| Discography: The Division Bell (1994) |
| Columbia CK 64200 |
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The heavy presence of synthesizer was no coincidence. The Division Bell marked the true return of keyboardist Rick Wright to the group, after he was essentially forced out by Roger Waters during recording of 1979s The Wall. (Waters would split with Floyd in 1983.) While Wright sat out 1983s The Final Cut, and was only partially involved in the making of 1987s Momentary Lapse, he would write or co-author three songs on The Division Bell, including the instrumental Marooned, which won the best rock instrumental Grammy for 94. Other songwriting credits included: Polly Samson, David Gilmours wife; Nick Laird-Clowes, leader of the Dream Academy, whose mid-80s self-titled album was co-produced by Gilmour; and Anthony Moore, who worked on Momentary Lapse, and would go on to co-produce Wrights 1996 Broken China album. Wright, along with Gilmour and drummer Nick Mason were joined by many of the musicians the group had gathered for its Delicate Sound of Thunder tour several years prior: keyboardist Jon Carin, bassist Guy Pratt, Gary Wallis on percussion, and Tim Renwick on guitar. Bob Ezrin, who first worked with the group on The Wall, co-produced the effort with Gilmour. Michael Kamen, who also went back to The Wall, handled orchestrations. The albums trademark Floydian cover was the work, in part, of Storm Thorgerson, co-founder of the design team Hipgnosis, which had created so many Floyd covers before. While variations and outtakes of older Floyd covers are hard to come by, there are many variations of the now-familiar talking heads of The Division Bell on the vinyl LP, various EPs and promotional material.
The albums title, a reference to the British parliaments practice of ringing a bell when it becomes deadlocked, was suggested to the group by Adams. It plays into The Division Bells theme of communication, or lack thereof.
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