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Wanderers Ways. Neil Thompson 1961-2021

David Gilmour Luck And Strange [new] Instant

The album’s core theme is mortality. Gilmour does not shy away from the fact that he is in the "last chapter" of his life. Instead of fighting it, he uses his guitar to converse with it.

To help you get the most out of this topic, let me know if you'd like to: See a of the album's themes

While we await the official release date to stamp a final score on Luck and Strange , the early buzz from London listening sessions is deafening. Critics are calling it "the best Gilmour solo album since On an Island " and "a masterwork of septuagenarian reflection." David Gilmour Luck and Strange

, provides lead vocals and harp on the track "Between Two Points," while his son Gabriel also contributes vocals. The Wright Connection

However, the most shocking collaboration is a posthumous one. The album features reconstructed keyboard parts recorded by , Gilmour’s late Pink Floyd bandmate who passed away in 2008. Gilmour revealed that he went back to old jam sessions from 2007 (the On an Island sessions) and extracted Wright’s ambient textures, weaving them into new compositions. In a very real sense, the ghost of Pink Floyd haunts the grooves of Luck and Strange . The album’s core theme is mortality

While Gilmour had stockpiled musical ideas since 2015, the true catalyst for Luck and Strange was the COVID-19 lockdown. Isolated at his home studio aboard his houseboat, The Astoria , and later at his Brighton seaside studio, Gilmour found himself doing something he rarely allows: looking backward.

Throughout the album, Gilmour grapples with themes of loss and mortality, drawing on his own experiences with grief and bereavement. Tracks like "The Last Time" and "Kiss That Grrrl" are infused with a sense of melancholy, their melancholic melodies and introspective lyrics capturing the pain and sadness that can accompany loss. To help you get the most out of

Throughout the album, Gilmour grapples with themes of loss and mortality, drawing on his own experiences with grief and bereavement. Tracks like "The Last Time" and "Kiss That Grrrl" are infused with a sense of melancholy, their melancholic melodies and introspective lyrics capturing the pain and sadness that can accompany loss.

The title track, "Luck and Strange," features a poignant piece of history: a keyboard part recorded by the late Richard Wright during a jam session at Gilmour’s barn in 2007. This connection to his Pink Floyd bandmate anchors the album in a sense of continuity, bridging the gap between the psychedelic era and Gilmour’s modern, blues-inflected wisdom. Sonic Evolution and Production

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