A Momentary Lapse of Reason [Original Recording Remastered]
|
| List Price: | £8.99 |
| Price: | £4.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
50 new or used available from £2.69
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Signs Of Life
- Learning To Fly
- Dogs Of War
- One Slip
- On The Turning Away
- Yet Another Movie
- Round And Around
- New Machine
- Terminal Frost
- New Machine (1)
- Sorrow
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1623 in Music
- Released on: 1987-09-07
- Number of discs: 1
Editorial Reviews
CD Description
After a long protracted legal battle over the rights to thePink Floyd name, David Gilmour, Nick Mason and Richard Wright released 1987's A MOMENTARY LAPSE OF REASON despite RogerWaters' protests. Retaining collaborators from Floyd's past(producer Bob Ezrin), this Gilmour-led version of the band crafted a number of songs that were as cerebral and introspective as anything Floyd had done in the past. The first single, "Learning To Fly", served as the unofficial anthem for this latest chapter of Pink Floyd.
The Andy McKay/Gilmour-penned "One Slip" uses the requisite bells and whistles along with Tony Levin's impressive stick solo to guarantee it a prominent place in the band's canon. "The Dogs of War" and "On The Turning Away" are perfect commentaries on the conservative mindset shaping the '80s at the time. The former is anominous screed composed at a time when the Cold War was still a reality whereas the latter is a sad swipe against the self-absorption of the Me Decade.
Customer Reviews
Pink Floyd proves there is life after Roger Waters
Whatever you think of Roger Waters, Pink Floyd was clearly never the same after his rather acrimonious exit. Having won the right to continue using the band's name, David Gilmour, Nick Mason, and Richard Wright recorded and released A Momentary Lapse of Reason in 1987. It's a far cry from the incredibly successful concept albums largely controlled by Roger Waters (e.g., The Wall, Dark Side of the Moon), and it has its inherent imperfections, but A Momentary Lapse of Reason is still an impressive album featuring some great musical moments and awesome Gilmour guitar riffs.
Freed from the controlling influences of Waters, David Gilmour dominates this album - he wrote or co-wrote every track, took up the mantle of lead singer, and did much to prove himself the greatest guitarist in the business. One can read certain things in the album title and some of the songs (e.g., Sorrow) about the whole Pink Floyd turmoil of the previous years, but the main problem with this album is its seeming lack of a unifying theme. There is unquestionably a great deal of intensity in the words and music, but there's no real depth. To me, the whole album has an artificial feel to it - especially compared with the Waters-dominated Pink Floyd releases. There are no bad songs on this album (although some Pink Floyd fans don't think very much of The Dogs of War), but few seem to work up any real emotion. One can get a feel for this in the opening instrumental track; there may be Signs of Life in the initial sounds of plodding movement through water, but these are lost in a cacophony of artificial voices speaking unintelligibly in the background. I have to admit that I don't always understand what Gilmour and the guys are trying to do in some of these songs.
Learning to Fly is somewhat pop-oriented track that succeeds quite well, but the first real magic is to be found in the song On the Turning Away. This track about man's lack of concern for his fellow man also features some amazing guitar work by Gilmour. Gilmour's finger work basically carries the second half of the album, one rendered somewhat obscure by the long instrumental Terminal Frost and its musical A New Machine bookends. The album closes out impressively, though, with Sorrow. This is the most emotionally compelling song on the album, and it opens with David Gilmour doing what he does best.
I can see how some Pink Floyd fans don't really care for this album. It's very different from what had come before, and the song lyrics don't really compare to those written by Roger Waters. Still, this is Pink Floyd - maybe not the Pink Floyd we wish we still had, but Pink Floyd nonetheless. David Gilmour, Nick Mason, and Richard Wright revived this group when many thought it was dead and buried, and their own distinctive musical creations introduced a new generation of fans to the magic that is, was, and always will be Pink Floyd.
This Floyd studio album is a delicate sound of thunder.
It is now 1987 and Pink Floyd have been dormant for four years. We fans had read countless articles from the music press over that period of time saying that Floyd were dead. Roger Waters had seemed to have won the cold war as his 'Pros & Cons Of Hitchhiking' album had been released and he had toured America and Europe with playing Floyd songs to boot. God was on his side, literally because his new lead guitarist was God (Eric Clapton just in case you didn't know his nickname). But just when we had given up hope of seeing the brand name, Pink Floyd on any new product A Momentary Lapse Of Reason is released.
Hang on a moment, we had had no Floyd for years then all of a sudden we have more activity than something which is very active. Roger was following his own dream world with Pros & Cons, diverging from his bleak melancholy state and to venture into something quite unusual. Now here was Gilmour and Mason with Wright in toe proving that they equally had a right to the name Pink Floyd. The legal battles continued but us fans didn't care, we had Waters and Floyd.
OK, with Waters now out of the main picture, the Floyd could continue true to what fans would expect of Gilmour/Mason/Wright: great music. First and foremost was the great music. This was there first true musical adventure since Wish You Were Here (1975). What did surprise a lot of people was Gilmour's lyrics. It was like a reincarnation of Waters. They were sad (One Slip: about an unwanted pregnancy), untrusting (Dogs Of War) and cold (Sorrow). Gilmour admitted that some of Roger had worn off on him. Thanks Roger. Could us fans love a too happy Floyd, I don't think so.
This album to me sounds like a more joyful version of Animals (without Wright's superb piano) crossed with the moodiness of Wish You Were Here. Of course there is more to this album than that but it is not a smooth as David Gilmour by Gilmour (1978) or as barren as The Final Cut (1983). Indeed this album is almost seductive in parts. Look no further than Terminal Frost with its beautiful saxophone.
A good portion of the tracks from this album found there way onto the live album Delicate Sound Of Thunder but apart from Sorrow none are improved on. Sorrow also appeared on Pulse and again this is a superior version. It is my favourite track from AMLOR.
There are several more stand out tracks which include One Slip, On The Turning Away and Yet Another Movie.
This is a great chill out album. It is best heard in the dark, then again most Floyd albums are, but I ignore my wife when she says the power should be cut off too.
Just one final note. If you were wondering who plays bass on the album, it's the legend that is TONY LEVIN.
Thanx for reading this.
PINK FLOYD TAKING YOU TO THE STARS !!!
Anyone who is familiar with Floyd's work knows this is problably the most underrated album of the band. Well, maybe the problem with that opinion is the point of view. Many compare AMLOR with "Dark Side", "The Wall" or "Wish You Were Here". But if you do so, you'll have to compare these last three with "A Saucerful of Secrets" and "The Piper at The Gates of Dawn", for instance. And then you you will find the previous 3 superior to these last 2. This way of thinking would be terribly unfair, you know why? Because you can't compare orange with onions, or apples with beans! "The Piper" and "A Saucerful" are psychedelic classics, "Dark Side" and "wish You", along with "Animals", are progressive classics, and "The Wall" is the ultimate Opera Rock classic. All These albums above are amazing in their own ways!
But what is so good about AMLOR? This album, despite the absence of Waters (and let me remind you that "The Piper" didn't have Gilmour and "The Final Cut" didn't have Rick Wright), has a kind of space tune that makes you fell you're flying. It not only happens in "learning to fly", but in "one Slip", "yet anothe movie/round and round", "terminal frost" and "sorrow". "Learning to fly" has 'flying' as a theme, but the others give you that sensation by the music, mainly the guitar work by Gilmour.
The other 2 highlights of the album are "signs of life" and "on the turning away". The first sets the mood for the rest of the album, giving a mystery feeling. The second is a beautiful melody with great lyrics and an amazing guitar solo.
Many critics say that this album have weak parts, like "a new machine", I and II, and "the dogs of war". That's OK but, did "Vera" and "bring the boys back home" spoiled "The Wall"? What about "seamus" on "Meddle"?
Therefore, AMLOR is a true Floyd album, and is worth buying and listening, you won't regret. Put your phones on, lay back and look to the sky, 'cause that's where Pink Floyd is going to take you!!!

![A Momentary Lapse of Reason [Original Recording Remastered]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/316QMKPYVEL._SL210_.jpg)



