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Roger Waters: The Wall Live

 A l b u m   D e t a i l s


Label: Columbia Records
Released: 2015.11.20
Time:
51:10 / 52:01
Category: Progressive Rock
Producer(s): Nigel Godrich
Rating:
Media type: CD
Web address: www.rogerwaters.com
Appears with: Pink Floyd
Purchase date: 2015
Price in €: 1,00





 S o n g s ,   T r a c k s


CD 1

[1] In The Flesh? (Roger Waters) - 4:15
[2] The Thin Ice (Roger Waters) - 2:48
[3] Another Brick In The Wall, Pt. 1 (Roger Waters) - 4:08
[4] The Happiest Days Of Our Lives (Roger Waters) - 1:27
[5] Another Brick In The Wall, Pt. 2 (Roger Waters) - 3:45
[6] The Ballad Of Jean Charles de Menezes (Roger Waters) - 2:54
[7] Mother (Roger Waters) - 6:44
[8] Goodbye Blue Sky (Roger Waters) - 3:40
[9] Empty Spaces (Roger Waters) - 2:46
[0] What Shall We Do Now? (Roger Waters) - 1:30
[11] Young Lust (David Gilmour, Roger Waters) - 4:02
[12] One Of My Turns (Roger Waters) - 3:26
[13] Don't Leave Me Now (Roger Waters) - 4:12
[14] Another Brick In The Wall, Pt. 3 (Roger Waters) - 1:23
[15] Last Few Bricks (Roger Waters) - 3:15
[16] Goodbye Cruel World (Roger Waters) - 1:35


CD 2

[1] Hey You (Roger Waters) - 4:43
[2] Is There Anybody Out There? (Roger Waters) - 2:41
[3] Nobody Home (Roger Waters) - 3:44
[4] Vera (Roger Waters) - 1:08
[5] Bring The Boys Back Home (Roger Waters) - 1:54
[6] Comfortably Numb (David Gilmour, Roger Waters) - 7:34
[7] The Show Must Go On (Roger Waters) - 2:31
[8] In The Flesh (Roger Waters) - 4:42
[9] Run Like Hell (David Gilmour, Roger Waters) - 6:27
[10] Waiting For The Worms (Roger Waters) - 4:01
[11] Stop (Roger Waters) - 0:30
[12] The Trial (Bob Ezrin, Roger Waters) - 6:30
[13] Outside The Wall (Roger Waters) - 4:31

 A r t i s t s ,   P e r s o n n e l


Roger Waters - Vocals, Bass, Guitar

Robbie Wycoff - Vocals
Harry Waters - Piano
Jon Carin - Keyboards
Dave Kilminster - Guitar
G.E. Smith - Guitar
Snowy White - Guitar
Graham Broad - Drums

Jon Joyce - Backing Vocals
Kipp Lennon - Backing Vocals
Mark Lennon - Backing Vocals
Pat Lennon - Backing Vocals

Nigel Godrich - Producer
Gerald Scarfe - Art Direction

 C o m m e n t s ,   N o t e s


Two CD album. 6-panel double digipak, includes 20-page book with color photos.

Soundtrack of the film of the same name by Roger Waters And Sean Evans

Directed: Sean Evans & Roger Waters.
Produced: Roger Waters & Clare Spencer.
Written: Roger Waters & Sean Evans.
Executive producer Mark Fenwick.
Productor: Nigel Godrich.
Music and quadraphonic pre-prod: James Guthrie.
Quadraphinic pre-prod: Joel Plante.
Sound mixer: Trip Khalaf.
Sound re-recording mixers: Adam Scrivener, Dominick Tavella.
Supervising sound editor / Sound designer: Jacob Ribicoff.
Photography: Sean Evans.
Handwriting and dierctor of movie animation (1980): Gerald Scarfe.
Soundtrack package design: Amelia Tubb.



Pink Floyd's The Wall is many things: First, a concept album, released in 1979; then a haunting, psychedelic mostly-animated movie (1982); then a series of worldwide sold out concerts (2010-2013); then another film, Roger Waters The Wall, the "globally acclaimed feature film by Roger Waters and Sean Evans," its corresponding soundtrack, and probably a bunch of other things we're forgetting, too. Even as a widely lucrative franchise, The Wall in its various offshoots continues to resonate today with Floyd diehards and new generations of listeners alike.

For those fans anxious for another installment, today Columbia/Legacy Recordings annouced that the soundtrack to the feature film Roger Waters: The Wall, a road documentary of the 2010-2013 tour that's been called "an immersive concert experience," will be released next month.

The film will be released on multiple formats (DVD, Blu-Ray, digital download, etc.), due December 1, 2015, while the soundtrack, produced by Nigel Godrich (Radiohead, Beck, Paul McCartney), will be availble via a two CD, three LP, or digital package and is due November 20, 2015. See concert personnel (Hi, G.E. Smith!) and track listing below.

Roger Waters - Thursday, October 8, 2015
© 1997 - 2016 ARTISTdirect.



Roger Waters The Wall captures Roger Waters’ sold-out 2010-2013 “The Wall Live” tour, the first complete staging of the classic Pink Floyd concept album since 1990. A tour-de-force of rock & roll stagecraft anchored in a powerful message of peace and compassion, “The Wall Live” became a must-see concert event for music fans everywhere. It played to over 4.5 million people at more than 200 shows across four continents, making it the most successful worldwide tour by a solo artist in history.

Roger Waters The Wall is produced by Nigel Godrich (Radiohead, Beck, Paul McCartney) and offers an exhilarating listening experience for generations to enjoy. It is the ultimate concert souvenir – not only for the fans who saw the show, but for those who weren’t there or who may be discovering “The Wall” for the first time.

Roger Waters The Wall also serves as a companion piece to the feature film, ROGER WATERS THE WALL. Directed by Sean Evans and Roger Waters, ROGER WATERS THE WALL fuses the epic and the personal to operate on three levels simultaneously: as an immersive concert experience; as a road movie of Waters’ reckoning with the impact of war on his own family; and as a stirring antiwar film about the human cost of conflict.

Originally released in 1979, Pink Floyd’s “The Wall” was the band’s first narrative concept album. Waters drew from personal history to chart the life and times of the central character, a mentally disintegrating rock star haunted by the wartime death of the father he never knew. The album’s thematic content and musical mastery, exemplified by worldwide chart-topper “Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)” and radio staples “Run Like Hell” and “Comfortably Numb,” struck a chord with audiences worldwide. Pink Floyd’s subsequent 1980-81 tour for the album was unprecedented in its use of sets and theatrics, but the scale of production limited it to 31 dates in just four cities. “The Wall” wouldn’t be seen again until 1990, when Waters and an all-star cast performed a benefit production on the site of the no-man’s-land that had until recently divided West and East Germany. Twenty years later, concertgoers had the opportunity to experience “The Wall” anew, and millions of fans affirmed that its message and music remain potent and relevant as ever. With Roger Waters The Wall , that opportunity lives on.

© 2015 Artist Arena and Roger Waters



Ten days before Roger Waters The Wall arrives on home video, the movie’s soundtrack will be released. Not so surprisingly, the track listing looks a lot like the one from Pink Floyd‘s original 1979 album on which Waters’ tour was based. You can see the full lineup below.

The album is scheduled for release on Nov. 20 in two-CD, triple-vinyl and digital formats. The 29 tracks are taken from Roger Waters’ 2012-13 The Wall Live tour, the first staging of the epic work since 1990. Waters’ show played more than 200 performances and was seen by four and half million people.

The soundtrack is culled from the recent big-screen version of the concert, which was originally set for just one showing. Popular demand has extended the run to another screening for Oct. 15 before the film, which also includes behind-the-scenes and documentary elements, is available on DVD and Blu-ray on Dec. 1.

Roger Waters The Wall was produced by Nigel Godrich, whose work with Radiohead, Beck and Paul McCartney has made him one of music’s most in-demand board guys. Fans will recognize most of the songs on the soundtrack. One addition to the playlist, “The Ballad of Jean Charles de Menezes,” is an acoustic coda to “Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 2.”

Michael Gallucci - October 8, 2015
ultimateclassicrock.com



Now that Roger Waters has released his new concert film of The Wall, filmed on the former Pink Floyd singer-songwriter's recent world tour, he is putting out an accompanying soundtrack album. Between 2010 and 2013, the singer performed the 1979 double-album, home to "Comfortably Numb" and "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)," live more than 200 times. Like the film, the soundtrack, titled Roger Waters The Wall and due out on November 20th, contains recordings from around the world and will be available digitally and as either a two-CD or three-LP set.

Waters performed the album for approximately 4.5 million people during the course of the tour with help from an 11-person backing group. Singer Robbie Wyckoff handled the vocal parts that Floyd's David Gilmour sang on the original record, while the guitars were handled by Dave Kilminster, former SNL bandleader G.E. Smith and Snowy White, the last of whom performed on Floyd's original The Wall tour. Waters' son Harry performed Hammond organ and piano on the tour.

Frequent Radiohead collaborator Nigel Godrich, who provided music production and mixing for the film, produced the album.

The soundtrack will run longer than the original Wall album, which spanned only two LPs, as it includes two songs removed from the original release — "Last Few Bricks" and "What Shall We Do Now?" — which Floyd had added back in for live performances. This version of The Wall also includes "The Ballad of Jean Charles de Menezes," which Waters incorporated into his performances of the album beginning in 2011 in tribute to a 27-year-old Brazilian man that London police killed thinking, wrongly, that he was a terrorist.

The soundtrack marks the third time The Wall has been released as a live album. In 1990, Waters released The Wall: Live in Berlin, which he'd recorded and filmed less than a year after the Berlin Wall fell with a star-studded cast, including Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, Marianne Faithfull, the Band, Sinéad O'Connor, Cyndi Lauper and Tim Curry, among others. A decade later, Pink Floyd released Is There Anybody Out There? The Wall Live 1980-81, which contains recordings of Waters' final tour as a member of the band.

Waters told Rolling Stone that the meaning behind The Wall hadn't changed for him over the years. "The context changes, but the story remains the same," he said. "If people see this movie, what I hope is that that they may look at one another and go, 'You know what? We are a community, and we are many. There are a lot of us.'"

Kory Grow - October 8, 2015
RollingStone.com



Roger Waters The Wall captures Roger Waters' sold-out 2010-2013 "The Wall Live tour, the first complete staging of the classic Pink Floyd concept album since 1990. A tour-de-force of rock & roll stagecraft anchored in a powerful message of peace and compassion, "The Wall Live" became a must-see concert event for music fans everywhere. It played to over 4.5 million people at more than 200 shows across four continents, making it the most successful worldwide tour by a solo artist in history.

Roger Waters The Wall is produced by Nigel Godrich (Radiohead, Beck, Paul McCartney) and offers an exhilarating listening experience for generations to enjoy. It is the ultimate concert souvenir not only for the fans who saw the show, but for those who weren't there or who may be discovering "The Wall" for the first time.

Roger Waters The Wall also serves as a companion piece to the feature film, ROGER WATERS THE WALL. Directed by Sean Evans and Roger Waters, ROGER WATERS THE WALL fuses the epic and the personal to operate on three levels simultaneously: as an immersive concert experience; as a road movie of Waters' reckoning with the impact of war on his own family; and as a stirring antiwar film about the human cost of conflict.

Originally released in 1979, Pink Floyd's "The Wall" was the band's first narrative concept album. Waters drew from personal history to chart the life and times of the central character, a mentally disintegrating rock star haunted by the wartime death of the father he never knew. The album's thematic content and musical mastery, exemplified by worldwide chart-topper "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" and radio staples "Run Like Hell" and "Comfortably Numb," struck a chord with audiences worldwide. Pink Floyd's subsequent 1980-81 tour for the album was unprecedented in its use of sets and theatrics, but the scale of production limited it to 31 dates in just four cities. "The Wall" wouldn't be seen again until 1990, when Waters and an all-star cast performed a benefit production on the site of the no-man's-land that had until recently divided West and East Germany. Twenty years later, concertgoers had the opportunity to experience "The Wall" anew, and millions of fans affirmed that its message and music remain potent and relevant as ever. With Roger Waters The Wall, that opportunity lives on.

Amazon.com



Between 2010 and 2013 Pink Floyd’s mastermind Roger Waters toured performing the band’s epic 1979 album The Wall. The historic outing marked the biggest worldwide tour by a solo artist and the shows were nothing short of a breathtaking feat of musicianship, amazing art direction and special effects.

The concerts featured a state of the art video screen, which was projected onto a huge 500-foot wall built each night during the concert. The Wall Live tour also boasted huge inflatable puppets, an airplane flying through the air and crashing into the stage and an overwhelming amount of pyrotechnics sprinkled through the show where Waters and his band played the seminal album in its entirety.

Roger Waters The Wall is the new film that documents the tour and also shows an up close and personal side to the normally guarded artist. The film features the entire concert interspersed with footage of Waters embarking on an emotional road trip where he reconciles the untimely deaths of his grandfather and father in World War I and World War II, respectively.

In the film, Waters takes a rite of passage road trip, with his three grown children. They visit the grave of Water’s grandfather, who was killed in France on Sept. 9, 1914, when his father was just two years old. He also gets emotional shedding tears when he visits Anzio, Italy, where his father Lt. Eric Waters died following a bitter fight during World War II in February of 1944.

In an ironic and tragic twist of fate, two generations of Waters boys grew up without their father. It’s something that the legendary artist still wrestles with although, after taking the cathartic journey, he seems to be a little more at peace with it.

“I had a recurring dream through my life that I had murdered someone and felt incredibly guilty,” the usually cagey Waters explains in the film. After realizing and coming to terms that the dreams were about his father, he never had the dream again.

“Political action kills people,” Waters deadpans in the film. It’s an understandable point of view coming from someone who has dealt with such loss in his life.

He drives the point home during the live performances in the film, which feature a lot of heavy-handed anti-war imagery. Waters takes every chance to tug at emotional heart stings showing pictures of many soldiers who were killed in action as well as political activists who met an untimely and tragic end. It hits its peak during the anthemic and tear-inducing performance of “Bring The Boys Back Home,” the album’s blatant anti-war track. 

Many of the songs on The Wall are personal songs that touch on the death of Waters' father. The first song “In The Flesh?” concludes with a plane crashing, signifying the passing of Eric Waters. In “Mother,” the subject of the album deals with his over-protective matriarch, who is overcompensating and smothering the boy, due to the loss of her husband.

The epically psychedelic performance of the groundbreaking masterpiece is incendiary and filmed in 4K, which provides breathtaking visuals. Guitarist Snowy White, Dave Kilminster and former Saturday Night Live bandleader G.E. Smith as well as a host of other musicians, including Waters’ son Harry, brilliantly perform the layered songs at the height of musicianship.

The audience revels in the scope and scale of the production at the stadium concert. Many fans get emotional singing and chanting along to Pink Floyd’s classics including “Another Brick in the Wall,” "Young Lust" and the chill-inducing "Comfortably Numb."

Roger Waters The Wall, which is co-directed by Waters and Sean Evans, will arrive in theaters for a one-night only global release on Monday (Sept. 29). It will be presented in over 300 theaters in North America alone. The film will also feature an exclusive “in conversation” with Roger Waters and Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason, where the two reunite and break bread while answering questions submitted by fans. For more information head to Fathom Events.

© 2016 Billboard.
 

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