Pink Floyd played their best known songs.
Highly rehearsed ,note for note.
Highly choreographed and big stage show.
In the same venue night after night.
With two original band members missing
Many people traveled hundreds of miles to see it. But only ten per cent were fans.
For those of us who know about those things and those of us who don’t.
[QUOTE] [b]AlbaNo1 wrote:[/b]
Looking at the Division Bell tour Pink Floyd drew heavily on 2/3 albums for their set.
Not hit singles as such but huge chunks of their main albums in the mid 70s. It’s still their best known songs, so on that level I don’t see much of a difference.
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It's completely different, an you said it yourself.
Queen traded on their huge success as a singles band. Their greatest hits sales far exceed their other albums. Floyd, like Zeppelin and 70's Genesis relied on huge album sales to translate into huge ticket sales.
[QUOTE] [b]The Real Wizard wrote:[/b]
[QUOTE] [b]RobbyBloodshed wrote:[/b]
In my opinion the drums on Innuendo are some of the best sounding they recorded. Show Must Go On’s drums are so big and powerful.[/QUOTE]
It may surprise you that its partly acoustic drums and partly triggered ! In that song, every kick and snare is augmented with a fake kick and snare.
I feel like the grinch.
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Haha! I believe that, by that time all that was cutting edge technology. Anyway to get the best product, in my opinion!
I actually used part acoustic/part Roger Taylor samples on my new double single.
Really amazing program, so happy with Roger doing this, he recorded it where Led Zeppelin did arguably their most iconic stuff: https://youtu.be/btk7FTobl5k
My use of it: https://youtu.be/fLF5yYt1gnk / robbybloodshed.com