]
If that sounds ruthless, it's not-it's just the hard reality. Rick is happy
to sail off on his yacht and be part of this thing, and earn very good money
out of it. He doesn't like shouldering responsibility, so it's a very good
arrangement.
MUSICIAN: You don't seem nostalgic for the days of the teenage rock
group.
GILMOUR: I've got some nostalgia for it, you know, but I'm 46, it's
a different era. There's lots of kids developing their own nostalgia for their
things; there are people living that stuff. I mean, it's stupid to pretend.
We're not a teenage pop group. We are a big old dinosaur, and it takes a lot
of work to get it lumbering on its feet. It's not the same thing as it was.
But I still love it.
Phil Taylor, Gilmour's longtime tech, asserts a philosophy based on the shortest, cleanest signal path, via guitar, cable, amp, speakers. Well, almost. In Dave's case, the guitar is a '57 Strat reissue with EMG SA pickups, an EXG expander and an SPC mid boost. Onstage, things get complex thereafter. His pedalboard is a giant effects loop: Two Boss CS2 compressors and a Digital Metalizer, an lbanez Tube Screamer, a Rat II, a t.c. electronics line driver and a Big Muff are all EQ'd separately by modified Boss GE7s. The distortion pedals get smoothed by a Beagle Studio 22 preamp. Next is an Alembic F2B preamp with an extra tube for lower impedance and a Summit Audio F100 EQ. The signal then goes to a modified Ernie Ball volume pedal, splits into t.c. 2290, Lexicon PCM70 and MXR Daisy System delays and is summed with the dry signal. Two Hiwatt 100-watt heads with Mullard EL34s power two Celestion-loaded Marahall 4x12 bottoms and two Fane Crescendo-loaded Wem 4x12 tops-a stack on each side. The left power stack is chorused by a CE2 for fatness. Dave sets delay times and patches through a Custom Audio Electronics pedalboard, substantially modified by Taylor and Pete Cornish to include a high-end audio routing system with gold-plated relays. At home Dave fiddles with a Zoom 9030, a GK 250ML, a '59 Fender Bassman, a Hiwatt SA212 and a Sansamp. He uses GHS Boomers. Oh yes, he also owns the first Fender Strat ever made-serial number 001.