Music Monday: Is This the Greatest Rock Instrumental of All Time?
Before introducing what I believe to be the greatest instrumental in the history of rock ‘n roll, allow me to acknowledge some worthy contenders to the title.
Link Wray’s “Rumble” may be the most influential instrumental in rock history that everyone has heard but fewer know the title. It also has the distinction of being the only instrumental ever banned on the radio, “Rumble” being slang for a brawl radio programmer in parts of the South thinking that a donnybrook would break out with the mere mention of the song’s title and Dsus2 to E Major vamp.
Surf rock has donated more than its share of contenders.
The Ventures – here with their slightly awkward dance routine being introduced by Dick Clark in a gentle swaying prop bed to mime to “Walk Don’t Run” on the Saturday Night Beech-Nut Show – can certainly claim a few.
Neil LeVang’s take on “Ghost Riders in the Sky” on the Lawrence Welk Show – he was a member of the band – is fantastic.
And, for good measure, I’ll toss “Theme From The Endless Summer” by The Sandals ,into the mix.
Excellent tunes each. Rush and Van Halen each had some incredible instrumentals.
I would contend, however, that Pink Floyd’s “The Great Gig in the Sky” from 1973’s The Dark Side of the Moon best them all, and it isn’t even close.
If you’re not familiar with the song or need a reminder of its power, cue up the below video with the lights off, the volume up and your eyes closed.
How the Song Came to Be
Part of the greatness that made The Dark Side of the Moon so iconic is that it was a combination of spare parts from other work and the fact that the record was road-tested for years by the band prior to release. The album’s closer, “Eclipse,” was once a jazzy instrumental. Roger Waters had penned a song at the end of the sessions for their previous album, Meddle, he called “The Dark Side of the Moon” which became “Brain Damage” on the final record. “On the Run” was originally a guitar-driven bluesy jam.
The origins of “The Great Gig in the Sky” lie in the band’s assignment to provide a soundtrack to Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1970 film Zabriskie Point. While the Floyd did make a couple of contributions to the soundtrack, they left a significant number of musical ideas and songs-in-progress on the cutting floor, much of which has since been released. Two of those musical ideas were “The Violence Sequence” and “The Mortality Sequence” or “The Religion Song.”
The former, fleshed out and with lyrics added, became “Us and Them.”
The latter, with several changes, became “The Great Gig in the Sky,” the title of which is a reference to mortality and Heaven being The Great Gig in the Sky.
While being road-tested, the band played the song as an organ instrumental with religious quotations and quotations from the Bible. At other times there were recordings of NASA astronauts playing along.
Things would change back at Abbey Road Studios. The music had developed to include all four members of the band. Then the band’s two primary writers of music, David Gilmour and the song’s composer, keyboardist Richard Wright, brought in, at the suggestion of session engineer Alan Parsons – who made quite a few critical contributions to the album as a whole, not least this, the clocks that begin “Time” and the coins sounds that begin “Money” – session vocalist Clare Torry. It was a three-hour session in late January of 1973 on a Sunday just weeks before the album was scheduled to be finished.
Gilmour and Wright went over the concept of the track with Torry and asked her to improvise a vocal. She did one take and was displeased with the results but, inspired to treat her voice as an instrument, sang through two more takes. When asked for a third, she obliged but threw in the towel halfway. She felt spent and that she was becoming repetitive.
She left the session with thirty pounds in her pocket for her troubles and a distinct impression that this was the last she would hear from Pink Floyd.
Back in the studio, however, Gilmour, Wright and Parsons were blown away by her performance. They pieced together the final vocal from bits and bobs of Torry’s last two-and-a-half takes and the song was done.
Easy as.
What This Has That No Others Do
The vocal dynamics are wild with this song. The others are nice – even great – tunes but they lack the alchemical combination of grandeur and intimacy of “The Great Gig in the Sky” that encapsulates the song’s theme far better than samples of a preacher or star-struck astronauts ever could. They lack the emotional pull, the soul, the depth. After listening to this song all else is hollow.
It’s fitting that the next track on the album is about the hollowest thing of all: money.
If you look back at the instrumentals above, you’ll find that they follow the structure of a song with verses and choruses. Maybe even pre-choruses, for those of you who like to get fancy.
“The Great Gig in the Sky” moves without such structure. It happens in movements and the movements begin with the peak of emotional intensity at the beginning, the least common place to put it. Why shoot your wad at the beginning, only to follow it up with less powerful movements?
This song dares to do just that and, in the opinion of this here writer, it absolutely works.
After the emotional high has sustained what it could, I, as a listener, need the prolonged decay and release to gather together and integrate and recalibrate myself.
And let’s talk, for a moment, about the attack of that first vocal section. If you watch the response videos, and there are many, on YouTube by trained vocalists one is left with the distinct impression that what wowed them was not what Clare Torry was doing, but that it would occur to so few to do it.
It also happens to be one of the few songs which cannot be improved by a live performance, as great as that performance might be.
Here’s one by Pink Floyd on their final tour, which I saw as a teen in a drizzly, misty Foxboro Stadium, with vocalists Sam Brown, Durga McBroom and Claudia Fontaine.
Bonus Beats
Check out this very different but very excellent cover by Rhett Shull and his band. Well worth the price of admission.
Don’t hit me (you’ll probably end breaking your screen) but I think I like the Rhett Shull cover better than the original. I find Torry’s vocals too jarring (*)and distracting, taking center stage away from the music.
Thank you for this. A nice present to start the day
(*) I also don’t like sopranos doing scales, so it’s a me thing, and not a criticism of Torry’s amazing vocal abilities.Report
£30 in 1972 is about $500 today. Not a bad wage for a few hours of work. Hopefully, she’s still getting royalty checks.
Also, pre-DSOTM Floyd always had at least 1 instrumental on their records, and they were usually pretty good to great, with One of These Days giving your pick a run for its money.Report
Love the Ventures & Link Wray (The Rumble & The Swag are perfection).
Shout out to the King of Surf Guitar, Dick Dale. Everyone knows his Miserlou but I’ll take Taco Wagon FTW.Report
Does Emerson, Lake, and Palmer’s cover of “Fanfare for the Common Man” count?
Psychedelic/Prog has a *LOT* of gems that, sadly, didn’t survive the radio era. I mean, if you need to hear a song and you don’t know who did it, it’s best to be able to sing a lyric to the DJ, right?
You can’t just say “dun nuh nuh nuh-nuh nuh-nuh-nuh duh-nuh-nuh-nuh-nuh nuh nuh” and hope that he’ll play you Soulful Strut. And it’s even worse with Psychedelic/Prog because the song very likely wanders and so you can’t even find something to hook onto.
And then the DJ will just say “Oh, you want to hear an instrumental?” and just play Jessica and NO THAT IS NOT WHAT I WANTED TO HEAR, THANK YOU.
So stuff like Jimi’s Third Stone From The Sun never really got the airplay it deserved. It certainly deserved more than “All Along the Watchtower” got (and gets).
Genesis’s brilliant Los Endos is very good and I’d rather listen to it than anything off of Dark Side of the Moon:
I’m not going to play any King Crimson or Tangerine Dream. But I was tempted to. Their problem is that their stuff belongs on a “Top Ten” list but not on any given “Top Five” list.
Half of the stuff on Thick as a Brick is instrumental… but it’s one 44-minute song. So I guess it doesn’t count. But half of the stuff is *BRILLIANT*.
So I’ll just wander back to Floyd and say that If I’m going to pick something from Pink Floyd, I’d pick “One Of These Days”.
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I was thinking about a lot of prog rock, but I realized that most of it has vocal lines. For some reason, Karn Evil #9 and Roundabout feel like instrumentals to me. Of course, Pink Floyd has progressive and psychedelic roots too. I don’t think of Pink Floyd as having songs though, more like album sides. Money, and Us and Them, are the only things I’d call songs on Dark Side of the Moon. The Wall has some distinct songs I guess, but in my mind they’re fused into one continuous project.Report
I jumped to “Animals” and then remembered “oh, yeah… there are lyrics on that.”Report
I pulled out ELP’s Pictures at an Exhibition and yeah, a majority of the cuts have a vocal track. Lyrics, even. None of the lyrics are memorable, and I suspect that the main purpose is that it’s easier for Greg Lake to sing lyrics than just “Dum, dum, dum-dee-dee-dum-dum” even when the vocals are just another instrument.Report
As a lark, I googled whether Kiss did any instumentals AND THEY DID!!!
I learned about their 1981 album Music from “The Elder”!
Get this:
I asked “WHAT?” Three times reading that paragraph.
Yes. Kiss did have an instrumental track. “Escape from the Island”. And it’s not bad? I mean, if you like Ace Frehley?
This is nuts.
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Let us not fail to remember Telstar by the Tornados which topped the UK and US charts back in 1962Report
Let me provide a cover link. Come for the music, stay for the dancer. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xypu-31toEReport
Booker T & the MGs “Green Onions” demands at least a mention.
https://youtu.be/0oox9bJaGJ8?si=I1BBjqAFCrduMgQX
In more modern music (I guess this isn’t really “new” music anymore) let me remind you of “You Wish” by Nightmares on Wax…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TwDOa-lvizM
..and “Intro” by the Xx.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFq6nnw7xg0
See also about half of the corpus of Thievery Corporation’s work, e.g., “Facing East”:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kSoBORS3KZE
Am I saying any of these are better than “Great Gig in the Sky?” Well, no, because the fact that they got “Great Gig” done on the first take with no real vocal rehearsals is damn near miraculous and means that piece will always deserve a mention in any rock instrumentals list. Which is a sign of a plausible claim to primacy. But these are pretty amazing pieces of music IMO, which fit within the now-very-broadly-subgenred category of “rock.” (I might include, say, Peter Mancini’s “Peter Gunn Theme,” but I feel like that’s more properly classified as jazz.)
I might want to include “Sirius” but it kind of feels like “Sirius,” though yes its own piece of music, still really feels like an intro to “Eye in the Sky.” (This Alan Parsons project reference is included for all of my Chicago Bulls fan friends who deservedly remember the glory years.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E_NNCNDYEpU
I am also affirming that “Great Gig in the Sky” and other pieces of music are properly called “instrumentals” even though vocals are included. Vocalizing is using the human voice as an instrument, and relying upon the tones and sounds of that instrument to convey emotion rather than articulated words.Report
The only time I ever followed basketball of any type was in the Bulls’ heyday of the ’90s. Sirius can only ever be associated with that team if you live in Chicago.
I always thought Super Furry Animals (A) Touch Sensitive would make great intro music.
https://youtu.be/hjthQW86O4M?si=8XEXnH3Znuc05vioReport