A Foot In the Door: The Best of Pink Floyd
Download links and information about A Foot In the Door: The Best of Pink Floyd by Pink Floyd. This album was released in 2011 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Progressive Rock, Heavy Metal, Psychedelic, Classical genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:19:25 minutes.
Artist: | Pink Floyd |
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Release date: | 2011 |
Genre: | Rock, Hard Rock, Progressive Rock, Heavy Metal, Psychedelic, Classical |
Tracks: | 16 |
Duration: | 01:19:25 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Hey You | 4:39 |
2. | See Emily Play | 2:48 |
3. | The Happiest Days of Our Lives | 1:32 |
4. | Another Brick In the Wall, Pt. 2 | 3:48 |
5. | Have a Cigar | 5:08 |
6. | Wish You Were Here | 5:05 |
7. | Time (Edit) | 6:20 |
8. | The Great Gig In the Sky | 4:36 |
9. | Money | 6:34 |
10. | Comfortably Numb | 6:19 |
11. | High Hopes | 6:55 |
12. | Learning to Fly | 4:49 |
13. | The Fletcher Memorial Home | 4:10 |
14. | Shine On You Crazy Diamond, Pts. 1-5 (Edit) | 11:05 |
15. | Brain Damage | 3:46 |
16. | Eclipse | 1:51 |
Details
[Edit]The first single-disc Pink Floyd compilation to surface in 30 years — the last being A Collection of Great Dance Songs, released as a stopgap between The Wall and The Final Cut — A Foot in the Door: The Best of Pink Floyd has its share of idiosyncrasies, quirks evident right from the choice of the moody “Hey You” as the set’s opener. “Hey You” might not be an ideal keynote song but it is certainly one of Floyd’s signature songs, something that can’t be said of every one of the 16 songs here, the oddest choices being “The Happiest Days of Our Lives” (used as an extended intro for “Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 2”) and “The Fletcher Memorial Home” (an album cut from the un-beloved The Final Cut). Apart from these tunes, A Foot in the Door serves up the expected — five cuts from Dark Side of the Moon, three from Wish You Were Here, four from The Wall (of the big radio staples, “Run Like Hell” and “Young Lust” are absent), adding the early Syd Barrett “See Emily Play” and the latter-day “High Hopes” and “Learning to Fly” almost as afterthoughts. Although the compilation could withstand some minor tweaks — a post-Syd song like “One of These Days” would have been welcome, for instance — this is still a very worthy compilation of (most of) the Floyd songs everybody knows by heart.