, formerly EMI Studios
Alan Parsons, EMI staff engineer for Pink Floyd's previous studio album,
The Dark Side of the Moon, declined to continue working with them due to the recent formation of
his own group and working on
their first album. Pink Floyd had worked with engineer Brian Humphries on
More, recorded at Pye Studios, and again in 1974 when he replaced an inexperienced concert engineer. Humphries, being a stranger to EMI's Abbey Road set-up, encountered some early difficulties. On one occasion, Humphries inadvertently spoiled the backing tracks for "Shine On", a piece that Waters and drummer
Nick Mason had spent many hours perfecting, with
echo. The entire piece had to be re-recorded. The sessions for
Wish You Were Here at EMI's Studio Three (now
Abbey Road Studios) lasted from January until July 1975, recording on four days each week from 2:30 pm until very late in the evening. The group found it difficult at first to devise any new material, especially as the success of
The Dark Side of the Moon had left all four physically and emotionally drained. Keyboardist
Richard Wright later described these sessions as "falling within a difficult period", and Waters recalled them as "torturous". Mason found the process of multi-track recording to be "tedious", while Gilmour was more interested in improving the band's existing material. Gilmour was also becoming increasingly frustrated with Mason, whose failing marriage had brought on a general malaise and sense of apathy, both of which interfered with his drumming. Gilmour had composed the phrase while improvising, but was encouraged by Waters' positive response to make it the focus of the song. A subtle refrain performed by Wright, lifted from "
See Emily Play", is also audible towards the end. "Welcome to the Machine" and "Have a Cigar" were attacks on the music business, their lyrics working with "Shine On" to provide a summary of the rise and fall of Barrett; "Because I wanted to get as close as possible to what I felt ... that sort of indefinable, inevitable melancholy about the disappearance of Syd."
Syd Barrett's visit On 5 June 1975, on the eve of the second North American leg of their
Wish You Were Here Tour, Gilmour married his first wife,
Ginger. That day, the band were completing the mix of "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" when an overweight man with shaven head and eyebrows entered, carrying a plastic bag. Waters did not recognise him, Mason also failed to recognise him, and was "horrified" when Gilmour identified him. In Mason's memoir
Inside Out, he recalled Barrett's conversation as "desultory and not entirely sensible".
Storm Thorgerson would later reflect on Barrett's presence: "Two or three people cried. He sat round and talked for a bit but he wasn't really there." According to Gilmour, Barrett "came two or three days and then he didn't come any more." Waters was reportedly reduced to tears by the sight of his former bandmate. Fellow visitor
Andrew King asked Barrett how he had gained weight; he said that he had been overeating while living in isolation. He showed an unexpected enthusiasm for participating in the recording of the album, but while listening to the mix of "Shine On", showed no signs of understanding its relevance to him. Barrett also joined Gilmour's wedding reception in the EMI canteen, but left unnoticed. Apart from Waters seeing Barrett in
Harrods a couple of years later, it has been agreed by biographers and journalists to be the last time any member of the band saw him alive. This series of events is regarded to have tonally influenced the final version of "Shine On You Crazy Diamond". Waters said later that "'Shine On' is not really about Sydhe's just a symbol for all the extremes of absence some people have to indulge in because it's the only way they can cope with how fucking sad it is, modern life, to withdraw completely. I found that terribly sad."
Instrumentation As with
The Dark Side of the Moon, the band used synthesizers such as the
EMS VCS 3 (on "Welcome to the Machine"), but softened with Gilmour's acoustic guitar, and percussion from Mason. In actuality Grappelli's playing was included, but so low in the final mix that the band presumed it would be insulting to credit him. He was paid £300 (). Saxophonist
Dick Parry, who had performed on
The Dark Side of the Moon, performed on "Shine On You Crazy Diamond". The opening bars of "Wish You Were Here" were recorded from Gilmour's car radio, with somebody turning the dial (the classical music heard is the finale of
Tchaikovsky's
Fourth Symphony).
Vocals Recording sessions had twice been interrupted by US tours (one in April and the other in June 1975), and the final sessions, which occurred after the band's performance at
Knebworth, proved particularly troublesome for Waters.
The Blackberries recorded backing vocals for "Shine On You Crazy Diamond". ==Packaging and album cover art==