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Tema: Un dia triste para la musica

Se que hay muchos fanaticos de Pink Floyd en este foro asi que paso la noticia:
Lamentablemente fallecio hoy a la edad de 65 anos Richard Wright, el mitico tecladista de Pink Floyd.
Ya no se volveran a escuchar esos imponentes ambientes que el creaba en los teclados. y ya se desvanece del todo la idea que los miembros originales se vuelvan a juntar

[frame]http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080915/en_nm/wright_dc_3[/frame]

2 (editado por Est3ban 15.09.2008 16:26:18)

Re: Un dia triste para la musica

(crying)  ...Waters y Gilmour lo debían volver loco!!!
@Ummagumma: con ese nick, es lógico que seas vos el portavoz oficial de la banda para macacos. wink

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Estoy sin palabras, no me lo esperaba.

Un grande entre grandes que sufrió lo mismo que George Harrison con los Beatles al estar en "segunda linea de combate" y no poder ser apreciado en todo su potencial.

Muchas de las composiciones musicales y arreglos mas celebres de Pink Floyd son de Wright como por ej. "The Great Gig in the Sky", "Us and Them", "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" y el increíble "Echoes" el cual les recomiendo lo vean en el ultimo concierto de David Gilmour en el Royal Albert Hall que ahora lamentablemente es la ultima participación de Wright con lo mas cercano a lo que fue Pink Floyd.

Que en paz descanses querido Richard !!

Pink Floyd - Echoes (Part I) - Live at Pompeii October 1971

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLJ_QVfT_wM[/youtube]

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Shine y Echoes ... tal vez Sysyphus también.

"There was nothing so very remarkable in that; nor did Alice think it so very much out of the way to hear the Rabbit say to itself, 'Oh dear! Oh dear!  I shall be too late'."

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Una pena sad

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

:'( Que lástima :'(

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

para, que salado... adoro pink floyd, y las teclas de richard wright son lo más!
otra vez cancer, que bajón

Little boxes on the hillside

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

para !

Baldazo de agua fría.

Un MÚSICO con todas las letras y en mayúsculas.

Change fear for curiosity.

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

cada ves hay mas gente que se muere de cancer boooo, que salado...

el origen del mundo.

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

No one can replace Richard Wright. He was my musical partner and my friend.

In the welter of arguments about who or what was Pink Floyd, Rick's enormous input was frequently forgotten.

He was gentle, unassuming and private but his soulful voice and playing were vital, magical components of our most recognised Pink Floyd sound.

I have never played with anyone quite like him. The blend of his and my voices and our musical telepathy reached their first major flowering in 1971 on 'Echoes'. In my view all the greatest PF moments are the ones where he is in full flow. After all, without 'Us and Them' and 'The Great Gig In The Sky', both of which he wrote, what would 'The Dark Side Of The Moon' have been? Without his quiet touch the Album 'Wish You Were Here' would not quite have worked.

In our middle years, for many reasons he lost his way for a while, but in the early Nineties, with 'The Division Bell', his vitality, spark and humour returned to him and then the audience reaction to his appearances on my tour in 2006 was hugely uplifting and it's a mark of his modesty that those standing ovations came as a huge surprise to him, (though not to the rest of us).

Like Rick, I don't find it easy to express my feelings in words, but I loved him and will miss him enormously.

David Gilmour
Monday 15th September 2008

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Si creo que era con quien se llevaba Gilmour mejor.
Inclusive toco con el en la gira " On an Island" con el

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

me acabo de enterar, una lastima, sin duda una gran perdida...uff

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Pu.... qué pena, no se juntan más ...por lo menos no acá. (bye)

Sólo hay 2 cosas infinitas: el Universo y la estupidez humana. Y no estoy muy seguro de la primera
                                      Albert Einstein

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Rest in Peace Richard sad

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

iAlf escribió:

cada ves hay mas gente que se muere de cancer boooo, que salado...

en realidad, cada día hay menos gente que muere de cáncer, Alf.
porque el diagnóstico precoz es cada día más fiable, y porque los protocolos de tratamiento son cada día más eficaces.
el tipo de cáncer que fue causa de muerte de Richard Wright debió haber sido muy maligno, porque la evolución fue muy breve - muchas veces es más digno de esa manera.

"There was nothing so very remarkable in that; nor did Alice think it so very much out of the way to hear the Rabbit say to itself, 'Oh dear! Oh dear!  I shall be too late'."

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Siendo tan linda la vida, no veo qué digno es morirse. Ni así ni de cualquier otra manera.

Sólo hay 2 cosas infinitas: el Universo y la estupidez humana. Y no estoy muy seguro de la primera
                                      Albert Einstein

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

refuerte escribió:

Siendo tan linda la vida, no veo qué digno es morirse. Ni así ni de cualquier otra manera.

Creo que groucho se refiere a los tratamientos prolongados y agresivos de la enfermedad.
Sabiendo el inevitable desenlace es preferible que el mismo sea corto ya que es terrible tanto para el enfermo como para la familia.

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Juanjo:Mac escribió:

Creo que groucho se refiere a los tratamientos prolongados y agresivos de la enfermedad.
Sabiendo el inevitable desenlace es preferible que el mismo sea corto ya que es terrible tanto para el enfermo como para la familia.

sí, así es Juanjo. hay formas dignas e indignas de morir ( en la literatura, en las culturas, en la historia, en la medicina ... ) - la Bioética es un capítulo de la medicina que se ocupa de este asunto. en el caso de Wright, es indigno que haya muerto tan joven y talentoso, pero es digno que al menos haya sufrido poco tiempo y que quienes se ocuparon de él mientras estuvo vivo y enfermo supiesen hasta dónde llegar, y que pretender llegar más allá sería indigno para el paciente.

"There was nothing so very remarkable in that; nor did Alice think it so very much out of the way to hear the Rabbit say to itself, 'Oh dear! Oh dear!  I shall be too late'."

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

La web oficial de Roger Waters elimino todos los links de portada y puso la siguiente imagen en honor a Richard Wright.

http://www.macacos.com.uy/usuarios/juanjo/varios/Richard_Wright_Candles.jpg

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Iba a aclarar, pero se me fueron las ganas.

Sólo hay 2 cosas infinitas: el Universo y la estupidez humana. Y no estoy muy seguro de la primera
                                      Albert Einstein

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

que salado..... me quede sin palabras.
Si existe un dios tiene lógica que se lleve a los mejores wink

Refu, creo que capte lo que dijiste. No es digno morir de ninguna manera. No es de dignidad perder lo mas lindo que tenemos. Este era un ser digno de seguir viviendo, no de morir a manos de un cancer, por mas diagnosticado a tiempo que sea. Si, es horrible lo que un tratamiento te causa, pero es horrible morir a manos de lo que sea cuando tenes una vida entera para disfrutar, aprender y VIVIR.
Ahora comprendo mejor lo que te pasa Refu wink....same as me.

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

wink Gracias Luna...es así.

Sólo hay 2 cosas infinitas: el Universo y la estupidez humana. Y no estoy muy seguro de la primera
                                      Albert Einstein

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

No hay por donde! big_smile

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Me llamó la atención la poca difusión que se le dio a esto.
Triste

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Martinpost escribió:

Me llamó la atención la poca difusión que se le dio a esto.
Triste

Totalmente de acuerdo, el mas ridículo de los "homenajes" que escuche hoy (si, 2 días después) fue en radio Océano que pusieron "The Great Gig in the Sky" y se remitieron a leer información de internet (mas o menos 30 segundos).
Luego pasaron a un tema que nada tenia que ver pero con la misma música de fondo.

Cuando uno de los conductores quiso acordarse del nombre del disco no pudo y tuvo que asistirlo otro.
Por lo menos mira el disco antes de ponerlo... ah es cierto que ahora no usan ni siquiera CD's

El único que escribió unas sinceras palabras fue Gilmour, Waters y Mason brillaron por su ausencia.

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Retiro lo dicho anteriormente aunque a diferencia de Gilmour no se expresaron publicamente en sus respectivos sitios web.

"I was very sad to hear of Rick's premature death, I knew he had been ill, but the end came suddenly and shockingly. My thoughts are with his family, particularly [his children] Jamie and Gala and their mum Juliet, who I knew very well in the old days, and always liked very much and greatly admired. As for the man and his work, it is hard to overstate the importance of his musical voice in the Pink Floyd of the '60s and '70s. The intriguing, jazz influenced, modulations and voicings so familiar in 'Us and Them' and 'Great Gig in the Sky,' which lent those compositions both their extraordinary humanity and their majesty, are omnipresent in all the collaborative work the four of us did in those times. 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 [Gilmour] and Nick [Mason] that one last time. I wish there had been more."

Roger Waters

"Like any band, you can never quite quantify who does what. But Pink Floyd wouldn’t have been Pink Floyd if [we] hadn’t had Rick. I think there’s a feeling now -- particularly after all the warfare that went on with Roger and David trying to make clear what their contribution was -- that perhaps Rick rather got pushed into the background. Because the sound of Pink Floyd is more than the guitar, bass, and drum thing. Rick was the sound that knitted it all together....He was by far the quietest of the band, right from day one. And, I think, probably harder to get to know than the rest of us.....It’s almost that George Harrison thing. You sort of forget that they did a lot more than perhaps they’re given credit for."

Nick Mason

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Dejo una parte de la entrevista del año 1996 con motivo del lanzamiento de su ultimo album solista "Broken China"

RICHARD WRIGHT INTERVIEW

August 1996, by Mark Blake
THE FLOYD ERA

What did you think of The Final Cut (Floyd's first album without Wright)?

I didn't like it, but I knew that I could be quite prejudiced about it, considering my situation. But I think that if you ask Dave or Nick (Mason) about it they don't think it's a very good album either. The thing is, during The Final Cut, the three of them had huge fights which culminated in Roger leaving the band. He had the misguided belief that he was the band, which is why his ego was shattered when Dave eventually decided to carry on without him.

You've mentioned earlier that you were frustrated by some aspects of The Division Bell, What exactly?

I think we could have gone further towards making a Floyd album as we used to: more thematic, with all the music having a logical link. That's something I think a lot of the band's fans like and it was something I wanted to achieve with my own record. There are a lot of other aspects of the record that I was very happy about, such as being able to contribute to the writing. My influence can be heard on tracks like Marooned and Cluster One. Those were the kind of things that I gave the Floyd in the past and it was good that they were now getting used again.

You obviously have a really affection for what might be called the "classic" Pink Floyd sound?

Well, a lot of people have said that you can't listen to just a few songs on Broken China, you have to listen to the whole thing. I think that was true about Pink Floyd. That's what I liked about the albums and I think that's what a lot of people liked about the Floyd. I like playing that type of music and its also the kind of music I like creating. I'm not a songwriter as such - I don't like the idea of just writing 12 songs and sticking them on an album.

Would you agree that there are parallels between Broken China and film soundtrack music?

Yes. When Floyd wrote music for films like Zabriskie Point and More, they were still just a collection of songs and instrumental pieces. It's very hard to get into film soundtracks, but I am putting out the word that I would like to do them. Music and picture together fascinates me and how music can affect a film so completely. I'd love to have the chance to write for a major film.

Do you feel baffled by the mystique that still surrounds Pink Floyd and especially Syd Barrett, even now?

I think I can understand it. If you listen to The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn there are some extraordinary songs in there - and that's what Syd did. He was an amazing person, and they were the kind of songs that no one had ever written before - childlike, but wonderful stuff. Of course we developed and changed completely over the years. But I can understand why people still want to know about Syd and the music we did then.

How do you feel about subsequent generations listening to those records?

I don't know if that's a good thing or a bad thing. In some ways it's great. It's interesting that the music created in the 60's and 70's is still listened to so much today. On the last tour, it was incredible to be playing music to people who had not been born when it was written, yet knew it so well.

How do you view those early Pink Floyd records?

I cringe at some of my songs - such as Remember A Day. We were pretty amateurish at the time, but I don't think it was just my stuff that doesn't sound so good now. Something like Corporal Clegg, which was one of Roger's songs, is just as bad. Syd was the songwriter and then we came in and had to take over the song writing and it was a lot of responsibility to assume. We could never write like Syd, we never had the imagination to come out with the kind of lyrics he did.

What memories do you have of that early '70s period in the band's history - making records like Dark Side Of The Moon and Wish You Were Here?

The late 60's was a purely experimental time in the band's history. But it was a learning process. By the 70's we'd consolidated ourselves and we knew what we could do: what we could write, what we could play. Dark Side Of The Moon and Wish You Were Here was a very enjoyable time. Looking back now, though, it was also a very busy time, so I don't think we ever had much chance to sit back and think about what we were doing. Throughout the whole of the early '70s, we were either on the road or in a recording studio. That's all I can remember.

What do you think of Animals, nearly 20 years on?

It was difficult. It was 1977 and that was when Roger really began to start believing that he was the sole writer of the band. With regards to that album, it was partly my fault, because I didn't have much to offer. Dave, who did have something to offer, only managed to get a couple of things on there. I like my playing on the album, but it wasn't a fun record to make. Compared to, say, Wish You Were Here, where we were really pulling together as a band - we had our disagreements but it was still a nice creative process - Animals was a slog. But I didn't have anything to offer, material wise, so I was in a difficult situation.

Floyd were always lumped in with that whole '70s prog rock scene. Could you relate to those bands?

I always felt we were on our own, but I was aware of the bands that were around at this time: groups like Genesis, Yes and Led Zeppelin. I listened to all of those groups and I liked some of them. I always liked Genesis with Peter Gabriel, but I rather lost interest when he left.

Did punk make much difference to you?

I thought punk was good because it bought me back to the UFO Club days. At last I thought there was something that had come along and was really pushing the boundaries. Unfortunately, I didn't like the music, but I liked the whole movement and people like Malcom McLaren and Vivienne Westwood. I was quite flattered when the Floyd were criticised by some of the punk band (laughs), but it didn't bother me. Now look at the Sex Pistols. They've reformed!

So much of the Floyd's back catalogue is perceived as almost "untouchable". Do you fancy shattering any illusions and revealing whether there's anything you'd like to change about those records?

I think it's more in terms of the mixing and the sound we had, rather than the songs. I think we all wish some of the lyrics had been a bit better, especially on the earlier songs, and that the quality of the recording of the drums and bass, for example, was a bit better. But in terms on the whole essence of the songs, I don't think I'd want to go back and change anything, because that was how it was at the time. That was us.

Have the rest of Floyd heard Broken China?

Dave has certainly heard some of it, because I asked him to play on it. He did play on one track, but we then decided to use a different approach to the song later on, so we didn't use his guitar. He's heard the album and I think his comment was that he thought it was very good.

Do you ever see much of the band between albums and tours?

We don't socialise much. Pink Floyd is like a marriage that's on a permanent trial separation (laughs). We all respect each other but we're not close friends. At the beginning we were friends: we were living with each other constantly, 24 hours a day. But we were young then and we weren't so serious about our relationships. These days, I think it all comes down to respect. There's a respect between us.

Was The Division Bell an easy album for the three of you to make - compared to how relations had been the last time you were in the group?

Certainly. I don't know if that is down to age. I don't know if it gets easier as you get older. It might be. Although one tends to get more stubborn with age and set in one's ways, which is one of the things I always try to be aware of.

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

Creo que la poca difusion se debe al perfil bajo que siempre mantuvieron los integrantes del grupo, ellos siempre resaltaron como banda pero siempre fueron muy reacios a dar entrevistas y aparecer como "Jet Set".
Solo se concentraron en hacer buena musica y no ser una "banda mediatica", creo que a como se maneja la musica actual ( totalmente comercial) esto seria pracicamente imposible hoy por hoy
A modo de ejemplo recuerdo una entrevista de cuando llego Roger Waters a Bs As que en el aereopuerto preguntaban a la gente quien era el y muy poca gente lo supo reconocer.

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Re: Un dia triste para la musica

La (ST) Madre.... un grande.... esos solos de piano que se mandaba... dando un silencio entre cada copas, dando la nota justa en el momento justo...
UN SALADO, UN GRANDE.
GRACIAS RICHARD WRIGHT por ser parte de la banda que hace, hizo arte no musica...

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