The Committee instrumentals In early 1968, Pink Floyd recorded several instrumental tracks to be used in the soundtrack to the Peter Sykes film
The Committee, starring former Manfred Mann singer Paul Jones. Syd Barrett had originally been approached to record music for the film, but his solo attempt was deemed to be unusable. The band, now with Gilmour on guitar, took over and recorded their pieces in a basement studio in London. The two main pieces are actually the same tune played at two different tempos, with the main riff featured on guitar for the first, the keyboard for the second. A third, lengthy instrumental is an embryonic version of "Careful With That Axe, Eugene". The opening instrumental is a short backwards-played tape made up of Tablas, guitar and a high pitch sound effect, which sounds very similar to what was described by the makers as the piece Barrett had attempted, leading fans to believe his initial idea may have been used by the band. Parts 1 and 2 have seen official release in
The Early Years 1965—1972 box set.
"Richard's Rave Up" "Richard's Rave Up" was a track recorded on 13 February 1968, during sessions for
A Saucerful of Secrets. Per Glenn Povey's
The Complete Pink Floyd, studio notes show Take 1 as 2:54 in length. (This was not "Song 1", which was recorded in August 1968 in Los Angeles.)
"The Boppin' Sound" "The Boppin' Sound" was recorded and mixed down on 13 February 1968, during sessions for
A Saucerful of Secrets. Per Glenn Povey's
The Complete Pink Floyd, studio notes show Take 1 as 3:00 in length. (This was not "Roger's Boogie", which was recorded in August 1968 in Los Angeles and is 4:35 in length.)
"Incarceration of a Flower Child" A Waters-penned song written in 1968, after Barrett left the band, as an attempt to reinvent themselves. The lyrics are about the downfall of Barrett. The song was eventually recorded by
Marianne Faithfull on her 1999 album
Vagabond Ways. The melody of the opening of the verses provided the chorus of "
Your Possible Pasts", from the Pink Floyd album
The Final Cut.
"Seabirds" A song used in the
More film but as yet unreleased. A song titled "Seabirds" was released as part of
The Early Years 1965–1972 box set in 2016; however, this is not the song from the film but an alternative version of the instrumental track "Quicksilver".
"Stefan's Tit" An outtake from the
More sessions. Working title for "Green Is The Colour".
"Paris Bar" Another
More outtake, found on the same multitrack tape as the above track. Working title for "Ibiza Bar".
"Theme (Dramatic Version)" Another
More outtake, found on the same multitrack tape as the above tracks. Working title for "Dramatic Theme".
"Alan's Blues" "Alan's Blues" is an instrumental blues song first recorded for the film
Zabriskie Point in December 1969. This version was released as a bonus track on the 1997 soundtrack reissue under the title "Love Scene 6". It began appearing in live shows in early 1970, initially along with two other
Zabriskie instrumentals ("
Heart Beat, Pig Meat" and "The Violent Sequence") that were soon dropped. Performed through 1972, often as an encore. Possibly also recorded in 1971. The song appears on various bootleg recordings (usually live, sometimes given the nickname of "Pink Blues").
"Rain in the Country" A nearly-7-minute instrumental outtake from the
Zabriskie Point sessions, based on "The Narrow Way". It is available on bootleg albums such as
Omay Yad. intended for a sex scene. Three takes were recorded (under the working titles "Love Scene No. 1", "No. 2" and "No. 3"), each somewhat different from the others, but all sharing the same eerie organ-and-guitar motif. The term "Oenone" refers to a Greek mythological character, namely the first wife of Paris of Troy. Early bootleg appearances list the song as "Oneone", sometimes thought to be a misspelling of the mythological character, but more likely a phonetic tip of the hat to
Zabriskie Point's director Michelangelo Antonioni. Excerpts of "Oenone" were released as part of
The Early Years 1965–1972 box set in 2016 under the titles "Love Scene Version 1" and "Love Scene Version 2", though no complete takes have ever been released officially.
"Just Another Twelve Bar" Another improvised instrumental recorded during the
Atom Heart Mother world tour in 1970. The sole circulating recording cuts in midway, and what is heard is close enough to the finale jam of the song "Biding My Time" that it's possible this song is simply an excerpt of that one.
"Pink Blues" Often referred to as simply "Blues"; blues jam played after encores during the
Meddle tour, during 1971. In December 2021, a previously unreleased live album, titled "Embryo, San Diego, Live 17 Oct. 1971", was released on Spotify, along with 11 other new live albums recorded between 1970 and 1972. This album concludes with a 5-minute "Blues Jam". Also see "Alan's Blues" (above).
"Corrosion in the Pink Room" "Corrosion in the Pink Room" is a song written by Waters, Gilmour, Wright and Mason. It is an instrumental piece that was played at their live shows during the early 1970s. It is a very
avant-garde piece, with eerie piano playing by Wright and scatting by Waters, reminiscent of the sounds on "
Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict". Halfway through, the song transitions to a jazzy blues jam, similar to "
Funky Dung". It also was known to feature the "whalesong effect", used during live performances of "
Embryo" and, later on, "
Echoes". Roger Waters often meddled with their manager Steve O'Rourke while performing, indicated by him calling out "Steven" in this song.
"The Merry Xmas Song" "The Merry Xmas Song" is a humorous song written for a one-off performance on
BBC radio in 1969, during the
Zabriskie Point soundtrack sessions, and performed around 1975. It is notable as one of only six Pink Floyd songs to feature Mason on vocals (the others are Barrett's "
Scream Thy Last Scream", "
Corporal Clegg", "
One of These Days", "
Signs of Life", and "
Learning to Fly").
"Richard Are You Ready Yet?" "Richard Are You Ready Yet?" is a humorous
self-parody song improvised during an interlude at the Live at Berlin tour.
"Long Blues" An improvised blues piece, "Long Blues" was performed live in 1970, at Montreux. Waters announced that since it was "a bit late for mind-expanding, [they]'re going to play some music to calm down to". While similar in sound to "Alan's Blues", some elements from "
Funky Dung" and "
Mudmen" are definitely present. It appears on the
Early Flights, Volume 1 bootleg.
"The Dark Side Sequences" During the early performances of "
The Dark Side of the Moon" they named several tracks as sequences. tracks like
On the Run were now called "The Travel Sequence". Other tracks were changed too:
The Great Gig in the Sky was The Mortality Sequence,
Us and Them was the Violent Sequence and
Brain Damage was The Lunatic Sequence.
"Bitter Love" Written by Waters, the song is about the bad experience Pink Floyd had after agreeing to appear in magazine advertisements for a French soft lemon drink called "
Gini" originally from
Perrier. Lyrically, the song describes Waters selling his soul in the desert. The song is also known as "How Do You Feel?".
"Drift Away Blues" "Drift Away Blues" is a
blues improvisation that was played live on 6 July 1977 at the
Stade Olympique,
Montreal, as an encore, picked in response to an aggressive audience. Waters introduced the song by telling the audience that "since we can't play any more of our songs, here's some music to go home to." Allegedly, Gilmour was upset at this and slipped off the stage rather than play. It appears on the
Azimuth Coordinator Part 3 bootleg, and others of that date.
"Overture" "Overture" is a song that was written by Waters for
The Wall movie. Pink Floyd decided not to include the song and it is unknown if it was ever recorded.
"Death Disco" An unreleased portion of
The Wall, in which a DJ is heard to taunt an audience. Some Floyd books mistakenly give the title as "The Death of Disco" or "The Death of Cisco". It introduced the fascist ideas later heard in "
In the Flesh", and the guitar riff was later developed into "
Young Lust". ==Unreleased albums==