Album Title
Pink Floyd
Artist Icon The Piper at the Gates of Dawn (1967)
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First Released

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The Piper at the Gates of Dawn est le premier album du groupe Pink Floyd, sorti en 1967. Le titre de l'album (en français Le joueur de pipeau aux portes de l'aube) est une référence au chapitre 7 du livre Le Vent dans les saules de Kenneth Grahame. Le disque est largement dominé par l'influence de Syd Barrett, dont les compositions évoquent l'espace (Astronomy Domine, Interstellar Overdrive) ou les contes de fées (Matilda Mother, The Gnome).

L'album fut enregistré dans le studio no 1 d'Abbey Road, tandis que dans le studio no 2, en face, les Beatles enregistraient leur album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Reçu plutôt positivement par la critique à sa sortie, il sera plus tard reconnu comme l'un des plus grands albums psychédéliques des années 1960. En 1967, Record Mirror et NME lui donnent la note de quatre étoiles sur cinq, le premier précisant que « le son psychédélique du groupe est concrètement né avec cet album, qui expose autant leur talent artistique que leur talent pour enregistrer ». Paul McCartney, alors bassiste des Beatles, ou encore Joe Boyd, ancien producteur de Pink Floyd, ont également émis des critiques positives concernant The Piper at the Gates of Dawn. On peut aussi citer Rolling Stone, qui, en plus de lui attribuer un score de quatre étoiles et demi sur cinq, le classe en 2003 à la 347ème place de sa liste des 500 plus grands albums de tous les temps.

En 2007, à l'occasion du quarantième anniversaire de sa sortie, l'album a été réédité sous forme d'un coffret 2 CD, reprenant l'album en stéréo et en mono, et d'un coffret 3 CD en édition limitée avec un troisième CD reprenant singles de l'époque Barrett et autres raretés.
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User Album Review
For all who know the tragic story of Syd Barrett’s meteoric rise and fall in the world of art rock, it’s generally agreed that, between the first psychedelic strains of “Arnold Layne” and the mumbled torture of “Late Night”, his creative zenith was The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn. Recorded in the run-up to the Summer Of Love in a studio next to the one where the Beatles were putting the finishing touches to Sgt Pepper, this album remains a pinnacle of English psychedelic music. It’s filled with the child-poet musings of a mind not yet oppressed, but free to wander between fairy tales and cosmic explorations and still be home in time for tea.
Born to the tail end of the blues boom, Syd’s Pink Floyd (originally the Tea Set), were tailor-made for the nascent underground. Free from a (visible) desire to make with the chart success (man), they also had the requisite backgrounds to get them in on the ground floor with the middle class tastemakers. Along with the Soft Machine they forged their sound - stuttering swooping telecasters and eastern-tinged organ wig outs over hypnotic beds of rhythm - in the clubs of West End London. By this point they had wooed EMI into signing them and, following the bad sales ploy of having their first single, “Arnold Layne” banned as it reached number 20, they finally struck top ten territory with “See Emily Play”. It was lucky that, by this time, the album was mostly completed, because it was this sudden propulsion into the limelight that was to prove poor Syd’s undoing. Enforced ‘package’ tours with other chart acts (as well as the equally bemused Jimi Hendrix Experience) were to prove too much exposure for the deeply insecure artist.
The first side opens with the outer space chatter of a thousand space missions intoning the names of the stars and we’re plunged in to a prime slice of mid-sixties freak-out territory. Syd’s guitar is fabulously lithe. There follows a series of tales of cats, silver shoes, unicorns, mice called Gerald, bikes, gnomes, scarecows and the I Ching. Sounds horrible, doesn’t it? But in 1967 this was fresh and new, and what’s more it’s delivered utterly charmingly and with no hint of received American pronunciation merely to be cool. It’s been said before, but this is Edward Lear for the acid generation.
Then in the black hole between these tracks we get Syd’s other side, the shining, blasted sci fi tones of his guitar rumbling through the extended work out of “Interstellar Overdrive”.
This is the paradox with Barrett. He could seemingly write material that was both poppy and deeply out there with ease. Who knows how the Floyd would have sounded had he held on. Definitely different that’s for sure. But Piper remains a testament to a mind that, for a brief spell, saw no boundaries…


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