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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espero les guste….dejen mensaje… |
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Sorry about the low audio…. |
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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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“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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Mary you are nearly a laught, Mary you are nearly a laught, but you are really a CRY ! pier (who was just a stranger at home, who was dragged down by the stone)… |
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I remembered the cowbell this time. The use of any copyrighted material is used under the guidelines of “Fair Use” in Title 17 § 107 of The United States Code. Such material remains the copyright of the original holder and is used here for the purposes of education, comparison, and criticism only. No infringement of copyright is intended… |
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I remembered the cowbell this time. The use of any copyrighted material is used under the guidelines of “Fair Use” in Title 17 § 107 of The United States Code. Such material remains the copyright of the original holder and is used here for the purposes of education, comparison, and criticism only. No infringement of copyright is intended… |
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Brilliant Pink Floyd cover band playing at Wakarusa Fest in Ozark, AR….very cool show…. |