Even if youโre not a diehard Pink Floyd fan (or never were), Dark Side of the Moon has likely entered your life in some way. Either you recognize the album art, or youโve been annoyed by โMoneyโ and its 7/4 time signature when it comes on the radio. And thatโs not counting the untold millions of people for whom it became a transformative listening experience. But how does it hold up? Tal Rosenberg dives deep into the albumโs core paradoxes โ deep and shallow, steeped and callow โ while somehow balancing a fanโs adoration and an arched eyebrow. No matter how long itโs been, this piece will make you want to raise a glass (or something more botanical) and revisit the record.
Dark Sideย propelled Pink Floyd into mass exposure because the band realized that theatricality isnโt a mannerism; itโs a presentation.ย Dark Sideย is fundamentally one long suite with musical motifs repeating throughout (โBreathe (In the Air)โ reappears in some form during โTimeโ and โAny Colour You Likeโ). Hundreds of progressive-rock bands in the 1960s and โ70s tried to do something similar, but Pink Floyd could actually break sections of its albums down into discrete pop songs that DJs could play on the radio. And the band removed stylistic choices from its earlier albums that might be unpleasant for conventional audiences: droning feedback, jazzy noodling, and 25-minute songs.
This photo essay of car designer Hideo Kodama doing car renderings is fragrantly nostalgic for me. We learned these tools and techniques in design school in the 70s: drawing with glass bottled spirit-based (phew!) Magic Markersโข on the back side of the vellum for subtle shades and no bleedโฆmaking hand-cut stencils to add dramatic colored accents with dusty NuPastel chalks and volatile Flo-masterโข solventโฆand finally spraying your finished art with aerosol cans of lacquer fixative (think clouds of hairspray).ย โ Read the rest