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Echoes: The Stories Behind Every Pink Floyd Song

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A history of rock band Pink Floyd, from the late 1960s through to the early 1990s, which looks at every track they have produced and features accounts from band members, producers, engineers, friends and tour managers.

This is the most comprehensive book ever published on the music and lyrics of Pink Floyd. Every track is examined in detail with stories and quotations about the inspiration behinde the songs, stidio tales and solid referance detail. Features complete discography, videography and internet site listings.

176 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1996

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Cliff Jones

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Lars G.
10 reviews1 follower
March 11, 2025
This book was a small revolution for me when it came out. To my awareness, there was no song-for-song runthrough of the entire Pink Floyd catalogue. It has its merits, and it has its drawbacks.
The first thing I must mention, is that my copy comes with a few paragraphs in the "Wish you were here"-section of the book, pasted over with a sticker, that replaces the original written text. Of course I skillfully removed it, and found a reference to Nick Mason's cocaine situation ca 1974. No shocker to the current Pink Floyd fan.

The big merit of this book, is that Jones (who btw was in an up-and-coming band called Gay Dad, by the time this book was released) focuses not so much on dull descriptions of the band's music, but instead makes an effort on tracing and elaborating on the various references on the titles, lyrics and songs, which is much more entertaining than forever descriptions of music that we can clearly hear ourselves.
It's a joy to read Cliff Jones' takes on the lyrics of "Let there be more light" (probably one big pile of Cambridge in-jokes), and of Syd's lyrical references. With the soundtracks, Cliff has been watching the films. With "Ummagumma" it goes a bit out of hand, and he lectures us on what a "Grand Vizier" is. I don't think Nick Mason knew, or cared.
With the later albums, it gets less interesting. "The Wall" is kind of self-explanatory to begin with, and when it comes to the 80s/90s, I realize that I don't have a lot of questions about the songs themselves. I would rather be a fly on the wall when the records were being made, and "Echoes" offers none of that.
My edition had neat pastelle colors for each chapter, with a great selection of photos.
By today's standards, it's an ok book, but then it blew me away. I have read it so many times.
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