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Artist: Pink Floyd
Album: The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn
Label: EMI Records
Website: http://www.pinkfloyd.com
Reviewer: Bill Knispel
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Track List:
CD 1:
Astronomy Domine (mono)
Lucifer Sam (mono)
Matilda Mother (mono)
Flaming (mono)
Pow R. Toc H. (mono)
Take Up Thy Stethoscope and Walk (mono)
Interstellar Overdrive (mono)
The Gnome (mono)
Chapter 24 (mono)
The Scarecrow (mono)
Bike (mono)
CD 2:
Astronomy Domine (stereo)
Lucifer Sam (stereo)
Matilda Mother (stereo)
Flaming (stereo)
Pow R. Toc H. (stereo)
Take Up Thy Stethoscope and Walk (stereo)
Interstellar Overdrive (stereo)
The Gnome (stereo)
Chapter 24 (stereo)
The Scarecrow (stereo)
Bike (stereo)
CD 3:
Arnold Layne
Candy and a Currant Bun
See Emily Play
Apples and Oranges
Paintbox
Interstellar Overdrive (French Edit)
Apples and Oranges (stereo version)
Matilda Mother (Alternative version)
Interstellar Overdrive (Take 6)
Pink Floyd in 1967 was a completely different musical beast than the band most people came to know and love in the
1970’s.
Most of this was due to the genius (and insanity) of founder member Roger Keith (Syd) Barrett, the mastermind whose childlike
innocence and penchant for psychedelic hook writing would rocket the band to the forefront of the British pop scene during the
spring and summer of 1967. While most people rightly consider the band an album group, crafting lengthy conceptual pieces, the
early Pink Floyd was just as much a singles group, crafting several UK top 20 singles. Already a bit of an underground
sensation, the group convened in Abbey Road studios in February of 1967 (at the same time the Beatles were creating their
psychedelic masterpiece Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band) to record what many consider the very first true
psychedelic rock album, The Piper At The Gates of Dawn.
Syd would leave the band under difficult circumstances in later 1967, but his presence would continue to be felt for the rest of
the group’s career. Whether it was the groups’ efforts to ensure continued royalties to their founded through reissues of his
early work (A Nice Pair, 1971, the inclusion of “Astronomy Domine” on both Ummagumma, 1969, and
P.U.L.S.E., 1994) or the writing of a 20 minute epic that drew inspiration from their former bandmate’s meteoric
rise and fall (“Shine On You Crazy Diamond”), Syd was always there in spirit, if not flesh.
2007 marks the 40th anniversary of Piper’s release, and the band has spared no small expense to ensure it gets the
deluxe reissue treatment it deserves. The album is currently available in two distinct formats; in wide release, The
Piper at the Gates of Dawn is available as a 2-CD set, containing the original UK mono LP mix as well as the UK stereo
mix most people are familiar with from reissues and the initial 1987 CD release. A deluxe edition is also available, in cloth
hardbound book binding, containing both UK LP mixes as well as a third CD featuring all 1967 non-album singles and B-sides, as
well as several alternate versions and EP mixes not available on CD previously. This deluxe package also includes an
enlightening reproduction Syd Barrett notebook, filled with collage art and sundry other bits that provide insight into
Barrett’s creative process.
Perhaps most enlightening with this collection is the ability to compare and contrast the stereo and mono versions of the
album. For many US listeners (perhaps the majority of them), the stereo version of the album is most familiar. It has been
readily available since 1987 on CD, and makes up the majority of the first LP of A Nice Pair from 1971. Listening
to the mono mix of the album is a bit of a shock then; one might assume that the mono mix would be flat and lifeless, but the
opposite is true. At the time, far more energy was expended in mixing for mono as most audio systems were still monaural. As a
result, greater care was taken, with more presence and immediacy audible in the material. Songs like “Interstellar Overdrive”
or “Take Up Thy Stethoscope and Walk” jump from the speakers as if alive.
By way of comparison, the stereo mix now feels safe and somewhat unassuming. Beyond a few interesting panning choices (the
extreme swirling of sound from channel to channel at the end of the stereo “Interstellar Overdrive” is the best example), the
stereo mix simply feels softer and less immediate. The mix varies from track to track, often limited to hard panning of
instruments to left and right, with little experimentation or risk taking. After 20 years of hearing the album in stereo, it’s
odd to say that it’s less of an enjoyable experience, but I think I’ll be playing the mono edition far more often than the
stereo mix from here on out.
For hardcore collectors, CD 3, which collects the non-album singles and b-sides, as well as some alternate versions, may seem
somewhat anti-climactic. Between older collections such as Relics and the Early Singles disc from
the Shine On boxed set, a lot of these tracks have been available at the commercial level. I believe that several of the
alternate versions included have also seen circulation in an unofficial manner at one time or another as well. However, having
them in one collection is certainly simpler and more appropriate. The alternate version of “Matilda Mother” included on CD 3 is
a definite highlight: musically, this version of “Matilda Mother” is much like the album versions. The divergence can be found
in Barrett’s lyrics, which crib liberally from Hilaire Belloc’s “Cautionary Tales for Children,” which features a rather naughty
young lady by the name Matilda with a penchant for telling mistruths. Originally planned for release on Piper,
Belloc’s estate withdrew permission for Barrett to use the intended lyrics, resulting in a hasty rewrite. It’s an interesting
experience to hear such familiar music with such wildly different lyrics, and while the eventual album release’s lyrics are
perhaps more original, hearing how the song was initially intended offers insight into the evolutionary songwriting
process.
This reissue of Pink Floyd’s classic debut album achieves a number of things. Not only does it do a fine job of memorializing
the pop genius of their earliest leader, it does so in packaging that is exquisite and beautiful. For many listeners and fans
of the band, it will allow for a reevaluation of the material in more than one form. The Piper at the Gates of
Dawn is one of the seminal proto-progressive and psychedelic albums, and this reissue should hopefully get it into more
hands. Seek out the 3-CD version if at all possible…the extra material and packaging is certainly worth it.
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