Identifier3001111
Created AtTue May 23 2023 23:54:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Media TypeShn
Media Count1
Sound RatingA+
NotePink Floyd
Floyds of London
Paris Cinema, London
September 30, 1971
1 disc
SBD (BBC broadcast)
A+

[disc 1] (64:35)
1. Fat Old Sun (15:36)
2. One of These Days (6:58)
3. Echoes (26:21)
4. The Embryo (10:27)
5. Blues (5:13)

http://www.pf-roio.de/roio/roio-cd/floyds_london.cd.html

This specific concert was played on September 30, 1971, but was
broadcasted on John Peel's "In Concert" program on October 12, 1971.
The first three songs was taken from the master source, but Embryo
and Blues was taken from a second generation copy to finish the show...
the original broadcast was chopped in order to air the performace.

The 'Floyds of London' roio has now been seen labelled as
Pink Floyd Meddler with what looks like some kind of black inked
rubber stamp. This perhaps confirms the rumour that Floyds of London
is the 'original packaging' version of Meddler. Previous versions
had no mention of Meddler at all.

Inside the box is a 20-page booklet. The booklet front duplicates the
outside art, and the booklet back cover has the track list.
This roio entry gets the title from a prominent phrase above
the band portrait on page 3 and again above the concert photo
on page 15, "THE FLOYD'S [sic] OF LONDON". There's no title on the
disc itself...the CD has a white printed flame design and black text
and logos. - OWL

Here is the complete text of the insert:

The Floyd's of London

As far as discerning Rock aficionados were concerned, the BBC was an
institution made up of three smaller ones: "Top of the Pops,"
"The Old Grey Whistle Test," and "Top Gear" were three groundbreaking
shows and key outlets for new music.

"Top of the Pops" was BBC-1's flagship Top-40 show. "The Old Grey Whistle
Test" (BBC-2's TV alternative to the Top-40 format of "TOTP") was hosted by
"Whispering" Bob Harris, who each week introduced a live studio session of
some of Rock's classic acts. "Top Gear" hosted by John Peel, was the BBC
Radio equivalent of "Whistle Test," the key difference between the shows being
that John Peel's sessions usually featured a live audience.

Peel, at the time, was something of a maverick. Bucking the Top-40 format,
he was more interested in promoting almost anything that was not in the
mainstream, and had been a huge admirer of the Pink Floyd.

On the 25th of September and the 20th of December [1967], the Floyd performed
many of their early classics live on John Peel's "Top Gear" show (each
broadcast a week or so later). The latter session was the last in which
the band would be accompanied by Sys Barrett, whose latest material,
("Vegetable Man," "Scream Thy Last Scream," and "Jugband Blues")
began to indicate the eventual demise of his creative genius.
His legendary daily doses of LSD certainly inspired him to write
some of the most original psychedelic masterpieces this side of
Sgt. Pepper, but was also inevitably a factor in his breakdown.

David Gilmour, an old mate of Syd's, made his BBC debut with the band on
the 25th of June, 1968, on "Top Gear." Searching for a new musical direction,
the Floyd started working on extended pieces, debuted many of these songs
("Murderistic Women," "Baby Blue Shuffle in D Major," "The Embryo,: et al)
on this show and also later that year on the 2nd of December.

These two sessions illustrated how much the band had changed in such a
short period of time. In 1967 they were trying to be psychedelic "pop stars,"
recalls Roger Waters. It didn't work out that way Two years later they were
re-establishing a new niche for themselves, relying on touring and
appearances on Peel's show as their main exposure to the public.

On the 16th of July, 1970, the Floyd made a landmark appearance on the
"Peel Sunday Concert" from the Paris Cinema in London. Performing well
developed versions of "The Embryo" and "Green is the Colour" seamlessly
sequeing into "Careful with that Axe, Eugene" (three lives staples from
that era), they also premiered two new pieces, "If" and the grandiose
"Atom Heart Mother" suite.The latter, which was the title track of
their new album (taking up an entire side of the vinyl), saw the band
accompanied by the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble performing before a live
audience, and was 1st broadcast on the 19th of July (and repeated
throughout the 1970's).

On the 30th of September, 1971, Pink Floyd returned to London's Paris Cinema to
promote their new album, "Meddle." The songs featured were "Fat Old Sun,"
"One of These Days I'm Going to Cut You into Little Pieces, "Echoes," "The
Embryo," and finally a blues instrumental. This show was also performed before
a live audience and was later broadcast on Peel's "In Concert" program on the
12th of October.

This was the first time that two key songs from their new album were performed
on the BBC. "Echoes" had been through a number of iterations, originally starting
out as a collection of unrelated segments stitched together and originally titled
"The Return of the Son of Nothing."

Peel's dry sense of humour can be heard as he introduces this song, casually
mentioning that the group's roadies Pete and Scott find it to be "a rather good
number." Likewise, he sarcastically puts down Roger Waters' equally sarcastic
contention that "Echoes" was about "modern contemporary society." [Peel makes
this comment for "One of These Days" actually - ed] "One of These Days" was
introduced as "Nick Mason's Vocal debut, which I am assured," announces Peel,
"he will do without moving his lips."

While "Echoes" and "One of These Days" would soon appear on "Meddle, "Fat
Old Sun" had been previously released on "Atom Heart Mother," and was
expanded into a fourteen minute epic, showcasing the instrumental talents of
Gilmour and Wright.

"The Embryo" has only been ever released on hte EMI/Harvest sampler "Picnic,"
in the UK (to the dismay of the band who regarded this track as "an unfinished
demo"), and on the U.S. compilation "Works." This version of "The Embryo" is
vastly different than the official releases as well as the version played on "Top
Gear" in 1968, and is similar to the one played a year earlier on Peel's show.

"Blues" is just that, and as such it is a rarity. Recent Floyd shows have been such
tightly timed visual extravaganzas, that there is little, if any room for musical
interludes. Also note that this "Blues" number was never broadcast except for it's
original airing on veteran Rock station WNEW in New York.

This is classic Pink Floyd, well on the way to becoming the mature band that
would soon reach world-wide fame with it's 1973 album "The Dark Side of the
Moon." What we have on this performance is a tight, professional band, who
unlike in later years, found room for improvisation and a looseness that would
slowly disappear from their repertoire.

Fans of the latter day Pink Floyd might be disappointed with this show,
considering that the songs are slower and do not feature any of Gilmour's
blistering guitar solos or Roger's biting and dark lyrics. But long-time fans of the
band will delight in this golden era recording. This was a Pink Floyd
performance without the aid of a sopisticated light show, lasers, back-up
performers or inflatable pigs. This was purely the talents of Roger Waters on
bass, David Gilmour on lead guitar and vocals, Richard Wright on keyboards and
vocals and Nick Mason on drums (and pre-recorded vocals).

The celebrate the 25th anniversary of this show, only the highest quality sources
were used to reproduce the original concert onto CD. The original BBC
transcription LP's were comprised of "Fat Old Sun," "One of These Days" and
"Echoes." This was later combined with their 1970 performance on John Peel's
show by Westwood One, who acquired the rights in the mid 1980's (these two
shows were independantly rebroadcast throughoout the 1970's on the syndicated
"King Biscuit Flower Hour" and "The Best of the BBC Rock Hour").

Unfortunately, combining these shows also involved limited air time, and
ultimately, "Fat Old Sun" and the first half of "Atom Heart Mother" were
sacrificed and omitted from future broadcasts.

"Fat Old Sun" was recorded off an original BBC transcription LP directly onto
DAT as well as the introductions to the new material from "Meddle." The first
forty-five seconds of "Echoes" has also been restored, which remains edited, (as
well as Peel's intros) from the combined shows.

"The Embryo" and "Blues" originate from a second generation analogue tape from
WNEW's initial broadcast ("The Embryo," although broadcast in the UK, was
never included on any of the radio transcription disks).

This CD was digitially remastered from these sources, in hopes of reproducing
the finest and most accurate version of this historical show. - BEAKER

My disc sounds stereo to me! It is packaged with a booklet about BBC radio in
the 70's (The John Peel show, Top of the Pops, and The Old Grey Whistle Test).
It is packaged in the "tin can" referred to in the database. Track listing the same
as Meddler. The Embryo has the WNEW announcement at 8:12. All other
announcenments are on the disc.

Cover art differs from Meddler, looks like various constellations. Excellent disc
now in stereo. Nice packaging. The Embryo and Blues have a little hiss from the
analogue tape. - JZ

There may be more than one version of this disc around. The one I have seen is
practically identical to Meddler and sounds mono to me. - DAve.

This is totally identical to "Meddler". So one can say exactly the same comments
as for "Meddler": superb sound quality, BUT some annoying things that
disappointed a lot of people (myself included).

The three opening bass lines, at the beginning of OOTD, are missing. During the
"Echoes" intro (at 0:49), some applause can be heard (this was due to a mix
between a BBC vinyl, used for the first minute of the song, and the Westwood
One CD, that doesn't contain the whole intro). In the middle of "Embryo", there is
a WNEW radio station ID (the two last tracks are taken from the WNEW's initial
broadcast).

But there's another thing _very_ annoying: the whole CD is in mono, and not
"well balanced" mono! I compared the first three tracks to the Swingin Pig's
versions ("One Of These Days" RoIO, where the tracks are in stereo). I noticed
that the mono sound in "The Floyd's Of London" was not a mix between the left
and right channels of the stereo broadcast, but ONLY THE LEFT CHANNEL!
So, Gilmour's guitars are far louder than Wright's keyboards! This is particulary
sad during the "solid rhythm" section in "Echoes" (that begins at 8:52): Rick's
organ seems to have disappeared (Rick begins to play at 9:25, but he's very
distant). So, to _really_ enjoy FOT, OOTD and Echoes, I still listen to the
Swinging Pig's version. Its' a pity, because the overall sound quality is better
here.

Having say that, I'm very happy to own this RoIO, for the last two tracks.

It seems that the man who provided the DAT for "Meddler" has stereo masters
(see comments' section for "Meddler"). Something happened during the mastering
of the DAT, that lost the right channel and duplicated the left channel onto the two
channels of the DAT, explaining the mono sound. It seems that this man
re-mastered his masters to a new DAT, adding the missing bass lines at the
beginning of OOTD, and adding John Peel's comments before "Embryo". He ran
off 10 CDR's from it and gave them to people he knew. Let's hope these stereo
versions will see the light of day (a future RoIO CD pressing?). If that happens,
this could be the best RoIO of all times, reproducing the whole BBC concert with
a breathtaking sound quality, in stereo. - MARC-OLIVIER.

Source InfoSBD (BBC broadcast)
Trades Allowed
Performance
Pink Floyd 1971-09-30 Paris Cinema, London, UK
Set 1Fat Old Sun
One Of These Days
Echoes
Embryo
Blues
Set 2
Set 3
CommentBBC FM John Peel Show