Empty Spaces
"Empty Spaces" | |
---|---|
Song by Pink Floyd | |
from the album The Wall | |
Published | Pink Floyd Music Publishers Ltd |
Released |
30 November 1979 (UK) 8 December 1979 (US) |
Recorded | 1978–1979 |
Genre | Progressive rock |
Length | 2:10 |
Label |
Harvest (UK) Columbia (US) |
Songwriter(s) | Roger Waters |
Producer(s) | Bob Ezrin, David Gilmour, James Guthrie and Roger Waters |
"Empty Spaces" is a song by the English progressive rock band Pink Floyd, featured as the eighth track on their 1979 rock opera The Wall. It is the only known song by Pink Floyd to contain a backmasked message.
Composition
The song is in E minor, and is two minutes, eight seconds in length. It features a long introductory section, with solo guitar and a repetitive drumbeat, and an airport announcement, as a reference to Pink heading for a concert tour. The song reaches a climax of tension, at which point Roger Waters plays a descending blues scale over the minor dominant, B minor, cueing the start of the vocals. Roger Waters sings a short verse, ending on the phrase "How shall I complete the wall?" This track shares a backing track with "What Shall We Do Now?", sped up from D to E, with new guitar and vocals. The last beat introduces the next song, "Young Lust".
Plot
The Wall tells the story of Pink, an alienated and embittered rock star. At this point in the narrative, Pink is now grown up and married, but he and his wife are having relationship problems because of his distance, and his nearly-complete emotional "wall". Pink asks himself how he should complete its construction.
Movie and live versions
On both the film adaptation and the recording of the live performance of this album, the song is dropped in favour of "What Shall We Do Now?".
Hidden message
Directly before the lyrical section, there is a hidden message. It is isolated on the left channel of the song. When heard normally, it appears to be nonsense. If played backwards, the following can be heard:
Empty Spaces Secret Message
Found by reversing the audio | |
Problems playing this file? See media help. |
- –Hello looker... Congratulations. You have just discovered the secret message. Please send your answer to Old Pink, care of the Funny Farm, Chalfont...
- –Roger! Carolyne's on the phone!
- –Okay.[1][2]
Roger Waters congratulates the listener for finding this message, and jokes that she can send her answer to "Old Pink" (being either a comical reference to Syd Barrett, or a foreshadowing of Pink's eventual insanity), who lives somewhere in a funny farm (a term to describe a psychiatric hospital) in Chalfont. Before he can reveal the exact location, however, he gets interrupted by someone (James Guthrie) in the background who says Carolyne (Waters' then wife) is on the phone.[3]
Covers
- The song was covered by Mushroomhead for the Universal re-release of XX.
- In 2009, AGM House Band covered it for a never-completed tribute to The Wall.[4]
- In 2010, the progressive rock band Astra covered the track for a compilation album covering The Wall (titled The Wall: Rebuilt).|
Personnel
- David Gilmour – guitars, Prophet-5 and ARP Quadra synthesizers
- Nick Mason – drums (only in the full version of the song, "What Shall We Do Now?")
- Roger Waters – vocals, bass guitar, VCS3 synthesizer
- Richard Wright – piano
with:
- James Guthrie – ARP Quadra synthesizer[5]
Further reading
- Fitch, Vernon. The Pink Floyd Encyclopedia (3rd edition), 2005. ISBN 1-894959-24-8.
References
- ↑ "Jeff Milner's Backmasking site". Jeff Milner. Retrieved 3 February 2010.
- ↑ Nemcoff, Mark Yoshimoto (4 April 2013). "Empty Spaces: Backwards Messages, Stairway to Heaven and a Failure to Communicate". WordSushi. Retrieved 11 June 2017.
- ↑ BBC - Culture, The Hidden Messages in Songs
- ↑ Ray Padgett, Full Albums: Pink Floyd's The Wall Pt. 1, Cover Me Songs, 15 September 2010.
- ↑ Fitch, Vernon and Mahon, Richard, Comfortably Numb - A History of The Wall 1978–1981, 2006, p.82.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Wall |