The Piper at the Gates of Dawn{| align="right" border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width=225 style="margin-left:3px"\n!align="center" bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|The Piper at the Gates of Dawn\n|-\n|align="center" colspan="3"| \n|-\n!align="center" bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|LP by Pink Floyd\n|-\n!align="left" valign="top"|Released\n|colspan="2" valign="top"|August 5 1967\n|-\n!align="left" valign="top"|Recorded\n|colspan="2" valign="top"|1967\n|-\n!align="left" valign="top"|Genre\n|colspan="2" valign="top"|Rock\n|-\n!align="left" valign="top"|Length\n|colspan="2" valign="top"|41 min 52 s\n|-\n!align="left" valign="top"|Record label\n|colspan="2" valign="top"|Columbia Records\n|-\n!align="left" valign="top"|Producer\n|colspan="2" valign="top"|Norman Smith\n|-\n!bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Professional reviews\n|-\n!align="left" valign="top"|RollingStone review\n|valign="top"|Favourable\n|valign="top"|link\n|-\n!bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Pink Floyd Chronology\n|-align="center" \n|valign="top"|N/A\n|valign="top"|The Piper at the Gates of Dawn(1967)\n|valign="top"|A Saucerful of Secrets (1968)\n|} The Piper at the Gates of Dawn is Pink Floyd's debut album, and the only one made under Syd Barrett's leadership. The album has whimsical lyrics about scarecrows, gnomes, bicycles and fairytales, along with psychedelic instrumental passages. The album was recorded at Abbey Road Studios. The LP was released on August 5, 1967 and reached #6 on the UK charts and #131 on the US charts. The CD was first released in 1987, and re-released with a digitally re-mastered CD in 1994. The album's title comes from the seventh chapter of Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows, where Water Rat and Mole, while searching for a lost animal, have a religious experience. ("This is the place of my song-dream, the place the music played to me," whispered the Rat, as if in a trance. "Here, in this holy place, here if anywhere, surely we shall find Him!") The Piper referred to is identified with the Greek god Pan.
|
||||
"Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one." - Albert Einstein (1879-1955) |
\n|-\n!align="center" bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|