Roger Waters - Sea Shell and Stone video free download


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Duration: 06:41
Uploaded: 2010/01/15

Taken from the film The Body. 1970's scientific documentary film directed and produced by Roy Battersby. In the film, external and internal cameras are used to showcase different parts of the human body. The film's narrators, Frank Finlay and Vanessa Redgrave, provide insightful commentary that combines the knowledge of world renowned human biologists and anatomical experts. Unlike similar films of this subject matter The Body gives an entertaining presentation of the human anatomy, and avoids monotone narration. The film's soundtrack Music from the Body was composed by Ron Geesin and Roger Waters, and includes songs that were literally made using the human body as a medium.

Comments

9 years ago

rofano lubis

wow .. i have this album on cassette .. really eager wants to see the movie .. wish you can share the full version on ... brilliant work between geesin n waters ... with good lyric .. hope someday they will be an upload pf a full movie for music from the body ..cheers

10 years ago

Benn Little

Greg - Roger cannot 'resurrect' PF - he left the band....althouugh he has the concert rights to The Wall, PF is Gilmour and Mason. It's discussed at length in several interviews with RW and DG....

10 years ago

FB Answers

This was one of the weirdest albums I ever owned. Wasn't there a tune on it called "More than seven sperms in penis land"?

10 years ago

Jokie X Wilson

:-{P}

10 years ago

MetallicBill

Actually, in a way Roger does work with people from his past, at least, some from Floyd like Snowy White, I seem to recall a Rockline caller asking Dave or Roger about working with members from a previous project. It's hard to remember details after all these years, but it's good to work with people you know no matter who you are or what the work! haha

10 years ago

GREG FREEMAN

What if either Roger Daltry or Pte Townsheand dies or just retire would it be right to still call the band The Who. I doubt Waters would ever resurrect Pink Floyd using musicians he's played with in the past. Sounds unethical and a cheat on the audience. Modern music is so bankrupt of substance that we wait for these few surviving artists to bring a little relief. Thankfully Elvis Costello is still out there. Tom Petty is still pretty good. I am very glad to have lived during the 70's.

10 years ago

MetallicBill

Watched a documentary about The Who detailing performances right after losing Keith Moon and John Entwistle where missing them was a tangible experience for the band, and more then any time before I felt that connection they must have shared and then missed, like losing a member of your family, but you love the music and have to keep on keeping on

10 years ago

MetallicBill

Agreed, I follow Pete and Roger of the Who, because I think without their bass and drummer they toured as a band with, they continue in a spirit of those musicians as they would have wanted them to, I feel in most cases, saying that is most likely the case. I think for the older musical artists, they might be inspired most by the unceasing demand to see these legends performing naturally on stage, as long as they're able for a one of a kind experience as such

10 years ago

GREG FREEMAN

But sadly there will be in all likelyhood no more Pink Floyd music. I keep a tiny flickering of hope that Waters and Gilmour mend those fences. I recall when Floyd and Waters were on tour at the same time and in a radio interview he stated that he was competing against himself and a fear that some entity calling itself Pink Floyd with people he never played with playing his songs. I guess it is valid concern which thankfully never came to pass. Like The Who. Half the band is gone. Is it right?

10 years ago

MetallicBill

The other song BREATHE (in the air) I have a feeling is too confusingly closely titled to the Dark Side of the Moon track, but it's every bit as good, I'd say, and I'm trying not to even be biased about it! haha

10 years ago

MetallicBill

The songs you mention are classic early PF, and I love that as much as anything, so I have to say, I still look forward to his continued recording, because with Dave Gilmour, you never know when he will retire, but at the time they battled for the Pink Floyd name and inflatables in court, Roger would complain that no one came to his shows because his anonymity paid off in the years as a member whereas going the solo route under his name confused casual fans of PF. That's his perception of it

10 years ago

GREG FREEMAN

I am really a faded fan of Roger Waters. It has been close to 20 years since he's put out any new music (I cannot include the opera) and all he has done is rehash old Pink Floyd albums. When I saw him over 15 years ago he played at least three quarters of The Wall and Dark Side and very little solo stuff. I have outgrown his doom and gloom hopeless music. I want the guy who wrote Green Is the Colour, Cymbaline, If, etc. Move on to a new topic, Mr. Waters. It is becoming self indulgent and boring

10 years ago

MetallicBill

airplay, much to his dismay (had to edit with the confines of YT comment boxes) Anyway, it was relating directly about how he comes up with songs and yet try and get them across to a large audience of people, I'd hoped everyone could be privy to those moments in rock history. I may have a tape archiving it somewhere

10 years ago

MetallicBill

We're getting off the video topic, but no matter, I would ask if you've had the ability to catch most of the syndicated radio interviews with Roger Waters? Remember ROCKLINE on FM radio? I don't know what happened to that fine show with plenty of cool interviews over the years, but Roger was on there getting a bit of joking about how one of the songs lacked the ability to dance to it, so as far as how he hoped to have a radio hit, he pointed out that Bryan Adams on his Wall album didn't get FM

10 years ago

GREG FREEMAN

I grew up during the 70's with the singer/songwriter era so I have nothing against people writing personal music but there needs to be something the listeners can indentify with, it cannot be so idiosycratic that it alienates. The goal should be to communicate the ideas. The reason I cannot listen to many modern female singers is that the songs songs like diary entries and will appeal solely to those individuals who share these same issues and excludes all others from understanding. It failss

10 years ago

MetallicBill

Saw a Crosby Stills and Nash video tour documentary that encompassed a lot of anti- this, anti that in terms of politics and what not, I could see people were agitated for the same reasons you mention, some even leaving a show they paid money to see, but an artist simply CANNOT cater to an audience, David Gilmour said this same thing on the Time Life Rock and Roll video series in the 1990s, saying it was a "fools game to second guess the public' in terms of trying to play to trends and tastes

10 years ago

MetallicBill

For Roger Waters it's deeply personal and like an artist hardships often translate to songs, this is true of more then just Pink Floyd, but life and it's implications permeate the theme of Dark Side of the Moon, and that's why it stands the test of time, because these are things people also relate to, as is war and growing up without a normal family is also one, so I would never presume to tell him how to create what is personal art first and foremost

10 years ago

GREG FREEMAN

It becomes morbid and dull to listen to the same themes repeated over and over. War is a horrible waste of human life, yes, no argument here. I think one of his best songs on the subject is The Bravery of Being Out of Range from Amused to Deeath. The imagery is concise and without heavy handed commentary. He is a great songwriter when he restrains himself and allows the listener to draw their own conclusions and emotions on a subject. No one likes being lectured to. A good song provokes thought.

10 years ago

MichaelHansenFUN

I have a copy of the original VHS of that also this film here was posted on here till multiple violations gt it taken down

10 years ago

MetallicBill

Did I mention Zabriskie Point came out on LaserDisc? It's something I'd collect if I come across it again at some point. One of the last years of LDs in America, sadly

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