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muadib says...

Con Gilmour tocando (como dirĂ­a Pappo) 'el pianito ese'

Filed under: pink floyd

A couple of days late for Remembrance Day, but I was busy celebrating a birthday after a moment of silence at 11am. Every November 11th, I think of Pink Floyd for this three minute song: a stirring indictment of a young boy who blames the powerbrokers for taking his dad into the service during WWII.

"The song sets up the story premise for The Wall movie, set over footage recreating the British contribution to the Anzio campaign's Operation Shingle, where Allied forces landed on the beaches near Anzio, Italy with the goal of eventually liberating Rome from German control. These forces included C Company of the Royal Fusiliers, in which Waters' father Eric served. As Waters tells it, the forward commander had asked to withdraw his forces from a German Tiger I tank assault, but the generals refused, and "the Anzio bridgehead was held for the price / Of a few hundred ordinary lives" as the Tigers eventually broke through the British defence, killing all of C Company, including Eric Waters.

In the second verse of the song (which makes up the reprise later in The Wall film), Waters describes how he found a letter of condolence from the British government, described as a note from King George in the form of a gold leaf scroll which "His Majesty signed / In his own rubber stamp." Waters' resentment then explodes in the final line "And that's how the High Command took my Daddy from me". - Wikipedia

When the Tigers Broke Free
(Roger Waters)

It was just before dawn
One miserable morning in black 'forty four.
When the forward commander
Was told to sit tight
When he asked that his men be withdrawn.
And the Generals gave thanks
As the other ranks held back
The enemy tanks for a while.
And the Anzio bridgehead
Was held for the price
Of a few hundred ordinary lives.

And kind old King George
Sent Mother a note
When he heard that father was gone.
It was, I recall,
In the form of a scroll,
With gold leaf and all.
And I found it one day
In a drawer of old photographs, hidden away.
And my eyes still grow damp to remember
His Majesty signed
With his own rubber stamp.

It was dark all around.
There was frost in the ground
When the tigers broke free.
And no one survived
From the Royal Fusiliers Company C.
They were all left behind,
Most of them dead,
The rest of them dying.
And that's how the High Command
Took my daddy from me.

Filed under: pink floyd

David says...

<p>The Dark Side of Planet Earth from allan corbett on Vimeo.</p>

Filed under: pink floyd

scoblitz says...

A Momentary Lapse of Reason - Pink Floyd

a shell of a band
leaving no doubt which one's pink
big disappointment

Filed under: pink floyd

shagg_187 says...

On the way back home, this is the song that supported me. This might possibly be my favorite Pink Floyd song.

From their album The Division Bell (with Richard Wright on vocals), this is the song of the day. Can't believe it was written in 1994.

He's starting to choke, It's been so long since he spoke

Well he can have the words right from my mouth

Filed under: Pink Floyd

The Wall - Pink Floyd at my parent here in Rancho Cucamonga Ca. You cant have any pudding unless you eat your meat. VH1 Classic

Filed under: pink floyd

Another Brick In The Wall (Part 3) by Pink Floyd  

Young Lust by Pink Floyd  

Comfortably Numb by Pink Floyd  

Hey You by Pink Floyd  

Another Brick In The Wall (Part 3) by Pink Floyd  

Filed under: Pink Floyd

Mother by Pink Floyd  

Another Brick In The Wall (Part 1) by Pink Floyd  

Another Brick In The Wall (Part 2) by Pink Floyd  

Goodbye Blue Sky by Pink Floyd  

Filed under: Pink Floyd

Cymbaline (1996 Digital Remaster) by Pink Floyd  

  

The Thin Ice by Pink Floyd  

Filed under: Pink Floyd

On The Turning Away (Live Version) by Pink Floyd  

Run Like Hell (Live Version) by Pink Floyd  

Filed under: Pink Floyd