Part I of the song begins with a loud and unintelligible rant cutting out the noise of the previous track, "
What God Wants, Part I". Following this is a backwards spoken message: The message climaxes with Waters yelling in the aggressive Scottish voice he used to depict the character of the teacher in
The Wall. This is not the first example of Roger Waters using reversed messages in his musical work. In an interview with
Rockline on 8 February 1993 Roger Waters stated that he had wanted to use samples of
HAL 9000 from
2001: A Space Odyssey on the album.
Stanley Kubrick, the director, turned him down on the basis that it would open the door to too many other people using the sound sample. Since this incident Waters has used the audio of HAL describing his mind being taken away during the introduction of "Perfect Sense, Part I" in live performances, such as the
In the Flesh tour in 2002, after Kubrick had died. The opening lines of the song begin with a reference from the film
2001: A Space Odyssey in which "The monkey sat on a pile of stones and stared at the broken bone in his hand". This monkey – the human being – is referred to continuously throughout the album. In Part II, famed sportscaster
Marv Albert commentates a war as if it were a basketball game. Both parts of the song were performed as part of Waters'
In the Flesh tour. In 2000, a recording of this was released as the fifth track of the second disk of the live album,
In the Flesh – Live. Both parts were released as one track, titled "Perfect Sense, Pt. 1 & 2", with a length of 7:26. In the 2015 re-released and remastered edition of the album, the samples of
HAL 9000 were finally included, and the backwards message omitted. == Personnel ==