Wet Dream - Richard Wright
Unassuming. Underwhelming. Unremarkable. Unnoticed. A Floydian Slip...
Lots have been said about this artist and this album in both the year it was released and since. Credit to Steven Wilson for taking something that was nearly forgotten from the time it was made and remixed for what would have been Richard Wright's 80th birthday last year. This is the first time I've ever heard this album, and credit to
@journolud for the nomination for something I missed and didn't know I was
actually missing.
This is an album I've had off and on in the past week at various times. It is definitely an easy mood feeling, and one I listened to a couple times quite intently on the bike yesterday while pedaling around town. Usually I go for something fasted paced and loud, but this strangely has hit the mark for me.
I've already commented on how much I enjoyed Wright's return to form with Gilmour and the band for their post-Waters era, especially on
The Division Bell.
It was that familiarity that made me both anticipate and already appreciate his low-key vocal delivery on songs such as "Against the Odds", "Summer Elegy", and "Holiday". "Against the Odds" in particular worked quite well and conveyed the despair he was feeling in and with his marital relationship. The "sail on, sail on, across the sea" in "Holiday" just seemed like the easy going mode he was on in such setting.
The Floydish feeling also present in the album on the sax and guitars brought to us by the touring musicians for the band in Mel Collins and Snowy White really worked to keep the band familiarity most fans were accustomed to.
While Wright and Gilmore were out recording their two solo albums in the studio back to back at this time, Waters was starting down his own "solo journey" in writing his first most personal Floyd album in
The Wall, mostly by himself and that shows up there, save for a few tracks Gilmour co-wrote and got a chance to actually sing on.
My favourite tracks here on Wright's album were:
- "Mediterranean C" - just a nice song to paddle to along the waters on a SUP, as I hope to soon.
- "Against The Odds" - his vocal delivery is a precursor to "Wearing the Inside Out", always welcome to me and just right for the song's mood
- "Summer Elegy" - nearly reminded me a bit of Gerry Rafferty in spots
- "Drop In From The Top" - loved White's guitars and Wrights keys at the end
- "Pink's Song" - Juliette Wright's lyrics here were very nice and delivered well, and I loved Collins' playing on flute on this song, which really made this the standout to me. "Let me go, I cannot stay" with those unassuming vocals really hit home too.
- "Funky Deux" - a nice bass-led funky song which sounded different than most of the album, a good closer with the Floyd instruments all melded in together, later on sax, and then guitar. We'd not ever hear anything close to this again on any Waters' Floyd albums. A fun ending.
Unlike others, I think this will be an album I do revisit over time, as I have a special spot for Richard Wright and those "un"assuming members of the band often don't get credit for, but make up a key part of the sound.
Don't believe me? Go listen to
The Final Cut without Wright and tell me how it stacks up to their 70's powerhouses. As an homage to the year, and this is a good thing here, I'm scoring this a
7.8/10. I remain undaunted to any criticism of Wright being anything more than himself on this, and he was who he was, not the main guy in the lights, but the producer and ideas behind some great sounds that we may or may not take for granted.