PINK FLOYD : PINK FLOYD AT POMPEII MCMLXXII

 

Disc One (63:52)

  1. Pompeii Intro
  2. Echoes - Part 1
  3. Careful With That Axe Eugene
  4. A Saucerful Of Secrets
  5. One Of These Days
  6. Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun
  7. Mademoiselle Nobs
  8. Echoes - Part 2

Disc Two (18:47)

  1. Careful With That Axe Eugene
  2. A Saucerful Of Secrets

Label : Columbia

Venue : Amphitheatre of Pompeii, Pompeii, Italy

Recording Date : October 4-7, 1971

Release Date : May 2, 2025

Review (AllMusic) : A remnant of Pink Floyd's pioneering early-'70s experimentalism, Live at Pompeii has survived for over half a century as a cult film slow to receive its due. Part of this is because of its changing nature - originally filmed in late 1971, the project endured a confused succession of iterations, beginning with a 1972 festival premiere that was deemed too short, followed by the addition of new footage and a wider 1974 theatrical release that was largely eclipsed by the success of the group's landmark Dark Side of the Moon album. Decades later, in 2002, filmmaker Adrian Maben released a director's cut, then a 2013 documentary that used some of its footage. Prior to what will hopefully be the film's definitive release, a proper soundtrack had never materialized. 2025's Live at Pompeii MCMLXXII is that soundtrack, and it sounds magnificent. Remixed by latter-day prog rock guru Steven Wilson (Porcupine Tree), it contains every song from the newly expanded version of the film along with a second disc featuring alternate takes of "Careful with That Axe, Eugene" and "A Saucerful of Secrets." Historically, Pompeii falls at a significant hinge point in Pink Floyd's career. By the time they set up among the deserted ruins of the ancient Roman amphitheater outside Naples, they were in many ways still an undefined entity. Their output after Syd Barrett's 1968 departure was exploratory, often thrillingly so, but they had yet to find the sense of cohesion and polish that would mark their catalog from Dark Side forward. And that's a big part of Pompeii's charm, both on screen and disc. Before the mainstream success of the late '70s and the fractious in-fighting of the '80s, this was the egalitarian Pink Floyd, a quartet of sonic explorers who'd built up plenty of clout, but were still somewhat under the radar. The chosen material favors their earliest post-Barrett work and that of the album they were about to release, 1971's Meddle. The standouts are the two sections of "Echoes" that bookend the concert, as well as "One of These Days," a showpiece for drummer Nick Mason, who does some amazing work. Likewise, David Gilmour and Richard Wright's lush harmonies foreshadow some of the grandeur of the emerging Dark Side sound. But it's Roger Waters' bold vision that helped carry Pink Floyd into their prime, and his gnarly peregrine scream on "Careful with That Axe, Eugene" is one of the soundtrack's biggest thrills. By the time Pompeii was shown in theaters, the band was already into their next phase as stadium behemoths. Never again did they sound as spontaneous and free as they did here.

Review (Mojo) : The reappraisal of Pink Floyd: Live At Pompeii the movie, this once super-prog totem of a hirsute band sonic voyaging in an empty Roman amphitheatre, began in the ’90s. Beastie Boys paid cheeky homage to the film’s striking imagery in the video for 1992’s Gratitude and Jonny Greenwood would force his pre-OK Computer Radiohead bandmates to watch it on their tourbus (his brother Colin deriding it as “ridiculous”). Now, with its soundtrack restored by Steven Wilson – in a mix that is more detailed than the 2016 versions of five tracks featured on box set The Early Years 1965-1972 – it sparkles anew. The funky jam section of Echoes sounds punchier than ever, while the 12-minute-plus unedited version of A Saucerful Of Secrets is starker and stranger. The new set also includes Mademoiselle Nobs, Meddle’s Seamus with a different dog barking along to the wailing blues harmonica.