Discography Pink Floyd |best| 〈High-Quality〉

— Flawed in parts, but the peaks are so towering that they redefine the landscape of popular music.

– 6/10 A transitional album. Barrett’s decline is palpable (he appears on only one track, “Jugband Blues”). David Gilmour joins, and the band begins its drift toward sprawling, ominous instrumentals. Uneven but historically crucial. The Transitional Period (1969–1971): Finding Their Voice More (1969) – 5/10 A forgettable film soundtrack. Folkier and less ambitious. Few essential tracks (“Cymbaline” hints at better things). For completists only. discography pink floyd

– 4/10 A live album (excellent) plus a studio experiment (near-unlistenable). The live side proves their early power. The studio side—solo pieces by each member—is indulgent, awkward, and dated. — Flawed in parts, but the peaks are

– 8/10 The true artistic breakthrough. Side two’s “Echoes” (23 minutes) is their first perfect epic—haunting, oceanic, and brilliantly structured. Side one’s “One of These Days” is thunderous. Finally, the Floyd sound coheres. The Golden Era (1973–1979): Unassailable Masterpieces The Dark Side of the Moon (1973) – 10/10 A flawless, universal concept album. Time, money, madness, death—rendered with immaculate production, quadrophonic sound design, and songs that work as both pop (“Money”) and philosophy (“The Great Gig in the Sky”). It spent 741 weeks on the Billboard chart. Essential for any music listener. David Gilmour joins, and the band begins its