Aug 132010
 

The video of Roger Waters and David Gilmour performing together at the Hoping Foundation charity event is now available for you to watch above.

Filmed by Gilmour’s wife, Polly Samson, it shows clips the pair performing the 4 songs they played on July 10th 2010.

They played four songs including ‘To Know Him Is To Love Him’, ‘Wish You Were Here’, ‘Comfortably Numb’ and ‘Another Brick in the Wall (Part Two)’.

On his Facebook page, Roger Waters wrote, “Here is a 2 minute taster of the gig David and I did together for The Hoping Foundation back in July. The sound quality is crap but it was a great night for me, and for him, and also for “US and THEM” . Please support the Hoping Foundation, they are doing great work for refugee children. David and I have given the charity the whole 29 mins and I’m told they’re going to put it up at approximately 5.00pm (UK time) on Monday. Go to http://hopingfoundation.org/ to see the video and please support the charity if you can. Roger

Watch the Video

Video of Roger Waters and David Gilmour at Hoping Foundation Charity Event 2010

Video of Roger Waters and David Gilmour at Hoping Foundation Charity Event 2010

You can either view the 2 minute clip on Roger’s Facebook page or watch the full 29 minute version above.

Discuss

Perhaps open for debate is David attempting those high pitches in the first song To Know Him is to Love Him!

Wish You Were Here sounded much better even if Roger must insist on applying his post Pink Floyd vocal style and melody on the song!

Interesting swearing after Wish You Were Here even if a donation did follow.

Comfortably Numb was a small taster of what David Gilmour re-uniting with Roger Waters on The Wall Tour 2010 or 2011 will be like! Of course the staging will be much more grand and the experience of seeing that live will be something else. Still no news on which date David Gilmour will be choosing to perform with Roger Waters.

Shame someone stood in front of the camera during the second solo and the sound was distorted somewhat! He did get a recording on his phone by the looks of it so perhaps to redeem himself… well… you never know what YouTube can throw up!

They finished with Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2) which is probably their most famous song amongst non-fans. haha

Your Thoughts?

Please leave any comments or thoughts you may have below! This is your big moment!

Apr 292010
 
Portrait photo of Roger Waters

Portrait photo of Roger Waters

NEW YORK – Roger Waters has kept up a steady performing schedule, and this fall, he’s launching a big spectacle with a 30th anniversary tour for Pink Floyd’s “The Wall.” But fans won’t be hearing any new music from Waters — he hasn’t put out an album in almost two decades.

That’s not because of a lack of creativity, Waters insists.

“I have a ton of songs,” he said in a recent interview.

“Some of them are recorded, and some of them are half-recorded, and I keep promising myself that I’m gonna find a collaborator and work on them and put them together in some kind of coherent form,” he continued. “I suspect I will do that in some time in the near future. But it’s strange how time keeps clicking away. And each page turns faster then the last, in my experience.”

Whether the 66-year-old Waters puts out a new album remains to be seen, but he has plenty of other things to occupy his time. He spoke with The Associated Press about “The Wall,” politics and more.

AP: There had been talk about bringing “The Wall” to Broadway. Is that still going to happen?

Waters: That’s still very much in the cards. I have been working on and off for the last year or so with an English writer named Lee Hall, who has become greatly celebrated over here and in London, because he wrote “Billy Elliot,” which is one of the most successful musicals out there at the moment. … Lee’s become a close friend of mine, and I’m touching wood but we think we’ve finally found a director that we want to work with, so that’s another project that’s in the pipeline. We’re on the fourth or fifth version of the book, and trying to write some laughs into it. My one disappointment with the original rock ‘n’ roll show that we did, and to some extent with the movie as well, there weren’t just not many laughs in it. … Humor is a very important part of my life, so part of the reason for wanting to do a production on Broadway is to express the funny side of the characters.

AP: Green Day’s “American Idiot” is in the vein of “The Wall.” Do you plan to check out the Broadway play version?

Waters: It would be remiss of me not to check it out. I don’t know the work very well. I am not a very good audience. … My taste in music is very broad, but it’s not very much popular music that I listen to. But when I got this invitation, I did check out some bits of Green Day, and you know, there’s some very strong melodies in there.

AP: What were your inspirations for “The Wall”?

Waters: My early manhood was troubled by all kinds of feelings of inferiority, and inconsequence, I was that guy at parties who only ever dressed in black and stood in the corner and scowled at people. Very often those attempts by the young to be cool are just because they’re absolutely scared. I certainly was. The writing of “The Wall” was part of a process that I used to free myself from some of those neuroses, and some of those fears. Fear is a very pernicious element in many of our lives … (It) is in lots of ways similar to the fear that is engendered in nations and ideologies. … We build up these defenses and the fear that we establish about other, anybody that’s not us.

AP: What is your impression on the political divide in the United States?

Waters: The United states is very insular and parochial, and resists the idea of seeing yourselves they way others see you, the way you’re seem in Europe, and the resistance is enormous, I think, to taking a straight forward look at this stuff. … Obviously many, many American citizens are aware of these problems in society and how deeply important they are. … I remember my mother, who traveled here before the second World War, used to say to me, ‘Americans are so friendly, and so generous,” but she also said, “And so naive.” But I think there’s a huge well of wanting to do good and wanting to help, but it is subverted by the power of commerce.

AP: It’s always asked of you, so we will ask it again — any chance of another Pink Floyd reunion?

Waters: David (Gilmour) is completely disinterested in anything like that. After Live 8, I could have probably gone for doing some more stuff, but he’s not interested, so it is what it is.

Source [ Associated Press ]

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