4.4 • 13.7K Ratings
🗓️ 6 April 2003
⏱️ 33 minutes
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Sue Lawley's castaway this week is David Gilmour of Pink Floyd. Gilmour grew up in Cambridge, where his father was a senior lecturer in zoology and his mother was also a lecturer and film editor. He was educated at a private school, in the hope that he would shine academically, but he really wanted to be playing music with his friends at the local state school, the County. At 16 he left and went to the Cambridge Tech where he became friends with Syd Barratt, the legendary founder of The Pink Floyd Sound, as they were originally known.
Pink Floyd went on to become one of the most successful bands of all time with albums such as Animals, Meddle and Wish You Were Here, and most famously, The Dark Side of the Moon and, later, The Wall. Dark Side of the Moon has remained in the best-selling albums chart ever since its release 30 years ago and has racked up some 35 million copies sold worldwide. The records were as groundbreaking in their presentation as their music, and the covers, designed by Storm Thorgerson, became iconic in their own rights: the man on fire on Wish You Were Here, the flying pig over Battersea power station on Animals, the black gatefold with a prism streaming light on Dark Side of the Moon. Pink Floyd concerts became a byword for spectacle through the 1970s and 1980s with lights and lasers and special effects.
Since the seventies, David Gilmour has also worked solo and guested with Bryan Ferry and Paul McCartney among others. He has several charitable interests, recently selling his mansion in Maida Vale to Earl Spencer and donating the £4.5 million to Crisis, a homelessness and housing charity. In 2001 he performed a mainly acoustic selection of his and Pink Floyd's songs at Robert Wyatt's Meltdown on the South Bank. He lives on 300 acres of land in Sussex with his second wife, writer Polly Samson and four of his eight children.
[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]
Favourite track: Dancing in the Street by Martha and the Vandellas Book: An English translation of the Koran Luxury: An acoustic Martin D.35 guitar
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0:00.0 | Hello, I'm Krestey Young, and this is a podcast from the Desert Island Discs archive. |
0:05.0 | For rights reasons, we've had to shorten the music. |
0:08.0 | The program was originally broadcast in 2003, and the presenter was Sue Lawley. My castaway this week is a rock star in his mid-fifties wearing jeans a |
0:27.2 | t-shirt and an acoustic guitar he can still pack out the Royal Festival Hall |
0:31.1 | with an intimate romantic performance it's all part of the long |
0:34.8 | enjoyable downhill run from the height of rock-star popularity where he spent the last three decades. |
0:40.5 | As the lead guitarist and vocal in Pink Floyd, he was an integral part of the albums which made |
0:45.8 | the group so famous, Dark Side of the Moon and the Wall, which continued to sell millions of copies |
0:50.6 | a year. The son of Cambridge academics, he's never been a celebrity showman but he says we made |
0:56.6 | some music that was pretty damn wonderful in our finest moments I think we were |
1:00.6 | greater than the sum of our parts. He is David Gilmore. |
1:04.4 | Long enjoyable downhill run, that's my phrase, my take on what you do. Is that how it feels? |
1:10.0 | It's fair enough. I'm trying to make life a little simpler. I don't lust after those huge |
1:15.8 | audiences and that I claim that I've had about enough of I think. |
1:19.8 | Enough of. But when you go out there as you have done in the World Festival, they still come. |
1:25.3 | They still come. It's very rewarding for people to still come and see me sort of enjoying |
1:30.8 | myself in a slightly different way to the way I've been used to doing it. |
1:35.0 | In a totally different way because when you get out there you know it's not the big |
1:39.2 | light show the big spectacular not the inflatable pigs with large testicles or not flying over the same. |
1:47.0 | It's just as I said in the introduction, you standing there with quite often just an acoustic |
1:51.9 | guitar, singing presumably the songs you want to |
1:54.4 | sing. Well there's quite a few others there with me a little gospel choir and bassist |
... |
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