Pink Floyd - The Dark Side of the Moon - The Great Gig In The Sky (FLAC) video free download


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Duration: 04:45
Uploaded: 2014/12/14

Pink Floyd - The Dark Side of the Moon - The Great Gig In The Sky (FLAC)

Comments

6 years ago

Louis Griffin

I only 3, have autism, am mentally retarded, and have been living under a rock and i was born in the wrong generation. Leave a like if u agree

6 years ago

Rockin Atheist

The song began life as a Richard Wright chord progression, known variously as "The Mortality Sequence" or "The Religion Song". During 1972 it was performed live as a simple organ instrumental, accompanied by spoken-word samples from the Bible and snippets of speeches by Malcolm Muggeridge, a British writer known for his conservative religious views. When the band came to record Dark Side in 1973, the lead instrument had been switched to a piano. Various sound effects were tried over the track, including recordings of NASA astronauts communicating on space missions, but none were satisfactory. Finally, a couple of weeks before the album was due to be finished, the band thought of having a female singer "wail" over the music.Clare Torry's vocalsAs the band began casting around for a singer, album engineer Alan Parsons suggested Clare Torry, a 25-year-old songwriter and session vocalist. Parsons had previously worked with Torry, and had liked her voice on a compilation album of covers.[3] An accountant from Abbey Road Studios called Dennis contacted Torry and tried to arrange a session for the same evening, but she was initially unenthusiastic. Torry was not a particular fan of Pink Floyd, and she had various other commitments, including, she later admitted, tickets to see Chuck Berry that evening.[4] Eventually, however, a session was scheduled for the following Sunday.The band played the instrumental track for Torry and asked her to improvise a vocal. At first, Torry struggled to divine what the band wanted, but then she was inspired to pretend that she herself was an instrument.[5] She performed two complete takes, the second one more emotional than the first. David Gilmour asked for a third take, but halfway through Torry stopped, feeling she was getting repetitive and had already done the best she could. The final album track was assembled from all three takes. The members of the band were deeply impressed by Torry's performance, but were so reserved in their outward response that she left under the impression that her vocals would never make the final cut.[6] She only became aware they were used when she saw the album at a local record store, spotted her name in the credits and purchased it.

6 years ago

Peter Vr

I love the hammond on the background!!!!!!!

6 years ago

Jadran Pandurevic

you gotta be on something to truly understand this song,,, its an indescribable feeeling, you actually start to float , I was 20 something on some indian/afgani shit, and somebody played this song, i thought i died and went to heaven, your mind transcends all dimensions. Its well known everybody involved in making this song, album was on lsd. This piece will live for eternity.

6 years ago

Captin Bob

Hard to believe this was a improv... the person at the recording desk literally turned to them and said 'ok go' and pressed record and they did this. Amazing. Only true musicians can do this!

7 years ago

FlaviA GDíaz

Ahahaha.... eterno... lo mejor en quejidos, gemidos, gritos... .. después la calma... Pink Floyd inmortal...

7 years ago

pupper

>FLACYou mean 196kbps AAC? Because that's what all audio on youtube is encoded to, you donkey.

7 years ago

Danyel Pacheco

La voz que hizo llorar al álbum :')

7 years ago

Mag Suns

ah the noisee man..

7 years ago

varun nakkeerran

please listen to AAROMALE from vinnai thandi varuvaya by ARRAHMAN.....

7 years ago

chase88cox

memory's ❤

7 years ago

pc c

cool ever

7 years ago

Chris GN'R14

7 years ago

Valentina Astudillo

alto viaje

7 years ago

Alto

Great emotions!

7 years ago

Manuel Ascui

Timeless

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