Discography Pink Floyd 'link' -
Artist: Pink Floyd Active: 1965–1995, 2014 (final album) Core Studio Albums Reviewed: 15 Genre: Psychedelic Rock, Progressive Rock, Art Rock
Ummagumma, More, The Final Cut, The Endless River Start here: The Dark Side of the Moon or Wish You Were Here For the converted: Animals and Meddle discography pink floyd
– 10/10 An aching tribute to Syd Barrett and a critique of the music industry. The nine-minute “Shine On You Crazy Diamond” (split into two parts) is their emotional peak. “Have a Cigar” and the title track are perfect. Dark Side’s equal in quality, but more melancholy. Artist: Pink Floyd Active: 1965–1995, 2014 (final album)
– 6/10 Gilmour’s attempt to rebuild Pink Floyd after Waters’ departure. Polished, commercial, and lyrically weak (“Learning to Fly,” “On the Turning Away”). Lacks edge, but the production is gorgeous. A competent but safe return. Dark Side’s equal in quality, but more melancholy
– 6/10 A transitional album. Barrett’s decline is palpable (he appears on only one track, “Jugband Blues”). David Gilmour joins, and the band begins its drift toward sprawling, ominous instrumentals. Uneven but historically crucial. The Transitional Period (1969–1971): Finding Their Voice More (1969) – 5/10 A forgettable film soundtrack. Folkier and less ambitious. Few essential tracks (“Cymbaline” hints at better things). For completists only.
Few bands have crafted a discography as meticulously conceptual and sonically transformative as Pink Floyd. From their whimsical, Syd Barrett-led psychedelic origins to their globally dominant, philosophically dense progressive rock epoch, their catalog is a narrative of ego, madness, time, and alienation. While not every album is a masterpiece, the band’s arc—from chaotic invention to polished, stadium-filling gloom—is one of rock’s most compelling journeys. The Barrett Era (1967–1968): Psychedelic Seeds The Piper at the Gates of Dawn (1967) – 9/10 A kaleidoscopic British psychedelic landmark. Barrett’s whimsical, childlike songwriting (“Astronomy Domine,” “Bike”) clashes beautifully with eerie organ drones and fragmented studio experiments. Essential, but stylistically a different band.