"Embryo" | |
---|---|
Song by Pink Floyd | |
from the album Picnic – A Breath of Fresh Air | |
Released | May 1970 |
Recorded | 26 November, 3-4 December 1968 |
Studio | Abbey Road Studios |
Genre | Psychedelic folk |
Length | 4:39 |
Label | Harvest (UK) |
Songwriter(s) | Roger Waters |
Producer(s) | Norman Smith |
"Embryo" (sometimes called "The Embryo") is a song by Pink Floyd.[1][2] It was recorded in 1968 and regularly performed live in 1970–71,[3] but never released on any regular Pink Floyd studio album.
A studio version appeared in 1970 on the rare multi-artist album Picnic – A Breath of Fresh Air.[4] Its next appearance was in 1983 on Pink Floyd's own compilation Works. It then appeared in 2007 on A Breath of Fresh Air – A Harvest Records Anthology 1969–1974 (one of only three tracks from the original sampler album to be included in the similarly-titled anthology).[5] Multiple renditions of "Embryo" appeared on the band's 2016 box set The Early Years 1965–1972; two versions were also included on the smaller 2-disc compilation The Early Years 1967–1972: Cre/ation (2016).
The studio version of the song was recorded late 1968 and intended for the album Ummagumma.[3][6][7] David Gilmour sang the lead vocal, and the accompaniment includes piano and Mellotron. The track includes bassist Roger Waters speaking high-pitched vocal gibberish, having sped his voice up in a similar manner to his work with Ron Geesin.[8]
The first recording session began on 26 November. The group kept the first take, but replaced it with a new recording on 3 December. Overdubs were recorded the next day, but then the track was abandoned. Gilmour later said, "we all went off it for some reason".[7] The band decided to make the studio half of Ummagumma a series of solo projects, and so the group-recorded "Embryo" was dropped from the running order.[9]
The track was first released on the 1970 multi-artist sampler album Picnic – A Breath of Fresh Air.[6] The record company, Harvest Records obtained clearance from producer Norman Smith to use the track, but the band did not consent to this release, and asked for it to be withdrawn.[10][6] It later appeared on the US compilation album Works.[6] A three-minute version, similar to the studio cut, was recorded live at a BBC session in December 1968.[11]
"Embryo" was finally granted widespread release in the 2016–2017 Early Years box set. The set includes the original studio recording, the 1968 BBC live session, and other live performances from 1970 and 1971.
Pink Floyd regularly played the song in concert in 1970-71.[6] The earliest known performance was on 18 January 1970, at the Fairfield Halls, Croydon,[12][13] followed by 11 February 1970, at the Town Hall, Birmingham.[14]
Live performances featured a different arrangement from the studio version, which was expanded to include instrumental jamming, lasting between 10 and 25 minutes. The lead vocal was shared with Gilmour and Richard Wright in harmony, and Gilmour contributed a lead guitar motif between verses. After two verses, Waters led a jam session around a two-bar riff on the bass, while tape-recorded noises of young children played in the background, which could be panned around the venue using the azimuth co-ordinator. Following this, Gilmour played a "whale song" effect (by the reversing the cables on his wah-wah pedal), which would later be used in the song "Echoes".[15] Some live performances included making various squeaks and squeals into his reverberated vocal mic (similar to those in "Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict").[16]
"Embryo" was recorded for two BBC Radio concerts at the Paris Theatre, London, compered by John Peel. The first was on 16 July 1970, which was transmitted three days later.[17] At the concert, Peel complemented the performance of "Embryo", calling it "very hopeful, optimistic music".[18] The second was on 30 September 1971 and broadcast on 12 October.[19]
The last time "Embryo" was played was on 20 November 1971 at the conclusion of the band's North American tour in Cincinnati.[20]
"Embryo" has been released on the following official releases:
Studio version
According to Jean-Michel Guesdon and Philippe Margotin:[7]
Live version