Sunday, March 24, 2013

40 years of the Dark Side

It’s been 40 amazing years since this band from England put out this album called ‘The Dark Side of the Moon’ – an album that changed a lot in the way psychedelic rock was perceived and announced the arrival of Pink Floyd.

Cover Art - The Dark Side of the Moon
If you've never heard a Pink Floyd song, and if this album happens to be the first thing you hear, you’ll think I’m absolutely crazy to be calling this album a revolution in music. I never thought much of this album the first time I heard it. In fact, I was quite put off from listening to Pink Floyd. Ticking clocks, alarm bells, the sound of loose cash, heartbeats, incessant wailing can be quite annoying. I thought to myself,” These idiots and the producer must have been on weed to put out such a silly album”.

But then, that’s the thing about Pink Floyd. You either love them or hate them. There is no neutral ground. And a lot of the music they make is very situational meaning one has to be at a certain place in one’s life or going through a certain moment to appreciate the kind of music the band made.( I wish I could write ‘makes’ here instead). And that was what happened with regard to ‘The Dark Side of the Moon’.

 I remember coming home rather tired and annoyed about something that day, and I remember having my computer randomly running tunes (the good old days of winamp) and I was just lying down in bed and staring at the ceiling when all of a sudden ‘Breathe’ came on. The slight heartbeat at the beginning, the buildup of tension in the wailing  and suddenly have drop to a simple E minor groove and the light drumming just seemed to have struck some kind of a chord inside me. (Pun intended) And I put ‘Breathe’ on an infinite loop for the rest of the evening and felt better. And it was that song that made me fall in love with the album.

As time went by, one starts to listen to the lyrics of songs like ‘Time’ and ‘Money’ where you find the band have very cleverly called out on the widening gap between the rich and the poor and how both approach the world. The subtlety in lines such as “ And you run and you run to catch up with the sun because it’s shrinking….racing around, to come behind you again” are a clever jab at the working class who spend all their time on work only to end up being a mere statistic. The affluent nature of the rich is clearly brought out in songs like ‘Money’ with lines referring to people with too much money thinking about buying football teams….something that clubs like Chelsea and Manchester City are all too familiar with.

And then you find the song moving into a beautiful, almost dream like nature with ‘Us and Them’ (My second favourite song from the album). And then Pink Floyd’s jab at the political system referring to the entire set up as lunatics controlling the masses through mass media is sheer brilliance. In a manner of speaking, ‘Brain Damage’ was the precedent to bands like ‘Rage against the Machine’ who've based their songs as anti-establishment…. And isn't that what a lot of Rock music is all about?

While ‘The Dark Side of the Moon' would not be the best thing you hear if you’re not a Pink Floyd fan, it still remains to be one of the finest albums in terms of breaking new ground as to how psychedelic rock can be made and how one can speak about how the system just does not work, without having to offend people with rude words and lyrics. ‘The Dark Side of the Moon’ showed people how to be anti-establishment and still sound pleasant.

Here's a link to the 'Classic Albums' documentary series focused on 'The Dark Side of the Moon'


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