The Nile Song

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“The Nile Song”
“The Nile Song” cover
Single by Pink Floyd
from the album Soundtrack from the Film More
B-side Ibiza Bar
Released 1969
Format 7"
Recorded March 1969
Genre Hard Rock
Heavy Metal
Length 3:26
Label Columbia Records
Writer(s) Roger Waters
Producer Pink Floyd
Pink Floyd singles chronology
"Point Me at the Sky"
(1968)
"The Nile Song"
(1969)
"One of These Days"
(1971)
Soundtrack from the Film More track listing
"Cirrus Minor"
(1)
"The Nile Song"
(2)
"Crying Song"
(3)

"The Nile Song" is the second song from Pink Floyd's 1969 album, Soundtrack from the Film More. Many consider it one of the band's flirtations with hard rock, along with the 1979 track "Young Lust" (from The Wall) and 1983's "Not Now John" (from 1983's The Final Cut). It is written by Roger Waters and it is one of the few Pink Floyd's songs not featuring any keyboard. The track "Ibiza Bar" in the same album reprises almost the same theme. Andy Kellman of All Music Guide describes "The Nile Song" as "one of the heaviest songs the band recorded".[1] The harmonic progression gives a strain of modulations, beginning at A, and then rising a whole step with each repeat, cycling through six different keys, returning to the starting point of A, and continuing the pattern as the song fades out.

"The Nile Song" was covered by the Necros on their 1986 album Tangled Up, by Dreadnaught on their 2002 One Piece Missing EP and by Voivod on their 1993 album, The Outer Limits.

[edit] Personnel


[edit] References

  1. ^ allmusic ((( Relics > Overview )))