- Pink Floyd | Echoes
: Around the 7-minute mark, the song transitions into a repetitive, bass-driven "funk" groove.
: Roger Waters stated the lyrics were an attempt to describe the human potential for empathy . Live at Pompeii Echoes - Pink Floyd
The song's signature opening was born from a happy accident. Keyboardist Richard Wright played a single high note on a grand piano that was accidentally fed back through a . This created the famous "underwater" sonar sound that defines the track's intro. 3. Collaborative Writing : Around the 7-minute mark, the song transitions
To fit the format of their legendary film Live at Pompeii , the band "put together" a different version by splitting the song into two parts. "Part 1" opened the film and "Part 2" closed it, creating a bookend effect for the performance. Keyboardist Richard Wright played a single high note
"Echoes" was the first song in years that all four band members—David Gilmour, Roger Waters, Richard Wright, and Nick Mason—wrote together as a true group effort. It served as a bridge toward their later sound, with David Gilmour noting it showed the direction they would take with The Dark Side of the Moon . 4. Structural Highlights
The band recorded two dozen separate musical ideas, which they initially titled . These included backwards tape loops, experimental riffs, and vocal experiments. They eventually sifted through these, keeping the most promising parts and arranging them into a coherent 23-minute suite. 2. The Famous "Ping"