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The Wall is definitely one of Pink Floyd’s best album covers, and the record gave them their only U.S. No. 1 as “Another Brick in the Wall Pt. 2” (the “We don’t need no education” song ...
1. Pink Floyd – The Dark Side of the Moon (1973) The most iconic of his covers is, no doubt, that of Pink Floyd’s 1973 album, The Dark Side of the Moon.
He saw this album cover [of bluesman Pink Anderson, juxtaposed with Floyd Council], and he said, “Oh, Pink Floyd,” and that was the name that stuck. It’s so bizarre.
A museum worker looks at the cover of Pink Floyd’s 1969 album ‘Ummagumma’, at the V&A museum in west London, Tuesday, May 9, 2017, which shows a band member sitting, with a picture on the wall.
Among the 415 album covers Hipgnosis made between 1968 and 1983 was Pink Floyd’s “Animals” (1977), for which a 40-foot inflatable pig was photographed floating between the chimneys of London ...
But his bandmates, David Gilmour and Nick Mason, did not agree. They opted instead to record a new Pink Floyd album, 1987’s snarkily titled A Momentary Lapse Of Reason, without him.
Last week, the HiRise team tweeted an image showing "dark streaks in the north polar layered deposits of Mars" compared with the iconic cover of Pink Floyd's 1973 album The Dark Side of the Moon.
If Hipgnosis had created just that single unforgettable album cover it would be worth noting. But the outfit founded by Storm Thorgerson and Aubrey “Po” Powell designed a slew of iconic covers ...
The golden age of utterly surreal multi-platinum album covers, from artists like Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin is recalled in director Anton Corbijn's "Squaring the Circle: The Story of Hipgnosis." ...
The covers are of Level 42's '80s hit "Something About You," a track that pushes the bass a little more to the forefront, and Pink Floyd 's "Fearless" from the band's 1971 album, Meddle.
Harvest 'Meddle' (1971) Not every idea was a home run. Storm Thorgerson apparently suggested a close-up of a baboon's anus for "Meddle,' before being thankfully overruled by Pink Floyd.
Pink Floyd's David Gilmour starts his new solo album Luck and Strange inside the top 10 on at least five Billboard charts—even hitting No. 1 on several of them.
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