George Roger Waters
(born 6 September 1943 in Great Bookham, Surrey) is an English rock musician. He is best known as the bass player and one of the main songwriters and lead singers in the English rock band Pink Floyd from 1964 to 1985. Following his split with Pink Floyd in 1985, Waters began a solo career, releasing three studio albums, one soundtrack, and staging one of the largest concerts ever, The Wall Concert in Berlin
in 1990. In 2005 he released an opera, Ça Ira
, and joined Pink Floyd at the Live 8 concert in London for their first public performance with Waters in 24 years.
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ROGER WATERS TICKETS
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Biography
Early years (1943–1965)
Born in
Great Bookham,
Surrey, Waters grew up in
Cambridge. His father
Eric Fletcher Waters fought in
World War II and died in combat
at Anzio in 1944, when Waters was only five months old. Waters referred or alluded to the loss of his father throughout his work, from "Corporal Clegg" (
A Saucerful Of Secrets
, 1968) and "Free Four" (
Obscured By Clouds
, 1972) to the sombre "
When the Tigers Broke Free", first used in the movie version of
The Wall
(1982), and "The Fletcher Memorial Home" (
The Final Cut
, 1983).
Waters and
Syd Barrett attended the Morley Memorial Junior School on Blinco Grove, Cambridge, and later both attended the
Cambridgeshire High School for Boys (now
Hills Road Sixth Form College), while fellow band member
David Gilmour attended
The Perse School in the same road.
[1] He met
Nick Mason and
Richard Wright while attending the
Regent Street Polytechnic school of architecture. He was a keen sportsman and was fond of swimming in the
River Cam at
Grantchester Meadows. At 15 he was chair of
YCND in Cambridge.
Pink Floyd years (1965–1983)
In 1965, Roger Waters co-founded Pink Floyd along with
Syd Barrett,
Richard Wright and
Nick Mason. Although Barrett initially did most of the songwriting for the band, Waters wrote the song "
Take Up Thy Stethoscope and Walk" on their debut LP,
The Piper at the Gates of Dawn
. The album was a critical success and positioned the band for stardom. Barrett's deteriorating mental health led to increasingly erratic behaviour, rendering him unable to continue in his capacity as Pink Floyd's lead singer and guitarist. Waters attempted to coerce his friend into psychiatric treatment; this proved unhelpful, and the band approached
David Gilmour to replace Barrett at the end of 1967. Even the band's former managers felt that Pink Floyd would not be able to sustain its initial success without Barrett. Filling the void left by Barrett's departure, Waters began to chart Pink Floyd's new artistic direction. The lineup with Gilmour and Waters eventually brought Pink Floyd to prominence, producing a series of albums in the 1970s that remain among the most critically acclaimed and best-selling records of all time.
In 1970, Waters collaborated with British composer
Ron Geesin, who co-wrote Pink Floyd's title suite from
Atom Heart Mother
, on a soundtrack album,
Music from "The Body"
, which consisted mostly of instrumentals interspersed with songs composed by Waters. Within Pink Floyd, Waters became the main lyrical contributor, exerting progressively more creative control over the band: he produced thematic ideas that became the impetus for concept albums such as
The Dark Side of the Moon
and
Wish You Were Here
, for which he wrote all of the lyrics and some of the music. After this, Waters became the primary songwriter, composing
Animals
and
The Wall
largely by himself (though continuing to collaborate with Gilmour on a few tracks).
Initially, Waters' bandmates were happy to allow him to write the band's lyrics and guide its conceptual direction while they shared the opportunity to contribute musical ideas.
[2] However, this give-and-take relationship began to dissolve: a consequence of the band's collective
ennui, according to Waters. Songwriting credits were a source of contention in these years; Gilmour has noted that his contributions to tracks like "Another Brick in the Wall, Part II", with its
guitar solo, were not always noted in the album credits. Nick Mason addresses the band infighting in his memoir,
Inside Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd
, characterizing Waters as egomaniacal at times. While recording
The Wall
, Waters decided to fire Wright, after Wright's personal problems began to affect the album production. Wright stayed with the band as a paid session musician while Waters led the band through a complete performance of the album on every night of the brief tour that followed, for which Gilmour acted as musical director.
In 1983, the last Waters–Gilmour–Mason collaboration,
The Final Cut
, was released. The sleeve notes describe it as being a piece "by Roger Waters" that was "performed by Pink Floyd". Gilmour unsuccessfully tried to delay production on the album until he could author more material; Waters refused, and in 1985, he proclaimed that the band had dissolved due to irreconcilable differences. The ensuing battle between Waters and Gilmour over the latter's intention to continue to use the name
Pink Floyd
descended into threatened lawsuits and public bickering in the press. Waters claimed that, as the original band consisted of himself, Syd Barrett, Nick Mason and Richard Wright, Gilmour could not reasonably use the name Pink Floyd now that it was without three of its founding members. Another of Waters' arguments was that he had written almost all of the band's lyrics and a great part of the music after Barrett's departure.
Early solo years (1984–2005)
After his departure from Pink Floyd, Waters embarked on a solo career producing three concept albums and a movie soundtrack which did not garner impressive sales. His solo work has managed critical acclaim and even some comparison to previous work with Pink Floyd.
[3] His first solo album, 1984's
The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking
, was a project about a man's dreams across one night. The list of musicians helping Waters during recording included guitarist
Eric Clapton and jazz saxophonist
David Sanborn. Conceived around the same time as
The Wall
, the concept was shown and demos played to the Pink Floyd members, but they chose to proceed with
The Wall
over
The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking
, rejecting the latter as "too personal". Gilmour was later to claim that this was not as obvious a task as might first seem, as, in his opinion, both demos were "unlistenable" and "sounded exactly alike."
[4] Longtime Pink Floyd engineer Nick Griffiths, however, says otherwise: "They were seriously rough, but the songs were there."
[5] The album, accompanied by Gerald Scarfe artwork that some claimed was sexist, received mixed reviews, with
Kurt Loder describing
Pros And Cons Of Hitch Hiking
in
Rolling Stone
as a "strangely static, faintly hideous record."
[6] On the other end of the spectrum, Mike DeGagne of
Allmusic praised the album for its "ingenious symbolism and his brilliant use of stream of consciousness within a subconscious realm", rating it four out of five stars.
[7] The resulting concert tour featuring a set design by
Marc Brickman and Mark Fisher of Park Display, and, on the first leg, Clapton on lead guitar, was not a success.
In 1986, Waters contributed songs and a score to the soundtrack of the movie
When the Wind Blows
, based on the
Raymond Briggs book of the same name. His backing band, featuring
Paul Carrack, was credited as
The Bleeding Heart Band
. Waters' then legal wranglings with Gilmour over the Pink Floyd brand are alluded to on the soundtrack album's "Towers of Faith", where the vocal transforms from "
This land is my land", to "This sand is my sand", to "This band is my band".
In 1987, Waters released another concept album,
Radio K.A.O.S.
, about a man named Billy who can hear radio waves in his head. Waters followed the release with a supporting tour, also in 1987. The album did not garner the sales he had achieved in Pink Floyd. Years later, Waters himself would express dissatisfaction at the album, expressing distaste for the production, and particularly regretting his decision to trim the album from a double to a single.
After the
Berlin Wall came down in 1989, Waters staged
The Wall Concert in Berlin on 21 July 1990 to commemorate the end of the division between
East and
West Germany. The concert took place on
Potsdamer Platz, part of the former "no-man's land" of the Berlin Wall, and featured many guest superstars:
The Band,
Bryan Adams,
Cyndi Lauper,
Van Morrison,
Sinéad O'Connor,
Scorpions,
Marianne Faithfull, and
Joni Mitchell. It was one of the biggest concerts ever staged with an attendance of over 300,000 and was watched live by over five million people worldwide. The concert was intended to raise funds for a recently formed UK-registered charity founded by the late
Leonard Cheshire, the Memorial Fund for Disaster Relief. (The charity's name was changed to the World Memorial Fund for Disaster Relief in 1992, before it ceased operating in 1995.)
Two years later, Waters released 1992's
Amused to Death
, about the corrupting, desensitising nature of
television. The title was derived from the book
Amusing Ourselves to Death
by
Neil Postman. It is Waters' most critically acclaimed solo recording, with music critics comparing it to later Pink Floyd work, such as
The Wall
. Waters himself describes the record as the third in a thematically-linked trilogy, after
Dark Side Of The Moon
and
The Wall
. The album had one hit, "
What God Wants, Pt. 1" which hit #4 on Mainstream Rock charts.
Jeff Beck played lead guitar on many of the album's tracks, which were recorded with a rotating cast of backup musicians. There was no tour in support of this record, although Waters would later perform several songs from this record nearly eight years later on his
In the Flesh
tours.
In 1999 Waters embarked on the
In the Flesh
tour which saw him performing some of his most famous work, both solo and Pink Floyd material. The tour was a success in the US, and after Waters had booked mostly smaller venues (after the let-down in attendance from his 1987 tour), tickets sold so well that most of the concerts had to be upgraded to larger venues. With Gilmour's Pink Floyd retiring after 1994, and many Floyd albums selling at the pace of
Beatles records, Waters was in great demand. The tour eventually stretched across the world. Tickets were at such high demand, that the tour had to be spanned over three years. Almost every show was sold out with some venues garnering more sales than Pink Floyd shows of early touring years. One concert was released on CD and DVD, named
In the Flesh Live
, after the tour. During this tour he played two new songs from his next solo album, "Flickering Flame" and "Each Small Candle", as the final encore to the show. In June 2002 Waters played the
Glastonbury Festival performing many classic Pink Floyd songs.
Miramax announced in mid-2004 that a production of
The Wall
was to appear on
Broadway with Waters playing a prominent part in its production. Reports stated that the musical contained not only the original tracks from "The Wall", but also songs from
Dark Side of the Moon
,
Wish You Were Here
and other Pink Floyd albums, as well as new material.
[8] On the night of 1 May 2004, the
overture for
Ça Ira
was pre-premièred on occasion of the
Welcome Europe
celebrations in the accession country of
Malta, performed over
Grand Harbour in
Valletta and illuminated by light artist Gert Hof.
In September 2004, Waters released two new tracks on the Internet, "To Kill The Child" and "Leaving Beirut." Both of these tracks were inspired by the
2003 invasion of Iraq. Waters, who currently resides in the U.S., has said that the songs were written immediately after the start of the war, but he delayed releasing them until just before the
2004 presidential election. The lyrics to "Leaving Beirut" contain strong attacks on
U.S. President George W. Bush and
British Prime Minister Tony Blair. After the
2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake and subsequent
tsunami disaster, Waters performed "
Wish You Were Here" with
Eric Clapton during a
benefit concert on the
American network
NBC.
Later solo years (since 2005)
In February 2005, it was announced on Roger Waters' website that his opera,
Ça Ira
, had been completed after 16 years of work. It was released as a
CD/
DVD set by
Sony Classical on 27 September 2005 with Baritone
Bryn Terfel, soprano Ying Huang and tenor
Paul Groves. The original
libretto was written in
French by the late
Étienne Roda-Gil, who set the opera during the early
French Revolution. From 1997 Waters rewrote the libretto in
English.
On 2 July 2005 Waters and Pink Floyd reunited for a performance at the
Live 8 concert. They played a four-song, 23-minute set, including "
Speak to Me/
Breathe"/"
Breathe (Reprise)", "
Money", "
Wish You Were Here", and "
Comfortably Numb". Waters remarked shortly after Live 8 to the
Associated Press that, while the experience of playing as Pink Floyd again was positive, the chances of a bona fide reunion would be "slight", considering his and Gilmour's continuing musical and ideological differences. During an interview with
Rolling Stone
, Waters further denied the possibility of a future Pink Floyd tour, saying "I didn't mind rolling over for one day, but I couldn't roll over for a whole fucking tour."
[9] He has since stated on a radio interview that he would be interested in the possibility of recording a new album with the rest of Pink Floyd as long as he had creative control. However, Gilmour has said on several occasions that he is retired from extensive touring, shedding more doubt on the possibility of a Pink Floyd reunion tour.
However, more recently, Waters has become more open to the idea of a Pink Floyd reunion tour, stating during the BBC documentary "Which One's Pink", "It was really cool, I'd like to do more of it", and at the end of the program, stated "I don't think it will happen but I'd like...well, you can ask David when you speak to him."
Waters is known to be working on two new solo albums; one has the working title of
Heartland
. Two new songs that might appear on this album have been released on
Flickering Flame: The Solo Years Vol. 1
: "
Each Small Candle" and "Flickering Flame". The other of the two albums deals with the theme of love, much in the vein of
Pros and Cons
. A work-in-progress, which may appear on this album and was dubbed "Woman" by bootleggers, was heard during the sound checks for the In the Flesh tour. However, in a recent telephone interview, he confirmed that the release of his next project has been delayed due to not having a concept to draw all the individual songs together into one piece.
Roger Waters toured Europe and North America during 2006 for his
The Dark Side of the Moon Live Tour. As part of his performance he played a complete run-through of the 1973 Pink Floyd classic,
The Dark Side of the Moon
, as the second half of the show. The first half was a mix of Floyd classics and Waters' solo material. Elaborate staging designed by Marc Brickman, complete with projections, and a full, 360 degree quadrophonic sound system were used. This new Waters' solo tour is expected to be as successful as his previous
In the Flesh
tour. His former Pink Floyd bandmate, Nick Mason, joined Waters on some of the tour dates. Richard Wright was invited to participate on the tour as well but he declined the offer to work on solo projects.
[10] There was also a 2007 leg of the Tour, starting in January in Australia, followed by New Zealand and going through Asia, Europe, South America, and finally North America in June.
Syd Barrett, who died on 7 July 2006, remained an emotional subject for most of his friends and former colleagues. Waters said in interviews before Barrett's death that it would be difficult and inappropriate for him to try to insert himself back into his old friend's life.
Mason began patching their relationship in 2002. After speaking to Mason and
Bob Geldof about a possible Pink Floyd reunion at Live 8, Waters contacted Gilmour by phone and e-mail, and it appears that they have buried the hatchet since the concert and now communicate on a friendly basis. Waters had made overtures to Wright, as well, before Wright's death on 15 September 2008. Following this Waters stated on his website: "Rick's ear for harmonic progression was our bedrock. I am very grateful for the opportunity that Live 8 afforded me to engage with him, and David and Nick that one last time. I wish there had been more."
In March 2007 the science fiction film
The Last Mimzy
was released featuring a new exclusive song, "Hello (I love you)", which played over the end credits.
Waters described it as "a song that captures the themes of the movie, the clash between humanity's best and worst instincts, and how a child's innocence can win the day."
[11]
On 7 July 2007, Waters played at the American leg of the
Live Earth concert, an international multi-venue concert aimed to raise awareness about global climate change, featuring the
Trenton Youth Choir and his trademark inflatable pig. Waters has also recently become a spokesperson for
Millennium Promise, a non-profit organisation that helps fight extreme poverty and
malaria, and wrote a commentary for
CNN's website on 11 June 2007 about the topic.
[12] After wrapping up a performance at the
Coachella Festival in April, Waters continued his
The Dark Side of the Moon Live tour in 2008.
[13]
Waters was to be among the headlining artists performing at
Live Earth 2008 in
Mumbai,
India on 7 December 2008. This concert was cancelled in light of the
terrorist attacks in Mumbai throughout November 2008.
[14]
Hits and awards
Waters' solo singles have seen little chart activity; "
What God Wants, Pt. 1" reached #35 in the UK in September 1992.
[15] His first major solo album,
The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking
, has been certified Gold by the
RIAA, and his opera
Ça Ira
reached #1 on both the UK and U.S. Classical Charts. Waters has also been inducted into the U.S. and UK Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Pink Floyd, and received a "Media Event of the Year" award for mounting
The Wall Live in Berlin
. In February 2009 he received a "
Cinema for Peace" award for
The Wall
.
[16]
Equipment and instruments
Though Waters does not talk a lot about the musical equipment he uses in his tours and during his recordings, it is known that when he first started playing with Pink Floyd he used a
Höfner bass, quickly replacing that with a
Rickenbacker 4001S bass guitar. In the early 1970s, he switched to a
Fender Precision Bass. He often plays with a
pick, but is also known to play
fingerstyle occasionally. He also uses
RotoSound Jazz Bass 77 bass guitar strings. Throughout his career, he has used WEM, Hiwatt and Ashdown amplifiers. He is known to use
delay;
tremolo;
chorus effect and
phaser effects in his music.
While usually credited only as a bass guitarist and vocalist, Waters is also known to play electric guitar (as he did on
Wish You Were Here
and
Animals
, where he played
rhythm guitar on tracks "
Shine On You Crazy Diamond" part 9, "
Pigs (Three Different Ones)" and "
Sheep") as well as add
synthesizer and
tape effects, both to Pink Floyd and his solo works. He also plays acoustic guitar frequently during his live tours, mostly on tracks from
The Final Cut
and on the track "Mother".
The following is a list of equipment Waters either has used on his solo or Pink Floyd recordings, as well as on tours.
[17] [18] [19]
Bass guitars
- Höfner bass guitar. His first bass.
- Rickenbacker RM-1999 (also known as 4001S). Fireglo with rosewood fretboard. Used between 1966-1969. Lost in 1970 after equipment van was stolen in New Orleans, and everything was subsequently recovered except the guitars and basses.
- Fender Precision Bass. Waters was first seen in 1968 with a Precision. After 1970 he has rarely used any other bass guitars.
- *Sunburst with rosewood fretboard and brown tortoise pickguard. First seen in September 1968. Also used in the early 70's. Pickup cover and thumbrest (below pickups) attached.
- *White with brown tortoise pickguard and rosewood fretboard. Appears on back cover of Ummagumma 1969. Seen used at the KQED TV recording April 1970 as well as several photographs from 1969. Stolen along with Rickenbacker after equipment van heist in 1970
- *Multi-coloured jazz bass with rosewood fretboard. Actual colours of bass are unknown since only black and white footage/photos exist. This is a WWII German camouflage pattern. Used extremely rarely in 1969.
- *Black with rosewood fretboard. Seen in some early performances.
- *Black with white pickguard, maple fretboard. First seen at a concert in Hyde park in July 1970, this guitar was used on very few occasions before April 1972 when it became his de facto
only guitar on stage. Circa 1976 Phil Taylor (David Gilmour's guitar technician) replaced the white pickguard with a black, something clearly visible on In the Flesh and The Wall tours. During the Wall sessions and tour Waters had three of them.
- *Sunburst with maple fretboard and gold anodized pickguard. Used during the Dark Side of the Moon
recordings.
- *Black with maple fretboard and black pickguard. His main bass guitars during the 1980s solo album and tours. It could be argued whether this guitar is the one which originally had white pickguard (see above).
Waters currently uses Samson wireless systems with his basses.
- Black with maple fretboard "Charvel" Precision style - currently used on Live 8, The Dark Side Of The Moon Live 2006-2008
Guitars
- CBS Fender Stratocaster. Black with white pickguard, maple fretboard.
- CBS Fender Stratocaster. Black with maple fretboard. Used on the 1977 tour.
- Fender Stratocaster. Black with white pickguard and maple fretboard. Used on The Wall recording sessions.
- Ovation Legend acoustic/electric guitar. Used on the 1977 tour.
- Ovation Legend 1619-4 acoustic guitar. Used on The Wall recording sessions and tour. Also used on The Pros & Cons of Hitch Hiking Tour.
- Ovation Classical 1613 acoustic guitar. Used on The Wall tour.
- Washburn electric-acoustic guitar. Blue. Used on Radio K.A.O.S. tour. and The Wall Live in Berlin.
- Gibson Les Paul guitar. Black. Used on Radio K.A.O.S. tour.
- Unknown Fender Telecaster copy. Black, with three control knobs. Used exclusively at The Wall Live in Berlin, on "Hey You".
- Martin 000-28EC acoustic guitar. Used on In the Flesh tour.
- Martin 000-28ECHF Bellezza Nera acoustic guitar. Used on Dark Side of the Moon Live tour.
- Washburn RR300 electric guitar (hi-strung). Sunburst. Used on In the Flesh tour.
- Fender Eric Clapton Signature Stratocaster. Torino Red with white pickguard. Used on In the Flesh tour.
- Fender Stratocaster. All black. Used on 2002 In the Flesh tour.
Solo discography
''For his work with Pink Floyd, see
Pink Floyd discography between 1967 and 1983
28 November 1970
| Music from The Body
(with Ron Geesin)
|
30 April 1984
| The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking
|
16 May 1986
| When the Wind Blows
(various artists soundtrack)
|
15 June 1987
| Radio K.A.O.S.
|
10 September 1990
| The Wall - Live in Berlin
|
7 September 1992
| Amused to Death
|
5 December 2000
| In the Flesh - Live
|
13 May 2002
| Flickering Flame: The Solo Years Volume 1
|
26 September 2005
| Ça Ira
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References
- Pink Floyd in Cambridge
- David Gilmour Interview
- ''Amused to Death'' review
- Glenn Povey and Richard Ashton interview with Gilmour, ''Brain Damage'', February 1988
- Schaffner, Nicholas, ''A Saucerful of Secrets: The Pink Floyd Odyssey'', First Edition, 1991, p.224
- "The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking" review
- http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:f04gtq2ztu4a Allmusic
- Pink Floyd's Wall Broadway bound
- Scaggs, Austin (11 August 2005). "Q&A", ''Rolling Stone'' issue 980
- 2006 North American Tour Full Details
- http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_pwwi/is_/ai_n17103978
- Waters: Something can be done about extreme poverty - CNN.com
- Portishead, Johnson, Waters To Headline Coachella
- [1]
- UK Top 40 chart archive database
- Pulse & Spirit, February 2009
- Fitch, Vernon: ''The Pink Floyd Encyclopedia (3rd Edition)'' 2005
- Mason, Nick: ''Inside Out - A Personal History of Pink Floyd'' 2004
- Fitch, Vernon and Mahon, Richard: ''Comfortably Numb - The Wall 1978-1981'' 2006