SONG FACTS

Month 10, 2023

 


“Wish You Were Here” - Pink Floyd 1975


SONG FACTS

“Wish You Were Here” video - Pink Floyd
Album: Wish You Were Here
Released 1975 video

Wish You Were Herevideo is about the detached feeling many of us float through life with. It's a commentary on how people cope with the world by withdrawing physically, mentally, or emotionally. The main inspiration was Pink Floyd founding member Syd Barrett and his ordeal with schizophrenia.

Roger Waters based the song on a poem he wrote about Syd Barrett's break from reality. In a 2022 interview on the Joe Rogan Experience, he clarified that “Wish You Were Herevideo was “partially” about Barrett, adding, “And I do wish he was here.&rdquo

Waters believes LSD fed into Barrett's eventual insanity but wasn't the sole cause, as he suspected Barrett was already teetering on the edge of schizophrenia. Waters watched Barrett slowly unwinding as the band rose to stardom, particularly after they released “Arnold Laynevideo

One anecdote Waters recalls in the interview is walking with Barrett outside Capitol Records in Los Angeles. Barrett looked at him and said, “It's nice here in Las Vegas, isn't it?” His face then darkened, and he spat out the word, “People!” The moment was characteristic of the disjoined nature of Barrett's mind leading up to his total break with reality.

Barretts decline was personally painful but also professionally frightening, as the band relied on him to write the bulk of their songs. When Waters realized they were losing him, he took control of the songwriting.

This was a rare case of the Pink Floyd primary songwriters Roger Waters and David Gilmour mutually collaborating on a song - they rarely wrote together. Gilmour had the opening riff written and was playing it in the studio at a fast pace when Roger Waters heard it and asked him to play it slower. The song built from there, with the pair writing the music for the chorus and verses together, and Waters adding the lyrics.

Wish You Were Here” is the title track to Pink Floyd's ninth album, their follow-up to “The Dark Side Of The Moon”. The song reflects the feeling in the studio while they were recording the album. Waters felt they had checked out and weren't putting a full effort into the recording sessions. He once said the song could have been called "Wish We Were Here."

When this song starts, it sounds like it is coming from an AM radio somewhere in the distance. This represents the distance between the listener and the music.

At the end of the song, when the wind is blowing, you can hear the sound of a violin played by Stephane Grappelli, a French jazz musician who was recording in nearby studios. Pink Floyd asked him to play on the track when they found out he was there.

The theme of absence pervades the album. They chose “Wish You Were Here” as the title track because it summed up the message. The designer who did their cover art, Storm Thorgerson, was the first to suggest it as the album title.

The album contains images relating to the theme of detachment. The most prominent shows two businessmen shaking hands, with one of them on fire. This represents an insincere business deal, with one of the men about to get burned. In all of the images, there is something missing, like the diver who does not make a splash.

Like many Pink Floyd albums, Wish You Were Here doesn't translate nearly as well to CD or streaming. A lot of work went into choosing which songs were on the front and back sides of the album, which is eliminated on the CD, and there is also a lot less room for the artwork, which goes along with the music.

When Pink Floyd was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996, they played “Wish You Were Herevideo at the induction ceremony. Drummer Nick Mason accepted the award but didn't join the performance, while Roger Waters and Syd Barrett didn't attend.

The small sample of classical music at the beginning of the song is from “Tchaikovsky's 4th Symphonyvideo.

In the 26th second of the song you can hear a small cough. This was to create the effect of a man listening to the radio and playing along with his guitar. In the 31st second you can hear a sniff. Rumors say that it symbolizes Gilmour quitting smoking, but it could just be the radio and the man.

In the mid-'80s, Roger Waters left the band and assumed Pink Floyd was dissolved. It wasn't: Davie Gilmour and Nick Mason carried on without him, starting with the 1987 album A Momentary Lapse of Reason. At his solo concerts, Waters avoided songs he wrote with Gilmour, but “Wish You Were Here” is an exception, played at most of his shows. “It still brings tears to my eyes when I sing it because it's so important to every day of my life, because we too often fail to make the connections that we ought to”, he said on a 1992 Jim Ladd radio special.

Fred Durst and Wes Borland of Limp Bizkit and Johnny Rzeznik of The Goo Goo Dolls performed this at the 2001 “Tribute To Heroes” telethon to benefit victims of the terrorist attacks on America. Durst, Rzeznik, and Borland appealed to a younger audience, but this song was familiar to the older viewers as well. Almost 60 million people watched the telethon.

Wyclef Jean did a soul-reggae version on his 2 Side II a Book album. He paid credit to Pink Floyd in additional lyrics at the end of the track:

“My brother tune me into rock”

“Put me up on Pink Floyd, a band from the British blocks”

With Nick Mason on drums, Ed Sheeran, Richard Jones of The Feeling, and Mike Rutherford of Genesis performed “Wish You Were Here” at the Closing Ceremony of the London 2012 Summer Olympics. This version entered the UK singles chart at #34 the following week. The Pink Floyd original simultaneously landed at #68, marking the first time it had entered the UK top 75.


 

“Wish You Were Here” - Pink Floyd 1975)

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“Wish You Were Here” - Pink Floyd 1975

1975

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1977

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Pink Floyd official site (Pink Floyd Discography) / Rock & Roll Hall of Fame / Billboard / All Music / Song Facts / Ultimate Classic Rock / Pink Floyd

Image: “Wish You Were Here (album)” by Pink Floyd