Product Details
Shine On

Shine On
Pink Floyd

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Track Listing

  1. Arnold Layne
  2. Candy And A Currant Bun
  3. See Emily Play
  4. Scarecrow
  5. Apples And Oranges
  6. Paint Box
  7. It Would Be So Nice
  8. Julia Dream
  9. Point Me At The Sky
  10. Careful With That Axe Eugene
  11. In The Flesh?
  12. The Thin Ice
  13. Another Brick In The Wall (Part 1)
  14. The Happiest Days Of Our Lives
  15. Another Brick In The Wall (Part 2)
  16. Mother
  17. Goodbye Blue Sky
  18. Empty Spaces
  19. Young Lust
  20. One Of My Turns
  21. Don't Leave Me Now
  22. Another Brick In The Wall (Part 3)
  23. Goodbye Cruel World
  24. Pigs On The Wing (1)
  25. Dogs
  26. Pigs (Three Different Ones)
  27. Sheep
  28. Pigs On The Wing (2)
  29. Shine On The Crazy Diamond (Part One)
  30. Shine On The Crazy Diamond (Part One)
  31. Shine On The Crazy Diamond (Part One)
  32. Shine On The Crazy Diamond (Part One)
  33. Shine On The Crazy Diamond (Part One)
  34. Welcome To The Machine
  35. Have A Cigar
  36. Wish You Were Here
  37. Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Part Two)
  38. Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Part Two)
  39. Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Part Two)
  40. Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Part Two)
  41. Speak To Me
  42. Breathe
  43. On The Run
  44. Time
  45. The Great Gig In The Sky
  46. Money
  47. Us And Them
  48. Any Colour You Like
  49. Brain Damage
  50. Eclipse
  51. Signs Of Life
  52. Learning To Fly
  53. The Dogs Of War
  54. One Slip
  55. On The Turning Away
  56. Yet Another Movie
  57. Round And Round
  58. A New Machine (Part 1)
  59. Terminal Frost
  60. A New Machine (Part 2)
  61. Sorrow
  62. Hey You
  63. Is There Anybody Out There?
  64. Nobody Home
  65. Vera
  66. Bring The Boys Back Home
  67. Comfortably Numb
  68. The Show Must Go On
  69. In The Flesh
  70. Run Like Hell
  71. Waiting For Worms
  72. Stop
  73. The Trial
  74. Outside The Wall
  75. One Of These Days
  76. A Pillow Of Winds
  77. Fearless
  78. San Tropez
  79. Seamus
  80. Echoes
  81. Let There Be More Light
  82. Remember A Day
  83. Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun
  84. Corporal Clegg
  85. A Saucerful Of Secrets
  86. See-saw
  87. Jugband Blues

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #78920 in Music
  • Released on: 1992-11-09
  • Number of discs: 9
  • Formats: Box set, Import

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
Available again! This is Columbia's beautifully packaged nine-disc 1992 box set featuring seven classic Floyd albums digitally remastered ('A Saucerful Of Secrets', 'Meddle', ' Dark Side Of The Moon', 'Wish You Were Here', 'Animals', 'The Wall' (two CDs)

Amazon.com essential recording
Box sets are difficult phenomena. Their cost is often prohibitive, and the weight of outtakes, alternate takes, chronological corrections, and myriad other completist elements make them sometimes less listenable than the original recordings. But this mammoth nine-CD package is a different breed of cat. It collects a smattering of early Pink Floyd, including the great hits and misses caught on Relics, A Saucerful of Secrets, and Meddle, and then moves into the band's great period, with Dark Side of the Moon and their first Sony titles, Wish You Were Here and Animals. Their development from early psychedelicists to producers of suite-length musical ponderings is great to witness. And it's even more fascinating to see where the band went with what they'd learned by 1977. To that end, the set includes The Wall in its entirety as well as A Momentary Lapse of Reason. No doubt about it, this is a huge investment, but the packaging, thoroughness, intent, and impact all warrant that even casual fans should make the leap ahead into the fullness this box offers. --Andrew Bartlett


Customer Reviews

Some Terrific Music...But at a Price4
There is some terrific music on this box set. Unfortunately, with some of the bizarre choices regarding which Pink Floyd CDs were included and which weren't, along with the rather steep price tag, the average fan will probably pass on this and it's hard to blame them. After all, if you're going to present an accurate picture of Pink Floyd, you have to include founding member Syd Barrett. And while he appears on three of the tracks from A Saucerful of Secrets and six tracks from the Early Singles disc, where is Barrett's masterwork, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn? And is this set improved by the inclusion of the post-Waters album A Momentary Lapse of Reason? A better choice would have been to include the live disc from Ummagumma.

With those criticisms aside, there is some essential music here. Any serious rock library should include Wish You Were Here, The Wall and Dark Side of the Moon. I was also glad to see the inclusion of Meddle, an album I bought on vinyl when it first came out in 1971. Side one features rather short song structures, but side two was reserved for the 23-minute grandiose "Echoes." [Please forgive my LP references to sides one and two, but I still think of recordings as being two-sided.] Perhaps the biggest selling point of this box set is the separate disc that includes many of the band's early singles from 1967 and 1968:

"Arnold Layne" b/w "Candy and a Currant Bun" Both written by Syd Barrett and released in March of 1967. The A-side is more pop oriented, but the B-side features some wonderful psychedelic guitar along with Rick Wright's kinetic keyboard playing.

"See Emily Play" b/w "The Scarecrow" Also both composed by Barrett. The trippy "See Emily Play" from May of 1967 was their first UK top ten hit--and their last, until "Another Brick in the Wall (Part II)" topped the chart in 1979! The synchopated sound of "The Scarecrow" makes it one of their most endearing songs of the period.

"Apples and Oranges" (Barrett) b/w "Paintbox" (Wright) This is one of the last songs Barrett recorded with the band. Released in November 1967, it failed to chart. By the following May, Barrett was out of the band and David Gilmour becomes a permanent replacement.

"It Would Be So Nice" (Wright) b/w "Julia Dream" (Waters) This is a much more pop-oriented song than their previous singles, but it still fails to chart when released in April of 1968.

"Point Me at the Sky" (Waters, Gilmour) b/w "Careful with That Axe Eugene" (Waters, Wright, Mason, Gilmour) Another failed single from December of 1968. It represents a return to a more psychedelic sound, but Pink Floyd doesn't catch on as a singles band. The B-side becomes a concert favorite. This studio version is a 5:44 trippy instrumental; the live version on Ummagumma runs 8:47.

Another bonus to the box set is the 112-page hardcover book that is included. There is a separate section for each album, including song lyrics, essays and interviews, along with some terrific photos.

Putting together a Pink Floyd box set wasn't going to be an easy task. The bottom line is the cost of this box versus buying the individual albums. That dilemma was solved for me when I got this as a gift. I need to remember to thank them again.

The Box Set5
I bought this Boxed set back when itcame out in 1992. For me it was a great investment as I did not have any Pink Floyd CD. I was totally blown away by the excelent work that it was putted into this set. Every aspect in this set has been thought out from the record cases to the way they are set together to produce the Dark Side of The Moon cover.

The two most relevant aspects of this set are the sound production which is simply spotless making each record shine with new life. The second plus is the book that comes with the set. Each chapter is about the records included in the box. For each CD theres is detailed information on lyrics, cover art conception, photos, press releases during the time as well as band information or interviews relevant to the period.

This was at the time the most ambicious box set to come from a rock band in CD format and I must say that it did not dissapoint at the moment. Today many of the music has already been released in single CD so the hype of having all these albums in a box set many not be as appealing as it was back in 1992. Nevertheless, it is still an impressive body of work.

The greatest of starter kits for the best of bands...5
Shine On is, like other reviewers have stated, missing some of the best. No true Floyd fan would be without Piper, without Atom Heart Mother, or Ummsgumma. However, this is a great set for people who have heard Floyd, like it a lot (enough to drop some serious cash on it) and want some bonus trivia. The Critic's review is all wrong-- the book, despite it's errors, is a way of beginning the journey into the greatest band of all time. Dark Side will hook you, Animals and the Wall will deepen you, Meddle and Saucer will expand you-- only then is it time to move on into the absolutely incredible sounds of early Floyd... and then you buy the rest, one by one, as your budget allows. This set makes sure you are ready to get to that point. I highly reccommend.