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Pink Floyd - Discography -1967-2014-320kbps- Here

Key Releases: A Saucerful of Secrets (1968), More (1969), Ummagumma (1969), Atom Heart Mother (1970), Meddle (1971)

Post-Barrett, the band—David Gilmour (guitar/vocals), Roger Waters (bass/vocals), Nick Mason (drums), and Richard Wright (keyboards)—struggled to find direction. This period is often overlooked by casual fans, but it is essential for understanding their evolution.

This era was defined by experimentation. Atom Heart Mother featured a full orchestra and choir on the title track, while Ummagumma was a chaotic mix of live prowess and avant-garde solo experiments. However, by 1971’s Meddle, the band hit their stride. The side-long epic "Echoes" bridged the gap between their psychedelic roots and the progressive rock masterpiece that would follow.

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Key Releases: A Momentary Lapse of Reason (1987), The Division Bell (1994)

Waters was wrong. David Gilmour and Nick Mason regrouped (with Wright returning as a session musician) to reclaim the Pink Floyd name. After a legal battle, they released A Momentary Lapse of Reason. While criticized for sounding like a Gilmour solo album, it featured the radio hit "Learning to Fly" and launched one of the highest-grossing tours in history. Pink Floyd - Discography -1967-2014-320Kbps-

1994’s The Division Bell was a stronger artistic statement, addressing themes of communication and breakdown. It featured the haunting "High Hopes" and reintroduced Richard Wright as a full songwriting contributor.


Gilmour and Mason rebuild Pink Floyd. While heavy with 1980s gated reverb, a 320Kbps rip gives "Learning to Fly" the necessary airiness and "On the Turning Away" the wide stereo separation that makes Gilmour’s guitar feel three-dimensional.

  • Limitations of 320 kbps:

  • Why the paper calls 320 kbps “solid”:


  • This is the non-negotiable core of the Pink Floyd - Discography -1967-2014-320Kbps- collection. No other format has made these albums more portable without sacrificing the studio magic.

    A gritty, Orwellian response to the punk rock movement, Animals divided society into dogs, pigs, and sheep. It is Gilmour and Waters at their most aggressive and instrumental, featuring some of Gilmour’s most celebrated guitar solos. Key Releases: A Saucerful of Secrets (1968), More

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