The Final Cut is the twelfth studio album by the English progressive rock band Pink Floyd, released on 21 March 1983 by Harvest Records in the United Kingdom and internationally and on 2 April 1983 in the United States by Columbia Records. It is Pink Floyd's last studio album to include founding member, bass guitarist and songwriter Roger Waters, and their only album on which he alone is credited for writing and composition. It is also the only Pink Floyd album that does not feature keyboardist Richard Wright. - Waters originally planned The Final Cut as a soundtrack album for the 1982 film Pink Floyd - The Wall. With the onset of the Falklands War, he rewrote it as a concept album, exploring what he considered the betrayal of his father, who died serving in the Second World War. Waters sings most of the lyrics; lead guitarist David Gilmour provides vocals on only one track. The packaging, also designed by Waters, reflects the album's war theme. Although it reached the top of the UK Albums Chart, the album received mixed reviews. - Recorded in eight British studios from July to December 1982, with an accompanying short film released in the same year, production of The Final Cut was dominated by interpersonal conflict. Waters left the band in 1985 and The Final Cut remains the last Pink Floyd studio album he worked on.
Out of stock? Get notified when this item is restocked.
1. The Post War Dream 2. Your Possible Pasts 3. One of the Few 4. When the Tigers Broke Free 5. The Hero's Return 6. The Gunner's Dream 7. Paranoid Eyes 8. Get Your Filthy Hands Off My Desert 9. The Fletcher Memorial Home 10. Southampton Dock 11. The Final Cut 12. Not Now John 13. Two Suns in the Sunset
The Final Cut is the twelfth studio album by the English progressive rock band Pink Floyd, released on 21 March 1983 by Harvest Records in the United Kingdom and internationally and on 2 April 1983 in the United States by Columbia Records. It is Pink Floyd's last studio album to include founding member, bass guitarist and songwriter Roger Waters, and their only album on which he alone is credited for writing and composition. It is also the only Pink Floyd album that does not feature keyboardist Richard Wright. - Waters originally planned The Final Cut as a soundtrack album for the 1982 film Pink Floyd - The Wall. With the onset of the Falklands War, he rewrote it as a concept album, exploring what he considered the betrayal of his father, who died serving in the Second World War. Waters sings most of the lyrics; lead guitarist David Gilmour provides vocals on only one track. The packaging, also designed by Waters, reflects the album's war theme. Although it reached the top of the UK Albums Chart, the album received mixed reviews. - Recorded in eight British studios from July to December 1982, with an accompanying short film released in the same year, production of The Final Cut was dominated by interpersonal conflict. Waters left the band in 1985 and The Final Cut remains the last Pink Floyd studio album he worked on.
Out of stock? Get notified when this item is restocked.
1. The Post War Dream 2. Your Possible Pasts 3. One of the Few 4. When the Tigers Broke Free 5. The Hero's Return 6. The Gunner's Dream 7. Paranoid Eyes 8. Get Your Filthy Hands Off My Desert 9. The Fletcher Memorial Home 10. Southampton Dock 11. The Final Cut 12. Not Now John 13. Two Suns in the Sunset
Wonderful remaster. Always had a soft spot for Waters' last contribution to the Floyd
KenB
March 4, 2019
Powerful and dynamic playing meets painful and ragged, even raw, emotions expressed in lyrics and subjects of war, loss, destruction, and doom... Doom of war past and present also seem to stand in for the impending destruction of the band in its last days with the full classic group taking turns in the studio - and failing to integrate socially, but successfully making one last group effort before Roger goes solo; the remainder becomes the whole unit again, and the sunset glow of Momentary Lapse of Reason and The Division Bell - and well before the session material of the latter becomes their twilight album The Endless River... I will not call this Roger Waters’ first solo as some do - it is much more. But in closing I will say that this is one concept so much that I literally will not listen to songs from it, but instead I listen en to end.