“For me it’s much less complicated to work alone,” David Gilmour said in 2006, with his characteristic understatement; yet there are few that would rate a David Gilmour album above a Pink Floyd one, or even consider him, even after all these years, a solo artist. Most people think of him, more now perhaps than anyone else, as the very ongoing embodiment of Pink Floyd, the group he joined in late 1967 as a live replacement for Syd Barrett. Steady, strong-willed and undoubtedly his own person, Gilmour has stealthily sought to preserve the legacy of the group it could be argued its other two leaders (Syd Barrett, Roger Waters) sought, if not to destroy, certainly undermine.
“It was really off the top of our heads, it was fun – comparatively,…
