
Moresound is the most sound !
I didn't notice the jump cut on 'Matilda mother' until you mentioned it
I've been listening to the album for 33 years and there were bits like that that always sounded a bit funny to me but I never thought about it consciously. To my 16 year old ears in the late 70s, Floyd's music was unlike any I'd ever heard. Their first two albums quite simply changed my musical headspace and to a large extent, provided the final nudge for me in terms of the kind of music I was prepared to accept. So anything weird, I just thought was part of the songs. It wasn't until I read the late Nicholas Schaffner's book "A saucerful of secrets", that I realized how much editing was done. Last year, a guy I know gave me a Syd Barrett CD {it's awful} and on it is the unedited version of "Matilda mother". It's interesting but I can't see beyond the edited version I know and love, even if the editing is lame.
I can't honestly see a problem with 'Baron Saturday'. I thought the production was pretty decent on that one, personally.
For most of the song, yes. But listen to the part where there's that percussion melange. There's a slowdown and a drop in level that sticks out like a sore thumb. On their next LP, "Parachute", the song "Sickle clowns" has a similar kind of middle percussion part. It's much better and no editing mishaps this time. But I'm being picky because I love that song. Actually, I love them both !
Listening to it, I noticed two Beatle related things ~ firstly, on the chorus after they sing all the "Baron Saturday" bits, the next bit of vocal sounds just like John Lennon to me. And at the end of the percussion bit, just as the mellotron flute and guitar play their little figure, the drums come in. It's an absolutely identical figure to the one Ringo Starr plays on his first recorded composition for the Beatles, "Don't pass me by". Interestingly, it also appears after a notable gap in the music and in 1968.
'Defecting Grey' was edited down from something like 5:45, it still ended up 4:30 long. It makes me wonder if the cut in Matilda was a symptom of the same process ("Make it shorter!" "But...")
I would totally agree with you. There still were people in record companies that believed in songs being 3 minutes for radio play, despite the fact that songs were getting longer and disc jockeys were playing those longer tracks.
"Defecting grey" was a wonderful track for the time. On the CD I have of "SF Sorrow", both the edited and unedited versions are included. I didn't like it at first but it really grew on me. It's about a normal man reflecting on whether or not being a normal, everyday 9 to 5 man hasn't actually been a waste of time. Very much in keeping with the kinds of themes people were writing about after having their psyches expanded on LSD. Musically, there's few tracks from the 60s that have as many musical changes.