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Pulse
 
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Pulse

Pink FloydMP3 Download
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (226 customer reviews)


  • Original Release Date: June 6, 1995
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
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Disc 1:
  Song Title Time Price  
  1. Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Live) 13:37 Not Available
  2. Astronomy Domine (Live) 4:19 Not Available
  3. What Do You Want From Me (Live) 4:09 Not Available
  4. Learning To Fly (Live) 5:16 Not Available
  5. Keep Talking (Live) 6:53 Not Available
  6. Coming Back To Life (Live) 6:56 Not Available
  7. Hey You (Live) 4:38 Not Available
  8. A Great Day For Freedom (Live) 4:31 Not Available
  9. Sorrow (Live) 10:47 Not Available
10. High Hopes (Live) 7:52 Not Available
11. Another Brick In The Wall (Part Two) (Live) 7:06 Not Available
Disc 2:
  Song Title Time Price  
  1. Speak To Me (Live) 2:30 Not Available
  2. Breathe In The Air (Live) 2:35 Not Available
  3. On The Run (Live) 3:47 Not Available
  4. Time (Live) 6:48 Not Available
  5. The Great Gig In The Sky (Live) 5:50 Not Available
  6. Money (Live) 8:53 Not Available
  7. Us And Them (Live) 6:58 Not Available
  8. Any Colour You Like (Live) 3:20 Not Available
  9. Brain Damage (Live) 3:46 Not Available
10. Eclipse (Live) 2:37 Not Available
11. WIsh You Were Here (Live) 6:35 Not Available
12. Comfortably Numb (Live) 9:29 Not Available
13. Run Like Hell (Live) 8:36 Not Available
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Customer Reviews

226 Reviews
5 star:
 (151)
4 star:
 (35)
3 star:
 (18)
2 star:
 (7)
1 star:
 (15)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (226 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of, if not, the best live Pink Floyd album, October 8, 2000
This review is from: Pulse (Non-Blinking) (Audio CD)
When I first saw "Pulse" in stores I thought it was a greatest hits album released so that the remaining Pink members could make one last cash grab. Was I mistaken. The live "Pulse" album consists of the entire "Dark Side Of The Moon" album along with some of the best cuts from "The Wall" and "Wish You Were Here". It also includes excellent selections from post-Waters albums, "A Momentary Lapse Of Reason" and "The Division Bell". Another aspect that makes this album even more complete is the appearence of Astronomy Domine from their debut album, "Piper At The Gates Of Dawn". Overall, Gilmour and company belt out great versions of Pink classics with "random precision" and prove they still have what got them called "the best conceptual album writers of all time and one of the top three bands in history". The choice cuts would definitely have to be Comfotably Numb, Wish You Were Here, Run Like Hell, Brain Damage, Eclipse and from the 1994 "Division Bell" album High Hopes. As an added bonus, the two CD set comes in a deluxe slipcase package with an extensive booklet complete with tour pictures, equipment and track listings. An absolute must. Listen and you will understand why.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Transported once again, a surprise ride!, June 3, 2006
This review is from: Pulse (Non-Blinking) (Audio CD)
Like so many others, I reluctantly and sadly gave up on Pink Floyd after The Wall. Final Cut is too dismal, and without Roger Waters, how could they possibly still be the true Pink Floyd we all know and love? I missed them terribly, and I wanted more. In my bias (and I'm not proud of this), Momentary Lapse seemed more a solo album, or perhaps an offshoot of PF, but not the real Pink Floyd, and I scarcely gave it a chance. Not long ago, a friend loaned me Pulse, mainly to hear the entire performance of Dark Side (which is excellent). The other familiar songs were good, too, even the singles I had heard from Momentary Lapse.

Before returning the CD to my friend, I felt obliged from loyalty to the great years to at least give the unknowns a serious ear. Randomly, I started with "Keep Talking." To my complete wonder and amazement, here was a true Pink Floyd song, as pure and as enthralling as anything from Animals or Wish You Were Here. It must be a lucky fluke, I thought. My second choice was "Sorrow," simply because it is long. Again, I found myself grinning and drawn in exactly like during their prime. It was wonderful to realize that the mistake was mine. These songs definitely ARE true Pink Floyd, and taking nothing away from Roger Waters, he is NOT an essential ingredient after all. So I went back - "What Do You Want With Me," "Coming Back to Life," "A Great Day For Freedom," "High Hopes," and "Sorrow" again (even better the second time). I felt like I had discovered a rare gem I never knew existed - another lost Pink Floyd masterpiece. How could I have been so blind and so deaf? Since 1980, I have thirsted for more Pink Floyd, and here it has been all along!

To those others like me who may have given up on them and have always wanted more, give Pulse a chance. Listen closely, turn it up, and see if you are not transported to the same place that PF has always been able to take us. I defy you to hear that little concert within the concert and not run out and buy Division Bell and Momentary Lapse. Gilmour, Mason, and Wright, please forgive my own lapse. Thank you all once again.
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54 of 65 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A quality live set that seems to lack some energy at times, January 21, 2005
This review is from: Pulse (Non-Blinking) (Audio CD)
The claim to fame of Pulse, Pink Floyd's two-CD live album released in 1995, is the live performance of Dark Side of the Moon in its entirety. If you're a casual Pink Floyd fan, that's great; if you're a devoted fan, you're apt to be disappointed by the lack of nuance expressed in a concert setting. It has obviously been a few years since I listened to Pulse because my memory told me it was superior to 1988's Delicate Sound of Thunder live two-CD album - my memory was wrong. I'm not saying Pulse isn't a quality performance or that fans won't enjoy it, but to my ears it clearly lacks the sort of passion and energy that was captured on Delicate Sounds of Thunder. The two live albums of the reconstituted, post-Waters Pink Floyd share a number of songs in common, and I prefer the Thunder versions in almost every single case. Here, the long instrumental sections of Shine on You Crazy Diamond, for example, seem to drag on interminably, while on Delicate Sound of Thunder each minute of the music built up toward a pressurized unleashing of vocals.

The first disc features a healthy portion of material originating after Waters' acrimonious exit from the band. There are two tracks from 1987's A Momentary Lapse of Region (Sorrow and Learning to Fly) and five from 1994's The Division Bell (What Do You Want from Me, A Great Day for Freedom, High Hopes, Keep Talking, and Coming Back to Life). These are intermixed alongside some older Pink Floyd tracks: Shine on You Crazy Diamond from Wish You Were Here, Astronomy Domine from 1967's The Piper at the Gates, and two classic cuts from The Wall. Another Brick in the Wall (Part Two) is good but seems to lack a little oomph, but Hey You is delivered with the passion and energy that make it easily the most impressive song on either of the Pulse CDs.

Disc Two takes us through a complete version of Dark Side of the Moon; the live setting does take something away from the purity and magic of these songs, so your appreciation of the live set may depend upon the depth of your commitment to Pink Floyd itself. Three tracks are added on at the end in the form of musical encores. I have a feeling there would be rioting in the streets if Pink Floyd showed up and didn't play Wish You Were Here, Comfortably Numb, and Run Like Hell. I was impressed by the first of these three classic songs, but Comfortably Numb and Run Like Hell seem to fall short of their counterparts on the earlier Distant Sound of Thunder.

At first glance, Pulse looks like a no-brainer, a guarantee of musical nirvana courtesy of one of the greatest bands of all-time. As I listened to it, though, I just felt as if something were missing - something subtle and comparatively minor, but noticeably missing all the same. Still, this is Pink Floyd, and no Pink Floyd recording could ever be bad - but it seems to me that Pulse could have been more intense and musically dazzling than it is.
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Why always Dark Side of the Moon? 4 Dec 5, 2011
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