Wednesday, 14 March 2018
946 The Wall
First viewed : 21 July 1990
Channel Four broadcast a live transmission of this extravagant concert from the Potsdamer Platz in Berlin. Ex- Pink Floyd bassist Roger Waters, a man never slow to recognise his own importance, was quick to make a connection between the fall of the Berlin Wall and his own magnum opus a decade earlier and resurrect the live show more or less on the site of the infamous dividing line. His ex-band mates were not invited to resume their roles with Waters putting together a new band and inviting a fairly impressive cast of guest stars to perform particular numbers including Cyndi Lauper, Bryan Adams, Van Morrison and Sinead O Connor.
I didn't watch the whole show. The difficulty with The Wall as an album is that it's musically threadbare. The other band members hardly contributed anything to the writing and yet Waters can barely string two chords together in his compositions and all the guest stars in the world couldn't turn his dreary dirges into great songs. Having guest vocalists sugared the pill to an extent in the first half of the show but for the latter part you had to endure his strained ranting on most of the songs. I'm sure his ex-bandmates noted the irony of him choosing to deliver the last few numbers while dressed as a military dictator.
It's only fair to note that the concert was a charitable event to benefit the Memorial Fund for Disaster Relief founded by war hero turned philanthropist Leonard Cheshire. It didn't actually make that much money after Waters recouped his investment and the charity didn't long survive Cheshire's death two years later.
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I have zero love for Pink Floyd or Waters' songwriting (his lyrics in particular tend to be terrible) - maybe you remember there was a joke about when they played in West Berlin in 1988 and 20 people were killed trying to escape into East Germany...
ReplyDeleteYes - and the lyrics are his strongest card !
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