Pink Floyd – Soundtrack To The Film ‘Zabriskie Point‘
(soniclovenoize reconstruction)
March 2020 UPGRADE
Side A:
1. Heart Beat, Pig
Meat
2. Country Song
3. The Violent
Sequence
4. Fingal’s Cave
5. Crumbling Land
6. Love Scene
Side B:
7. Alan’s Blues
8. Oenone
9. Rain In The
Country
10. Come In Number
51, Your Time Is Up
Long time/no post!
Here is a long-threatened update to one of my favorite reconstructions,
the unreleased 1970 Pink Floyd soundtrack to the film Zabriskie Point. A specific cycle of music written for the
film and allegedly intended as the band's own release, the film’s director Michelangelo
Antonioni scrapped most of Pink Floyd’s work in favor of a collection of songs
also featuring Grateful Dead, Kaleidoscope and The Youngbloods. With only three of the band’s intended songs
making the cut, the rest trickled out over the years on bootlegs, remaster
bonus discs and box sets. This
reconstruction attempts to collect the final takes of the primary compositions
for the film and presents it in a cohesive, all-Pink Floyd collection, akin to
More and Obscured By Clouds. Many tracks
feature my own unique edits and have all been volume adjusted for coherency.
Upgrades to this March 2020 edition are:
- “Rain in the Country” upgraded source from The Early Years
- New edit of “Fingal’s Cave” from upgraded source, The Early Years
- New edits of “Oenone” and “Alan’s Blues”
- Addition of “The Violent Sequence” and “Love Scene”
1969 was a hit and miss year for Pink Floyd. Obviously searching for a signature sound
beyond Syd Barrett’s psychedelic pop, the band spent the year touring and
composing conceptual sound experiments, including the live presentation The Man
and The Journey (which was also reconstructed on this blog). Some of this music appeared on the soundtrack
to the film More, a collection of pieces Pink Floyd recorded specifically for
the Barbet Schroeder film, released in August.
A few other Man and The Journey tracks appeared on the band’s own release
Ummagumma in November, a double LP that featured solo studio recordings from
each individual member of Pink Floyd and a live disc which featured fantastic
recordings from that spring, including a dynamic version of their 1968 b-side, “Careful
With That Axe, Eugene”.
It was that specific b-side which spurred on Pink Floyd’s creation
of their next studio soundtrack project, recorded the very month of Ummagumma’s
release. Director Michelangelo Antonioni
was so moved by “Careful With That Axe, Eugene”, he requested not only for Pink
Floyd to record a new version of it for his upcoming film Zabriskie Point, but
to score it’s entirety! The band
gathered into International Recording Studio in Roma in November 1969 to compose and
record music specifically for the film, with more work in December at Abbey
Road. In the end, Pink Floyd recorded original music
for seven different scenes throughout those two months:
The opening credits featured an experimental piece called “Heart
Beat, Pig Meat”, which was sometimes performed within The Man and The Journey as "Doing It!" throughout
1969. Driven by a heartbeat-like loop of
a microphone tap, Richard Wright’s meandering organ and dialog sound samples
from the film and elsewhere, the song opened the officially released
soundtrack.
Pink Floyd recorded several variations of a song called “Country
Song”, meant for the scene in which protagonist Daria is driving and looking at
a map. While it was one of the only two
songs of the cycle with actual lyrics, they also recorded several shorter,
instrumental versions, including “Auto Scene 2”, “Auto Scene 3” and “Looking At
Map”. Despite being a solid song that could have been a highlight on Atom Heart Mother, "Country Song" didn't make the cut and Antonioni instead used “Brother Mary” by Kaleidoscope
for the scene.
Wright composed a beautiful piano piece for the riot scene,
which the band called “The Violent Sequence”.
Antonioni again decided not to use it, but the band rewrote it into the
magnificent “Us and Them” on Darkside of The Moon.
For the scene in which the airplane takes off and flies, Pink
Floyd composed several heavy rock pieces, including “Take Off 1” and “Take Off
2”. A third variation of “Take Off” was dubbed
“Fingal’s Cave” by the band, and was considered the master for their own
soundtrack album, had it been released. Antonioni
did not use any of these, and instead used an edit of Grateful Dead’s “Dark
Star” from Live/Dead.
A second ‘driving on the highway’ scene featured variations
of a rollicking folkish song called “Crumbling Land”, the second to contain
actual lyrics and was eventually featured in both the film and official
soundtrack. A shorter version called “On
The Highway” was also recorded.
The love scene between Daria and Mark proved to be more
difficult to provide, as Pink Floyd recorded several vastly different
pieces of music for the love scene. The
band initially tracked a spacey, psychedelic piece featuring Wright’s farfisa
organ and David Gilmour’s delayed guitar effects with overdubbed vibraphone, not dissimilar
to More’s “Quicksilver”. After recording
three different versions of this arrangement—with the third featuring overdubbed
erotic sound effects and called “Oenone”, intended as the master for Pink Floyd’s
own soundtrack album—Antonioni suggested a different musical approach. “Love Scene 4” featured a majestic Wright
piano solo, with an overdubbed vibraphone.
This too was rejected, and Pink Floyd simplified it to “Love Scene 5”, a
double-tracked vibraphone piece, which was also dismissed. A complete
rethink produced “Love Scene 6”, a slow blues jam, renamed “Alan’s Blues” and
meant for the band’s own soundtrack album.
That two was rejected, and Pink Floyd attempted one last arrangement for
Antonioni’s love scene: a long, space-folk instrumental (reminiscent of “The
Narrow Way, Part 1” and “Baby Blue Shuffle in D Major”) called “Love Scene 7”, which
was also called “Rain In The Country” for the band’s own intended soundtrack
album. All five of these variations of
the love scene were rejected and Antonioni used a multitracked solo guitar
piece by Jerry Garcia instead.
Pink Floyd’s final contribution was used in both the
film and official soundtrack: “Come In Number 51, Your Time Is Up”, the remake
of “Careful With That Axe Eugene” featured in the explosion scene. The band also recorded an alternate take
called “Explosion” in a major key.
Ultimately, only “Heart Beat, Pig Meat”, “Crumbling Land”
and “Come In Number 51, Your Time Is Up” was used and featured on the
soundtrack. Pink Floyd allegedly
compiled their own eight-song, 40-minute master of their original music for a
possible release, but it never emerged. The
film’s musical advisor Don Hall played several selections from that master on
the radio in late 1969; a recording of that broadcast was used to make the
legendary Omayyad bootleg, which gave Pink Floyd collectors a sample of some of
the Zabriskie Point music left on the cutting room floor. “Country Song”, “Love Scene 4”, “Alan’s Blues”
and “Rain in the Country” all appeared on the bonus disc of the 1997 remaster
of the Zabriskie Point soundtrack, with an additional 70 minutes of studio
outtakes from the sessions appearing on the bootleg A Journey Through Time and
Space, possibly dubbed on the sly from the mastertapes during the Zabriskie
Point remastering process. Finally, 47
minutes of Zabriskie Point recordings were featured on The Early Years:
Devi/ation box set in 2016.
My reconstruction of the Soundtrack to the Film ‘Zabriskie
Point’ collects the master takes of each song meant for each of the seven scenes, additionally
using three variants of the love scene, presented in film order. My intent is to present this reconstruction
as a sister album to Pink Floyd’s More, so some tracks have been edited for the
sake of release-appropriateness. Each
side is approximately 20 minutes and this reconstruction should be able to slip
into Pink Floyd’s official cannon with no musical overlap.
Side A begins with “Heart Beat, Pig Meat” and “Country Song”,
both taken from the 1997 Zabriskie Point remaster. This is followed by “The Violent Sequence”
from The Early Years; note this is the shorter version recorded during the
actual Zabriskie Point sessions, as opposed to the longer Richard Wright demo recorded
just before Dark Side of The Moon. Next
is my own unique edit of “Fingal’s Cave”, in which “Take Off 1” is hard edited
onto the end of “Aeroplane” to make a more complete listening experience, both from The Early Years. Next is “Crumbling Land”, taken from
Zabriskie Point but pitchshifted to be in the correct key. Side A closes with what I am calling “Love
Scene”, which is my own unique edit of the piano/vibes mix of “Love Scene 4”
from A Journey Through Space and Time, cutting the over-six minute track down
to a manageable three minutes!
Side A begins with my own edit of “Alan’s Blues” from the
1997 remaster of Zabriskie Point; here I have edited out Gilmour’s first (and embarrassingly clumsy) guitar solo, cutting an entire minute out of its run-time. Following is “Oenone”, the master take of
Pink Floyd’s spacey version of the love scene.
Although their final master is as heard on the Omayyad bootleg, I am
instead using the “Full Mix” as found on A Journey Through Time and Space
bootleg, as it has superior sound-quality and added sound elements. I have faded the song out 3:45, excluding the
band’s ridiculous erotic noises, as I felt it disrupted the feel and flow of
the album as a whole. Closing the album
out is “Rain in the Country” and “Come in Number 51, Your Time is Up”, both
from the Zabriskie Point remaster.
While certainly not the greatest Pink Floyd album—and one
can understand why it was never released—the Soundtrack To The Film 'Zabriskie
Point' seems to stay close to my heart and holds a lot of air time on my music
player. The album showcases a series of
snapshots of Pink Floyd genre-hopping, including individual songs that each
play upon their diverse range of strengths and influences: experimental
found-sound collage; heavy psychedelic rock; electric blues; atmospheric
psychedelia; acoustic folk. There is a
bit of everything thrown in the mix, yet the album works as a whole, more so
than their previous and equally-diverse soundtrack album for the film More. Although largely instrumental, the two
song-based gems “Country Song” and “Crumbling Land” are stand-out tracks that
could rank as high as any of the Pink Floyd singles from the 1960s. Soundtrack To The Film 'Zabriskie Point' has
something for everyone and shows their essential continuity in between Ummagumma
and Atom Heart Mother.
Sources used:
Zabriskie Point Soundtrack (1997 TCM Records remaster)
A Journey Through Time and Space (2000 Scorpio Records bootleg)
The Early Years 1970: Devi/ation (2017 Pink Floyd Records)
flac --> wav --> editing in SONAR Pro and Goldwave
--> flac encoding via TLH lv8
*md5, artwork and tracknotes included
*md5, artwork and tracknotes included