View Full Version : Pink Floyd member Wright dies at 65
Ana_Lennon
Sep 15, 2008, 08:50 AM
Richard Wright, a founder member of Pink Floyd, has died at the age of 65 after battling cancer, his spokesman said.
Wright played the keyboard with the legendary band and wrote music in classic albums such as Dark Side Of The Moon and Wish You Were Here.
His spokesman said: "The family of Richard Wright, founder member of Pink Floyd, announce with great sadness, that Richard died ... after a short struggle with cancer. The family have asked that their privacy is respected at this difficult time."
Wright's spokesman did not say from what form of cancer the star had been suffering.
The self-taught keyboardist and pianist met fellow band members Roger Waters and Nick Mason while at architecture school.
He was a founder member of The Pink Floyd Sound in 1965, and the group's previous incarnations, such as Sigma 6.
http://ukpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5hWIGm5l-yoyRo6pTklrXqJB3BnmA
jesgear
Sep 15, 2008, 09:16 AM
That is so sad; Wright was my favorite member of Floyd. This news ruined my day :sad3:
zipp
Sep 15, 2008, 09:52 AM
This is terrible. No more Pink Floyd ever.
Syd Barrett was important of course but Richard Wright was the Floyd of the years when they became a legend.
I was hoping they'd do a last tour but that's it.
Johnny Rhythm
Sep 15, 2008, 10:27 AM
Stunned.....
"The Great Gig in The Sky"
chaitanya
Sep 15, 2008, 10:58 AM
Shine on you...Rick...
mari
Sep 15, 2008, 11:42 AM
......
... Wow, I just got back from the café where I work.. We actually lit candles and played The Dark Side Of The Moon tonight... and we didn't know about this.
Bon voyage, Richard.
Thank you.
I'm looking forward to that great gig.
http://www.pink-floyd.es/imagenes/Wright.jpg
Legs
Sep 15, 2008, 11:43 AM
This is sad news and so sudden.
Rest in peace Rick, you will be missed.
62hofner
Sep 15, 2008, 04:15 PM
He's off to that Great Gig In The Sky...
RIP
Hari's Chick
Sep 15, 2008, 07:41 PM
VfUalvKe-vo
Peace to Richard...thank you for everything... :sad1:
MAXWELL EDISON
Sep 15, 2008, 08:18 PM
I was coming back home from work a couple of hours ago when a friend of mine sent me a text message telling me such a sad news. I was shocked and I'm still devastated. I really feel bad and miserable. Remember that great gig in the sky. Thank you for everything, Rick. RIP.:cry3::cry2::sad3::sad1::cry4::angel5:
beatlelover45223
Sep 15, 2008, 10:17 PM
RIP Richard!
hibgal
Sep 15, 2008, 11:55 PM
BBC has a nice retrospect on Richard today:
Obituary: Pink Floyd's Richard Wright
By Ian Youngs
Music reporter, BBC News
Published: 2008/09/15 19:00:43 GMT
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45020000/jpg/_45020398_richard_wright466getty.jpg
As a keyboardist and songwriter, Richard Wright helped create the pioneering psychedelic sound that made Pink Floyd one of the world's greatest groups.
His atmospheric, jazzy organs and synthesisers were at times at the forefront of their songs, and at others provided a dreamy undercurrent upon which the rest of the band could drift.
Wright was studying architecture at the Regent Street Polytechnic in London when he met fellow students Nick Mason and Roger Waters.
They formed the Architechtural Abdabs in 1965, before art student Syd Barrett joined and the group became Pink Floyd.
They made their names on London's artistic underground scene, "playing music which the record companies could not understand", as Wright later put it.
"We never had a desire to be famous, to be rock 'n' roll stars," he said.
The musical style of jazz greats like Miles Davis influenced his keyboard playing the most, he said.
Barrett was the leading creative force in the early days, but drug use soon led to his mental deterioration.
The rest of the band, though, did not partake in heavy drug use.
Wright took two acid trips - one before he was in the band, which was "quite enjoyable", and a more unpleasant experience that put him off for life.
"It's a mistake thinking that drugs supplied Pink Floyd with the inspiration," he said.
"The ones who took drugs were the ones who came to see the shows."
Redefined sound
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45020000/jpg/_45020396_pink_floyd_1967_pa226.jpg
Wright (right) and the band were central figures in swinging London
After Barrett left, and with new guitarist Dave Gilmour on board, the band started to redefine themselves in the late 1960s and early '70s, moving away from eccentric pop to prog rock.
As well as providing backing vocals and keyboards, Wright wrote some of their songs.
They included the instrumental 13-minute Sysyphus on 1969's Ummagumma and Summer '68 from Atom Heart Mother, their first number one album.
The 23-minute Echoes, from their next long player, Meddle, centred around a single Wright piano note.
Record breaker
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45020000/jpg/_45020397_pink_floyd_1989pa226.jpg
Gilmour (left), Mason (centre) and Wright carried on into the 1990s
Their following release, 1973's Dark Side of the Moon, was their masterpiece.
Wright co-wrote much of the album, including Breathe, Time and Us and Them, but his most significant contribution was the piano-led The Great Gig in the Sky.
The album is one of the best-selling albums of all time and stayed in the US top 200 for 15 years.
The group became one of the biggest groups of the 1970s, and continued releasing albums, while Wright also branched out with a solo career.
But band relations were deteriorating, and Waters effectively sacked Wright after the 1979 album The Wall.
Waters had threatened to withhold the album if Wright refused to quit, the keyboardist later said.
"There was this big personality clash between me and Roger, and at the end of the day I realised that I couldn't work with this person anyway - so I left."
The other band members also fell out with Waters, with Gilmour and Mason starting work on a new Pink Floyd album without him in 1986.
Wright rejoined the splinter group as they continued to record and tour as Pink Floyd - after a lengthy legal battle with Waters.
They made two more Pink Floyd albums and played more than 100 shows on the Division Bell tour in 1994, the most lucrative tour in rock history at that time.
After that, the group fell dormant. Wright released another solo album and let off steam on his 65-foot yacht in the Virgin Islands.
Sailing was his "therapy and it releases all the pressures that one does get in this business", he said.
He joined his former bandmates, with the exception of Barrett, one last time at Live 8 in Hyde Park in 2005.
There has since been continual speculation that the group could reform to tour again.
But with Wright's passing, a hugely important chapter in the story of British music has closed.
Story from BBC NEWS: Link to article (http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/entertainment/7617583.stm)
© BBC MMVIII
FPSHOT
Sep 16, 2008, 12:16 AM
David Gilmour has put some really special words on his website
“No one can replace Richard Wright. He was my musical partner and my friend,”
“In the welter of arguments about who or what was Pink Floyd, Rick's enormous input was frequently forgotten”.
“He was gentle, unassuming and private but his soulful voice and playing were vital, magical components of our most recognised Pink Floyd sound”.
“I have never played with anyone quite like him. The blend of his and my voices and our musical telepathy reached their first major flowering in 1971 on 'Echoes'. In my view all the greatest PF moments are the ones where he is in full flow. After all, without 'Us and Them' and 'The Great Gig In The Sky', both of which he wrote, what would 'The Dark Side Of The Moon' have been? Without his quiet touch the album 'Wish You Were Here' would not quite have worked”.
“In our middle years, for many reasons he lost his way for a while, but in the early Nineties, with 'The Division Bell', his vitality, spark and humour returned to him and then the audience reaction to his appearances on my tour in 2006 was hugely uplifting and it's a mark of his modesty that those standing ovations came as a huge surprise to him, (though not to the rest of us).”
“Like Rick, I don't find it easy to express my feelings in words, but I loved him and will miss him enormously.”
DavidGilmour.com
twovirgins
Sep 16, 2008, 12:39 AM
Pink Floyd has been in my top 5 best bands ever and He will be missed RIP I think its weird all these rock people dying at about mid sixties of cancer ..
hibgal
Sep 16, 2008, 01:16 AM
What better way to remember Richard Wright? Here's Rick playing Breathe & Time from Dark Side of the Moon on Dave Gilmour's 2006 Live tour.
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Blackguard
Sep 16, 2008, 02:22 AM
Shine on Richard Wright. This is very sudden and sad news.
taxman
Sep 16, 2008, 05:17 AM
RIP :(
Pink Floyd must be feeling like we did when George died.
He wrote Us And Them, one of my Pink Floyd fav's:
zlY-JlE5ZCo
mari
Sep 16, 2008, 07:31 AM
His atmospheric, jazzy organs and synthesisers were at times at the forefront of their songs, and at others provided a dreamy undercurrent upon which the rest of the band could drift.
:heart2:
There has since been continual speculation that the group could reform to tour again.
But with Wright's passing, a hugely important chapter in the story of British music has closed.
:nono1:
proud_prudence
Sep 16, 2008, 10:10 AM
I was shocked hearing this, really really shocked..
I think Rick and George had a lot of similarities in their status
Rest peacfully, Richard
hibgal
Sep 24, 2008, 03:10 AM
Gilmour plays Pink Floyd tribute
By Ian Youngs
Music reporter, BBC News
Published: 2008/09/24 08:41:07 GMT
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45046000/jpg/_45046456_45045800.jpg
Pink Floyd reformed for Live 8 in 2005, with Gilmour (left) and Wright (right)
Pink Floyd star David Gilmour has performed one of the band's early songs in tribute to the group's keyboardist Richard Wright, who died last week.
Gilmour gave a poignant rendition of Remember A Day, written by Wright, who died from cancer at the age of 65.
The song was on Pink Floyd's 1968 second album Saucerful of Secrets.
"He created a sound that glued the whole Pink Floyd thing together," Gilmour said on BBC Two music show Later... With Jools Holland.
"He was just a very self-effacing but very talented, lovely chap. We're incredibly sad to have lost him."
Wright had been due to accompany Gilmour on the TV show, but sent the guitarist a text message three weeks ago saying he would not be able to play.
After his death, Gilmour decided to play Remember A Day. It is thought that the song had not been performed live for many years.
Wright sang lead vocals on the original version, which was recorded just before Gilmour joined the group.
Gilmour recalled meeting Wright in 1965, when his first band supported Pink Floyd in "schools and big old youth clubs".
Wright was "so shy and quiet", he told host Jools Holland.
Asked about Wright's contribution to Pink Floyd, he replied: "He brought a slightly more jazzy and ethereal element to it all.
"He had some elusive quality, let's call it soul, that glued the whole thing together. You notice it when it's missing."
One edition of Later... was broadcast on Tuesday, with a longer version to be aired on BBC Two on Friday.
For the Friday episode, Gilmour also performed The Blue, from his 2006 solo album On An Island.
The album version of that song featured Wright on backing vocals, and Wright had also accompanied Gilmour on tour.
The keyboardist was "revelling in what he was doing" in recent years, Gilmour said.
"He had so much joy in him."
The show also featured Mercury Prize winners Elbow, new US pop star Katy Perry and British hip-hop artist Roots Manuva.
Later... with Jools Holland is on BBC Two at 2335 BST on Friday.
Story from BBC NEWS: Link to article (http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/entertainment/7632426.stm)
© BBC MMVIII
And here's a clip of Remember A Day:
HSurg2GGvw0
Legs
Sep 25, 2008, 09:13 AM
Thanks for that.
A great version of "Remember The Day" tho ofcourse it's sad that Rick isn't there.
Legs
Sep 27, 2008, 08:30 AM
Got it taped last night.
Didn't watch the full show but fast forwarded it to the songs Dave and band played. I have yet to hear the interview with Dave.
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