The Endless River has as its starting point the music that came from the 1993 Division Bell sessions, when David Gilmour, Rick Wright and Nick Mason played freely together at Britannia Row and Astoria studios. This was the first time they had done so since the ‘Wish You Were Here’ sessions in the seventies. Those sessions resulted in The Division Bell, the band’s last studio album.
In 2013 David Gilmour and Nick Mason revisited the music from those sessions and decided that the tracks should be made available as part of the Pink Floyd repertoire. It would be the last time the three of them would be heard together. The band have spent the last year recording and upgrading the music,using the advantages of modern studio technology to create The Endless River.
The Endless River is a tribute to Rick Wright, whose keyboards are at the heart of the Pink Floyd sound. It is a mainly instrumental album with one song, ‘Louder Than Words’, (with new lyrics by novelist Polly Samson), arranged across four sides and produced by David Gilmour, Phil Manzanera, Youth and Andy Jackson.
Box includes 24-page photo/credit booklet in hard cover, including previously unseen photographs from 1993 sessions
- CD in full colour card wallet with full colour label
- DVD (NTSC) in full colour card wallet with full colour label
- 3 x Collectors’ full colour postcards, one of which with 3D Lenticular design
- DVD contains ‘The Endless River’ album in 5.1 Surround (Dolby Digital and DTS), plus stereo version in 48kHz /24 bit
Review
David Gilmour sang about an endless river on “High Hopes,” the last song
on what appeared to be the last Pink Floyd album, 1994's Division Bell. Twenty
years later, the same phrase became the title of The Endless River, an album
designed as Pink Floyd's last. Assembled largely from Division Bell outtakes
initially intended as an ambient project dubbed The Big Spliff, the record was
sculpted into shape in 2014 by Gilmour, Youth, Andy Jackson, and Roxy
Music's Phil Manzanera by adding guitar and Nick Mason's drums to original
tapes that were laden with keyboards from the late Rick Wright. He's not the
only missing member of Floyd, of course. Roger Waters is absent, as is the
long-gone Syd Barrett, but their ghosts are present throughout the primarily
instrumental The Endless River. Mortality is on the mind of the two remaining
Floyds, mentioned obliquely in “Louder Than Words,” the only song with
lyrics here, but felt through allusions to all their possible pasts. A song
unfurls with washes of synth pulled from “Welcome to the Machine,” the four
sides are structured like an ongoing amorphous suite à la “Shine on You Crazy
Diamond,” snippets of Atom Heart Mother slide against guitars that beat to the
rhythm from “Run Like Hell,” creating an impression of a band in a state of
repose: they're not indulging in their past so much as reflecting on it,
watching a tide of memories repeatedly roll in and out. Although very little
about The Endless River is risky by design – it is one of the most popular
bands of the 20th century returning to slowly pulsating aural waves that
characterized their biggest albums – the very shift away from vocals realigns
the band with not only Wish You Were Here (which this often resembles) but their
pre-Dark Side records for Harvest, undercutting the arena-pleasing aspirations
of the Gilmour-led reunion while underscoring how Pink Floyd always were an arty
band at their core. Instrumentals are also a savvy solution to the trouble of
working with uncompleted tapes – it's easier to turn them into an
ever-shifting suite than to graft on melodies – but the comforting sway of
swelling synthesizers and the soaring Gilmour guitar are sometimes unexpectedly
moving. Gilmour and Mason know this is their farewell, so they're saying goodbye
not with a major statement but with a soft, bittersweet elegy that functions as
a canny coda to their career. Stephen Thomas Erlewine – Allmusic.com