The Wall concert was only performed a handful of times each in four cities: Los Angeles, Uniondale (Long Island), Dortmund, and London (at Earl's Court). Because of the increasingly complex nature of Pink Floyd's music, more and more musicians besides the band were required on stage to recreate sounds achieved in the studio. Several backing vocalists, (the most notable of whom are Rachel Fury, Clare Torry, Sam Brown, Margaret Taylor, Durga McBroom and Carol Kenyon) have accompanied the band on and off from Dark Side of the Moon onwards. These shows are documented by the Delicate Sound of Thunder album and video. He became unable to make a meaningful contribution to the group on stage, playing his guitar incoherently and sometimes not playing at all. The costs of the tour were estimated to have reached US$1.5 million even before the first performance. In the latter, the screen could be retracted behind the stage when not required, and was tilted horizontally with its peripheral lights focused onto the stage into a single spotlight during the final guitar solo in "Comfortably Numb". At this show, they debuted a multi-speaker pan pot system controlled by joystick from the stage that allowed them to move sound to anywhere a speaker had been set up. Andy Roberts replaced White for the 1981 shows. C $30.40. The band's set consisted of "Speak to Me/Breathe/Breathe (Reprise)", "Money", "Wish You Were Here", and "Comfortably Numb". Because of the overwhelming chart success of both The Dark Side of the Moon, which reached #1 in the US in late April, #2 in the UK, and the US-released single "Money", the nature of Pink Floyd's audiences changed in June 1973. [16] Partly because of the difficulties of finding and hiring local orchestras and choirs, the band often played what is referred to as the "small band" version of the song when they performed it live. On 18 January 1970 (possibly 17 January 1970), the band began performing a then untitled instrumental piece, which would eventually become the title track to their next album Atom Heart Mother. Rotated one of these three songs: Occasionally, multiple song encores were performed, adding: Playing 98 shows (the most until 1994), 1972 was the last time Pink Floyd varied their set lists each night on a tour until their final one. The show was designed by Mark Fisher with Art Direction by Gerald Scarfe. He returned for The Wall shows along with a complete "surrogate band" consisting of Peter Wood (keyboards), Willie Wilson (drums) and Andy Bown (bass). The earliest shows for what is considered to be "Pink Floyd" occurred in 1965 and included Bob Klose as a member of the band, which at the time played mainly R&B covers. The Dark Side of the Moon entire album On 23 December 1966, the first of the "International Times" associated gigs to be held at the UFO Club was performed. During shows to promote A Momentary Lapse of Reason, a similar effect was achieved with a flying bed. During their performance at Live 8, Pink Floyd used Tim Renwick, Jon Carin, Dick Parry and Carol Kenyon. Longtime manager Steve O'Rourke died on 30 October 2003. During "Comfortably Numb", the three giant screens showed the Pink Floyd Wall (from the cover of The Wall), and during the final guitar solo, the words "Make Poverty History" were written on the wall. During "Have a Cigar," Waters and Gilmour can be heard laughing as they sing part of the opening line. Pink Floyd's combination of music and visuals set the standard for rock musicians. A typical 1975 set would include all of the following: In 1975, the band launched a short tour that ended two months prior to the release of Wish You Were Here, which eventually sold out stadiums and arenas across America. Roger staged another tour of The Wall in 2010 saying of the story "it has occurred to me that maybe the story of my fear and loss with its concomitant inevitable residue of ridicule, shame and punishment, provides an allegory for broader concerns. A lovely day. Over the course of their career, Pink Floyd has released nine official home videos/DVDs and made 28 music videos. 1973 saw Pink Floyd go on two relatively short tours of the US, one in March to coincide with the release of The Dark Side of the Moon and a later one in June. If visuals were to be used at all, they had to be provided by the venue or the local promoter.[12]. The tour took Pink Floyd to various exotic locations they had never played before such as shows in the forecourt of the Palace of Versailles, Moscow's Olympic Stadium, and Venice, despite fears and protests that the sound would damage the latter city's foundations. Richard Wright, Robert Wyatt, and Bob Geldof (Pink in The Wall film) make guest appearances. This tour played to 5.5 million people in 68 cities; each concert gathered an average 45,000 audience. The song officially debuted at the Bath Festival, Somerset England on 27 June 1970 under the title "The Amazing Pudding" (later the name of a Pink Floyd fanzine) and for the first time with orchestra and choir accompaniment. One of the two shows at The Dome, Brighton, England on 28 June and 29 June was filmed by Peter Clifton for inclusion on his film Sounds of the City. It is sad that Waters voice is absent, but it is nice to see the return of Wright. [12] By early 1969, most of their excess earnings were funneled into upgrading their sound equipment rather than maintaining a permanent light show. For the A Momentary Lapse of Reason and Division Bell tours, Jon Carin (whom David Gilmour had met at Live Aid playing in Bryan Ferry's backing band) provided additional synthesizers and keyboards, Guy Pratt replaced Roger Waters on bass, Tim Renwick provided additional guitar and Gary Wallis additional percussion. The Wall Live 1980–81, The Best of Pink Floyd: A Foot in the Door, Inside Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pink_Floyd_live_performances&oldid=1002163934, Articles with dead external links from July 2017, Articles with peacock terms from August 2011, Articles with weasel words from August 2011, Articles lacking in-text citations from July 2017, Articles with multiple maintenance issues, Articles with unsourced statements from September 2008, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, 30 September 1966 – The All Saints Church Hall Concert -, 10 May 2007 – Syd Barrett Tribute concert, "Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts VI-IX)". 5 product ratings - Pink Floyd Live At Pompeii VHS In Shrink With Original Price Tags and Ad. The set list continued to include R&B, but some original psychedelia was also being introduced. The tour marked the first time that the band played in Russia, Norway, Spain, New Zealand and was the first time they had played in Australia since 1973. Pink Floyd - Live at Pompeii (DVD, 2003) Pre-Owned. or Best Offer. [31] The size of the theatrical features of The Wall were increased to cater for a sold-out audience of 200,000 people and of another estimated 500 million, in 35 countries, watching on television. 4.5 out of 5 stars. The second part of "breakfast" preparation was around a minute followed by a 3-minute tape of British DJ Jimmy Young, whom the band disliked. The first part of this lasted around four minutes. During "Breathe", on the screen behind them, film of the iconic pig from the Animals album was shown flying over Battersea Power Station (itself visible on the horizon in television broadcasts of the performance), and during "Money", a shot of The Dark Side of the Moon record being played was shown. Considered one of the most experimental concerts by Pink Floyd, it featured a crew member dressed as a gorilla, a cannon that fired, and band members sawing wood on the stage. Waters recreated the Wall show in Berlin in 1990, alongside the ruins of the Berlin Wall, and was joined by a number of guest artists (including Bryan Adams, Scorpions, Van Morrison, The Band, Tim Curry, Cyndi Lauper, Sinéad O'Connor, Marianne Faithfull, Joni Mitchell, Ute Lemper and Thomas Dolby). LED ZEPPELIN - STAGE IN TOKYO 1971 (2CD) Live at Budokan, Tokyo, Japan 23rd September 1971 Top Rated Seller Top Rated Seller. At this point, it had no orchestra or choir accompaniment. Pink Floyd were pioneers in the live music experience, renowned for their lavish stage shows that combine intense visual experiences with music to create a show in which the performers themselves are almost secondary. Buy It Now. Music videos. For "Wish You Were Here", Waters sung half of the verse's lyrics, unlike the original recording. In 1996, Gilmour and Wright performed "Wish You Were Here" with Billy Corgan (of The Smashing Pumpkins fame) at their Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction. Brand New. Gilmour, Mason and Wright performed "Fat Old Sun" and "The Great Gig in the Sky" at his funeral at Chichester Cathedral, contrary to reports in the media claiming they played "Wish You Were Here". C $25.50. As on the original recordings, Gilmour sang the lead vocals on "Breathe" and "Money", and shared them with Waters on "Comfortably Numb". This concert was even bigger than the previous ones, as Waters built a 550-foot (170 m) long and 82-foot (25 m) high wall. This site is designed to document and share my ever-growing collection of live concert CD releases of Led Zeppelin & Pink Floyd (and others when i get time). The show was also delayed briefly by a fan that grabbed the tether line for the inflatable pig and wouldn't release it. Buy It Now +C $15.61 shipping. Some of the other bands who played were The Who, The Move, The Pretty Things, Soft Machine, Tomorrow and The Creation. Others performing were Tyrannosaurus Rex, Roy Harper and Jethro Tull. This site is designed to document and share my ever-growing collection of live concert CD releases of Led Zeppelin & Pink Floyd (and others when i get time). At their performance in Boston two nights later, Waters jokingly said "We're going to take a PIG break, back in 20 minutes". The encores would usually consist of either "Money" or "Us and Them" from Dark Side of the Moon or both. In 1972, during a German tour, Waters sardonically introduced Echoes as "Looking Through the Knotholes in Granny's Wooden Leg" (a Goon Show reference) on one occasion and "The March of the Dam Busters" on another. The two remaining members of the band, David Gilmour and Nick Mason, along with Richard Wright, had just won a legal battle against Roger Waters and the future of the group was uncertain. The show in Oakland, California on 9 May is widely regarded as one of the band's finest performances ever. The show was held at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, just a short distance from Burke Lakefront Airport. The last gig of the tour was as the headliner of 1975 Knebworth Festival, which also featured The Steve Miller Band, Captain Beefheart and Roy Harper (who joined Pink Floyd on the stage to sing "Have a Cigar"). Worldwide, the band grossed around US$135 million. 1996: Rock and Roll Hall of Fame performance, 2001: David Gilmour & Nick Mason statements about Pink Floyd touring again in the future, 2003: Steve O'Rourke's funeral performance, A number of October/November 1967 Pink Floyd shows in the US were cancelled due to problems getting work permits in time: in particular the three shows on 26, 27 and 28October 1967 at the, Learn how and when to remove these template messages, promotes the subject in a subjective manner, Learn how and when to remove this template message, Bath Festival of Blues and Progressive Music, Is There Anybody Out There? You can find the list of Pink Floyd tour dates here. In May, there was a Pink Floyd parade on 6th Avenue featuring both inflatable and live animals. Most of the songs were either renamed earlier material or under a different name than they would eventually be released. 'Yes, we did all sorts of strange things, you know, for live concerts as well, we used to make up tapes for the audience to come in by. Pink Floyd mounted its most elaborate stage show in conjunction with the tour of The Wall. [29], Another memorable performance occurred in Cleveland, Ohio on 25 June. C $78.04. A big thanks to BootLedz and all those who review at CMR. For the second half of the show, the band was largely invisible, except for a hole in the wall that simulated a hotel room where Roger Waters "acted out" the story of Pink, and an appearance by David Gilmour on top of the wall to perform the climactic guitar solo in "Comfortably Numb". When psychedelia fell out of fashion from about 1970 onwards, elevated platforms of the type conventionally used for roof maintenance in high buildings were brought on tour and filled with lighting equipment to be raised and lowered during performances. Other parts of the story were told by Gerald Scarfe animations projected onto the wall itself (these animations were later integrated into the film Pink Floyd: The Wall). However, this record was short-lived; less than a year later, The Rolling Stones' Voodoo Lounge Tour (like the Division Bell Tour, also sponsored in part by Volkswagen) finished with a worldwide gross of over US$300 million. 1972 saw Pink Floyd debut the performance of a not just a song (like on previous tours), but an entire album prior to its release. Their audiences changed during this time as well: while Barrett-era crowds consisted mainly of hippies who would dance in time with the music, they now drew more "intellectual" crowd, who would sit and remain quiet until the last note of a song was played. A typical 1977 set list would include the following: In 1977, Pink Floyd embarked on a world tour in support of the "Animals" album. Following Roger Waters' departure in 1985, the Pink Floyd light show reached a dazzling pinnacle. Three stages leapfrogged around North America and Europe, each 180 feet (55 m) long and featuring a 130-foot (40 m) arch modelled on the Hollywood Bowl. [21] This song made its live debut under the working title "Return of the Son of Nothing" on 22 April 1971 at Norwich, England and like "Atom Heart Mother" before it, it was a work in progress. I am generally time poor which is why my reference notes are short and direct but will update the site on a regular basis with new additions. Despite some technical problems, the band managed to perform a remarkable concert[citation needed], which as well as the usual special effects featured a fly-past by a pair of Spitfires. We had one half-hour-long tape, which we'd play for the half an hour the audience was coming in just before we started our show, and things like that. With David Gilmour, Nick Mason, Richard Wright, Guy Pratt. From Germany. Top Rated Seller Top Rated Seller. Although both the BBC and filmmaker Peter Whitehead filmed portions of the event, there is no known footage of Pink Floyd. Encore: For remainder of 1973 (except 4 November), the set list included: Second Set: Although both Jeff Beck and Davy O'List were considered, it was David Gilmour, then unobligated, who was brought on to augment Barrett as need arose during live shows. It appears that the Pink Floyd footage was not included in the movie but spectators report that Atom Heart Mother was part of the set that was recorded. Pyrotechnics (such as exploding flashpots, an exploding gong and fireworks) and dry ice were used extensively throughout Pink Floyd's career. Delicate Sound of Thunder is the first entirely live album by English progressive rock band Pink Floyd.It was recorded over five nights at the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island, New York, in August 1988 and mixed at Abbey Road Studios in September 1988. Complete information of all Pink Floyd Bootlegs ... Kqed TV Live 1970: The Way Of Wizards: Labyrinths (2xCD) 1971-11-10: Highland: Audience: Lapse Of Memory: 1988-02-19: Siréne: Learning To Fly: The Way Of Wizards: Leaving From The Hangar, Landing On The Lagoon (DVD) Apocalypse Sound: Libest Spacement Monitor (CD) 1970-07-16: The Swingin' Pig: Soundboard: Live (2xLP) 1970-10-23: Trade … Vicki and Sam Brown also attended as backing vocalists, as well as Candy Dulfer with saxophone solo. ', A second tour of the US during July and August 1968 (see A Saucerful of Secrets US Tour) was launched to tie into the release of their second album, A Saucerful of Secrets. David Gilmour said of the change "It was 'Money' that made the difference rather than 'The Dark Side of the Moon'. During the Barrett era, dynamic liquid light shows were projected onto enormous screens behind the band while they played, and the band also incorporated large numbers of strobe lights, which were controlled manually by an engineer. Portions of the suites were being performed as late as early 1970. On one occasion, the increasingly difficult Barrett remarked that if John Lennon did not have to appear on Top of the Pops neither did he. A typical 1971 set list would include some of the following: January 1971 saw the band working on a track in the studio of then unconnected parts whose working title was either "Nothing — Parts 1 to 24"[20] or "Nothing Parts 1–36". Alongside the classic live album and full concert film (restored and re-edited from the original 35mm film negatives and remixed in stereo and 5.1 surround sound), as included in The Later Years box set, all stand-alone editions feature 24-page photo booklets, with the 4-disc box edition including a 40-page photo booklet, tour poster and postcards. Specially recorded films and animations were projected onto it, and for 1977 "In the Flesh" and 1980–1981 "The Wall Live" tours, coloured spotlights were fixed around the rim, an effect which reached its zenith with the dancing patterns of multi-coloured lights in the A Momentary Lapse of Reason and Division Bell tours. At the finale of the concert, the wall was demolished amidst sound effects and a spectacular light show. This show, named "More Furious Madness from the Massed Gadgets of Auximenes", consisted of two experimental "suites", "The Man" and "The Journey". One source also claims that the show at Bromley Technical College on 26 April 1969 was also recorded for the album.[13]. LED ZEPPELIN - SALT LAKE CITY 1973 (2CD) Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah, LED ZEPPELIN - STAGE IN TOKYO 1971 (2CD) Live at Budokan, Tokyo, Japan 23rd September 1971, LED ZEPPELIN - GLASGOW 1972 1ST NIGHT (3CD) Live at Green's Playhouse, Glasgow, Scotland 3rd December 1972, Zeppelin - I've Got A Feeling - Graf Zeppelin. At these shows, the band began its use of visual effects and gradually stopped covering R&B. I'm quite used to it.". He stared blankly into space on their 4 November American Bandstand performance, listlessly strummed and barely managed to mime the vocals to "Apples and Oranges". For the U.S. leg of the 1975 tour, a pyramid shaped dirigible was floated above the stage. "You never know exactly what the future (holds)", Gilmour said. [17], On 18 July Pink Floyd headlined a free concert in Hyde Park organised by Blackhill Enterprises. The band managed to sell out arenas and stadiums in both Europe and America, setting attendance records all along the way. You know, if everyone wanted to, we could certainly still do something. Pink Floyd's series of longform concerts on Fridays at 5.00pm UK time continues with the broadcast tomorrow, Friday 1st May, of An Hour with Pink Floyd, the 1970 performance filmed by San Francisco TV station KQED. The title changed for the first part of the US tour to Eclipse (A Piece for Assorted Lunatics) during April and May before reverting to Dark Side of the Moon - A Piece for Assorted Lunatics in September for the second part of the US tour[24] and finally released in 1973 under the title of Dark Side of the Moon. Hear a Song From Pink Floyd's Upcoming 'The Endless River' System of a Down Drummer John Dolmayan Discusses His Crowdfunded Covers Record ; Princess Superstar Shares … With Wright's subsequent death, in September 2008, this was to be the final concert to feature all four bandmates playing together. The Dark Side of the Moon entire album They were augmented by guitarist/bassist Tim Renwick (guitarist on Roger Waters' 1984 solo tour, who has since become Pink Floyd's backing guitarist on stage); keyboardist/lap steel guitarist/backup vocalist Jon Carin (Pink Floyd's backing keyboardist from 1987 onward who performed on the 1999–2000 North American leg of Waters' "In the Flesh" tour, his 2006–2008 "Dark Side of the Moon Live" tour, his 2010–2011 "The Wall" tour and David Gilmour's 2006 On an Island tour); saxophonist Dick Parry during "Money" (who played on the original recordings of "Money", "Us and Them", and "Shine on You Crazy Diamond"); and backing singer Carol Kenyon during "Comfortably Numb". I do not collect or compare CD-R releases. From France. PINK FLOYD LIVE AT POMPEII 1972 ORIGINAL 27X41 NM HOT PINK DAYGLO MOVIE POSTER . 1 product rating - THE AUSTRALIAN PINK FLOYD SHOW -2011-LIVE FROM THE HAMMERSMITH APOLLO 2 CD NEW+. At the end, after the last song had been played, Gilmour said "thank you very much, good night" and started to walk off the stage. Pink Floyd were an English rock band that achieved international acclaim with their progressive and psychedelic music. It was the quartet's first performance together in over 24 years — the band's last show with Waters was at Earls Court in London on 17 June 1981. In the U.S. alone, it grossed US$103.5 million from 59 concerts. Those feeling of detachment became the starting and focal point for Pink Floyd's next album, The Wall.[30]. It gave us a much larger following, for which we should be thankful. In the run-up to the band's four-night run at Madison Square Garden in New York City (1–4 July), tour promoters used an aggressive marketing strategy, filling pages of The New York Times and Billboard magazine with ads. ... People at the front shouting, 'Play Money! [28] The musicians that accompanied the band on the tour included veteran saxophone player Dick Parry (occasionally playing keyboards as well) and guitarist Snowy White, who also filled in on bass guitar for some songs. This film captures Pink Floyd live -- and alone -- in a small stadium in the petrified Italian city of Pompeii, playing some of their pre- Dark Side of the Moon material. This was the musical basis for "Us and Them", from their The Dark Side of the Moon album. There are several unofficial videos of the entire live show in circulation and some footage is shown on the Behind the Wall documentary. From United States +C $38.27 shipping . Enter. For 1977's Animals promotion, Snowy White was brought in as an additional guitarist. They closed the show with Atom Heart Mother, which had been given the name after Roger Waters read an article in a newspaper about a woman who had been given a prototype heart pacemaker. The remaining four members played very small (generally no more than 50 people), mostly unadvertised shows at the Marquee Club in London through June 1966. Pink Floyd was the last act to play, to an audience of 125,000. Special effects reached a new and outrageous level during these Wall shows. The second half of the shows consisted of Wish You Were Here being played in its exact running order ("Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts 1-5)", "Welcome to the Machine", "Have a Cigar", "Wish You Were Here" and "Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts 6-9)"). The £60,000 firework display that ended the concert was entirely financed by the band. This was supposed to synchronise with the start of 'Breathe' but the band had tuning difficulties and the planes flew over before the start of the set. C $701.69. The FAA later fined the promoters $1,500 over the incident. They *were* our roots -- not personally, but as an enterprise. Announced as "The Atom Heart Mother" by the British broadcaster John Peel on his BBC Radio 1 show "Peel's Sunday Concert" on 16 July 1970, a name suggested by him to the band,[15] it was also announced as "The Atomic Heart Mother" two days later at the Hyde Park free concert. We had to get used to it, but previously we'd been playing to 10,000 seaters where, in the quiet passages, you could hear a pin drop. They developed many of these lighting techniques through their fortuitous early association with light artist Mike Leonard. 'The one in '68 was wonderful because it was much more a picnic in the park than a mini-Woodstock. Win Free Tickets! With David Gilmour, Richard Wright, Nick Mason, Jon Carin. From United States. The elaborate stage presentations, particularly those constructed for the outdoor venues, were their most complex and elaborate to date. Clips of these appear occasionally on television and the performance of "Careful with That Axe, Eugene" is on the various artists video Superstars in Concert.[25]. He also refused to mime to "See Emily Play": Waters was forced to mime the track instead (Waters confirmed this on the VH1's Legends: Pink Floyd episode). At the end of the year, the Division Bell Tour was announced as the biggest tour ever, with worldwide gross of over £150 million (about US$250 million). By the 1994 Division Bell tour, the band was using extremely powerful, isotope-splitting copper-vapour lasers. The high quality, extreme wide angle projection required special high-speed, 35mm, 10,000 watt xenon film projectors, with custom lenses, all designed, built and toured by Associates & Ferren. From United States. On 14 April 1969, at Royal Festival Hall, they debuted their new pan pot 360 degree sound system dubbed the "Azimuth Coordinator". 67 product ratings - PINK FLOYD LIVE AT POMPEII NEW DVD Director’s Cut Echoes Meddle. Pink Floyd World Tour 1968; Tour by Pink Floyd: Associated album: The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, A Saucerful of Secrets: Start date: 17 February 1968: End date: 28 December 1968: Legs: 3: No. If you want detailed performance reviews the excellent CMR website provides this on many releases. After 22 December show, the rest of band quietly put out word that they were in need of a guitarist. It was important for us too because it reminded us of our, uh, roots -- whether spurious or not. A typical 1970 set list would include some of the following: Early in 1970, Pink Floyd performed at gigs a piece from their film soundtrack for Michelangelo Antonioni's film Zabriskie Point referred to as "The Violent Sequence". Pink Floyd were invited to appear on the BBC2 music show Top of the Pops in July 1967 for three weeks after their second single "See Emily Play" reached #6 on the UK charts. He closed the show by gratefully commenting that this had been "the perfect end to the perfect day, good night and God bless". By the time of the band's first tour of the US in early November 1967, his condition was plainly showing. The "In The Flesh" tour would later become widely known as their most memorable series of concert performances, and the last in which Roger Waters would accompany the band. [5] The trademark giant pig was brought in for Animals in 1977,[6] floating over the audience, as well as a grotesque 'Nuclear Family', a refrigerator filled with snakes, a television and a Cadillac. During the last show in Montreal, a noisy fan near the stage irritated Waters to such an extent that he spat on him. Songs played in the second set and encore were swapped constantly, and the band even varied the number of songs played in the encore from the usual one, to two or three. In November 1972, during the middle of the European leg of their 1972 world tour and again in January 1973, Pink Floyd performed with the Roland Petit Ballet. The band was subsequently pressured to compensate for the ecological damage.[23]. Having the success of The Wall shows to live up to, the concerts' special effects were more impressive than ever. Many of the biggest bands from the 60’s & 70’s have expressed regret for not capturing more of their performances (on audio & video) and there is no question as the years roll on that bootleg recordings from this era have (and will) become historically important documents. It's crazy that America gives such a paltry percentage of its GNP to the starving nations. The album was recorded during the European leg of Pink Floyd's Division Bell Tour in 1994. 8 watchers. C $32.10. Although announced as "Echoes" on 6 August 1971 at Hakone, Japan,[22] the song was still performed with the additional lyrics at later August gigs. During this gig Clare Torry sang backing vocals making it the second and last time she did so. The act so disgusted David Gilmour that he left the stage prior to the final encore, ""More Blues"", leaving Snowy White to fill in as the roadies began dismantling the stage equipment. When they were on the way to their show at Southampton University on 26 January 1968, they decided not to pick up Barrett. LED ZEPPELIN - SALT LAKE CITY 1973 (2CD) Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah, Anyway, we're doing this for everyone who's not here, but particularly, of course, for Syd. Scarfe, Gerald. The audience must have been one of the smallest to see Pink Floyd at this era, only 1500 were present as the festival was not widely promoted.