Posted: 07/28 @ 05:07 pmPink floyd – pigs (three different ones) – bass cover
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The best bass line of Pink Floyd in my opinion. In memory of Richard Wright. Dedicated to Pink Floyd Community in Brasil. Sorry for a few mistakes…… |
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The best bass line of Pink Floyd in my opinion. In memory of Richard Wright. Dedicated to Pink Floyd Community in Brasil. Sorry for a few mistakes…… |
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Praise be to Jesus Christ. This is a cover of the Pink Floyd song: Pigs (Three Different Ones) Glory be to our God-Jesus is God-Honour be to Jesus Christ… |
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A imagem ficou ruim, pq além de escuro a qualidade tava baixa… StoneHenge Rock Bar – Belo Horizonte, 9 de Julho de 2010. Execução Integral da Tríade: Dark Side Of The Moon, Wish You Were Here e Animals: EM UMA S?” NOITE! Segue um pouquinho de cada faixa: Pigs On The Wing (part 1) Dogs Pigs (Three Different Ones) Sheep Acessem o site ou twitter@PFReunion Marcelo Canaan – Vocal, guitarra, violão e lapsteel Luiz Camporez – Vocal, guitarra e violão Raphael Rocha – Vocal, teclados e sintetizadores Luam Totti – Contrabaixo Alexandre Arnoni – Bateria e percurssão Virgynia Corradi – Backing vocal… |
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My vinyl collection Dall’album “Animals” 1977 (Limited Edition Pink Vinyl )… |
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Sorry about the low audio…. |
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I prefer the BBC take, personally, when Gilmours doing the scat singing at the end!… |
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“Pigs (Three Different Ones)” is a song from Pink Floyd’s 1977 album Animals. In the album’s three parts, “Dogs,” “Pigs,” and “Sheep,” inspired by the novel Animal Farm by George Orwell, pigs represent the people whom Roger Waters considers to be at the top of the social ladder, the ones with wealth and power; they also manipulate the rest of society and encourage them to be viciously competitive and cutthroat, so the pigs can remain powerful. Waters suggests that the pigs manipulate the dogs in the lines “Gotta admit, that I’m a little bit confused/Sometimes it seems to me, as if I’m just being used” in the song “Dogs.” The first verse refers to no one in particular, but rather businessmen in general. The second verse indirectly refers to the opposition leader at that time, Margaret Thatcher, although her name or title is never mentioned. The lyrics’ offensiveness to Thatcher is subtle, stating that she is “good fun with a hand gun;” better-defined obscenities are prevalent when it refers to her as a “bus-stop rat bag” and “fucked-up old hag”. The third mentions Mary Whitehouse by name, painting her as a prudish, sexually repressed “house-proud town mouse.” This contributed to Whitehouse’s negative image of Pink Floyd, who she thought were immorally promoting sex and drugs. Halfway through the song, David Gilmour uses a Heil talk box on the guitar solo to mimic the sound of pigs. This is the first use of a talk box by Pink Floyd…. |
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Dogs are used to represent the megalomaniacal businessmen who destroy themselves and those around them by obsessing over their egos and their careers. A number of comparisons are made and metaphors used to show how close these businessmen are with dogs, for example “Got to be able to pick out the easy meat with your eyes closed” the meat representing deals and opportunities for the businessmen. It is a long, increasingly haunting song at over seventeen minutes. The final verse explores a number of aspects of business life and how it compares to dogs, for example taking chances and being “trained not to spit in the fan”, losing their individuality “broken by trained personnel”, obeying their superiors “fitted with collar and chain”, getting treats for good behaviour “given a pat on the back”, being better than everyone else “breaking away from the pack” and getting to know everyone but spending less time with family “only a stranger at home”. Every line of this verse begins with the word “Who”, which prompted comparison to Allen Ginsberg’s poem “Howl”. This song and the use of the word “Who” at the beginning of every line of the final verse also illustrates the influence that Roy Harper had on the band. Roy Harper had used this technique on the song “The Lord’s Prayer” from his 1973 Lifemask album. Harper sang over 90 lines of a verse beginning with the words “whose” and “who”. Roy Harper also sang on the song “Have a Cigar” from the Wish You Were Here album. The song …… |
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“Pigs (Three Different Ones)” is a song from Pink Floyd’s 1977 album Animals. In the album’s three parts, “Dogs,” “Pigs,” and “Sheep,” inspired by the novel Animal Farm by George Orwell, pigs represent the people whom Roger Waters considers to be at the top of the social ladder, the ones with wealth and power; they also manipulate the rest of society and encourage them to be viciously competitive and cutthroat, so the pigs can remain powerful. Waters suggests that the pigs manipulate the dogs in the lines “Gotta admit, that I’m a little bit confused/Sometimes it seems to me, as if I’m just being used” in the song “Dogs.” The third mentions Mary Whitehouse by name, painting her as a prudish, sexually repressed “house-proud town mouse.” This contributed to Whitehouse’s negative image of Pink Floyd, who she thought were immorally promoting sex and drugs. Halfway through the song, David Gilmour uses a Heil talk box on the guitar solo to mimic the sound of pigs. This is the first use of a talk box by Pink Floyd…. |
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3-6-2010 Mitos Argentinos… |