Roger Waters Essays

  • Pink Floyd's The Wall

    1711 Words  | 4 Pages

    swollen hand blues. I've got thirteen channels of shit on the T.V. to choose from... I've got wild staring eyes. And I've got a strong urge to fly. But I've got nowhere to fly to. Ooooh, Babe. When I pick up the phone, there's still nobody home.” (Roger Waters) As Pink drifts further from reality, he longs for ideas of home and reconnecting with his personal roots, remembering the hope that Vera Lynn - a WWII era singer - gave within a country torn apart by war and loss. The personal and social ruin

  • Pink Floyd Biography

    1009 Words  | 3 Pages

    Richard Wright. Born on July twenty-eighth, nineteen forty-five, and has three kids: Gala, Jamie, and Benjamin. Met Nick and Roger at he Regent Street Poly. He enjoys taking his sixty-five foot yacht out when he is presented the opportunity. The second most important person in the band was George Waters or Roger As he preferred. Born on September sixth, nineteen forty-three. Roger has two kids and has recently divorced for the third time. Roger's farther was killed in the war and he never had a chance

  • Free Essays - Animal Farm

    661 Words  | 2 Pages

    animal metaphor that serves to cast a dark light on human social interactions and stratification functions. Conversely, the artworks individually attack the diametrically opposed, socio-economic systems of communism (by Orwell) and capitalism (by Roger Waters). The artworks are individually astounding, but when viewed in tandem, alludes to the idea that socio-economic systems are still evolving and in time the terms capitalism and communism will be thought as ineffective as feudalism. The shared characteristics

  • Similarities Between The Beatles and Pink Floyd

    766 Words  | 2 Pages

    often credited. Both bands members were raised in the United Kingdom. The original framework for “The Beatles” was conspired by the best friends, John Lennon and Paul McCartney. Likewise, “Pink Floyd” was created by best friends Nick Mason and Roger Waters. By the same token, both bands were founded while the members received their education. World War II was a pin point in each of the band members lives, if not directly affecting them, then they were affected through their parents. Ironically, the

  • Pink Floyd

    1216 Words  | 3 Pages

    Soon after they first began playing together in the mid-'60s, they fell firmly under the leadership of lead guitarist Syd Barrett, the gifted genius who would write and sing most of their early material. The Cambridge native shared the stage with Roger Waters (bass), Rick Wright (keyboards), and Nick Mason (drums). The name Pink Floyd, seemingly so far-out, was actually derived from the first names of two ancient bluesmen (Pink Anderson and Floyd Council). And at first, Pink Floyd were a much more conventional

  • Postmodernism in Pink Floyd The Wall

    1861 Words  | 4 Pages

    its faithful audience. The animated film Pink Floyd The Wall was directed by Alan Parker in 1982 and written by the lead singer of the Pink Floyd band, Roger Waters. The film follows Pink into a life changing journey in which ironically, the view of an outside world reflects different shades of a very persistent, internal turmoil. Inspired by Waters’ troubled past and his own involvement with the music industry, Pink’s character is a result of a flamboyant persona which is often reflected not only

  • What Does Another Brick In The Wall Represent

    638 Words  | 2 Pages

    Pink Floyd's album The Wall was recorded in 1979. “This album by Pink Floyd except for listening, listening, and listening repeatedly because it is too good to beat” because it is always a high listener album up to the present. Listen carefully and understand the lines of each new song can understand the content contained. It was also made a movie which was the first rock music video I ever watched. "Another Brick in The Wall (Part I)" is the opening song for The Wall metaphor. The wall here is a

  • Analysis of Pink Floyd's Song, Mother

    5282 Words  | 11 Pages

    really taken place, though not fully in the same context. Roger Waters once stated that he made this phone call while on stage, I believe, during a concert. Although the person on the other end of the line was in on the gag, the unsuspecting operator simply thought that this was a real call and so tried her best to patch Waters through to his "wife" only to have another man answer. It's hard to say if this is a true story, though, because Waters semi-refutes it on the DVD commentary, saying that it is

  • An Analysis Of Roger Rosenblatt's The Man In The Water

    502 Words  | 2 Pages

    these races larger, higher (on the food chain), and smarter, but those species are indefinitely stronger. A person breaks an arm, cries instantly. An animal breaks a leg, it keeps walking until death. The very point that Roger Rosenblatt is trying to make in his piece The Man in the Water, that humans

  • Theme Of Man In The Water By Roger Rosenblatt

    656 Words  | 2 Pages

    author's usage of similes and metaphors is helpful to the reader to point out emphasized ideas. In The Man in the Water, by Roger Rosenblatt, the theme of courageousness is shown through the descriptions of the man's actions, the comparison between man and nature, and Rosenblatt's response to the situation. The first way that the theme of courageousness is shown in The Man in the Water by Rosenblatt is through the great description of the man's actions. When crashes occur, many people sit still

  • Summary Of The Man In The Water By Roger Rosenblatt

    937 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the article, “The Man in the Water” the author, Roger Rosenblatt, shows humans potential selflessness. After a plane crashes into the ocean, one man, the hero of the story, saves the lives of many before saving himself. As the rescuers were handing down the floaties to bring people to safety, every time one was given to this man he risked his life and handed it to someone else. Every time that he decides to save someone else he is one step closer to dying, and he knows that too, but instead he

  • Essay on Portrait of the Artist as A Young Man and The Wall

    1790 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Artist in Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as A Young Man and Pink Floyd's The Wall Foragers, the people who live in hunter-gatherer societies, have no artists. It is only when society becomes complex enough to support a division of labor do artists emerge-first as shamans, then as the painters, singers, writers, etc., that we usually think of today. Society, then, creates the artist, but it can also destroy him. In A Portrait of the Artist as A Young Man, James Joyce describes the particular

  • An Analysis of Mending Wall

    2099 Words  | 5 Pages

    An Analysis of Mending Wall Robert Frost once said that "Mending Wall" was a poem that was spoiled by being applied. What did he mean by "applied"? Any poem is damaged by being misunderstood, but that's the risk all poems run. What Frost objects to, I think, is a reduction and distortion of the poem through practical use. When President John F. Kennedy inspected the Berlin Wall he quoted the poem's first line: "Something there is that doesn't love a wall." His audience knew what he meant and

  • Breaf Analysis of Poems by Robert Frost

    2253 Words  | 5 Pages

    Robert Frost “Design” 2. The poem starts off with a white spider on a white heal-all which holds onto a white moth. Just the knowledge of knowing that it is a spider, not to mention a fat spider, it has a negative connotations because no one really likes them to be honest. Spiders symbolize death and mystery. As for the heal-all, it is a plant that is commonly used for medicinal purposes. The rhyme scheme and vowel sounds emphasized that they are ‘characters of death and blight.’ 3. The first

  • Ephesians 5:8-16

    1053 Words  | 3 Pages

    Ephesians 5:8-16 Ephesians 5: 8-16 is about how we are the light and the hope of the world. This passage tells of how we need to live with righteousness and truth. It explains of how we must not have anything to do with fruitless deeds, but instead we should expose them to the light. For this, in turn, will make the darkness visible and the light will wake up the disobedient. It also instructs us to live a wise life and to make the most out of every opportunity we have. This passage has great

  • Roger Rosenblatt The Man In The Water Summary

    659 Words  | 2 Pages

    Washington D.C. and then dropped into the brisk waters of the Potomac river. The aftermath of this flight was unusual because of the actions of one individual involved in the disaster. A man in his fifties made the courageous decision to risk his own life to save his fellow passengers from the icy water. The man later lost his life. Roger Rosenblatt, an award-winning journalist, wrote an article about this man for Time magazine entitled "The Man in the Water". In the article, Rosenblatt tells the story

  • Song Analysis: Novacane

    921 Words  | 2 Pages

    Norberto Escalante Martin del Campo English 1302 9 March 2014 Novacane Many musical artists write or compose songs that have a double meaning. The type of song that you have to pay real close attention to the lyrics in this case, Dwayne Carter, also known as Lil Wayne, rapper from New Orleans wrote a song called “Novacane” this drug stabilizes your neural membrane and helps the prevention of nerve impulses causing no feeling acting as an anesthesia. This particular drug makes you hallucinate, more

  • Bartleby, The Scrivener Timed Write

    702 Words  | 2 Pages

    Bartleby, the Scrivener, a story of lawyer and scrivener, questions like: What is worth living for in the world? What does society to value or shape what it means to be successful or of worth in the world that is inhabited? This is done through various implications of Bartleby’s actions and responses, as well as the lawyer’s, and the descriptions and imagery of the environment. Walls in the story represent the entrapment, a blockade of sorts to prevent focus from wandering elsewhere. Bartleby in

  • The Path To Peace

    2146 Words  | 5 Pages

    into uncharted territory?  What is the new territory and how do you feel about going there?  Are you in troubled waters and need to find the “Path to Peace”? Explain.  What Scriptures help you get through challenging circumstances? A Prayer of Blessing Lord, I pray for all those who are in the extremely difficult place of having to choose to step out onto turbulent water or remain where they are. I pray that they would be strong and courageous and would trust you implicitly. Help them

  • Explore The Theme Of Loneliness In Of Mice And Men

    1678 Words  | 4 Pages

    I have chosen to explore the theme of loneliness and isolation because it is an evident theme in a range of texts and the messages received through these texts regarding loneliness relate to a greater society and our world today. The texts I've decided to explore are Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, 127 hours directed by Danny Boyle, Pink Floyd - The Wall directed by Alan Parker and Lord of the Flies by William Golding. A key theme throughout the novella Of mice and Men by John Steinbeck set