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Pink Floyd - In The Flesh?
Pink Floyd - In The Flesh?


Pink Floyd - In The Flesh? Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

Album: The Wall
Released: 1979

In The Flesh? Lyrics


So ya
Thought ya
Might like to go to the show
To feel the warm thrill of confusion
That space cadet glow
Tell me is something eluding you, sunshine?
Is this not what you expected to see?
If you want to find out what's behind these cold eyes
You'll just have to claw your way through this disguise

Lights, turn on the sound effects, action
Drop it, drop it on 'em, drop it on them

Writer/s: ROGER WATERS
Publisher: Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

In The Flesh?
  • This is the first song of the album, and the first part of this song is music from the last song of the album, "Outside the Wall." At the end of that song, a man says "Isn't this where..." and and in the beginning of "In the Flesh" he says "...we came in?" This was one manifestation of Roger Waters' fascination with cycles.
  • There is another song named "In the Flesh" on the album, which has the same tune but relatively different lyrics. The first song concerns the protagonist Pink's birth, while the latter concerns Pink becoming a Nazi dictator after he suffers a schizophrenic break.

  • Pink Floyd - In The Flesh
    Pink Floyd - In The Flesh


    Pink Floyd - In The Flesh Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: The Wall
    Released: 1979

    In The Flesh Lyrics


    So ya
    Thought ya
    Might like to go to the show
    To feel the warm thrill of confusion
    That space cadet glow
    Tell me is something eluding you, sunshine?
    Is this not what you expected to see?
    If you want to find out what's behind these cold eyes
    You'll just have to claw your way through this disguise

    Lights, turn on the sound effects, action
    Drop it, drop it on 'em, drop it on them

    Writer/s: ROGER WATERS
    Publisher: Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    In The Flesh
  • This is the song on the album The Wall when the protagonist Pink finally yields to his inner demons and becomes a psychopathic, race-baiting fascist.
  • Pink's calling out of various minorities in the audience (that one looks Jewish, that one's a coon, etc.) is a reference to the meetings of the British Union of Fascists before World War II. in these meetings, the speakers would rant about how foreigners, minorities and socialists were destroying Britain. Near the end of his speech, he would identify members of various minorities in the crowd, who would immediately be roughed up by the blackshirts (similar to Hitler's brownshirts) and thrown out onto the sidewalk.
  • Roger Waters wanted this song to parody mindless stadium rock. He told Rolling Stone in 2010: "We needed a beginning, so I went into a room with a bass guitar and went, 'I need something that's really stupid-sounding. Really loud, monolithic, dumb.' And I've grown rather fond of that riff in the intervening years."

  • Pink Floyd - Outside The Wall
    Pink Floyd - Outside The Wall


    Pink Floyd - Outside The Wall Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: The Wall
    Released: 1979

    Outside The Wall Lyrics


    All alone, or in two's,
    The ones who really love you
    Walk up and down Outside The Wall.
    Some hand in hand
    And some gathered together in bands.
    The bleeding hearts and the artists
    Make their stand.

    And when they've given you their all
    Some stagger and fall, after all it's not easy
    Banging your heart against some mad bugger's wall.

    "Isn't this where..."

    Writer/s: WATERS, ROGER
    Publisher: Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    Outside The Wall
  • This is the aftermath after the song "The Trial." It is most likely either Pink or his loved ones summarizing everything that happened.
  • Roger Waters played clarinet on this song during The Wall 1980-81 live shows.

  • Pink Floyd - Empty Spaces
    Pink Floyd - Empty Spaces


    Pink Floyd - Empty Spaces Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: The Wall
    Released: 1979

    Empty Spaces Lyrics


    What shall we use
    To fill the Empty Spaces
    Where we used to talk?
    How shall I fill
    The final places?
    How should I complete the wall

    Writer/s: WATERS, ROGER
    Publisher: Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    Empty Spaces
  • If part of this song is played backwards, you can hear this: "Congratulations. You have just discovered the secret message. Please send your answer to Old Pink, care of the Funny Farm, Chalfont...
    -Roger! Carolyne's on the phone!
    -Okay.

    Pink was the main character in Pink Floyd's film The Wall.

    After this first message, the voice of engineer James Guthrie is heard over an intercom, shouting out "Roger! Carolyne's on the phone!" This is a reference to Carolyne Christie, who was Roger Waters' wife from 1976-1992.
  • In the movie, an extended version was used, whereas in the album it ends with "How can i complete the wall?" which is only the sixth line. (thanks, charlie - Thomaston, DC)
  • The version used in The Wall is called "What Shall We Do Now." This shortened version was used on the album because there wasn't enough room for the the longer track. (thanks, Sarah - Guess, Canada)
  • On the album version, the song is more than half over when the lyrics begin. The first 1:28 of the song are completely instrumental and the song is a total of 2:08. The secret message at the beginning, however, begins at around 1:12, which is also over halfway through the song. (thanks, Chris - Bradenton, FL)

  • Pink Floyd - Mothe
    Pink Floyd - Mother


    Pink Floyd - Mother Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: The Wall
    Released: 1979

    Mother Lyrics


    Mother do you think they'll drop the bomb?

    Mother do you think they'll like this song?

    Mother do you think they'll try to break my balls?

    Ooh, ah
    Mother should I build the wall?
    Mother should I run for President?
    Mother should I trust the government?
    Mother will they put me in the firing mine?
    Ooh ah,
    Is it just a waste of time?

    Hush now baby, baby, don't you cry.
    Mama's gonna make all your nightmares come true.
    Mama's gonna put all her fears into you.
    Mama's gonna keep you right here under her wing.
    She won't let you fly, but she might let you sing.
    Mama's gonna keep baby cozy and warm.
    Ooh baby, ooh baby, ooh baby,
    Of course mama's gonna help build the wall.

    Mother do you think she's good enough?
    For me?
    Mother do you think she's dangerous,
    To me?
    Mother will she tear your little boy apart?
    Ooh ah,
    Mother will she break my heart?

    Hush now baby, baby don't you cry.
    Mama's gonna check out all your girlfriends for you.
    Mama won't let anyone dirty get through.
    Mama's gonna wait up until you get in.
    Mama will always find out where you've been.
    Mama's gonna keep baby healthy and clean.
    Ooh baby, ooh baby, ooh baby,
    You'll always be baby to me.

    Mother, did it need to be so high?

    Writer/s: WATERS, ROGER
    Publisher: Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    Mother
  • The movie The Wall is a semi-autobiographical story about a young boy that loses his father in the war and is raised by his overly protective mother. The child grows up alone as an outsider that absolutely does not fit in. He feels trapped by his overly protective environment while being shunned by the men around him.
  • Roger Waters: "If you can level one accusation at mothers, it is that they tend to protect their children too much. Too much and for too long. This isn't a portrait of my mother, although one or two of the things in there apply to her as well as to I'm sure lots of other people's mothers." (thanks, Mike - Mountlake Terrace, Washington, for above 2)
  • Waters told Mojo magazine December 2009: "The song has some connection with my mother, for sure, though the mother that Gerald Scarfe visualises in his drawings couldn't be further from mine. She's nothing like that." (For the film version of The Wall, cartoonist Gerald Scarfe visualised the mother as a huge monstrous woman with a brick-wall bosom.)
    Waters went on to admit to Mojo that the overly protective suffocating mother portrayed in the song has some similarities to his own mum. He said: "My mother was suffocating in her own way. She always had to be right about everything. I'm not blaming her. That's who she was. I grew up with a single parent who could never hear anything I said, because nothing I said could possibly be as important as what she believed. My mother was, to some extent, a wall herself that I was banging my head against. She lived her life in the service of others. She was a school teacher. But it wasn't until I was 45, 50 years old that I realised how impossible it was for her to listen to me."
    Mojo asked Waters if his mother saw herself in the song? He replied: "She's not that recognisable. The song is more general, the idea that we can be controlled by our parents' views on things like sex. The single mother of boys, particularly, can make sex harder than it needs to be."
  • Pearl Jam performed this song on September 30, 2011 as part of a week long Pink Floyd tribute on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. The Shins, Foo Fighters, MGMT, and Dierks Bentley all played Pink Floyd songs on the show that week.
  • Pink Floyd's drummer Nick Mason didn't play on this track. According to Roger Waters, this was because Mason had trouble with the 5/4 time signatures and other changes, as "his brain doesn't work that way." Jeff Porcaro, who was a session drummer and also a member of the band Toto, took his place. Mason was also replaced on drums (this time by Andy Newmark) on the track "Two Suns in the Sunset" from the album The Final Cut.
  • Dixie Chicks lead singer Natalie Maines recorded a cover version in 2013 which was the title track to her first solo album. She decided to cover the song after hearing Roger Waters perform it on his Wall tour. Waters loved her rendition, telling Rolling Stone, "I get goosebumps just talking about it."

  • Pink Floyd - One Of My Turn
    Pink Floyd - One Of My Turns


    Pink Floyd - One Of My Turns Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: The Wall
    Released: 1979

    One Of My Turns Lyrics


    "Oh my God! What a fabulous room! Are all these your guitars?
    "I'm sorry sir, I didn't mean to startle you!"
    "This place is bigger than our apartment!"
    "Let me know when you're entering a room"
    "Yes sir!"
    "Um, Can I get a drink of water?"
    "I was wondering about..."
    "You want some, huh?"
    "Yes"
    "Oh wow, look at this tub? Do you want to take bath?"
    "I'll have to find out from Mrs. Bancroft what time she wants to meet us, for her main..."
    "What are watching?"
    "If you'll just let me know as soon as you can ... Mrs Bancroft" "Mrs Bancroft..."
    "Hello?"
    "I don't understand..."
    "Are you feeling okay?..."

    Day after day, love turns grey
    Like the skin of a dying man.
    And night after night, we pretend its all right
    But I have grown older and
    You have grown colder and
    Nothing is very much fun any more.
    And I can feel One Of My Turns coming on.
    I feel cold as a razor blade,
    Tight as a tourniquet,
    Dry as a funeral drum.

    Run to the bedroom,
    In the suitcase on the left
    You'll find my favorite axe.
    Don't look so frightened
    This is just a passing phase,
    One of my bad days.
    Would you like to watch T.V.?
    Or get between the sheets?
    Or contemplate the silent freeway?
    Would you like something to eat?
    Would you like to learn to fly?
    Would'ya?
    Would you like to see me try?

    Would you like to call the cops?
    Do you think it's time I stopped?
    Why are you running away?

    Writer/s: WATERS, ROGER
    Publisher: Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    One Of My Turns
  • This was inspired by Roy Harper, a friend of the band and lead singer on Pink Floyd's "Have A Cigar." The specific inspiration was an incident where Harper trashed his caravan at the 1975 Knebworth festival. (thanks, Jim - Birmingham, England)
  • The Wall's producer Bob Ezrin thought of the album as a theatrical experience, and he cites this song as an example of that vision. He told Rolling Stone: "My vision for it was informed by the LP of the 1966 film A Man For All Seasons - all the dialogue, music and sound effects. I used to put it on and close my eyes - it was an eyelid movie."

  • Pink Floyd - The Happiest Days Of Our Live
    Pink Floyd - The Happiest Days Of Our Lives


    Pink Floyd - The Happiest Days Of Our Lives Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: The Wall
    Released: 1979

    The Happiest Days Of Our Lives Lyrics


    You! Yes, you! Stand still laddy

    When we grew up and went to school
    There were certain teachers who would
    Hurt the children any way they could
    By pouring their derision
    Upon anything we did
    Exposing every weakness
    However carefully hidden by the kids
    But in the town it was well known
    When they got home at night, their fat and
    Psychopathic wives would thrash them
    Within inches of their lives

    Writer/s: WATERS, ROGER
    Publisher: Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    The Happiest Days Of Our Lives
  • This leads directly into "Another Brick In The Wall (part II)" on the album, and radio stations usually play them together. "Another Brick In The Wall (part 2)" starts too abruptly for most desirable radio play, as opposed to this song which starts with the hum of a helicopter, which sounds rather nifty on a decent sound system.
  • This also leads into "Another Brick In The Wall (part 2) on Echoes, their greatest hits album. (thanks, Matt - Russell Springs, KY, for above 2)
  • In the DVD commentary for the movie version of The Wall, Roger Waters explained that the scene with the teacher and his wife was symbolic of a lack of communication and pointed out that the teacher took out his frustrations on the students. In the movie, when the teacher grabs Pink's little black book of poems, the one he quotes is their earlier hit "Money." Also in the commentary, Waters admits to having a lot of teachers like the one we see punishing Pink. (thanks, Ales - Rialto, CA)

  • Pink Floyd - Run Like Hel
    Pink Floyd - Run Like Hell


    Pink Floyd - Run Like Hell Youtube Music Videos and Lyrics

    Album: The Wall
    Released: 1979

    Run Like Hell Lyrics


    Run, run, run, run, run, run, run, run
    Run, run, run, run, run, run, run, run.
    You better make your face up in
    Your favorite disguise.
    With your button down lips and your
    Roller blind eyes.
    With your empty smile
    And your hungry heart.
    Feel the bile rising from your guilty past.
    With your nerves in tatters
    When the conch shell shatters
    And the hammers batter
    Down your door.
    You'd better run.

    Run, run, run, run, run, run, run, run,
    Run, run, run, run, run, run, run, run.
    You better run all day
    And run all night.
    Keep your dirty feelings
    Deep inside.
    And if you're taking your girlfriend
    Out tonight
    You'd better park the car
    Well out of sight.
    'Cause if they catch you in the back seat
    Trying to pick her locks,
    They're gonna send you back to mother
    In a cardboard box.
    You better run.

    "Hey, open up!"
    "Hammer, hammer"

    Writer/s: WATERS, ROGER/GILMOUR, DAVID JON
    Publisher: Warner/Chappell Music, Inc., IMAGEM U.S. LLC
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    Run Like Hell Song Chart
  • Like the last few songs on The Wall, this can be summarized as Hitler's rise into power and downfall into hell just as Pink's life did in the movie The Wall. This isn't as detailed as "Waiting For the Worms", but it is a look into Hitler's terror. The entire theme is based on the dreaded Kristallnacht (Night of Broken Glass translated from German) on November 9th, 1938 which came during Hitler's order of terror. Nazis raided Jewish businesses and synagogues, places of recreation, even homes; throwing people out, destroying what they could. Many were killed and hundreds injured, and 7,500 business and 177 synagogues were destroyed. This is the terror that Pink in The Wall brought over citizens of his own kind. (thanks, J.I. - Pittsburgh, PA)
  • Producer Bob Ezrin convinced the band to use a Disco beat on this. Even though dance music was not what Pink Floyd was about, they got a good, catchy sound by putting a beat to this.
  • This was one of the last songs Roger Waters and Dave Gilmour wrote together. By the time they started working on The Wall, there was a lot of tension between them, which got worse on their next album and became real nasty in 1986 when Waters left and Gilmour continued Pink Floyd without him.
  • When they first recorded this, it was a lot longer. They had to cut it down so it would fit on the album. There was a limited amount of space on vinyl records.
  • If Waters and Gilmour could get along, they could go back to the master tapes and produce a longer version of this as they had recorded originally. They have not spoken in years, and Waters has no intention of ever again working with Gilmour.
  • Waters sang lead on this. In 1987, when Pink Floyd toured without him, Gilmour did the vocals. They usually played it as an encore.
  • The stage show for the tour of The Wall was very theatrical. As the band played, 340 enormous bricks formed a wall in front of them, representing the distance between the performers and their audience. During this, the wall was knocked down.
  • In the movie version of The Wall, the main character, a rock star named "Pink," rampages a village with a group of Skinheads. "Pink" was played by Bob Geldof.
  • On July 21, 1990, Waters staged a production of The Wall in Berlin to celebrate the destruction of The Berlin Wall. The 200,000 people who attended cheered wildly he played this.
  • The female rock group Kittie covered this in 2002.
  • The Wall is a concept album about a rock star whose disturbed past and excessive lifestyle causes him to slowly go insane. (thanks, Jamie - Sydney, Belgium)
  • On the inner sleeve of the vinyl album, both "Run, run, run..." lines Aren't printed. What's there instead is the line "You better run like hell." (thanks, Elies - Surrey, Canada)
  • Artist Gerald Scarf came up with the symbol of the two hammers crossed. When he was doing the animation for The Wall he wanted to have an army of hammers marching but couldn't figure out how to make a hammer "march." He then realized that two hammers together gives the illusion of two legs, so he used that method in the animation and the "crossed hammer" symbol was born. (thanks, Dogma - Alexandria, LA)

  • Pink Floyd - Another Brick In The Wall (part II
    Pink Floyd - Another Brick In The Wall (part II)


    Pink Floyd - Another Brick In The Wall (part II) Youtube Music Videos and Lyrics

    Album: The Wall
    Released: 1979

    Another Brick In The Wall (part II) Lyrics


    Another Brick In The Wall (part II) Song Chart
  • Roger Waters wrote this song about his views on formal education, which were framed during his time at the Cambridgeshire School for Boys. He hated his grammar school teachers and felt they were more interested in keeping the kids quiet than teaching them. The wall refers to the wall Waters built around himself because he wasn't in touch with reality. The bricks in the wall were the events in his life which propelled him to build this proverbial wall around him, and his school teacher was another brick in the wall.
    Waters told Mojo, December 2009, that the song is meant to be satirical. He explained: "You couldn't find anybody in the world more pro-education than me. But the education I went through in boys' grammar school in the '50s was very controlling and demanded rebellion. The teachers were weak and therefore easy targets. The song is meant to be a rebellion against errant government, against people who have power over you, who are wrong. Then it absolutely demanded that you rebel against that."
  • The chorus came from a school in Islington, England, and was chosen because it was close to the studio. It was made up of 23 kids between the ages of 13 and 15. They were overdubbed 12 times, making it sound like there were many more kids.
    The addition of the choir convinced Waters that the song would come together. He told Rolling Stone: "It suddenly made it sort of great."
  • Pink Floyd's producer, Bob Ezrin, had the idea for the chorus. He used a choir of kids when he produced Alice Cooper's "School's Out" in 1972. Ezrin liked to use children's voices on songs about school.
  • There was some controversy when it was revealed that the chorus was not paid. It also didn't sit well with teachers that kids were singing an anti-school song. The chorus was given recording time in the studio in exchange for their contribution; the school received 1000 pounds and a platinum record.
  • The Disco beat was suggested by their producer, Bob Ezrin, who was a fan of the group Chic. This was completely unexpected from Pink Floyd, who specialized in making records you were supposed to listen to, not dance to. He got the idea for the beat when he was in New York and heard something Nile Rodgers was doing.
  • Pink Floyd rarely released singles that were also on an album. They felt their songs were best appreciated in the context of an album, where the songs and the artwork came together to form a theme. Producer Bob Ezrin convinced them that this could stand on it's own and would not hurt album sales, and when the band relented and released it as a single, it became their only #1 hit. Two more songs were subsequently released as singles from the album: "Run Like Hell" and "Comfortably Numb."
  • The concept of the album was to explore the "walls" people put up to protect themselves. Any time something bad happens, we withdraw further, putting up "another brick in the wall."
  • The Wall was one of 2 ideas Waters brought to the band when they got together to record in 1978. His other idea was The Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking, which he ended up recording as a solo album.
  • Water's original demo for this was just him singing over an acoustic guitar, and he saw it as a short interstitial piece for the album. He explained in Mojo magazine: "It was only going to be one verse, a guitar solo and out. Then the late Nick Griffths, the engineer at Britannia Row, recorded the school kids, at my request. He did it brilliantly. It wasn't until I heard the 24-track tape he sent while we were working at Producer's Workshop in Los Angeles that I went, 'Wow, this now a single.' Talk about shivers down the spine."
  • When they first recorded this song, it was one verse and one chorus, and lasted 1:20. Producer Bob Ezrin wanted it longer, but the band refused. While they were gone, Ezrin made it longer by inserting the kids as the second verse, adding some drum fills, and copying the first chorus to the end. He played it for Waters, who liked what he heard.
  • This is often paired with "Happiest Days of Our Lives" when played on radio stations, and it follows "Happiest" on the album. "Happiest Days of Our Lives" depicts how childhood was great and there was nothing to worry about, until the teachers came along and tried to oppress and suppress the children. Waters then describes that the teachers must have it rough in their own homes, and take out their frustration on the students. (thanks, Patrick - Conyers, GA)
  • To make this album, they came up with the concept of the character "Pink." Bob Ezrin wrote a script, and they worked the songs around the character. The story was made into the movie The Wall, starring Bob Geldof as "Pink." Many people believe you have to be stoned to enjoy the film.
  • For the stage show, a giant wall was erected in front of the band using hidden hydraulic lifts as they played. It measured 160x35ft when completed, and about halfway through the show, the bricks were gradually knocked down to reveal the band.
  • Waters sang lead. When he left Pink Floyd and the band toured without him, Gilmour sang it.
  • The original idea for the concept of the actual Wall they wanted to create came from a problem Roger Waters was having during their concerts. When he started thinking about the show, he wanted to isolate himself from the public because he couldn't stand all the yelling and shouting. "The Wall" was not just a symbol and a concept, but a way of separating the band from their audience. (thanks, raul - Buenos Aires, Argentina)
  • The line "We don't need no education" is grammatically incorrect. It's a double negative and really means "We need education." This could be a commentary on the quality of the schools.
  • On July 21, 1990, Waters staged a production of The Wall in Berlin to celebrate the destruction of The Berlin Wall.
  • The 1998 movie The Faculty has a version of this song remixed by Class Of '99. (thanks, Riley - Elmhurst, IL)
  • In England, this was released in November 1979 and became the last UK #1 of the '70s. (thanks, Alan - Blackpool, Lancs, England)
  • Part 1 of this song is often overlooked. It is saying that because Pink's father went off and died in WWII, he built The Wall to protect him from other people. In the movie you see him at the playground with the other kids and their fathers, then one of the kids leaves with his father and Pink tries to touch the father's hand. The father pushes him away quite aggressively then leaves. (thanks, Andres - Santa Rosa, CA)
  • In 2004, Peter Rowan, a Scottish musician who runs a royalties firm, started tracking down the kids who sang in the chorus, who were by then in their 30s. Under a 1996 copyright law, they were entitled to a small amount of money for participating on the record. Rowan was no so much interested in the money as in getting the chorus together for a reunion.
  • On July 7, 2007, Roger Waters performed this as the Live Earth concert at Giants Stadium in New Jersey. Live Earth was organized to raise awareness of global warming, and the slogan for the event was "Save Our Selves" (S.O.S.). Waters poked fun at Pink Floyd and the event by flying a giant inflatable big overhead, which was a classic Pink Floyd stage prop, except this one was emblazoned wit the words "Save Our Sausages." (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France)
  • Roger Waters did the Scottish voices on the track. He told Mojo magazine December 2009 laughing, "I can do mad Scotsman and high court judges."
  • The teacher character in this song shows up again in Pink Floyd's next album, The Final Cut (1983), notably in the song "The Hero's Return." He is based on the many men who returned from war and entered the teaching profession, as they had no other opportunities.

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