After their second successful live performance at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the 12th of May 1967, The Pink Floyd participates on the 14th of May on a BBC radio show called 'Look of the Week'.
"That sight, those sounds were made by the Pink Floyd, a pop group who took over
the Queen Elizabeth Hall on Friday Night for the entertainment they called 'Games For May',
of them, more hereafter."
Hans Keller:
"The Pink Floyd - you're going to hear them in a minute and I do not want to prejudice
you. Hear them and see them first and we'll talk about them afterwards but four quick
points I want to make before you hear them.
The first is that what you heard at the beginning, that short bit, those few seconds,
are really all I can hear in them, which is to say to my mind, there is continuous
repetition and propotionally they are a bit boring.
My second point is that they are terribly loud. You couldn't quite because of course
it isn't as loud from your sets or as it was at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on Friday.
I will ask them about that when we come to talk.
My third point is that perhaps I am a little bit too much of a musiciain to
appreciate them. And the reason why that, why I say that is that...
Four, they have an audience. And people who have an audience ought to
be heard. Perhaps it is my fault that I don't appreciate them."
Hans Keller:
"Let me first turn to Roger. I want to ask one fundamental
question, of which I'll tell you viewers may not be quite aware
of the significance of it because they didn't hear all of it. Why does it
all got to be so terribly loud? For me, frankly, its too loud. I just
can't bare it. I happened to have grown up with the string quartet which
is a bit softer. So, uh, why does it got to be so loud?"
Roger:
"Well, I don't think that it HAS to be. But I mean, that's the
way we like it. And uh, we didn't grow up in the string quartet so I
guess that could be one of the reasons why its loud. I mean, it doesn't
sound terribly loud to us."
Hans Keller:
"Actually not everybody who hasn't grown up in a string quartet
turns into a loud pop group. So your reasons weren't altogether committed.
But I accept that you like it. What are you saying is that, if one
gets immune to this kind of sound one may find it difficult to appreciate
softer types of sound. Syd? Yes? No?"
Syd:
"I don't think that's so."
Hans Keller:
"No."
Syd:
"I mean everybody listens. We don't need it very loud to be
able to hear it. And sometimes it's very quiet in fact. Personally I
like quiet music just as much as loud music. We play in large halls and
things so we're obviously going to use it as necessary. And when people
dance... like volume, you know, it comes in a bit further."
Hans Keller:
"Well, that's interesting. You say 'when people dance', you
did start, if I'm not mistaken as a group which accompanied dancing. Is that
it?"
Syd:
"Yeah, you could say that."
Hans Keller:
"And how did you turn into a concertizing group? "
Roger:
"Well, we've only done two concerts. Because they're seen with
Pop music, which I guess is what we are. And we play gigs
with ballrooms and dancehalls and the sort of scene because that's how
it works at the moment. But we felt that there was no real reason, you
know, why we shouldn't do an organized concert in a large hall where
people can come and sit and actually listen to what we do. You could say
with Dance Halls, generally speaking, are not very good places to actually
listen to the music. Most people come along and the music for most of them
has been, over the past few years anyway, a background noise that they
can jig about to."
Hans Keller:
"Were those two concerts successful? Syd?"
Syd:
"Yes, I think so. When we play - I think the way our act's developed
in the last six months has been influenced rather a lot by the fact that we
play in ballrooms. Necessarily. Because obviously this is the first
market. Which I think has given us a chance to realize maybe the music we
play isn't directed at dancing necessarily like normal pop groups."
Hans Keller:
"Have you encountered any hostility towards your creation?"
Roger:
"Well, yes we have. I mean there's been quite a lot of hostility
going on, you know, in places in the country. I mean the only hostility we've
actually seen, of course, is that which hit the national press. A sort
of professional knockers like Marve Pittman and..."
Hans Keller:
"Do you in turn feel agressive towards your audiences?"
Roger:
"No, not at all."
Hans Keller:
"In spite of all the loudness?"
Roger:
"No, not at all."
Syd:
"There's not really been anything to sort of to cause... you know...
the dislike of our audience."
Hans Keller:
"There's no shock treatment intended?"
Syd:
"No, certainly not. Some people think that we deliberately try and...
sort of... shock the audience and make them, blind them to keep the quiet.
No, this isn't so."
Hans Keller:
"Well there it is. I think you can pass your verdict as well as I
can. My verdict is that its a little bit of a regression to childhood.
But after all, why not?"
Jay Whitten: bperet@yahoo.com