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List of unreleased songs recorded by Pink Floyd

Pink Floyd have been known to perform and/or record a number of songs and instrumentals which have never been officially released on a single or album. Only those whose existence can be reliably confirmed are listed here. Bootleg recordings of the majority of below listed songs exist.

Several previously unreleased songs appeared on The Early Years 1965–1972 box set in November 2016, and The Later Years box set in December 2019, which marked their first official releases.

Syd Barrett–era unreleased songs edit

"I Get Stoned" edit

"I Get Stoned" is a Barrett song recorded live-in-studio on 31 October 1966, along with a version of "Interstellar Overdrive", at Thompson Private Recording Company.[1] The song features Barrett with an acoustic guitar.[2] The song was performed during a gig at the All Saints Hall in 1966.[3] The opening lines are thought to be "Living alone/I get stoned". The master tapes for the song are unknown, however under the title "Living Alone", a demo was recorded by Barrett during the sessions for the Barrett album on 27 February 1970.[4]

"Pink Theme" edit

"Pink Theme" is a song performed by the Barrett-era Pink Floyd in 1966. The song is thought to be an instrumental. Pink Floyd recorded the song at a concert at The All Saints Church Hall in London, England, on 14 October 1966. No known recording of this song is extant.

"Flapdoodle Dealing" edit

"Flapdoodle Dealing" is an instrumental song performed by the Barrett-era Pink Floyd in 1966.[5][6] Roger Waters is thought to have come up with its title. Pink Floyd never recorded a studio version of the song,[6] however, a version was recorded live at a concert at The All Saints Church Hall in London, England, on 14 October 1966.[5]

"Let's Roll Another One" edit

"Let's Roll Another One" is a Barrett song, later retitled "Candy and a Currant Bun" before being released in 1967.[7][8][9] It was written in 1965.[10] It features the original lyrics which were altered for the released single at the suggestion of Waters,[7] allegedly due to concerns about the acceptability of drug references, and the song can be found on bootlegs like "Feed Your Head".

"She Was a Millionaire" edit

"She Was a Millionaire" is a Barrett song, recorded at Abbey Road on 18 April 1967,[11][12] as a possible B-side.[13] Manager Peter Jenner said that the track was "the one that got away, the hit they were looking for."[13][14] The opening lines are thought to be "She was a millionaire/She had some time to spare". The instrumental backing track was completed by Pink Floyd but the master tapes for the song most likely were erased.[13] Elements from the song, however, would later become part of Barrett's solo song "Opel" recorded in 1969. Two takes were attempted at a backing track by Barrett during the sessions for the Barrett album in 1970,[4][15] before Barrett added vocals.[12]

"No Title" edit

An instrumental recorded at Sound Techniques on 4 September 1967. The first 90 seconds of the songs recording is available on various bootlegs. This track is sometimes incorrectly labeled "Sunshine," a piece which later became a section of "Matilda Mother." One Floyd prosopography claims that this recording is over fifteen minutes in length.

"One in a Million" edit

"One in a Million" (also known by the titles "Rush in a Million",[16] "Once in a Million", "Rust in a Million", and "Brush Your Window"),[16] is a song performed by the Barrett-era Pink Floyd in 1967.[17] Pink Floyd performed the song at a concert in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 13 September 1967.[17][16][18] The discrepancies in the title stem from Roger Waters' misheard stage announcement on the poor audience recording of the show. It was sung by Waters.

"Intremental" edit

"Intremental" is a 10-minute instrumental that was recorded at De Lane Lea on 20 October 1967.[19]

"Early Morning Henry" edit

A demo from the "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun" sessions, as mentioned in David Parker's book Random Precision, a guide to the recordings of Barrett. Parker states that he contacted Mason to inquire as to what this song was, but Mason could not remember. In 2020 an acetate of this recording was found and sold in auction. It was revealed that it was a song written and sung by Billy Butler, and Pink Floyd was used as the backing band. As part of the auction a 47-second snippet of the song was posted online. The full song has still not been released.[20]

"Green Onions" edit

A cover of "Green Onions" by Booker T. & the M.G.'s was performed on the BBC1 TV program Tomorrow's World on 12 December 1967.

"Have You Got It Yet?" edit

"Have You Got It Yet?" is an unfinished song written by Barrett during the short time in which Pink Floyd was a five-piece. At the time, David Gilmour had been asked to join as a fifth member and second guitarist, while Barrett, whose mental state was creating issues with the band, was intended to remain home and compose songs, much as Brian Wilson had done for The Beach Boys; however, this idea was soon abandoned.[21][22][23]

Barrett's unpredictable behaviour at the time and idiosyncratic sense of humour[24] combined to create a song that, initially, seemed like an ordinary Barrett tune. However, as soon as the others attempted to join in and learn the song, Barrett changed the melodies and structure, making it impossible for the others to follow,[22][23] while singing the chorus "Have You Got It Yet?" and having the rest of the band answer "No, no!".[25] This would be his last attempt to write material for Pink Floyd before leaving the band.[25] In fact, Waters stated, in an interview for The Pink Floyd and Syd Barrett Story, that upon realizing Barrett was deliberately making the tune impossible to learn, he put down his bass guitar, left the room, and never attempted to play with Barrett again. Waters had called it "a real act of mad genius".[22][23][25] The song was never recorded by Pink Floyd or Barrett, but its title was used for the 2023 documentary Have You Got It Yet? The story of Syd Barrett and Pink Floyd, directed by Roddy Bogawa and Storm Thorgerson.

Later–era unreleased songs edit

"The Committee" Instrumentals edit

In early 1968, Pink Floyd recorded several instrumental tracks to be used in the soundtrack to the Peter Sykes film The Committee, starring former Manfred Mann singer Paul Jones. Syd Barrett had originally been approached to record music for the film, but his solo attempt was deemed to be unusable. The band, now with Gilmour on guitar, took over and recorded their pieces in a basement studio in London. The two main pieces are actually the same tune played at two different tempos, with the main riff featured on guitar for the first, the keyboard for the second. A third, lengthy instrumental is an embryonic version of "Careful With That Axe, Eugene". The opening instrumental is a short backwards-played tape made up of Tablas, guitar and a high pitch sound effect, which sounds very similar to what was described by the makers as the piece Barrett had attempted, leading fans to believe his initial idea may have been used by the band. Parts 1 and 2 have seen official release in The Early Years 1965—1972 box set.

"Richard's Rave Up" edit

"Richard's Rave Up" was a track recorded on 13 February 1968, during sessions for A Saucerful of Secrets. Per Glenn Povey's The Complete Pink Floyd, studio notes show Take 1 as 2:54 in length. (This was not "Song 1," which was recorded Aug 1968 in Los Angeles.)

"The Boppin' Sound" edit

"The Boppin' Sound" was recorded on 13 February 1968, during sessions for A Saucerful of Secrets. Was mixed down on that date. Per Glenn Povey's The Complete Pink Floyd, studio notes show Take 1 as 3:00 in length. (This was not "Roger's Boogie," which was recorded Aug 1968 in Los Angeles and is 4:35 in length.)

"Incarceration of a Flower Child" edit

A Waters-penned song written in 1968, after Barrett left the band, as an attempt to reinvent themselves.[26] The lyrics are about the downfall of Barrett.[27][28] The song was eventually recorded by Marianne Faithfull on her 1999 album Vagabond Ways.[27][28][29] The melody of the opening of the verses provided the chorus of "Your Possible Pasts", from the Pink Floyd album The Final Cut.

"Seabirds" edit

A song used in the More film but as yet unreleased. A song titled "Seabirds" was released as part of The Early Years 1965–1972 box set in 2016, however this is not the song from the film but an alternate version of the instrumental track "Quicksilver".

"Stefan's Tit" edit

An outtake from the More sessions. Working title for "Green Is The Colour".

"Paris Bar" edit

Another More outtake, found on the same multitrack tape as the above track. Working title for "Ibiza Bar".

"Theme (Dramatic Version)" edit

Another More outtake, found on the same multitrack tape as the above tracks. Working title for "Dramatic Theme".

"Alan's Blues" edit

"Alan's Blues" is an instrumental blues song first recorded for the film Zabriskie Point in December 1969. This version was released as a bonus track on the 1997 soundtrack reissue under the title "Love Scene 6". It began appearing in live shows in early 1970, initially along with a couple other Zabriskie instrumentals ("Heart Beat, Pig Meat" and "The Violent Sequence") that were soon dropped. Performed through 1972, often as an encore. Possibly also recorded in 1971. The song appears on various bootleg recordings (usually live, sometimes given the nickname of "Pink Blues").

"Rain in the Country" edit

A nearly 7 minute instrumental outtake from the Zabriskie Point sessions, based on "The Narrow Way".[30] It is available on bootleg albums such as Omay Yad.[30] On the bootleg, The Complete Zabriskie Point Sessions, the Take 1 ends in "Unknown Song" while Take 2 ends in "Crumbling Land".

"Oenone" edit

A lengthy instrumental in the Zabriskie Point film,[31][32] intended for a sex scene. Three takes were recorded (under the working titles "Love Scene No. 1", "No. 2" and "No. 3"), each somewhat different from the others, but all sharing the same eerie organ-and-guitar motif. The term "Oenone" refers to a Greek mythological character, namely the first wife of Paris of Troy. Early bootleg appearances list the song as "Oneone", sometimes thought to be a misspelling of the mythological character, but more likely a phonetic tip of the hat to Zabriskie Point's director Michelangelo Antonioni. Excerpts of "Oenone" were released as part of The Early Years 1965–1972 box set in 2016 under the titles "Love Scene Version 1" and "Love Scene Version 2", though no complete takes have ever been released officially.

"Just Another Twelve Bar" edit

Another improvised instrumental recorded during the Atom Heart Mother world tour in 1970. The sole circulating recording cuts in midway, and what is heard is close enough to the finale jam of the song "Biding My Time" that it's possible this song is simply an excerpt of that one.

"Pink Blues" edit

Often referred to as simply "Blues"; blues jam played after encores during the Meddle tour, during 1971. In December 2021, a previously unreleased live album, titled "Embryo, San Diego, Live 17 Oct. 1971", was released on Spotify, along with 11 other new live albums recorded between 1970 and 1972. This album concludes with a 5-minute "Blues Jam". Also see "Alan's Blues" (above).

"Corrosion in the Pink Room" edit

"Corrosion in the Pink Room" is a song written by Waters, Gilmour, Wright, and Mason. It is an instrumental piece that was played at their live shows during the early 1970s. It is a very avant-garde piece, with eerie piano playing by Wright and scatting by Waters, reminiscent of the sounds on "Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict". Halfway through, the song transitions to a jazzy blues jam, similar to "Funky Dung". It also was known to feature the "whalesong effect", used during live performances of "Embryo" and, later on, "Echoes". Roger Waters often meddled with their manager Steve O'Rourke while performing, indicated by him calling out "Steven" in this song.[33]

"The Merry Xmas Song" edit

"The Merry Xmas Song" is a humorous song written for a one-off performance on BBC radio in 1969, during the Zabriskie Point soundtrack sessions, and performed around 1975. It is notable as one of only six Pink Floyd songs to feature Mason on vocals (Barrett's "Scream Thy Last Scream", "Corporal Clegg", "One of These Days", "Signs of Life", and "Learning to Fly").

"Richard Are You Ready Yet?" edit

"Richard Are You Ready Yet?" is a humorous self-parody song improvised during an interlude at the Live at Berlin tour.

"Long Blues" edit

An improvised blues piece, "Long Blues" was performed live in 1970, at Montreux. Waters announced that since it was "a bit late for mind-expanding, [they]'re going to play some music to calm down to". While similar in sound to "Alan's Blues", some elements from "Funky Dung" and "Mudmen" are definitely present. It appears on the Early Flights, Volume 1 bootleg.

"Bitter Love" edit

Written by Waters, the song is about the bad experience Pink Floyd had after agreeing to appear in magazine advertisements for a French soft lemon drink called "Gini" originally from Perrier. Lyrically, the song describes Waters selling his soul in the desert. The song is also known as "How Do You Feel?".

"Drift Away Blues" edit

"Drift Away Blues" is a blues improvisation that was played live[34] on 6 July 1977 at the Stade olympique, Montreal, as an encore, picked in response to an aggressive audience. Waters introduced the song by telling the audience that "since we can't play any more of our songs, here's some music to go home to." Allegedly, Gilmour was upset at this and slipped off the stage rather than play. It appears on the Azimuth Coordinator Part 3 bootleg, and others of that date.

"Overture" edit

"Overture" is a song that was written by Waters for The Wall movie.[35] Pink Floyd decided not to include the song and it is unknown if it was ever recorded.[35]

"Death Disco" edit

An unreleased portion of The Wall, in which a DJ is heard to taunt an audience. Some Floyd books mistakenly give the title as "The Death of Disco" or "The Death of Cisco". It introduced the fascist ideas later heard in "In the Flesh", and the guitar riff was later developed into "Young Lust".

Unreleased albums edit

The Committee soundtrack edit

At one point, it was considered that a soundtrack LP should be released containing music heard in the obscure science fiction film The Committee, for which Pink Floyd recorded a handful of seemingly untitled instrumentals, and The Crazy World of Arthur Brown contributed the song "Nightmare". Although bootleg soundtracks (both vinyl and CD) have been released by fans, the fact that the total running time of the material merely fills one side of an LP shows that this may not have been a commercially viable idea.

The Man & The Journey live album edit

The conceptual tour following Ummagumma's release was recorded at Amsterdam around autumn and released as a bootleg. This was released on The Early Years 1965—1972 box set in 2016.

Zabriskie Point soundtrack edit

In 2011, a document[citation needed] was found regarding a scrapped Zabriskie Point soundtrack LP consisting entirely of Pink Floyd's score (much of which was rejected from the final film). The soundtrack was in fact released, but the album would have originally consisted of the following songs, possibly in this order:

  1. "Heart Beat, Pig Meat"
  2. "Country Song"
  3. "Fingal's Cave"
  4. "Crumbling Land"
  5. "Alan's Blues"
  6. "Oenone"
  7. "Rain in the Country/Unknown Song"
  8. "Come in No. 51, Your Time Is Up" (this is a different title for "Careful with That Axe, Eugene")

Sixteen additional tracks were released on The Early Years 1965—1972 box set.

Household Objects edit

Following the success of The Dark Side of the Moon, Pink Floyd were unsure of their direction and worried about how to top that record's popularity. Returning to their experimental beginnings, they began a project entitled Household Objects, which would consist of songs played on hand mixers, rubber bands stretched between two tables, wine glasses and so on. The planned album was soon shelved.

"There weren't going going to be any real musical instruments on it at all," explained engineer Alan Parsons, "and it was to be recorded using only one microphone. We spent something like four weeks in the studio on it, and came away with no more than one and a half minutes [sic] of music."[36]

Two tracks – "The Hard Way" and "Wine Glasses" (the latter incorporated into the opening of "Shine On You Crazy Diamond") – were released on the Pink Floyd reissues in September and November 2011 on The Dark Side of the Moon (Immersion Box Set) and Wish You Were Here (Experience Version and Immersion Box Set), respectively.

In 2001, Simon Reynolds of The Wire described Household Objects as "a gambit that would have surpassed in advance PiL's Flowers of Romance, ATV's Vibing Up the Senile Man, Nurse With Wound, not to mention Matt Herbert."[37] Open Culture compared the project to similar found sound works, such as those from John Cage and composers of musique concrète.[38] Austin Powell of The Austin Chronicle refers to the recording of Household Objects as "sound-collage sessions" and writes that "The Hard Way" exemplifies "the playful experimentation of the era".[39]

Spare Bricks edit

Upon release of the film adaptation of The Wall, Pink Floyd planned to put together an album consisting of songs newly recorded for the film, as well as outtakes from the original Wall LP sessions. The proposed title for this disc was Spare Bricks. This was changed to "The Final Cut", which came from the song of the same name. The "When the Tigers Broke Free" single released at this time claim the track comes from the planned album. The Final Cut developed into a new concept album based in part around rewritten versions of The Wall outtakes. From 2004 onwards, Waters decided to incorporate the song into future CD pressings as the fourth track of the album.

The Big Spliff edit

In the 1990s, the engineer Andy Jackson edited unused material from the Division Bell sessions, described by Mason as ambient music, into an hour-long composition tentatively titled The Big Spliff.[40] Pink Floyd decided not to release it.[41] Part of The Big Spliff was used to create Pink Floyd's fifteenth and final album, The Endless River (2014).[42][43]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Palacios, Julian (2010). Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe (Rev. ed.). London: Plexus. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-85965-431-9.
  2. ^ Palacios, Julian (2010). Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe (Rev. ed.). London: Plexus. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-85965-431-9.
  3. ^ Palacios, Julian (2010). Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe (Rev. ed.). London: Plexus. p. 140. ISBN 978-0-85965-431-9.
  4. ^ a b Barrett (booklet). Syd Barrett. Harvest, EMI. 2010. p. 1.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  5. ^ a b Chapman, Rob (2010). "Flicker Flicker Blam Blam Pow". Syd Barrett: A Very Irregular Head (Paperback ed.). London: Faber. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-571-23855-2.
  6. ^ a b Palacios, Julian (2010). Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe (Rev. ed.). London: Plexus. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-85965-431-9.
  7. ^ a b Manning, Toby (2006). "The Underground". The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd (1st ed.). London: Rough Guides. p. 32. ISBN 1-84353-575-0.
  8. ^ Chapman, Rob (2010). "Watching Buttercups Cup the Light". Syd Barrett: A Very Irregular Head (Paperback ed.). London: Faber. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-571-23855-2.
  9. ^ Chapman, Rob (2010). "Distorted View – See Through Baby Blue". Syd Barrett: A Very Irregular Head (Paperback ed.). London: Faber. p. 134. ISBN 978-0-571-23855-2.
  10. ^ Chapman, Rob (2010). "Watching Buttercups Cup the Light". Syd Barrett: A Very Irregular Head (Paperback ed.). London: Faber. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-571-23855-2.
  11. ^ Jones, Malcolm (2003). The Making of The Madcap Laughs (21st Anniversary ed.). Brain Damage. p. 22.
  12. ^ a b Palacios, Julian (2010). "Within the Dark Globe". Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe (Rev. ed.). London: Plexus. p. 371. ISBN 978-0-85965-431-9.
  13. ^ a b c Palacios, Julian (2010). Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe (Rev. ed.). London: Plexus. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-85965-431-9.
  14. ^ Manning, Toby (2006). "The Underground". The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd (1st ed.). London: Rough Guides. p. 43. ISBN 1-84353-575-0.
  15. ^ "Unreleased Pink Floyd material: Millionaire / She Was a Millionaire". Pinkfloydhyperbase.dk. Retrieved 21 September 2012.
  16. ^ a b c "Unreleased Pink Floyd material: One in a Million". Pinkfloydhyperbase.dk. Retrieved 21 September 2012.
  17. ^ a b Palacios, Julian (2010). "Summer Tempests". Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe (Rev. ed.). London: Plexus. p. 272. ISBN 978-0-85965-431-9.
  18. ^ Manning, Toby (2006). "Soundtracks, Compilations & Bootlegs". The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd (1st ed.). London: Rough Guides. p. 226. ISBN 1-84353-575-0.
  19. ^ Palacios, Julian (2010). "Vegetable Man". Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe (Rev. ed.). London: Plexus. p. 288. ISBN 978-0-85965-431-9.
  20. ^ "Early Morning Henry featuring Pink Floyd Found – Listen Now!". September 25, 2020.
  21. ^ Schaffner, Nicholas (2005). "Apples and Oranges". Saucerful of Secrets: The Pink Floyd Odyssey (New ed.). London: Helter Skelter. p. 265. ISBN 1-905139-09-8.
  22. ^ a b c Manning, Toby (2006). "The Underground". The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd (1st ed.). London: Rough Guides. p. 45. ISBN 1-84353-575-0.
  23. ^ a b c Schaffner, Nicholas (2005). "Prologue – Wish You Were Here". Saucerful of Secrets: The Pink Floyd Odyssey (New ed.). London: Helter Skelter. p. 14. ISBN 1-905139-09-8.
  24. ^ DiLorenzo, Kris. "Syd Barrett: Careening Through Life." Trouser Press February 1978 pp. 26–32
  25. ^ a b c Palacios, Julian (2010). "Thunder Within the Earth". Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe (Rev. ed.). London: Plexus. p. 317. ISBN 978-0-85965-431-9.
  26. ^ Thompson, Dave. "Incarceration of a Flower a Child – Marianne Faithfull : Listen, Appearances, Song Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  27. ^ a b Palacios, Julian (2010). "The Return of Ulysses". Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe (Rev. ed.). London: Plexus. p. 392. ISBN 978-0-85965-431-9.
  28. ^ a b Manning, Toby (2006). "The Underground". The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd (1st ed.). London: Rough Guides. p. 46. ISBN 1-84353-575-0.
  29. ^ Demalon, Tom. "Vagabond Ways – Marianne Faithfull : Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  30. ^ a b "Unreleased Pink Floyd material - The Pink Floyd HyperBase". Pinkfloydhyperbase.dk. Retrieved 25 October 2021.
  31. ^ Manning, Toby (2006). "Soundtracks, Compilations & Bootlegs". The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd (1st ed.). London: Rough Guides. p. 227. ISBN 1-84353-575-0.
  32. ^ "Unreleased Pink Floyd material: Oenone". Pinkfloydhyperbase.dk. Retrieved 21 September 2012.
  33. ^ Mason, Nick. Inside Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004). ISBN 978-0-297-84387-0.
  34. ^ "Unreleased Pink Floyd material – The Pink Floyd HyperBase". pinkfloydhyperbase.dk.
  35. ^ a b "Unreleased Pink Floyd material: Overture". Pinkfloydhyperbase.dk. Retrieved 21 September 2012.
  36. ^ Cunningham, Mark (January 1995). "The other side of the moon". Making Music. p. 19.
  37. ^ Reynolds, Simon (July 2001). "Radiohead: Walking on Thin Ice". The Wire. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
  38. ^ "When Pink Floyd Tried to Make an Album with Household Objects: Hear Two Surviving Tracks Made with Wine Glasses & Rubber Bands". Open Culture. 12 September 2017. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
  39. ^ Powell, Austin (9 December 2011). "Pink Floyd: Dark Side of the Moon". The Austin Chronicles. Retrieved 8 December 2023.
  40. ^ "The Return of the Parts of Something: The Making of The Endless River", by Daryl Easlea, Prog October 2014, pp. 38–45
  41. ^ Mason, Nick (2005), Dodd, Philip (ed.), Inside Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd (Paperback ed.), Phoenix, p. 315, ISBN 978-0-7538-1906-7
  42. ^ Young, Alex (July 6, 2014). "Pink Floyd to release new album The Endless River in October". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved July 6, 2014.
  43. ^ Young, Alex (22 September 2014). "Pink Floyd reveals details of new album, The Endless River". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved 22 September 2014.

list, unreleased, songs, recorded, pink, floyd, pink, floyd, have, been, known, perform, record, number, songs, instrumentals, which, have, never, been, officially, released, single, album, only, those, whose, existence, reliably, confirmed, listed, here, boot. Pink Floyd have been known to perform and or record a number of songs and instrumentals which have never been officially released on a single or album Only those whose existence can be reliably confirmed are listed here Bootleg recordings of the majority of below listed songs exist Several previously unreleased songs appeared on The Early Years 1965 1972 box set in November 2016 and The Later Years box set in December 2019 which marked their first official releases Contents 1 Syd Barrett era unreleased songs 1 1 I Get Stoned 1 2 Pink Theme 1 3 Flapdoodle Dealing 1 4 Let s Roll Another One 1 5 She Was a Millionaire 1 6 No Title 1 7 One in a Million 1 8 Intremental 1 9 Early Morning Henry 1 10 Green Onions 1 11 Have You Got It Yet 2 Later era unreleased songs 2 1 The Committee Instrumentals 2 2 Richard s Rave Up 2 3 The Boppin Sound 2 4 Incarceration of a Flower Child 2 5 Seabirds 2 6 Stefan s Tit 2 7 Paris Bar 2 8 Theme Dramatic Version 2 9 Alan s Blues 2 10 Rain in the Country 2 11 Oenone 2 12 Just Another Twelve Bar 2 13 Pink Blues 2 14 Corrosion in the Pink Room 2 15 The Merry Xmas Song 2 16 Richard Are You Ready Yet 2 17 Long Blues 2 18 Bitter Love 2 19 Drift Away Blues 2 20 Overture 2 21 Death Disco 3 Unreleased albums 3 1 The Committee soundtrack 3 2 The Man amp The Journey live album 3 3 Zabriskie Point soundtrack 3 4 Household Objects 3 5 Spare Bricks 3 6 The Big Spliff 4 See also 5 ReferencesSyd Barrett era unreleased songs edit I Get Stoned edit I Get Stoned is a Barrett song recorded live in studio on 31 October 1966 along with a version of Interstellar Overdrive at Thompson Private Recording Company 1 The song features Barrett with an acoustic guitar 2 The song was performed during a gig at the All Saints Hall in 1966 3 The opening lines are thought to be Living alone I get stoned The master tapes for the song are unknown however under the title Living Alone a demo was recorded by Barrett during the sessions for the Barrett album on 27 February 1970 4 Pink Theme edit Pink Theme is a song performed by the Barrett era Pink Floyd in 1966 The song is thought to be an instrumental Pink Floyd recorded the song at a concert at The All Saints Church Hall in London England on 14 October 1966 No known recording of this song is extant Flapdoodle Dealing edit Flapdoodle Dealing is an instrumental song performed by the Barrett era Pink Floyd in 1966 5 6 Roger Waters is thought to have come up with its title Pink Floyd never recorded a studio version of the song 6 however a version was recorded live at a concert at The All Saints Church Hall in London England on 14 October 1966 5 Let s Roll Another One edit Main article Candy and a Currant Bun Let s Roll Another One is a Barrett song later retitled Candy and a Currant Bun before being released in 1967 7 8 9 It was written in 1965 10 It features the original lyrics which were altered for the released single at the suggestion of Waters 7 allegedly due to concerns about the acceptability of drug references and the song can be found on bootlegs like Feed Your Head She Was a Millionaire edit She Was a Millionaire is a Barrett song recorded at Abbey Road on 18 April 1967 11 12 as a possible B side 13 Manager Peter Jenner said that the track was the one that got away the hit they were looking for 13 14 The opening lines are thought to be She was a millionaire She had some time to spare The instrumental backing track was completed by Pink Floyd but the master tapes for the song most likely were erased 13 Elements from the song however would later become part of Barrett s solo song Opel recorded in 1969 Two takes were attempted at a backing track by Barrett during the sessions for the Barrett album in 1970 4 15 before Barrett added vocals 12 No Title edit An instrumental recorded at Sound Techniques on 4 September 1967 The first 90 seconds of the songs recording is available on various bootlegs This track is sometimes incorrectly labeled Sunshine a piece which later became a section of Matilda Mother One Floyd prosopography claims that this recording is over fifteen minutes in length One in a Million edit One in a Million also known by the titles Rush in a Million 16 Once in a Million Rust in a Million and Brush Your Window 16 is a song performed by the Barrett era Pink Floyd in 1967 17 Pink Floyd performed the song at a concert in Copenhagen Denmark on 13 September 1967 17 16 18 The discrepancies in the title stem from Roger Waters misheard stage announcement on the poor audience recording of the show It was sung by Waters Intremental edit Intremental is a 10 minute instrumental that was recorded at De Lane Lea on 20 October 1967 19 Early Morning Henry edit A demo from the Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun sessions as mentioned in David Parker s book Random Precision a guide to the recordings of Barrett Parker states that he contacted Mason to inquire as to what this song was but Mason could not remember In 2020 an acetate of this recording was found and sold in auction It was revealed that it was a song written and sung by Billy Butler and Pink Floyd was used as the backing band As part of the auction a 47 second snippet of the song was posted online The full song has still not been released 20 Green Onions edit A cover of Green Onions by Booker T amp the M G s was performed on the BBC1 TV program Tomorrow s World on 12 December 1967 Have You Got It Yet edit Have You Got It Yet is an unfinished song written by Barrett during the short time in which Pink Floyd was a five piece At the time David Gilmour had been asked to join as a fifth member and second guitarist while Barrett whose mental state was creating issues with the band was intended to remain home and compose songs much as Brian Wilson had done for The Beach Boys however this idea was soon abandoned 21 22 23 Barrett s unpredictable behaviour at the time and idiosyncratic sense of humour 24 combined to create a song that initially seemed like an ordinary Barrett tune However as soon as the others attempted to join in and learn the song Barrett changed the melodies and structure making it impossible for the others to follow 22 23 while singing the chorus Have You Got It Yet and having the rest of the band answer No no 25 This would be his last attempt to write material for Pink Floyd before leaving the band 25 In fact Waters stated in an interview for The Pink Floyd and Syd Barrett Story that upon realizing Barrett was deliberately making the tune impossible to learn he put down his bass guitar left the room and never attempted to play with Barrett again Waters had called it a real act of mad genius 22 23 25 The song was never recorded by Pink Floyd or Barrett but its title was used for the 2023 documentary Have You Got It Yet The story of Syd Barrett and Pink Floyd directed by Roddy Bogawa and Storm Thorgerson Later era unreleased songs editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources List of unreleased songs recorded by Pink Floyd news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message The Committee Instrumentals edit In early 1968 Pink Floyd recorded several instrumental tracks to be used in the soundtrack to the Peter Sykes film The Committee starring former Manfred Mann singer Paul Jones Syd Barrett had originally been approached to record music for the film but his solo attempt was deemed to be unusable The band now with Gilmour on guitar took over and recorded their pieces in a basement studio in London The two main pieces are actually the same tune played at two different tempos with the main riff featured on guitar for the first the keyboard for the second A third lengthy instrumental is an embryonic version of Careful With That Axe Eugene The opening instrumental is a short backwards played tape made up of Tablas guitar and a high pitch sound effect which sounds very similar to what was described by the makers as the piece Barrett had attempted leading fans to believe his initial idea may have been used by the band Parts 1 and 2 have seen official release in The Early Years 1965 1972 box set Richard s Rave Up edit Richard s Rave Up was a track recorded on 13 February 1968 during sessions for A Saucerful of Secrets Per Glenn Povey s The Complete Pink Floyd studio notes show Take 1 as 2 54 in length This was not Song 1 which was recorded Aug 1968 in Los Angeles The Boppin Sound edit The Boppin Sound was recorded on 13 February 1968 during sessions for A Saucerful of Secrets Was mixed down on that date Per Glenn Povey s The Complete Pink Floyd studio notes show Take 1 as 3 00 in length This was not Roger s Boogie which was recorded Aug 1968 in Los Angeles and is 4 35 in length Incarceration of a Flower Child edit A Waters penned song written in 1968 after Barrett left the band as an attempt to reinvent themselves 26 The lyrics are about the downfall of Barrett 27 28 The song was eventually recorded by Marianne Faithfull on her 1999 album Vagabond Ways 27 28 29 The melody of the opening of the verses provided the chorus of Your Possible Pasts from the Pink Floyd album The Final Cut Seabirds edit A song used in the More film but as yet unreleased A song titled Seabirds was released as part of The Early Years 1965 1972 box set in 2016 however this is not the song from the film but an alternate version of the instrumental track Quicksilver Stefan s Tit edit An outtake from the More sessions Working title for Green Is The Colour Paris Bar edit Another More outtake found on the same multitrack tape as the above track Working title for Ibiza Bar Theme Dramatic Version edit Another More outtake found on the same multitrack tape as the above tracks Working title for Dramatic Theme Alan s Blues edit Alan s Blues is an instrumental blues song first recorded for the film Zabriskie Point in December 1969 This version was released as a bonus track on the 1997 soundtrack reissue under the title Love Scene 6 It began appearing in live shows in early 1970 initially along with a couple other Zabriskie instrumentals Heart Beat Pig Meat and The Violent Sequence that were soon dropped Performed through 1972 often as an encore Possibly also recorded in 1971 The song appears on various bootleg recordings usually live sometimes given the nickname of Pink Blues Rain in the Country edit Main articles Unknown Song and Crumbling Land A nearly 7 minute instrumental outtake from the Zabriskie Point sessions based on The Narrow Way 30 It is available on bootleg albums such as Omay Yad 30 On the bootleg The Complete Zabriskie Point Sessions the Take 1 ends in Unknown Song while Take 2 ends in Crumbling Land Oenone edit A lengthy instrumental in the Zabriskie Point film 31 32 intended for a sex scene Three takes were recorded under the working titles Love Scene No 1 No 2 and No 3 each somewhat different from the others but all sharing the same eerie organ and guitar motif The term Oenone refers to a Greek mythological character namely the first wife of Paris of Troy Early bootleg appearances list the song as Oneone sometimes thought to be a misspelling of the mythological character but more likely a phonetic tip of the hat to Zabriskie Point s director Michelangelo Antonioni Excerpts of Oenone were released as part of The Early Years 1965 1972 box set in 2016 under the titles Love Scene Version 1 and Love Scene Version 2 though no complete takes have ever been released officially Just Another Twelve Bar edit Another improvised instrumental recorded during the Atom Heart Mother world tour in 1970 The sole circulating recording cuts in midway and what is heard is close enough to the finale jam of the song Biding My Time that it s possible this song is simply an excerpt of that one Pink Blues edit Often referred to as simply Blues blues jam played after encores during the Meddle tour during 1971 In December 2021 a previously unreleased live album titled Embryo San Diego Live 17 Oct 1971 was released on Spotify along with 11 other new live albums recorded between 1970 and 1972 This album concludes with a 5 minute Blues Jam Also see Alan s Blues above Corrosion in the Pink Room edit Corrosion in the Pink Room is a song written by Waters Gilmour Wright and Mason It is an instrumental piece that was played at their live shows during the early 1970s It is a very avant garde piece with eerie piano playing by Wright and scatting by Waters reminiscent of the sounds on Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict Halfway through the song transitions to a jazzy blues jam similar to Funky Dung It also was known to feature the whalesong effect used during live performances of Embryo and later on Echoes Roger Waters often meddled with their manager Steve O Rourke while performing indicated by him calling out Steven in this song 33 The Merry Xmas Song edit The Merry Xmas Song is a humorous song written for a one off performance on BBC radio in 1969 during the Zabriskie Point soundtrack sessions and performed around 1975 It is notable as one of only six Pink Floyd songs to feature Mason on vocals Barrett s Scream Thy Last Scream Corporal Clegg One of These Days Signs of Life and Learning to Fly Richard Are You Ready Yet edit Richard Are You Ready Yet is a humorous self parody song improvised during an interlude at the Live at Berlin tour Long Blues edit An improvised blues piece Long Blues was performed live in 1970 at Montreux Waters announced that since it was a bit late for mind expanding they re going to play some music to calm down to While similar in sound to Alan s Blues some elements from Funky Dung and Mudmen are definitely present It appears on the Early Flights Volume 1 bootleg Bitter Love edit Written by Waters the song is about the bad experience Pink Floyd had after agreeing to appear in magazine advertisements for a French soft lemon drink called Gini originally from Perrier Lyrically the song describes Waters selling his soul in the desert The song is also known as How Do You Feel Drift Away Blues edit Drift Away Blues is a blues improvisation that was played live 34 on 6 July 1977 at the Stade olympique Montreal as an encore picked in response to an aggressive audience Waters introduced the song by telling the audience that since we can t play any more of our songs here s some music to go home to Allegedly Gilmour was upset at this and slipped off the stage rather than play It appears on the Azimuth Coordinator Part 3 bootleg and others of that date Overture edit Overture is a song that was written by Waters for The Wall movie 35 Pink Floyd decided not to include the song and it is unknown if it was ever recorded 35 Death Disco edit An unreleased portion of The Wall in which a DJ is heard to taunt an audience Some Floyd books mistakenly give the title as The Death of Disco or The Death of Cisco It introduced the fascist ideas later heard in In the Flesh and the guitar riff was later developed into Young Lust Unreleased albums editThe Committee soundtrack edit At one point it was considered that a soundtrack LP should be released containing music heard in the obscure science fiction film The Committee for which Pink Floyd recorded a handful of seemingly untitled instrumentals and The Crazy World of Arthur Brown contributed the song Nightmare Although bootleg soundtracks both vinyl and CD have been released by fans the fact that the total running time of the material merely fills one side of an LP shows that this may not have been a commercially viable idea The Man amp The Journey live album edit The conceptual tour following Ummagumma s release was recorded at Amsterdam around autumn and released as a bootleg This was released on The Early Years 1965 1972 box set in 2016 Zabriskie Point soundtrack edit In 2011 a document citation needed was found regarding a scrapped Zabriskie Point soundtrack LP consisting entirely of Pink Floyd s score much of which was rejected from the final film The soundtrack was in fact released but the album would have originally consisted of the following songs possibly in this order Heart Beat Pig Meat Country Song Fingal s Cave Crumbling Land Alan s Blues Oenone Rain in the Country Unknown Song Come in No 51 Your Time Is Up this is a different title for Careful with That Axe Eugene Sixteen additional tracks were released on The Early Years 1965 1972 box set Household Objects edit Following the success of The Dark Side of the Moon Pink Floyd were unsure of their direction and worried about how to top that record s popularity Returning to their experimental beginnings they began a project entitled Household Objects which would consist of songs played on hand mixers rubber bands stretched between two tables wine glasses and so on The planned album was soon shelved There weren t going going to be any real musical instruments on it at all explained engineer Alan Parsons and it was to be recorded using only one microphone We spent something like four weeks in the studio on it and came away with no more than one and a half minutes sic of music 36 Two tracks The Hard Way and Wine Glasses the latter incorporated into the opening of Shine On You Crazy Diamond were released on the Pink Floyd reissues in September and November 2011 on The Dark Side of the Moon Immersion Box Set and Wish You Were Here Experience Version and Immersion Box Set respectively In 2001 Simon Reynolds of The Wire described Household Objects as a gambit that would have surpassed in advance PiL s Flowers of Romance ATV s Vibing Up the Senile Man Nurse With Wound not to mention Matt Herbert 37 Open Culture compared the project to similar found sound works such as those from John Cage and composers of musique concrete 38 Austin Powell of The Austin Chronicle refers to the recording of Household Objects as sound collage sessions and writes that The Hard Way exemplifies the playful experimentation of the era 39 Spare Bricks edit Upon release of the film adaptation of The Wall Pink Floyd planned to put together an album consisting of songs newly recorded for the film as well as outtakes from the original Wall LP sessions The proposed title for this disc was Spare Bricks This was changed to The Final Cut which came from the song of the same name The When the Tigers Broke Free single released at this time claim the track comes from the planned album The Final Cut developed into a new concept album based in part around rewritten versions of The Wall outtakes From 2004 onwards Waters decided to incorporate the song into future CD pressings as the fourth track of the album The Big Spliff edit In the 1990s the engineer Andy Jackson edited unused material from the Division Bellsessions described by Mason as ambient music into an hour long composition tentatively titled The Big Spliff 40 Pink Floyd decided not to release it 41 Part of The Big Spliffwas used to create Pink Floyd s fifteenth and final album The Endless River 2014 42 43 See also editThe Man and The Journey Pink Floyd bootleg recordings List of songs recorded by Pink FloydReferences edit Palacios Julian 2010 Syd Barrett amp Pink Floyd Dark Globe Rev ed London Plexus p 136 ISBN 978 0 85965 431 9 Palacios Julian 2010 Syd Barrett amp Pink Floyd Dark Globe Rev ed London Plexus p 137 ISBN 978 0 85965 431 9 Palacios Julian 2010 Syd Barrett amp Pink Floyd Dark Globe Rev ed London Plexus p 140 ISBN 978 0 85965 431 9 a b Barrett booklet Syd Barrett Harvest EMI 2010 p 1 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link a b Chapman Rob 2010 Flicker Flicker Blam Blam Pow Syd Barrett A Very Irregular Head Paperback ed London Faber p 113 ISBN 978 0 571 23855 2 a b Palacios Julian 2010 Syd Barrett amp Pink Floyd Dark Globe Rev ed London Plexus p 129 ISBN 978 0 85965 431 9 a b Manning Toby 2006 The Underground The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd 1st ed London Rough Guides p 32 ISBN 1 84353 575 0 Chapman Rob 2010 Watching Buttercups Cup the Light Syd Barrett A Very Irregular Head Paperback ed London Faber p 57 ISBN 978 0 571 23855 2 Chapman Rob 2010 Distorted View See Through Baby Blue Syd Barrett A Very Irregular Head Paperback ed London Faber p 134 ISBN 978 0 571 23855 2 Chapman Rob 2010 Watching Buttercups Cup the Light Syd Barrett A Very Irregular Head Paperback ed London Faber p 56 ISBN 978 0 571 23855 2 Jones Malcolm 2003 The Making of The Madcap Laughs 21st Anniversary ed Brain Damage p 22 a b Palacios Julian 2010 Within the Dark Globe Syd Barrett amp Pink Floyd Dark Globe Rev ed London Plexus p 371 ISBN 978 0 85965 431 9 a b c Palacios Julian 2010 Syd Barrett amp Pink Floyd Dark Globe Rev ed London Plexus p 209 ISBN 978 0 85965 431 9 Manning Toby 2006 The Underground The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd 1st ed London Rough Guides p 43 ISBN 1 84353 575 0 Unreleased Pink Floyd material Millionaire She Was a Millionaire Pinkfloydhyperbase dk Retrieved 21 September 2012 a b c Unreleased Pink Floyd material One in a Million Pinkfloydhyperbase dk Retrieved 21 September 2012 a b Palacios Julian 2010 Summer Tempests Syd Barrett amp Pink Floyd Dark Globe Rev ed London Plexus p 272 ISBN 978 0 85965 431 9 Manning Toby 2006 Soundtracks Compilations amp Bootlegs The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd 1st ed London Rough Guides p 226 ISBN 1 84353 575 0 Palacios Julian 2010 Vegetable Man Syd Barrett amp Pink Floyd Dark Globe Rev ed London Plexus p 288 ISBN 978 0 85965 431 9 Early Morning Henry featuring Pink Floyd Found Listen Now September 25 2020 Schaffner Nicholas 2005 Apples and Oranges Saucerful of Secrets The Pink Floyd Odyssey New ed London Helter Skelter p 265 ISBN 1 905139 09 8 a b c Manning Toby 2006 The Underground The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd 1st ed London Rough Guides p 45 ISBN 1 84353 575 0 a b c Schaffner Nicholas 2005 Prologue Wish You Were Here Saucerful of Secrets The Pink Floyd Odyssey New ed London Helter Skelter p 14 ISBN 1 905139 09 8 DiLorenzo Kris Syd Barrett Careening Through Life Trouser Press February 1978 pp 26 32 a b c Palacios Julian 2010 Thunder Within the Earth Syd Barrett amp Pink Floyd Dark Globe Rev ed London Plexus p 317 ISBN 978 0 85965 431 9 Thompson Dave Incarceration of a Flower a Child Marianne Faithfull Listen Appearances Song Review AllMusic Retrieved 20 September 2012 a b Palacios Julian 2010 The Return of Ulysses Syd Barrett amp Pink Floyd Dark Globe Rev ed London Plexus p 392 ISBN 978 0 85965 431 9 a b Manning Toby 2006 The Underground The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd 1st ed London Rough Guides p 46 ISBN 1 84353 575 0 Demalon Tom Vagabond Ways Marianne Faithfull Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Retrieved 20 September 2012 a b Unreleased Pink Floyd material The Pink Floyd HyperBase Pinkfloydhyperbase dk Retrieved 25 October 2021 Manning Toby 2006 Soundtracks Compilations amp Bootlegs The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd 1st ed London Rough Guides p 227 ISBN 1 84353 575 0 Unreleased Pink Floyd material Oenone Pinkfloydhyperbase dk Retrieved 21 September 2012 Mason Nick Inside Out A Personal History of Pink Floyd Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 ISBN 978 0 297 84387 0 Unreleased Pink Floyd material The Pink Floyd HyperBase pinkfloydhyperbase dk a b Unreleased Pink Floyd material Overture Pinkfloydhyperbase dk Retrieved 21 September 2012 Cunningham Mark January 1995 The other side of the moon Making Music p 19 Reynolds Simon July 2001 Radiohead Walking on Thin Ice The Wire Retrieved 7 November 2023 When Pink Floyd Tried to Make an Album with Household Objects Hear Two Surviving Tracks Made with Wine Glasses amp Rubber Bands Open Culture 12 September 2017 Retrieved 7 November 2023 Powell Austin 9 December 2011 Pink Floyd Dark Side of the Moon The Austin Chronicles Retrieved 8 December 2023 The Return of the Parts of Something The Making of The Endless River by Daryl Easlea Prog October 2014 pp 38 45 Mason Nick 2005 Dodd Philip ed Inside Out A Personal History of Pink Floyd Paperback ed Phoenix p 315 ISBN 978 0 7538 1906 7 Young Alex July 6 2014 Pink Floyd to release new album The Endless River in October Consequence of Sound Retrieved July 6 2014 Young Alex 22 September 2014 Pink Floyd reveals details of new album The Endless River Consequence of Sound Retrieved 22 September 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of unreleased songs recorded by Pink Floyd amp oldid 1218787436 She Was a Millionaire, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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