Pink Floyd – The Dark Side Of The Moon Movie

http://vimeo.com/40830549

Final cut of the full-length movie for Pink Floyd’s classic album, The Dark Side Of The Moon.

This film uses the backdrop films the band featured during their initial US, UK, and French tours for The Dark Side Of The Moon, with additional footage used for Breathe and live footage from 1972 added to Time.

The mix of the album for the video contains extended versions of Speak To Me and On the Run.

http://vimeo.com/41056477

Side two uses additional footage added to Us and Them and the entire Any Colour You Like. The mix of the album for the video contains an extended version of Money.

via Matthew Fuggi

4 thoughts on “Pink Floyd – The Dark Side Of The Moon Movie

  1. Can’t wait to check this out!
    But is it really better than screening the Wizard of Oz and dropping the needle on the third roar of the lion?

  2. Very nice. Years later, I saw the “Animals” tour, whose animations and physical aspects like the inflatable pig and lighting tricks were far more sophisticated. I got an added welcome dose of it at a Roger Waters solo concert. Its interesting to see the timeline of how they pushed the envelope.

  3. Oh, Pink Floyd… One of the greatest groups of all time. Always pushing the envelope and thinking outside of the box. In my opinion, they are still the only band with the exception of Radiohead (nearly 40 years later) who were really successful in incorporating electronic music with rock. Still blows my mind that they did Dark Side and Meddle and Wish You Were Here in the early to mid 70’s. Just timeless music and still so different from anything else to ever exist before or after the fact. Geniuses… All of them.

    1. > Just timeless music and still so different from anything else to ever exist before or after

      I agree. Nick Mason has a great book, “Inside Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd” that seems to capture a lot of the ups and downs. I was struck by the incredibly audience support Pink Floyd received in the early days. Mason has a quote from Jenny Fabian (the groupie) and it’s really interesting and sad, comparing the very early days of passionate audience involvement and participation, to the later days, when the audience became more distant and mostly observed, more than participated. It seems to me that Pink Floyd really benefited from those early years, the audience involvement and participation days. I don’t know if those kinds of early & involved, participating, audiences exist for any bands now.

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