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Information About

The Final Cut (album)




  Type LP
  Artist Pink Floyd
  Cover Thefinalcutcoverjpg
  Background Orange
  Released March 21 1983 (UK)<br /> April 2 , 1983 (US)
  Recorded July - December 1982, in various studios
  Genre Progressive Rock
  Length 43:27
  Label Harvest (UK) Capitol (US)
  Producer Roger&nbspWaters , James&nbspGuthrie and Michael&nbspKamen
  Last Album '' A Collection Of Great Dance Songs ''<br />(1981)
  This Album ''The Final Cut''<br />(1983)
  Next Album '' A Momentary Lapse Of Reason ''<br />(1987)


''The Final Cut'' is a rock Album by Pink Floyd recorded at several studios in the UK from July to December 1982 . It is the final Pink Floyd studio album to feature Roger Waters .


HISTORY

The LP was released Harvest/EMI in the UK on March 21 , 1983 and then on Columbia Records in the US on April 2 . ''The Final Cut'' reached #1 on the UK album charts and #6 in the US. On May 23 , 1983, ''The Final Cut'' went Gold and Platinum in May of 1983 and then Double Platinum on January 31 , 1997 .

Originally scheduled as the film soundtrack for the band's movie '', performed by Pink Floyd" - it was solely written by Waters and is the last 'Floyd album with him on board. The Final Cut is also the only Pink Floyd album on which Richard Wright does not appear—Waters had fired him during The Wall composition.

Many Floyd fans dispute whether this is really a Floyd album. Many have said that it is a Waters solo album under the moniker Pink Floyd. It has only one David Gilmour lead vocal (on Not Now John), and sounds more like Waters's solo recordings. Oddly, David Gilmour was paid for his work as producer under the conditions that he not be credited for it. Waters dominated the recording sessions, furthering the tension that already existed between him, David Gilmour , and Nick Mason , and even employed a session drummer on "Two Suns in the Sunset." Waters intended this to be the last Floyd album, but Gilmour and Mason (along with Wright as a session player) put out A Momentary Lapse Of Reason in 1987.

"Not Now John" was released as a single with "fuck all that" from the choruses Overdub bed as "stuff all that", backed by an extended version of "The Hero's Return" as a B-side , featuring an additional verse.


FILM

Pink Floyd released a 19-minute "video EP" for The Final Cut, essentially four music videos in a continuous sequence, directed by , who played the teacher in the film version of "The Wall", had a prominent role in the video EP. Roger Waters appears (albeit all but his mouth are sillhouetted) as a patient singing the lyrics to a psychologist on the grounds of the Fletcher Memorial Home.


CONCEPT

The album has three overlapping storylines:



With the nuclear Annihilation ending the album, it could be argued that Pink's unclear fate after the end of The Wall also becomes clear in the end of this album.


COVER

The cover was designed by Roger Waters. It features a Remembrance Day Poppy and four World War II medal ribbons (from left):

Vinyl copies did not have the album title on the cover; this was added for the CD and cassette releases.


REISSUES

In ''.


TRACK LISTING



On the original release

#"The Post War Dream" - 3:02
#"Your Possible Pasts" - 4:22
#"One of the Few" - 1:23
#"The Hero's Return" - 2:56
#"The Gunner's Dream" - 5:07
#"Paranoid Eyes" - 3:40
#"Get Your Filthy Hands Off My Desert" - 1:19
#" The Fletcher Memorial Home " - 4:11
#"Southampton Dock" - 2:13
#" The Final Cut " - 4:46
#"Not Now John" - 5:01
#"Two Suns in the Sunset" - 5:14


On the 2004 re-release

#" The Post War Dream " - 3:00
#"Your Possible Pasts" - 4:26
#"One of the Few" - 1:11
#" When The Tigers Broke Free " - 3:16
#"The Hero's Return" - 2:43
#"The Gunner's Dream" - 5:18
#"Paranoid Eyes" - 3:41
#"Get Your Filthy Hands Off My Desert" - 1:17
#" The Fletcher Memorial Home " - 4:12
#"Southampton Dock" - 2:10
#"The Final Cut" - 4:45
#" Not Now John " - 4:56
#" Two Suns In The Sunset " - 5:23

All songs composed by Roger Waters .


PERSONNEL


with




QUOTES


''The Final Cut'' was absolutely misery to make, although I listened to it of late and I rather like a lot of it. But I don't like my singing on it. You can hear the mad tension running through it all. If you're trying to express something and being prevented from doing it because you're so uptight...It was a horrible time. We were all fighting like cats and dogs. We were finally realising—or accepting, if you like—that there was no band. It was really being thrust upon us that we were not a band and had not been in accord for a long time. Not since 1975, when we made ''Wish You Were Here''. Even then there were big disagreements about content and how to put the record together {Link without Title} It sold three million copies, which wasn't a lot for the Pink Floyd. And as a consequence, Dave Gilmour went on record as saying, "There you go: I knew he was doing it wrong all along." But it's absolutely ridiculous to judge a record solely on sales. If you're going to use sales as the sole criterion, it makes ''Grease'' a better record than ''Graceland''.

:—Roger Waters, June 1987 , to Chris Salewicz

Well, this has been my beef for years, I mean always has been one of my beefs about what we do is that the balance has to be maintained. I've said it hundreds of times, ''ad nauseam'' I've said it—it's the balance between the words and the music I think is a very important thing and that's what I think we lost very much on ''The Final Cut''.

:—David Gilmour, Australian Radio, February 1988

The Final Cut was the lowest point in our Pink Floyd career for me, personally. I started off trying to do my best on that record... I had tried to point out to Roger that some of the tracks he wanted to put on it were tracks we had rejected off The Wall album because we didn't like them, you know. Roger just thought I was interfering... he'd got to a sort of megalomaniac stage where he could not tolerate anyone else having any real say in what was going on. We did fight horribly throughout that whole period.

:— David Gilmour recalls himself about the album during the early 1990's

It's very very good, but it's not personally how I would see a Pink Floyd record going. The sound quality is very good, it's very very well recorded, and the string arrangements and orchestral stuff are very well done, but it's not me. Consequently, I was arguing about how to make the record, at the beginning and it was being counterproductive.

:—David Gilmour, in a May 1983 interview


SINGLES



CHARTS

Album - Billboard (North America)

Singles


EXTERNAL LINK