Roger Waters Turns 75, Listen to a Classic 1977 Pink Floyd Performance
Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty
Pink Floyd bassist and singer, Roger Waters turned 75 today. Pink Floyd, of course, were one of the most commercially successful bands in history and they helped bring psychedelic-rock and prog-rock music to the mainstream with landmark albums like 1973’s The Dark Side Of The Moon, 1975’s Wish You Were Here and 1979’s The Wall. The band’s larger-than-life concept albums had grand lyrics that delved into topics like religion, technology, politics, war and existentialism. Their album covers have also become as iconic as the albums themselves—they’ve been on posters in college dorm rooms, on coffee mugs and on T-shirts for decades.
By 1977, the band had released 10 studio albums and it felt like they were lightyears away from their 1967 debut, The Piper At The Gates of Dawn, which was the experimental psych-pop brainchild of Syd Barrett, who left the band in 1972 and died in 2006. Their 1977 album, Animals, only consisted of five tracks and it was a George Orwell-influenced critique of British capitalism in the ’70s. The album was an obvious contrast to the growing punk rock movement, which was, in part, a reaction to the overwrought complexities of psych bands like Pink Floyd.
On May 9, 1977, Pink Floyd performed in Oakland, Calif. at the Oakland Coliseum Arena. Wolfgang’s Vault writer Alan Bershaw describes the show as one of the best performances in the band’s extensive history. Read his recollection of that night below: