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Dark Side Of The Moon
 
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Dark Side Of The Moon

Pink Floyd
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1,438 customer reviews) More about this product

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Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

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Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Speak To Me/Breathe (Breathe In The Air) 3:57$0.99 Buy Track
listen  2. On The Run 3:35$0.99 Buy Track
listen  3. Time 7:04$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. The Great Gig In The Sky 4:47$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. Money 6:22$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. Us And Them 7:50$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. Any Colour You Like 3:25$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. Brain Damage 3:50$0.99 Buy Track
listen  9. Eclipse 2:01$0.99 Buy Track


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Pink Floyd emerged from England's hippy scene in 1967 formed by Syd Barrett on guitar and vocals, Roger Waters on guitar, Nick Mason on drums and Rick Wright on keyboards and joined by guitarist David Gilmour as Syd Barrett's health deteriorated.

Their early albums, including The Piper at the Gates of Dawn and A Saucerful of Secrets established them as psychedelic pioneers, charting in the UK with… Read more in Amazon's Pink Floyd Store

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Frequently Bought Together

Dark Side Of The Moon + Wish You Were Here + The Wall (Deluxe Packaging Digitally Remastered)
Total List Price: $71.94
Price For All Three: $47.86

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  • This item: Dark Side Of The Moon ~ Pink Floyd

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  • Wish You Were Here ~ Pink Floyd

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  • The Wall (Deluxe Packaging Digitally Remastered) ~ Pink Floyd

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (October 25, 1990)
  • Original Release Date: March 24, 1973
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Capitol
  • ASIN: B000002U82
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  Vinyl  |  UMD for PSP
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1,438 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #278 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #5 in  Music > Rock > Progressive > Progressive Rock
    #5 in  Music > Classic Rock > Supergroups
    #9 in  Music > Classic Rock > Psychedelic Rock

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential recording

Dark Side of the Moon, originally released in 1973, is one of those albums that is discovered anew by each generation of rock listeners. This complex, often psychedelic music works very well because Pink Floyd doesn't rush anything; the songs are mainly slow to mid-tempo, with attention paid throughout to musical texture and mood. The sound effects on songs like "On the Run," "Time" and especially "Money" (with sampled sounds of clinking coins and cash registers turned into rhythmic accompaniment) are impressive, especially when we remember that 1973 was before the advent of digital recording techniques. This is probably Pink Floyd's best-known work, and it's an excellent place to start if you're new to the band. --Genevieve Williams

Product Description

Limited Edition Japanese pressing of this album comes housed in a miniature LP sleeve. 2008. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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487 of 525 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Why DARK SIDE is Most Heralded Album of All-Time (5 STARS), June 19, 2001
By Janson Kemp "jwk" (Dallas, TX USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Studies have been conducted on the success of Pink Floyd's classic, best-of-the-best "Dark Side of the Moon." Some results are as follows:

*One in every 20 people under the age of 50 in the United States owns a copy of this album *Dark Side remained on Billboard's 200 album chart for an amazing 15 years straight and then for another two when it was remastered back in 1994 *It is currently the most successful album ever with upwards of 40 million copies sold world-wide

Now the question... WHY? Why should one album by a band back in 1973 have such outstanding achievments and admiration even today? Perhaps because of the time period. Look at other albums released the same year by bands like Led Zeppelin, King Crimson, Rush, and the Doobie Brothers among several others. This was the year of rock perfection. Or maybe it was because of the rave for concept albums. Or the simple, yet unforgettable album cover.

More likely it was the band's chemistry and ability to make jaw-dropping, awe-inspiring, thought-provoking music. This is Pink Floyd at its collective finest, with everyone contributing. Unlike the band in 6 years, Waters did NOT do everything. Gilmoure took a huge chunk of the music-writing, laying down the chord progressions on "Breathe," "Time," and "Any Colour You Like;" the singing on the album's best songs, Water's conceeding to David's far superior voice; and pumping out what would later be hailed as some of rock's most influential lead-guitar riffs on "Money" and "Brain Damage." Wright got in on much of the writing as well with his keyboard contributions on "Breathe," the symphonic "Great Gig in the Sky," "Us and Them," and the amazing keybpard licks and effects on "Colour." Mason, who rarely contributed, put in his efforts on "Speak to Me," "Time," and the Waters-less "Colour." Finally, Roger Waters put down most of the album's music, laid down all the bass-lines as usual, thought up the album's concept, and wrote all the lyrics. If that's not enough, he made himself heard on "Brain Damage," "Eclipse," and the chorus of "Time." Anyway you put it, THIS is the true Pink Floyd; all contributing, all acknowledged.

The band's titanic success was continued on later albums like 1975's "Wish You Were Here," 1977's "Animals," and 1979's "The Wall," although by that time the band had begun to fall apart from Waters' power obsession. By 1983, the band had slipped to a Water's-solo-project version of itself, with "The Final Cut," and finally a break-up. But never would the band see the success or experience the musical genious of "Dark Side of the Moon." So pop this in, take another listen, and remember- even if you don't believe the hype- after this album, music would never be the same....

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110 of 117 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Still weird, but Pink Floyd streamlines their songwriting and find amazing critical & commercial success with this album, October 6, 2007
The problem with some albums (most of The Beatles' catalogue, Zeppelin, Radiohead, etc) is so much has been written about them there's not a lot new to say. For DARK SIDE OF THE MOON I figured I'd examine the record more in the context of their catalogue overall, as this is not very often examined in Amazon reviws.

As I've said in other reviews, Pink Floyd has always been a weird band. There's a reason why they're considered the ultimate space-rock band. And while there are other albums in their catalogue that are even spacier and more strange than the perennial favorite DARK SIDE OF THE MOON (ATOM HEART MOTHER and PIPER AT THE GATES OF DOWN, to name but two), it is here, on this album, that the band trimmed back their wild experiments to manageable songs. And once the general public figured out what Pink Floyd was capable of, they bought the record in droves.

Pink Floyd has a sizeable catalogue that dates before DARK SIDE OF THE MOON. While the Pink Floyd Faithful know these albums, a lot of fans don't know these records, and if they go looking for another DARK SIDE, they are often puzzled at the music they do find. There's a reason for that.

Pre-1973, Pink Floyd was very much on the outer edges of rock music. Like The Grateful Dead, they played by their own rules, and invented and subverted their own musical forms into something druggy, ethereal, and far beyond the scope of any normal popsong. Listening to early Pink Floyd records is like an audio-acid trip, and it's surprising that not only did they get to release such experimental music, with no real chance of getting radioplay or singles, but they got to release so many albums of it. With today's market and expectations and pro-tools mentality of the quest for the perfect popsong that will be the next big hit, the early PF records would never have been released.

All this changed in 1972, when Pink Floyd released their criminally underrated soundtrack OBSCURED BY CLOUDS. The true precursor to DARK SIDE, OBSCURED was recorded just as the initial sessions for DARK SIDE began. Moving away from the side-long suites and long winding instrumentals, OBSCURED features 10 songs, only four of which are instrumentals, with the other six songs being very akin to the DARK SIDE songs. It is with OBSCURED that Pink Floyd began writing music that would be much more accessible to the general record-buying public.

Pink Floyd continued in the direction they began with OBSCURED BY CLOUDS. Streamlining their music, Pink Floyd forwent the rather bizarre experiments that made up the bulk of their previous work. But don't think they sold out. Everything in DARK SIDE has precedent in their previous work.

While there's nothing that truly sounded like DARK SIDE in 1973, the music sounds very much like a culmination of all their previous experimentation (not counting Barret's PIPER) dating from 1968 to 1972. But rather than let their audio love of sound effects get away with them ("Alan's Psychedelic Breakfast"), or draw their often fascinating instrumental music to gargantuan proportions ("Echoes", "Atom Heart Mother") that only prog fans will wade through, the band took the elements of their overall sound, streamlined it, and used much more accessible songwriting, but still being true to their artistic vision.

And it is a vision and a sound that a lot of people love. DARK SIDE epitomizes what the band was capable of. Filled with sound effects, spacey music, turbocharged [turbocharted] instrumentals, DARK SIDE takes elements from all of the band's previous albums and utilizes them here. A lot of the sound effect work is rather famous, especially the interview snippits that engineer Alan Parsons and the band sprinkled throughout the album. Paul McCartney was interviewed, but seasoned by years of media coverage, the band felt his answers were too guarded and not as off-the-cuff as they wanted. The "I'm drunk" line was by Henry McCullough. There's also a barely audible orchestral version of The Beatles "Ticket To Ride" that can be briefly heard at the end of "Eclipse".

Pink Floyd always had the potential to be not only great musicians and rock artists but also commercially. But let's not kid ourselves. Without DARK SIDE, they would not be the commercial juggernauts that they have become today. Had they broke up with OBSCURED, today Pink Floyd would be one of those cult bands that a lot of people haven't heard of, but that those who do know them find them very interesting.

And that is why DARK SIDE is their definitive album, and one of the biggest selling albums ever. It is here on DARK SIDE that Pink Floyd went from being beyond a cult band with some rather esoteric, rather impenetrable music, to being a very successful band with the same sonic identity, but more streamlined and much more accessible to the general pubic.









(As far s the whole Dark Side of the Rainbow phenomena goes, where Wizard of Oz and the album syncs, apparently it is unintentional, or so the band claims. Pretty bizaare how well they sync if indeed it is unintentional).
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216 of 242 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rising Of The Moon!!!, March 28, 2004
By chris meesey Food Czar (The Colony, TX United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
Once in a while, a rock band or other musical entity puts out an album that, quite simply, changes the face of music history. And yet, Pink Floyd was a rather unlikely group of musical innovators: An excellent singer/guitarist(David Gilmour) who was, until the release of this album, best known merely as "Syd Barrett's replacement," (Barrett, still regarded by many fans as the band's true musical genius, had recently taken leave of his senses and was apparently holed up somewhere watching the floor relate to the walls); a fine bassist/writer/singer/perfectionist (Roger Waters) still tortured by his fatherless upbringing; a low-key keyboardist and rather good singer and writer (Rick Wright) who stayed in the background as much as possible; and finally, a rather thoughtful percussionist and sound-effects wizard (Nick Mason), whose most lasting claim to fame would be as the man who vocalized the chilling spoken word threat in the band's classic "One Of These Days". An unlikely band of innovators, to be sure. And yet, Pink Floyd was properly positioned in the right place at the right time with the right sound. The year was 1973, the musical revolution started in the sixties was still in full swing, FM radio was in it's infancy (Recently taken over by hippie-types who longed for hours and hours of nice, spacy, commercial-free programming). In a word, rock music was the touchstone of our generation, just as television had been the touchstone of our parent's generation, and computers would be to our childen's generation. Those of us in high school or college spent hours every night and weekend, gathered around the stereo in someone's apartment or room, getting high, drunk, or just daydreaming, pondering such important questions as "What makes Teflon stick to the pan?" (Thank you, Gallagher!) In many of these listening spaces, Pink Floyd's Dark Side of The Moon was the album of choice, sometimes listened to over and over again. The mad mutterings of "Speak to Me," the celestial swirl of "Breathe", the jet-propulsive paranoia of "On the Run," and "Time," a favorite subject of young questers everywhere (along with madness, death, and pizza), "The Great Gig in the Sky" (with Claire Torry's incredible vocal-cries of universal anguish, "Money", first-rate blues rock, "Us and Them", hypnotic yet thought-provoking, "Any Colour You Like," sheer beauty, "Brain Damage", the madman inside all of us, and "Eclipse," the perfect thematic coda. All received by us, the grateful listeners, in our various states of consciousness (altered or otherwise), and then purchased, time and again, from music stores. Dark Side of the Moon was the ONE ALBUM that every rock fan (and many wouldn't otherwise be caught dead listening to rock music) had to own. Why??? After thirty years, I can offer only a tentative answer: Most people cannot stand to ruminate for long about ourselves and our place in the universe, yet every human being on the face of this earth will at sometime wonder: Why are we here??? The Pink Floyd, through this classic masterwork, holds no answers for us, yet it is as if they are offering to accompany us as we journey toward self-discovery, making the transition easier, soothing the pain, quieting the hurt even as they force us to see inside ourselves. Thanks, guys, from all of your fellow voyagers. I think I can safely speak for many when I say the road to self-awareness would have been much bumpier if I had not traveled it in your celestial vehicle. I say once, and I say again, SHINE ON, YOU CRAZY DIAMONDS and rock on, even unto the darkest part of the dark side of the moon.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Cranky spat this one out
my nephew Mildred's flush-puppy Henry spat this atrocious heap of stinking dregs out in the cot. Yah, amy, I want your h*rny **shole, lest me having it doesn't interfere with your... Read more
Published 2 days ago

4.0 out of 5 stars one of the most beautiful cd I have ever heard
The Dark Side of the Moon is Pink Floyd's ninth album and I think we can consider it as a single extended piece rather than, a collection of lyrics. Read more
Published 3 days ago by S. Dede

2.0 out of 5 stars create your own misfortune
This is a diehard competition of nogood fools and blasphemists.
Yah, this stinkpy CD soled millionths but it was a part of a masterplan to infringe the do-gooders and stifle... Read more
Published 11 days ago

3.0 out of 5 stars slow diver
This cd most likely is an effigy of the silly kind.

Its atrocious musical gaffe is enough to distinguish the rotten from the prowess. Read more
Published 12 days ago

3.0 out of 5 stars slow diver
This cd most likely is an effigy of the silly kind.

Its atrocious musical gaffe is enough to distinguish the rotten from the prowess. Read more
Published 12 days ago

5.0 out of 5 stars A classic which succeeds on some remarkable fronts
I've known Pink Floyd's album DARK SIDE OF THE MOON for many, many years, but although I've been writing Amazon reviews for nearly a decade, I've always been reluctant to post... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Christopher Culver

5.0 out of 5 stars Dark Side of the Moon - Pink Floyd
Despite the fact that I am not much of a Pink Floyd fan, this album is one of my favorites. If you only ever listen to one Pink Floyd album, this is the one to get. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Andrew Hand

1.0 out of 5 stars This low quality MP3 makes my ears bleed
I have this great 4-5 star album on vinyl pressed by Mobile Fidelity and the sound quality is simply fantastic!
The sound mix on this MP3 makes my ears bleed. Read more
Published 2 months ago by LiveMusicFan

5.0 out of 5 stars Holy crap! Dark Side of the Moon for $1.99??!!
Well, this album is basically one of the greatest albums ever made, and for $[...], you have no reason for not buying it. Read more
Published 2 months ago by K. Berglund

5.0 out of 5 stars This is the ggreatest album of all time.
I remember the first time I heard Dark Side of the Moon. I was eighteen and a buddy brought a copy over to sync with the Wizard of Oz (it works). Read more
Published 2 months ago by William Ekhardt

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