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Ummagumma
  

Ummagumma [Import]

Pink Floyd Audio CD
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (41 customer reviews)

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In the early 1960s, a bunch of boys from Cambridge began jamming together, and out of those encounters were born the early incarnations of Pink Floyd. More than 40 years and 150 million album sales later, the band headlined the biggest global music event in history – Live 8 – and was inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame. You could say the Floyd has staying power.

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Product details

  • Audio CD
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Format: Import
  • Label: Import
  • ASIN: B000MLS716
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (41 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 56,471 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Just My Review..... 25 May 2001
Format:Audio CD
For many years, this double LP/CD was one of the most popular albums in Pink Floyd's pre-Dark Side of the Moon output, containing a live disc and a studio disc all for the price of one (in the LP version). The live set, recorded in Birmingham and Manchester in June 1969, is limited to four numbers, all drawn from the group's first two LPs or their then recent singles. Featuring the band's second line-up (i.e. no Syd Barrett), the set shows off a very potent group, their sound held together on stage by Nick Mason's assertive drumming and Roger Waters' powerful bass work, which keeps the proceedings moving no matter how spaced out the music gets; they also sound like they've got the amplifiers to make their music count, which is more than the early band had. "Astronomy Domine," "Careful With That Axe Eugene," "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun," and "A Saucerful of Secrets" are all superior here to their studio originals, done longer, louder, and harder, with a real edge to the playing. The studio disc was more experimental, each member getting a certain amount of space on the record to make their own music - Richard Wright's "Sysyphus" was a pure keyboard work, featuring various synthesizers, organs, and pianos; David Gilmour's "The Narrow Way" was a three-part instrumental for acoustic and electric guitars and electronic keyboards; and Nick Mason's "The Grand Vizier's Garden Party" made use of a vast range of acoustic and electric percussion devices. Roger Waters' "Grantchester Meadows was a lyrical folk-like number unlike almost anything else the group ever did. In 1994 the album was remastered and reissued in a green slipcase, in a version a lot louder and sharper (and cheaper) than the original CD release.
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126 of 133 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Audio CD
The word Ummagumma was a slang word for sex, now there is good sex and there is bad sex. Ummagumma certainly lives up to that for me. The package is made up of 2 CDs. The first CD is four long compositions performed live. This one disc is essential Floyd. Astronomy Domine is nothing like the versions found on 'Piper at the Gates of Dawn' (Floyd's first album), 'Echoes' and 'Pulse' (the 1995 live album). There is no narration of the solar system at the beginning, just quiet keyboards. The keyboards return during the mid section of this 8.30 minute version. (Mike 'Tubular Bells' Oldfield stated that he was heavily influenced by that keyboard break, when he chose the track on BBC Radio 1's "My Top 10". Circa 1983. Listening to his 70's albums one can hear that influence).

Careful With That Axe, Eugene' is next up. At just under 9 minutes it is a very similar version as to the one found on 'Live In Pompeii' video. There is one important difference though. The scream actually gives the impression that someone is being cut into little pieces (and it's not Jimmy Young!). I love this piece and is played live by The Australian Pink Floyd Show to a rousing reception. It is a very moving instrumental which builds to a murderous mid-section and then dies away, slowly. A classic.

Another classic, and again the best official released version is found in 'Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun'. 9 minutes long here, it knocks the excellent studio version into touch.

A Saucerful Of Secrets' completes the disc. It is similar to the studio version except for Gilmour's more pronounced vocal on the 5 minute outro. (The same finale as to 'The Man and the Journey').

The studio album could have pages written about it. It was going to be an experiment using household utensils. Thankfully that idea fell apart. What was released is a right mixture of solo efforts. Firstly, Wright with his musical version of Homer's Greek character Sysyphus pushing his rock infinitely almost to the top of a hill only to let it slip roll down again. To me it is a total waste of 13 minutes. It is the sort of noise that kids would make on BBC's "Music Time". (Who remembers that programme?)

Next two gems from Waters. The beautifully serene 'Grantchester Meadows' and the very silly, but stunning 'Several Species...' A Pict being slang for a Scot. Apparently to get the full drift of the hidden messages on this one track you need to play the vinyl at 16rpm/33rpm/45rpm/78rpm backwards and forwards. Don't worry if you've only got a CD player it is still great fun. Waters contribution comes in at 12.30 minutes.

Gilmour didn't have faith in his lyrics on his 12.20 minute piece 'The Narrow Way'. His voice is deliberately hidden in the mix of part 3. So the lyrics were not printed in the booklet. However, they are easy to find on the net. OK, the lyrics aren't outstanding but they aren't bad for an early attempt. The music is good; moody and powerful if just a little chaotic at times.

8 of Mason's 8.40 minutes are, for me anyway, a waste of time. Again reminders of "Music Time". But were Led Zeppelin inspired by the flute ending on part 3 for their intro to, oh what's the name of the most popular song ever written, oh..., "Stairway To Heaven".

Don't worry that the live album is spoilt by audience noise (like Delicate Sound Of Thunder) it isn't. This was recorded in England in June '69 when the crowd gave polite, respectful silence during each track, just like on 'Yessongs' by Yes. And just like 'Yessongs' the sound quality is superb. Remember this is years before digital recording. This album is only enhanced by being remastered. Finally, great packaging (even if some photos are from the 70's) from Storm Thorgerson who worked on the original album but it is nice to refer to that vinyl to see the original presentation showing different photos and Floyd's second album in one of the mirrors on the wall.

Thanks for reading this long essay, but it is impossible to describe this double CD in only a few words.

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37 of 40 people found the following review helpful
By AGC2070
Format:Audio CD
When I first bought this album, I didn't like it. There are only two studio songs with lyrics and at first it is certainly an uncomfortable cacophony. However, the more I listen, the more I like it. The wierdness is composed and put together with the care of a classical composer. From Richard Wright's pseudo classical piano doodlings, to the mellotron and running water interlude that lulls you into a false sense of security before the massive mellotron chord and drum-roll that sounds as though it was taken straight out of a horror film. Several species... is really the dark side of Grantchester Meadows. The Narrow Way begins with an ethereal acoustic jam and ends up as a full blown rock anthem, with Nick Mason displaying drumming of a similar standard to The Nile Song on 'More'. Then he comes into his own messing about with drum loops in the Grand Viser's Garden Party, neatly bookending this madness with a motif on the flute!

Then you have the live album to go. Astronomy Domine has a far more menacing effect than Barrett's version on the first album and the vocals at the end of A Saucerful of Secrets are a true feat, plus Nick Mason really belts those skins again on this one!!

Bands today would never realease an album like this 1) because their money-minded managers would never allow it and 2) they probably wouldn't know how anyway. True creativity in music is clearly not what it used to be.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
avant garde innovation
This album still stands as a superb achievement in avant garde music. I'm listening to the studio album as I type and it could have been made yesterday. Read more
Published 12 months ago by Abzorba the Greek
Floyd's experimental early days: good and not-so-good ummagumma
In 1969 Pink Floyd was little known outside the `arty' environment of university concert halls in England. Read more
Published 12 months ago by Dr. Trang
Schizophrenic
1969 Double album Ummagumma divides opinion but it is still an excellent snapshot of Pink Floyd at one of the most interesting times in their career - post-Barrett, but pre-Dark... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Marchespie
The Division bell?
Ive been a Floyd fan since 1977 when I first heard Animals. After discovering Animals I went back to listen to Wish you were here, Dark side, Meddle, Atom Heart Mother etc. Read more
Published 18 months ago by sgmontour@hotmail.com
Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Floyd
I've been a die-hard PF enthusiast for over 40 years now. At their best they are simply unrivalled. I agree in many ways with other reviewers of Ummagumma; the stunning live... Read more
Published on 29 Mar 2010 by Phil
Set the controls but lost the direction?
Ummagumma's saving grace is the fresh sounding live set that originally was the first LP of the set. Read more
Published on 24 April 2009 by AnOldGoat
Not an easy listen, but very rewarding in time
The short story:

Ummagumma is not an easy-listen. It's also a very insular album, not the kind you play when others are around, but the kind you listen to on your own at... Read more
Published on 2 Jan 2009 by Mr. J. Guevara
When music was inspired!
This is for me an album that takes me back to my youth and perhaps that is what makes it so special. Read more
Published on 14 Nov 2008 by S. C. Lawrence
Good, underrated transitional album
Floyd were clearly flailing around for a direction after Syd Barrett left, and the period 1968-71 is probably their most uneven. Read more
Published on 1 Oct 2008 by Paracelsus1966
Definitive live versions plus studio experimentation
Recorded during the long period of readjustment following the departure of Syd Barrett, while the band searched for a new identity and direction, the album could have been just a... Read more
Published on 26 Aug 2008 by M. G. Wilson
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