Stop (Pink Floyd song)
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“Stop” | |||||
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Song by Pink Floyd | |||||
Album | The Wall | ||||
Released | 30 November 1979 (US), 8 December 1979 (UK) | ||||
Recorded | April-November, 1979 | ||||
Genre | Art rock/Progressive rock | ||||
Length | 0:30 | ||||
Label | Harvest Records (UK) Columbia Records (US)/Capitol Records (US) |
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Writer | Waters | ||||
Producer | Bob Ezrin, David Gilmour and Roger Waters | ||||
The Wall track listing | |||||
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"Stop" is a song on the Pink Floyd album, The Wall. It was written by Roger Waters
Pink is tired of his life as a fascist dictator and the hallucination ends. He is also tired of The Wall, and puts himself on trial in his head. The song is also about the realization he has that everything that led up to his wall may have been his own fault, hence the line "Have I been guilty all this time"
The song is 30 seconds long and is the shortest Pink Floyd song.
[edit] Film version
After "Waiting for the Worms", Pink literally calls for a stop, where we find him sitting at the bottom of a bathroom stall. He seems to be reading the lyrics from a sheet of paper, where a few of the lines come from then unreleased material both written by Waters (The line "Do you remember me / How we used to be / Do you think we should be closer?", from "Your Possible Pasts" and others from "5:11AM (The Moment of Clarity)"). As Pink finishes the lyrics to "Stop", the security guard seen in the segment for "Young Lust" slowly pushes open the stall door, of which leads to animated intro of "The Trial".
[edit] Personnel
- Roger Waters - vocals[1]
- Bob Ezrin - piano[2]
[edit] References
- Fitch, Vernon. The Pink Floyd Encyclopedia (3rd edition), 2005. ISBN 1-894959-24-8