Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. "Your Possible Pasts" is a song by the English rock band Pink Floyd that appears as the second track on their 1983 album, The Final Cut. It was written by bassist Roger Waters. Roger Waters - bass guitar, acoustic guitar, tape effects, sound effects, vocals David Gilmour - electric guitars Nick...

  2. "Your Possible Pasts" (mislabeled as "Your Impossible Pasts" on a radio promo single) is a song from Pink Floyd's 1983 album The Final Cut. This song was one of several to be considered for the band's "best of" album, Echoes: The Best of Pink Floyd.

  3. People also ask

  4. Sep 12, 2023 · Pink Floyd’s song “Your Possible Pasts” is a captivating composition that delves into themes of self-reflection, nostalgia, and the impact of past experiences on our present lives. Released in 1983 as part of their album “The Final Cut,” the song takes listeners on a lyrical journey through the complexities of memory and its influence ...

  5. The Fractopian genre is agnostic about specific details of the future timeline. This is not to say that individual works of Fractopian Fiction might not postulate such timelines, only that the genre as a whole does not marry itself to any particular one of them. Looking forward, whoever, and keeping in mind the end-point (which is a qualified modification of existing corporate practices and ...

  6. Your Possible Pasts Lyrics. [Verse 1] They flutter behind you, your possible pasts. Some bright-eyed and crazy, some frightened and lost. A warning to anyone still in command. “Ranks!...

  7. The Wall is the eleventh studio album by the English rock band Pink Floyd, released on November 30, 1979. It is the final Pink Floyd album to feature the band’s classic ‘70s lineup, comprising Roger Waters (vocals, bass, synthesizers, acoustic and electric guitars), David Gilmour (electric and acoustic guitars, vocals, bass, keyboards, synthesizers), Nick Mason (drums), and Richard Wright ...

  8. Mar 19, 2016 · “Your Possible Pasts” is one of two tracks from The Final Cut with a direct connection to Pink Floyd The Wall and The Wall: Spare Bricks. It’s widely presumed to be one of Roger Waters’ original leftover song ideas written and considered for The Wall early on but not used. The Wall co-producer and engineer James Guthrie later recalled,

  1. People also search for