The Dark Side of the Moon
“The Dark Side of the Moon”—Pink Floyd (1973)
Added to the National Registry: 2012
Essay by: Daniel Levitin (guest
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“The Dark Side of the Moon”—Pink Floyd (1973)
Added to the National Registry: 2012
Essay by: Daniel Levitin (guest post)*
Dark Side of the Moon
Angst. Greed. Alienation. Questioning one's own sanity. Weird time signatures.
Experimental sounds. In 1973, Pink Floyd was a somewhat known progressive rock
band, but it was this, their ninth album, that catapulted them into world class rock-star
status. “The Dark Side of the Moon” spent an astonishing 14 years on the “Billboard”
album charts, and sold an estimated 45 million copies. It is a work of outstanding
artistry, skill, and craftsmanship that is popular in its reach and experimental in its grasp.
An engineering masterpiece, the album received a Grammy nomination for best
engineered non-classical recording, based on beautifully captured instrumental
tones and a warm, lush soundscape. Engineer Alan Parsons and Mixing Supervisor
Chris Thomas, who had worked extensively with The Beatles (the LP was mastered
by engineer Wally Traugott), introduced a level of sonic beauty and clarity to the
album that propelled the music off of any sound system to become an all-
encompassing, immersive experience.
In his 1973 review, Lloyd Grossman wrote in “Rolling Stone” magazine that Pink
Floyd’ s members comprised “preeminent techno-rockers: four musicians with a
command of electronic instruments who wield an arsenal of sound effects with authority
and finesse.” The used their command to create a work that introduced several
generations of listeners to art-rock and to elements of 1950s cool jazz. Some
reharmonization of chords (as on “Breathe”) was inspired by Miles Davis, explained
keyboardist Rick Wright.
The album opens with a long, cinematic introduction of a crescendoing heartbeat,
eventually accompanied by a ticking clock, distant voices, and other sound effects that
have been compared to a motor or airplane propeller. Among the discernable spoken
phrases are “I've always been mad” and, a few seconds later, a screaming melodic voice
with an edge of insanity ushers in the song proper. At 1:09, bass, ride-cymbal drum kit,
chorused guitar, and slide guitar all enter, an extraordinarily luscious, delicious, warm
ensemble of merging tones, yet each retaining their distinctiveness.
Throughout the album, the songs flow into one another symphonically, with seamless
musical coherence, as though written as part of a single melodic and harmonic gesture.
Lyric themes of madness and alienation connect throughout.
Listeners delighted in the array of new electronic sounds, spatialization, pitch and time
bending. Clocks, alarms, chimes, cash registers, footsteps, and other in situ recordings
are woven into the sounds and tropes of a traditional rock quartet. Pink Floyd were not
the first to borrow the techniques of Stockhausen and of Pierre Schaeffer's musique
concrète, nor were they even the first pop artists to do so. The Beatles had done this on
their “Sgt. Pepper” in 1967 and again more extensively in 1968’s “White Album.”
Simon & Garfunkel also experimented with found sounds on their breakthrough album,
“Bookends” in 1968. But the prominence of such experimentation, and the brilliant
execution of it put “Dark Side” in a class unto itself.
“On the Run” is a masterful use of synthesis by guitarist David Gilmour, in which the
instrument (the EMS synthesizer Synthis AKS) gives the musical impression of running
on a treadmill, accompanied by the lockstep time of 16th note hi-hat, created entirely on
the AKS. The instrument goes through a range of odd, otherworldly sounds, forming the
basis for what we now know as the electronica and EDM genres, and predated
Kraftwerk's breakthrough “Autobahn” by 18 months (which used the Synthi AKIS along
with Minimoog and ARP synthesizers). Additional special effect sounds were added to
“On the Run” by bassist Roger Waters using an EMS VCS3.
The ambient space of the Rotoms in the album's third cut, “Time,” gives way to neo-funk
rhythms and gripping vocals by Gilmour. Throughout the album, guitarists found the
guitar-tone-to-die-for, first heard on this track. Gilmour created it with multi-tapped
analog delays (from a Binson Echorec 2), a sound that Pat Metheny, The Edge (U2) and
others would later adapt to their own use. Gilmour is the master of the slow string bend,
creating evocative, emotionally-fraught pleadings and wailings one moment, and
triumphant exultations the next. His solos are so perfect, so exquisitely and intuitively
crafted, that one might overlook that he is one of the most effective and exciting rhythm
guitarists in all of contemporary music.
For many, the emotional high point of the album is “The Great Gig in the Sky.” Clare
Torry's wordless vocal is more emotive, more evocative and haunting than anything with
words. Keyboardist Richard Wright recalled that the band directed her to “think about
death, think about horror, whatever.” Her impromptu singing so transformed the songs
that later versions of the recording carry her name as a co-writer of the tune.
Opening side two of the vinyl version of the album, “Money” naturally became a hit on
Top 40 AM radio in an edited form and, then became an FM radio staple. The song is
composed in 7/4 time, except for 4/4 during the guitar solo, creating a unique urgency.
That same analog delay guitar cuts through like a lobotomy knife, and then suddenly
gives way to Stratocaster that sounds like it is standing right next to you.
The fade-out vocals of “Money” give way to the opening of “Us and Them,” with a
solemn, ecclesiastical organ, which in turns gives way to a suspended, arpeggiated chords
and a ride-cymbal groove that evokes 1950s cool jazz, deepened by Dick Parry's tenor
saxophone solo, redolent of Sonny Stitt or Dexter Gordon. Gilmour's vocals enter
unhurriedly at 1:41, taking the analog delay sound first heard on Gilmour's guitar and
festooning his lead vocals with it. The middle of “Us and Them” features another tenor
solo by Parry amidst a lush chorus of background vocals. The song fades into “Any
Colour You Like,” the third instrumental on the album. The guitar effects are largely
provided by Univox Uni-Vibe effects pedal (made popular by Jimi Hendrix on “Machine
Gun”), in addition to David Gilmour singing in unison with his instrument--a technique
often attributed to Slam Stewart who sang with his bass in the 1940s, and became a
signature feature of George Benson's guitar playing in the 1970s.
“Brain Damage” sums up the narrator's (Roger Waters) mounting anxiety and
vulnerability:
The lunatic is in my head.
The lunatic is in my head.
You raise the blade, you make the change,
You re-arrange me 'til I'm sane.
You lock the door,
And throw away the key,
There's someone in my head
But it's not me
“Brain Damage” segues into “Eclipse,” a restatement of the main musical and lyrical
themes, with the now-familiar ride-cymbal groove and its sparkly texture supporting
multiple climaxes, including a swirling organ motif and lush background harmonies
supporting the final words of the album (sung by Waters), “and the sun is eclipsed by the
moon.” The album ends with a fade-out of the heartbeat that began the album 42 minutes
earlier.
Roger Waters explained the album's creation and the context of the band's founder, Syd
Barrett, who had gone through a phase of behaving erratically before being briefly
hospitalized under suspicion of mental illness. “After Syd went crazy, in '68...we were
all of searching, fumbling around...[Syd] was the heartbeat of the band.” It was the first
time that Waters wrote all the lyrics for a Pink Floyd album--he had some things he
needed to say. “I suddenly realized then, that year, that life was already happening. I
think it's because my mother was so obsessed with education--and the idea that childhood
and adolescence, well everything--was about preparing for a life that was going to start
later. And I suddenly realized that life wasn't going to start later, it starts at dot and it
happens all the time. At any point you can grasp the reins and start guiding your own
destiny.... A lot of the musical ideas just came up just jamming away in these rehearsal
rooms.” The lyrics were clearly informed by Barrett's mental breakdown, and Waters'
reactions to it.
“Dark Side's: influence reached across several generations of musicians and spanned a
wide range of genres. James Taylor nicked the idea of the cash register loop for his own
song “Money Machine” in 1976, and Paul McCartney paid homage to it with the loop
opening his Wings track “Silly Love Songs” also in 1976. Smashing Pumpkins,
Radiohead, Phish, The Austin Lounge Lizards, and scores of other musicians have found
inspiration in the recording technology, lyrics, music, or all three. It also raised the
ambitions of Pink Floyd themselves, propelling them to create the ambitious and much-
praised double-album “The Wall.” Although prog-rock had sometimes been accused of
ignoring the emotional aspects of rock music in favor of the cerebral, “Dark Side of the
Moon” combined both brilliantly in an emotionally intense tour de force that continues to
surprise and reward listeners.
Daniel J. Levitin, Ph.D., is the James McGill Professor of Psychology and Behavioral
Neuroscience at McGill University and is dean of the College of Social Sciences at the
Minerva Schools at KGI. His is the author of the books “This Is Your Brain on Music,”
“The World in Six Songs,”“The Organized Mind,” and “A Field Guide to Lies.”
*The views expressed in this essay are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the
Library of Congress.