Clare Torry's Rare Live Performances of "Great Gig in the Sky" with Pink Floyd | Open Culture Clare Torry's Rare Live Performances of "Great Gig in the Sky" with Pink Floyd

Clare Torry’s Rare Live Performances of “Great Gig in the Sky” with Pink Floyd

When Clare Tor­ry went into the stu­dio to record her now-leg­endary vocals for Pink Floyd’s “Great Gig in the Sky,” the cen­ter­piece of 1973’s Dark Side of the Moon, nei­ther the singer nor the band were par­tic­u­lar­ly impressed with each oth­er. David Gilmour remem­bered the moment in an inter­view on the album’s 30th anniver­sary:

Clare Tor­ry did­n’t real­ly look the part. She was Alan Par­sons’ idea. We want­ed to put a girl on there, scream­ing orgas­mi­cal­ly. Alan had worked with her pre­vi­ous­ly, so we gave her try. And she was fan­tas­tic. We had to encour­age her a lit­tle bit. We gave her some dynam­ic hints: “Maybe you’d like to do this piece qui­et­ly, and this piece loud­er.” She did maybe half a dozen takes, and then after­wards we com­piled the final per­for­mance out of all the bits. It was­n’t done in one sin­gle take.

Asked the fol­low-up ques­tion “what did she look like?,” Gilmour replied, “like a nice Eng­lish house­wife.”

Tor­ry, for her part, was hard­ly starstruck. “If it had been the Kinks,” she lat­er said, “I’d have been over the moon.” She also remem­bers the ses­sion very  dif­fer­ent­ly. “They had no idea” what they want­ed,” she says. Told only “we don’t want any words,” she decid­ed to “pre­tend to be an instru­ment.” She remem­bers “hav­ing a lit­tle go” and knock­ing out the ses­sion in a cou­ple takes.

This Rashomon sce­nario involves not only faulty mem­o­ry but also the legal ques­tion as to who com­posed the song’s melody and vocal concept—a ques­tion even­tu­al­ly decid­ed, in 2004, in Torry’s favor, enti­tling her to roy­al­ties.

She clear­ly wasn’t about to become a tour­ing mem­ber of the band, even after the album’s mas­sive suc­cess and two sub­se­quent tours. Still, while Tor­ry may not have suit­ed Gilmour’s phys­i­cal pref­er­ences for female singers, and while she may not have thought much of Pink Floyd, she has appeared live with their dif­fer­ent iter­a­tions over the years, includ­ing a show at the Rain­bow The­atre in Lon­don just months after the album’s release (fur­ther up). Lat­er, in 1987, Tor­ry appeared again, this time with Roger Waters at Wem­b­ley Sta­di­um on his K.A.O.S. on the Road Tour.

Tor­ry would then join the David Gilmour-led Pink Floyd in 1990 for “Great Gig in the Sky” at Kneb­worth. I do not think she resem­bles an Eng­lish house­wife in the con­cert film at the top—or at least no more than the rest of the band look like mid­dle-aged Eng­lish hus­bands. But she still pulls off the soar­ing vocal, more or less, sev­en­teen years after she first stepped into the stu­dio, hav­ing lit­tle idea who Pink Floyd was or what would become of that fate­ful ses­sion.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Hear How Clare Torry’s Vocals on Pink Floyd’s “The Great Gig in the Sky” Made the Song Go from Pret­ty Good to Down­right Great

Pink Floyd Stream­ing Free Clas­sic Con­cert Films, Start­ing with 1994’s Pulse, the First Live Per­for­mance of Dark Side of the Moon in Full

Watch Doc­u­men­taries on the Mak­ing of Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon and Wish You Were Here

Josh Jones is a writer and musi­cian based in Durham, NC. Fol­low him at @jdmagness


by | Permalink | Comments (5) |

Sup­port Open Cul­ture

We’re hop­ing to rely on our loy­al read­ers rather than errat­ic ads. To sup­port Open Cul­ture’s edu­ca­tion­al mis­sion, please con­sid­er mak­ing a dona­tion. We accept Pay­Pal, Ven­mo (@openculture), Patre­on and Cryp­to! Please find all options here. We thank you!


Comments (5)
You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.
  • MYCROFT says:

    PINK FLOYD they cre­at­ed the great­est music and lyrics ever.Nothing even comes close nothing.You dont lis­ten to there music you expe­ri­ence it.☮🎼🎧

  • Stuartb says:

    I was at one of the Radio Kaos shows in Wem­b­ley and vivid­ly remem­ber Roger Waters intro­duc­ing Clare Tor­ry to sing the Great Gig. We were excit­ed when she walked on and she did not dis­ap­point. A won­der­ful musi­cal mem­o­ry to have even this many years lat­er.

  • Peter Logan says:

    Pink Floyd,A musi­cal Icon. A Del­i­cate sound of exquis­ite Thun­der that bog­gles the mind. Saw Clare Tor­ry sing at Kneb­worth 90,Was an absolute privilege.No band comes close😃.

  • Pedro Cação says:

    Esta é,sem dúvida,uma das maiores músi­cas e tam­bém das maiores cri­ações da ban­da.
    É intem­po­ral e a Clare Tor­ry foi o bom con­trib­u­to para o álbum “Dark Side of the Moon” k con­tin­ua a ser uma das maiores obras-pri­mas da ban­da.

  • Marc says:

    Like sev­er­al great female rock vocal­ists, Tor­ry does not cap­ture the raw essence that we per­ceive (as horny teenagers) of some scant­i­ly clad, raven-haired beau­ty with … you get the drift.

    But damn, that piece nev­er, ever ceas­es to amaze me.

    Love them or hate them (and MyCroft observes) you don’t lis­ten, you expe­ri­ence it. How many of today’s bands are like this?

    I doubt we’ll see the likes of Queen, Floyd, The Bea­t­les etc. ever again thanks to all the man­u­fac­tured music that we have. I find it as iron­ic as I do amus­ing that peo­ple call rap­pers “poets” because if you want poet­ry, you only need to study some of Floy­d’s lyrics.

    Con­sid­er for exam­ple, “Look­ing beyond the embers of bridges burn­ing behind us”

    It might not rhyme as Rap often does, but the depth of that sin­gle line embod­ies an amaz­ing range of emo­tion: and it’s the first one that came to mind among many, many oth­ers.

Leave a Reply

Quantcast
Open Culture was founded by Dan Colman.