"Two Suns in the Sunset" | |
---|---|
Song by Pink Floyd | |
from the album The Final Cut | |
Published | Pink Floyd Music Publishers Ltd |
Released | 21 March 1983 (UK) 2 April 1983 (US) |
Recorded | July–December 1982 |
Genre | Folk rock [1] |
Length | 5:23 |
Label | Harvest Records (UK) Columbia Records (US) |
Songwriter(s) | Roger Waters |
Producer(s) |
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"Two Suns in the Sunset" is the closing track on Pink Floyd's 1983 concept album The Final Cut , and Roger Waters' final chronological contribution to the band, before leaving in 1985. [2] [3]
Since there was no promotional tour for The Final Cut , and this album was entirely ignored by Gilmour, Wright and Mason during the tours for A Momentary Lapse of Reason and The Division Bell , "Two Suns in the Sunset" was never performed live by Pink Floyd. However, Roger Waters, as a solo artist, premiered the song almost 35 years after its release in a concert from the Us + Them Tour, held on 17 October 2018 at Itaipava Arena Fonte Nova in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil. [4] Waters also played it in 2022 on his This Is Not a Drill tour.
Partway through the song, the lyric "the sun is in the east, even though the day is done" refers to the glowing fireball of a nuclear explosion. [5] The song was partly inspired by Andrzej Wajda's movie Ashes and Diamonds (Polish: Popiół i Diament) [6]
Session drummer Andy Newmark plays drums on this song, as Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason felt unable to perform its complex time signature changes. The song begins and ends in 9/8 time, while the majority of the song is in 4/4 (or "common time"), and it is punctuated with added measures of 7/8 and 3/8. Adding to the complexity, the main theme of the rhythm guitar has chords changing emphatically in dotted eighth notes, so three eighth-note beats are divided equally in two. This is not unlike what "Mother", from the previous Pink Floyd album, The Wall , does, and on that song, Mason relinquished the drumming duties, in that case to Jeff Porcaro. [7] [8] [9]
In a review for The Final Cut, Justin Gerber of Consequence of Sound described "Two Suns in the Sunset" as "the album's crowning achievement." [10]
Toby Manning was less enthusiastic in his retrospective review, saying that this was the one song off The Final Cut where the musician Waters couldn't stay on the same level as the conceptualist Waters. [11]
with:
George Roger Waters is an English musician, singer-songwriter and composer. In 1965, he co-founded the progressive rock band Pink Floyd. Waters initially served almost entirely as the bassist, but following the departure of singer-songwriter Syd Barrett in 1968, he also became their lyricist, co-lead vocalist, conceptual leader and occasional rhythm guitarist until 1983.
The Final Cut is the 12th studio album by English rock band Pink Floyd, released on 21 March 1983 in the United Kingdom and on 2 April in the United States through Harvest and Columbia Records. It comprises unused material from the previous Pink Floyd album, The Wall (1979), alongside new material recorded throughout 1982.
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"Welcome to the Machine" is the second song on Pink Floyd's 1975 album Wish You Were Here. It features heavily processed synthesizers and acoustic guitars, as well as a wide range of tape effects. Both the music and the lyrics were written by bassist Roger Waters.
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