Pink Floyd 1969 -

Immaculate. The versions of “Astronomy Domine,” “Careful with That Axe, Eugene,” and “Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun” are definitive. You hear the space between the notes. You hear the echo. This is the Floyd as a unit —meditative, powerful, and scary.

They would perfect this on Dark Side of the Moon . But in 1969, they proved they had the ambition . Grade: B+ (Essential for deep fans, confounding for casuals) pink floyd 1969

In 1969, Pink Floyd stopped imitating Syd Barrett and started becoming the machine. The machine was rusty, it leaked oil, and it occasionally made no sense. But when it fired up—on “Careful with That Axe, Eugene” or “The Narrow Way”—you could hear the future breathing. Immaculate

1969 is not the year you start with Pink Floyd. It’s the year you go to after Dark Side , Wish You Were Here , and The Wall have burned themselves into your soul. It is the awkward, brilliant, self-indulgent, and utterly necessary adolescence of a band learning that silence is as loud as a scream, and that a story can be told without a single verse-chorus. You hear the echo

If 1967 was Pink Floyd’s psychedelic birth and 1968 their desperate scramble to survive the departure of Syd Barrett, then 1969 was the year they stopped treading water and began building their cathedral. It wasn't their most famous year, nor their most commercially successful, but 1969 is the dark, fascinating blueprint for everything that would make them legends.