PerÂhaps you enjoyed yesÂterÂday’s post on Pink Floyd: Live at PomÂpeii but today find yourÂself unsatÂisÂfied, longÂing for more footage that comÂbines the band with a hisÂtorÂiÂcalÂly iconÂic work of archiÂtecÂture. Today, dear readÂers, we have a conÂcert film that might fit your bill: The Wall — Live in Berlin, viewÂable free on YouTube. While it feaÂtures neiÂther the actuÂal Berlin Wall — that had already fallÂen — nor the comÂplete lineÂup of Pink Floyd, it comÂpenÂsates with a degree of specÂtaÂcle that, in terms of human labor, must rank alongÂside sevÂerÂal of the wonÂders of the ancient world. This live perÂforÂmance of The Wall, Pink FloyÂd’s driÂving, paraÂnoid 1979 rock opera, takes place on PotsÂdamer Platz, nor far from where the Berlin Wall stood a mere eight months before. The show’s crew gradÂuÂalÂly builds their own wall right there onstage over the course of the show, expressÂly to sufÂfer the same fate as both the real one that dividÂed East GerÂmany from the West and the metaphorÂiÂcal one that sepÂaÂrates The Wall’s disÂafÂfectÂed rock-star proÂtagÂoÂnist from the rest of humanÂiÂty.
The Wall — Live in Berlin hapÂpened not as an offiÂcial Pink Floyd show, but more as a proÂducÂtion by foundÂing memÂber Roger Waters. But you couldÂn’t accuÂrateÂly call it a Roger Waters solo show either, since, even aside from the large techÂniÂcal staff needÂed to orchesÂtrate such an event, he enlistÂed countÂless guest stars to put their own spin on the songs, includÂing CynÂdi LauÂper, Van MorÂriÂson, Thomas DolÂby, GerÂmany’s own ScorÂpiÂons, and — who could forÂget? — the band of the ComÂbined SoviÂet Forces in GerÂmany.
The perÂforÂmance drew hunÂdreds of thouÂsands of viewÂers, a sight from the stage which must sureÂly have kept Waters wonÂderÂing, in the folÂlowÂing decades, if it might make sense to return to The Wall’s well. But could the show ultiÂmateÂly repÂreÂsent a non-replicÂaÂble moment in culÂturÂal, musiÂcal, and politÂiÂcal hisÂtoÂry? Could only the Berlin of July 1990 have seen proÂgresÂsive rockÂers and pop stars join forces to turn a dark, heady douÂble conÂcept album into one of the most elabÂoÂrate and well-attendÂed conÂcerts in rock hisÂtoÂry?
You can find an answer to these quesÂtions in Waters’ recent The Wall Live tour, which began in SepÂtemÂber 2010. The video above capÂtures the show in MelÂbourne last year. Just as they did not simÂply stage a live repliÂca of The Wall (the album) for Live in Berlin, Rogers and comÂpaÂny have, this time around, wiseÂly choÂsen not to attempt a recreÂation of that impresÂsive evening twenÂty years before. While no less bold and comÂplex than its all-out preÂdeÂcesÂsor, the project of The Wall Live someÂhow interÂprets its musiÂcal source mateÂrÂiÂal in a more subÂdued and — for lack of a betÂter word — artisÂtic manÂner. These choicÂes acknowlÂedge the fact that popÂuÂlar music, even as genÂerÂatÂed by the Lady Gagas of the world, has stepped back from the straightÂforÂward specÂtaÂcle at its height in the late eightÂies. UnderÂstandÂing, too, that the world-dividÂing clash between comÂmuÂnism and capÂiÂtalÂism no longer looms quite so overÂwhelmÂingÂly in the zeitÂgeist, Waters has updatÂed the new shows with an infuÂsion of his curÂrent anti-war views. In Pink Floyd: Live in PomÂpeii, Waters openÂly worÂried about becomÂing “a relÂic of the past.” Watch the evoÂluÂtion between these two perÂforÂmances and judge for yourÂself whether he’s sucÂceedÂed so far in avoidÂing it.
H/T goes to Kate for flagÂging this conÂcert for us…
ColÂin MarÂshall hosts and proÂduces NoteÂbook on Cities and CulÂture. FolÂlow him on TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.