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  1. Syd Barrett (1946–2006) was an English musician who recorded 37 songs during his short two-year solo career. One of the founding members of English rock band Pink Floyd, he was the dominant force in their early years, writing the majority of the material on their debut album, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, [1] contributing to their second, A ...

    • ‘Scream Thy Last Scream’
    • ‘The Gnome’
    • ‘Double O Bo’
    • ‘Remember Me’
    • ‘Lucy Leave’
    • ‘Butterfly’
    • ‘Vegetable Man’
    • ‘Candy and A Currant Bun’
    • ‘In The Beechwoods’
    • ‘Apples and Oranges’

    ‘Scream Thy Last Scream’ can only partially be considered a Barrett song: although he composed the track, Nick Mason takes the main lead vocal line, with Barrett’s vocal pitched up to chipmunk levels. The song probably wouldn’t have been made any better had Barrett decided to take on the lead vocal himself. A cacophony of noise and randomness, ‘Scr...

    1967 was either a great year or a terrible year for gnomes. In April, a novice singer by the name of David Bowie released a highly irritating single called ‘The Laughing Gnome’ featuring himself conversing with the titular magical figure. Then, in August, Pink Floyd released a slightly better song covering much of the same ground. Depending on how ...

    A basic rocker centred around the band’s love of Bo Diddley, ‘Double O Bo’ is the song that most clearly sees Pink Floyd wearing their early influences on their sleeves. Barrett namechecks Diddley in the song’s lyrics, drawing a straight line to his swiping of ‘Hey Bo Diddley’. ‘Double O Bo’ sounds nothing like what Pink Floyd would become, and bec...

    There’s a fascinating alternative universe where Barrett never takes acid and Pink Floyd ends up becoming one the many forgotten beat groups of the mid-1960s. Songs like ‘Remember Me’ would be essential to rave-ups and sockhops that would continue on for another year or so, but the Floyd didn’t have much use for them once they adopted their now-fam...

    The amount of evolution that Pink Floyd experienced in less than a year was remarkable. In 1964, the group were a rough and ready garage rock act called The Tea Set. By 1965, they were one of the first psychedelic bands in Britain. The group’s earliest recordings remain curiosities, if for no other reason than to track the rapid change that the gro...

    The one song from The Tea Set sessions that most clearly points toward the sound that Pink Floyd would embrace in the future was ‘Butterfly’, a wonky and chromatic song that infuses some of the earliest twee and uniquely British sensibilities that Barrett ever explored in his songwriting. Although it’s still coated in some of the derivative beat mu...

    Written around the same time as ‘Jugband Blues’, ‘Vegetable Man’ is another sardonic take on the descent that Barrett found himself going through towards the end of his tenure in Pink Floyd. Unreleased for decades, ‘Vegetable Man’ garnered a reputation for being an upsetting and even potentially frightening listen. The actual song isn’t nearly as b...

    The B-side to ‘Arnold Layne’ doesn’t quite have the same pull as the A-side, but what ‘Candy and a Currant Bun’ lacks in terms of sophistication, it more than makes up for in atmosphere. Featuring one of Barrett’s most commanding vocal performances, ‘Candy and a Currant Bun’ bridges the gap between Pink Floyd’s early beat music and later psychedeli...

    Barrett left quite a few unfinished tracks when he quit/was kicked out of Pink Floyd. Most of them were near completion and simply dropped as the band attempted to find their new identity without their previous leader, but ‘In the Beechwoods’ wouldn’t have made sense to release even if they wanted to. It’s not certain whether ‘In the Beechwoods’ wa...

    The turning point for Pink Floyd’s transition between the Syd Barrett era and the David Gilmour era came on the single ‘Apples and Oranges’. Released one month before Gilmour officially joined the group, the single would be the final single release helmed by Barrett’s version of the band. Fuzzier and more unhinged than most of Pink Floyd’s material...

  2. Syd Barrett discography. Syd Barrett (1946–2006) was an English rock musician who was best known as the original frontman and primary songwriter of Pink Floyd. With the band, he recorded and wrote the majority of songs for their first album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, and was credited for one song ("Jugband Blues") on their second album A ...

    • Michael Gallucci
    • "Astronomy Domine" From: 'The Piper at the Gates of Dawn' (1967) The opening track of Pink Floyd’s debut name-checks the planets as the band’s instruments cascade over the rhythm like falling stars.
    • "Lucifer Sam" From: 'The Piper at the Gates of Dawn' (1967) One of Pink Floyd’s most popular cuts from their psychedelic era features all kinds of menacing moodiness, starting with an echo-drenched guitar riff that falls someplace between James Bond and hell.
    • "See Emily Play" From: 1967 single. The second single by Pink Floyd has been cited by several people, including Gilmour, as the moment where Barrett’s creeping mental illness collided with his frequent drug use.
    • "Octopus" From: 'The Madcap Laughs' (1970) "Octopus," under a different title, was one of the first songs Barrett wrote after leaving Pink Floyd. But his psychiatric problems and drug abuse delayed recording of his first solo album.
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Syd_BarrettSyd Barrett - Wikipedia

    Roger Keith " Syd " Barrett (6 January 1946 – 7 July 2006) was an English singer, guitarist and songwriter who co-founded the rock band Pink Floyd in 1965. Barrett was the band's original frontman and primary songwriter, known for his whimsical style of psychedelia, [1] English-accented singing, and stream-of-consciousness writing style. [4]

  4. Dec 14, 2020 · Pink Floyd songs written about Syd Barrett. ‘Brain Damage’. ‘Shine On You Crazy Diamond’. ‘High Hopes’. Pink Floyd Syd Barrett. Every Pink Floyd song written about Syd Barrett, their former leader who sadly became strange from Roger Waters, Dave Gilmour, Nick Mason and Richard Wright.

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  6. Sep 8, 2020 · Barrett found inspiration through LSD usage. In 1965, as the foursome that became Pink Floyd were finding their musical footing between classes at London's Regent Street Polytechnic and Camberwell ...

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