Pink_Floyd_bootleg_recordings

Pink Floyd bootleg recordings

Pink Floyd bootleg recordings

Bootleg discography


Pink Floyd bootleg recordings are the collections of audio and video recordings of musical performances by the British rock band Pink Floyd, which were never officially released by the band. The recordings consist of both live performances and outtakes from studio sessions unavailable in official releases. In some cases, certain bootleg recordings may be highly prized among collectors, as at least 40 songs composed by Pink Floyd have never been officially released.

During the 1970s, bands such as Pink Floyd created a lucrative market for the mass production of unofficial recordings with large followings of fans willing to purchase them. In addition, the huge crowds that turned up to these concerts made the effective policing of the audience for the presence of recording equipment virtually impossible. Vast numbers of recordings were issued for profit by bootleg labels.[1]

Some Pink Floyd bootlegs exist in several variations with differing sound quality[2] and length because sometimes listeners have recorded different versions of the same performance at the same time. Pink Floyd was a group that protected its sonic performance, making recording with amateur recording devices difficult.[2][3] In their career, Pink Floyd played over 1,300 concerts, of which more than 350 were released as bootlegged recordings (sometimes in various versions).[4] Few concerts have ever been broadcast (or repeated once they were broadcast on television), especially during 'the golden age' of the group from 1966 to 1981.[5]

Pink Floyd was one of the mainstays of the bootleg industry in the 1970s.[5][3] In 1999, the group was mentioned on BPI's list of most bootlegged British artists of all time.[6][7][8]

One of the best known ROIO's by Pink Floyd is Best of Tour '72: Live at the Rainbow Theatre with a concert performed on 20 February 1972. This bootleg includes one of the first performances of The Dark Side of the Moon. One year and one month before the official release of that same album, the bootleg had already sold over 120,000 copies.[9]

In 2008, the Pink Floyd bootleg Madison Square Garden, New York, NY – 2 July 1977 was mentioned on the Yahoo's Top 10 of Best Bootlegs of All Time.[10]

Earliest bootlegs

Most of Pink Floyd's early bootlegs concern performances from the European A Saucerful of Secrets Tour and the A Saucerful of Secrets US Tour. Most of these bootlegs were released by the label "Ace Bootlegs Production".

More information Bootleg title, Recording details ...

In January 1996, the label See For Miles Records released the bootleg album "Psychedelic Games for May" which includes a collection of Syd Barrett era Floyd, featuring a pre-Floyd acetate, rough mixes of the early singles plus BBC TV and the unreleased single "Scream Thy Last Scream".[17][18][19]

As late as 2004, a bootleg album entitled "Outtakes From Outer Space" emerged from Israel on the dubious-sounding "Hippie Shit Label", featuring a compilation of studio session recordings and outtakes, some mentioned above.[20] The track listing was:

  1. Lucy Leave (First Pink Floyd-Studio-Session)
  2. I'm a King Bee (First Pink Floyd-Studio-Session)
  3. Interstellar Overdrive (Studio-Session, 31 October 1966)
  4. Astronomy Domine (Live in London, 12 May 1967)
  5. Experiment (Studio outtakes 1967)
  6. Flaming (BBC-Session, 30 September 1967)
  7. The Gnome (BBC-Session, 30 September 1967)
  8. Matilda Mother (BBC-Session, 30 September 1967)
  9. The Scarecrow (BBC-Session, 30 September 1967)
  10. Vegetable Man (BBC-Session, 19 December 1967)
  11. Pow R. Toc H. (BBC-Session, 19 December 1967)
  12. Scream Thy Last Scream (BBC-Session, 19 December 1967)
  13. Jugband Blues (BBC-Session, 19 December 1967)
  14. Silas Lane (Studio outtakes 1967)
  15. Flaming (Single version, available only on USA Tower label)
  16. Reaction in G (Live in Rotterdam 12 October 1967)
  17. Milky Way (Studio outtake)

1969

More information Bootleg title, Recording details ...

During the two one-week recording sessions in November and December 1969 of the soundtrack for Michelangelo Antonioni's Zabriskie Point at International Recording in Rome, Pink Floyd experienced for the first time a studio leak. Three out-takes appeared on a bootleg album Omay Yad, also known under titles as Oneone, Fingal's Cave and Rain in the Country.

With the advent of a 1997 deluxe reissue of the movie soundtrack on a double compact disc, four previously unreleased Pink Floyd out-takes were also revealed. Almost simultaneously, a 15-track bootleg CD of the complete sessions appeared that revealed additional works in progress, among them a track that was long referred to by Pink Floyd as "The Violent Sequence". It was penned by Richard Wright for a riot scene in the movie and although unreleased in any form officially, was incorporated into their live set as an acoustic piano piece in the early part of the year. It was a forerunner to the melody of "Us and Them", which featured on their 1973 album The Dark Side of the Moon.[23]

1970: Atom Heart Mother tour

More information Bootleg title, Recording details ...

1971

At least 34 bootlegs of different concerts from 1971 were released (not counting the several bootlegs of each concert).[25]

  • 12 February – Colchester 12 February 1971
  • 13 February – Close the Blinds
  • 25 February – Live in Hamburg, also released as M502
  • 26 February – Pictures of Pink Floyd – Vol.1, also released as Motionless Pictures of Pink Floyd
  • 10 March – Rhapsody in Pink
  • 3 April – Ahoy Mate, It's 1971, also released on the bootleg The Band Who Ate Asteroids for Breakfast
  • 15 May – Echoes of a Distant Time
  • 4 June – A New Piece of Music, also released as Philipshalle, Düsseldorf
  • 5 June – Mauerspechte, also released as Vierundzwanzig Teile von Nichts
  • 12 June – Broadcasting from Europa 1, also released as Foreign Legion and Doctor Strange
  • 19 June – Brescia '71
  • 20 June – Live in Rome
  • 26 June – Amsterdam Free Concert
  • 1 July – Cosmic Music
  • 6 August – Echoes of Japanese Meddle, also released as Aphrodite (rev. A)
  • 6 August – Festival for the Nips
  • 13 August – Festival Hall – Melbourne 1971, also released as The Big Pink – Melbourne 1971 and Planets Meeting Down Under
  • 8 September – Osaka 1971
  • 18 September – Live in Montreux 1971 and Remember the Lesson of Giving
  • 23 September – Copenhagen Teatret, also released as Northern Old Sun and Falkoner Theatret
  • 30 September – Phenomena, also released as BBC Archives 1970– 1971, Eclipse, One of These Days and From Oblivion. Officially released on The Early Years 1965–1972.
  • 4 October – Pompeii (Harvested Version), also released as Live at pompeii
  • 10 October – One of These Days in Bradford, also released as Return from Pompei
  • 16 October – Motionless Albatross, also released as The Eye of Agamotto
  • 17 October – From Oblivion, also released as Life Could Be a Dream and as Wind and Seabirds
  • 27 October – Echoes in the Auditorium
  • 28 October – Hill Auditorium
  • 31 October – Toledo
  • 5 November – Hunter College
  • 6 November – For Reasons I Don't Understand
  • 10 November – Labyrinths
  • 12 November – Those Were the Days, also Echoes in Irvine
  • 16 November – Return of the Sons of Nothing, also released as Something from Nothing
  • 20 November – The Complete Taft Tapes, also released as Strange Tales and Embryonic Madness

Dark Side of the Moon Tour

Sometimes the smaller record mastering and pressing plants simply hid the bootleg work when record company executives would come around (in which case the printed label could show the artist and song names) and other times they would print labels with fictitious names. For example, the 1972 Pink Floyd bootleg called Brain Damage was released under the name The Screaming Abdabs.[1]

In January 1972, Pink Floyd debuted the live performance of their album The Dark Side of the Moon before its release. Many of Pink Floyd bootlegs date back from this period. Most of these bootlegs contain a pre-release version of the entire album.

1972

  • 20 January – The Dark Side Rehearsals, also released as Eclipsed by the Moon and Here They Come
  • 21 January – Eclipsed by the Moon, also released as Portsmouth
  • 22 January – The Dark Side of Winter Gardens
  • 23 January – Southampton Docks Eclipsed by the Moon
  • 28 January – You Are Number Six
  • 17 February –
  • 18 February – Rainbow Day 2
  • 20 February – The Best of Tour 72, also released as Time Ends and Rainbow Theatre, Moon Walk, In Rainbow Light (complete 2 CD show)
  • 6 March – Taiikukan 6 March 1972, also released as Acid Moon
  • 7 March – Tokyo to Taiikukan, also released as Live in Tokyo 1972
  • 8 March – Echoes from Osaka
  • 10 March – Home Again Kyoto
  • 13 March – Hokkaido, also released as Sapporo and as The Great Gig on The Moon
  • 30 March – Run Rabbit Run
  • 15 April – Sportarium
  • 16 April – Paper Money, also released as Take Up My Stethoscope and Columbia Sonicwave
  • 20 April – Syria Mosque Theater
  • 23 April – Cincinnati 72, also released as Mad for F*****g Years
  • 26 April – Detroit MI Ford Auditorium Pink Floyd – War in the Head
  • 27 April – Detroit MI Ford Auditorium Pink Floyd – War in the Head
  • 28 April – Eclipse – A Piece for Assorted Lunatics, also released as Hogweed Remaster
  • 2 May – Carnegie Hall Upgrade
  • 4 May – Mademoiselle Pink
  • 18 May – Lord of the Universe
  • 21 May – Sorcerers Supreme, also released as Gemersheim Festival, as Doubled Bubble and as Calling Number 228
  • 22 May – Rock Circus
  • 28 June – Return from Dark Profound
  • 10 September – McFarlin Auditorium – Dallas
  • 22 September – Bowl de Luna, also released as Cracked, Staying Home to Watch the Rain, From Box 1432, The Bright Side of the Earth and Damn Braces, Bless Relaxes
  • 23 September – Winterland '72, also released as Time & Money in California
  • 21 October – Gathering on the Moon
  • 10 November – Doctor Who in Denmark
  • 12 November – German Tour 72 Vol.3
  • 14 November – Düsseldorf Master Tape
  • 15 November – The Return of the Sons of Nothing, also released as The Great Gig in Böblingen
  • 16 November – March of the Dambusters
  • 17 November – Last Day in Germany, also released as One of Those Days
  • 29 November – Any Colour You Like, also released as All Your Life Will Ever Be and The Devils Inside
  • 1 December – Remembrance of Things Past, also released as Blow Your Mind Until You Die
  • 2 December – Saint-Ouen 2 December 1972
  • 7 December – Filling a Gap
  • 9 December – In a Neutral Land
  • 10 December – Across the Swiss Border, also released as End and Aim

1973

  • 13 January – A Night with Roland
  • 6 March – The Valley of the Kings
  • 7 March – Childhood's End (Chicago)
  • 8 March – Beneath Infinite Sky
  • 10 March – Thoughts and Memories, also released as Kent State Master
  • 11 March – Yeeshkul!
  • 14 March – Boston USA
  • 18 March – Dark Side of Radio City, also released Quiet Desperation in New York, Waterbury 18 March 1973 (Collector's Edition) and 3 Source Matrix [This show is usually listed as being at Radio 'City Music Hall in NYC but is actually from the Palace Theatre in Waterbury, Connecticut. A show was played at Radio City the previous night on 17 March]
  • 18 May – Earl's Court – Day One
  • 19 May – Supine in the Sunshine
  • 16 June – New Jersey 16 June 1973
  • 17 June – Saratoga Master, also released as On Stage
  • 20 June – Breaking Bottles in the Hall, also released as War Memorial
  • 28 June – Not a Cloud in the Sky
  • 29 June – Tampa
  • 12 October – Munich 1973 (Collector's Edition), also released as Paranoid Delusions
  • 13 October – The Lunatics on the Run, also released as Revealed
  • 4 November – Revealed at the Rainbow (Early Show)
  • 4 November – Live at the Rainbow (Late Show), also released as Obscured at the Rainbow and Finnsbury Park

The bootleg Supine in the Sunshine contains an audience live recording with extended versions of two songs from the soundtrack Obscured by Clouds (1972); namely the title track (5:38) and "When You're In" (7:48).

Yeeshkul! is so named because the bootlegger, or someone close to him, mentions the word several times during the performance. The name has inspired a forum for discussing Pink Floyd bootlegs which shut down on February 28, 2023.[26]

Pink Floyd 1974 tours

  • 22 June – Colmar
  • 24 June – Paris, 24 June 1974
  • 4 November – Picts in the Highland
  • 15 November – Black Holes in the Sky (rev. A), also named We Are from Planet Earth
  • 16 November – Dark Soundboard of Philadelphia, also named BBC Archives 74, Wembley 1974, Time in London, The Moon, No Room Upon the Hill and Interstellar Highlights
  • 17 November – Getting Better All the Time, also named Little Lambs Eat Ivy
  • 19 November – British Winter Tour
  • 28 November – Empire Theater 74
  • 9 December – The Kings of the Palace
  • 14 December – Bristol 13 December 1974, also named Heavy Fog in Bristol

The bootleg British Winter Tour, a recording of the 19 November show in Stoke-on-Trent was a notable bootleg released in 1975. It featured the three new songs that Pink Floyd were playing on that tour. It sold an estimated 50,000 copies.[17] The record was issued with the lyrics to the songs, and the quality of presentation convinced a number of buyers that the album was a bona fide follow-up to The Dark Side of the Moon. The British Phonographic Industry were not impressed, and attempted to find out who the bootleggers were, with the intent of prosecuting them.[27]

Wish You Were Here Tour (1975)

  • 8 April – Azimuth Coordinator, Part 1
  • 10 April – Seattle Coliseum
  • 13 April – Cow Palace Day 2
  • 21 April – San Tiago
  • 26 April – Movin' Time, also released as Dogs and Sheeps (sic) and Cruel, But Fair
  • 9 June – Landover, Maryland
  • 10 June – Shone Like the Sun
  • 15 June – Jersey Not Mother
  • 16 June – Random Precision
  • 17 June – Nassau Day 2, als released as Wishes, Echoes & Desires
  • 18 June – Echoes in the Gardens (version 2-cd), also released as Echoes in the Gardens (version 3-cd), Boston Gardens Masters, Boston 1975, Spaceball Ricochet and Echoes of the Stage
  • 20 June – Rivers of Steel
  • 22 June – Heavy Rain
  • 24 June – Detroit, also released as Detroit 1975
  • 28 June – Ivor Wynne, also released as Steel Breeze
  • 5 July – Knebworth '75 and Wish Roy Was in Knebworth

In the Flesh Tour (1977)

  • 23 January – Bugger's Eyes, also released as Animals Tour Debut and Dortmunds
  • 24 January – Animals in Dortmund
  • 27 January – From the Masters – Francfort 77, a.k.a. Heart Beat, Pig Meat
  • 29 January – Animals from the soundboard, The dark side of the pig, Desk pig in Berlin
  • 1 February – Dark side from the pig
  • 30 January – Absolut Floyd
  • 1 February – Vienna '77, a.k.a. Vienna stadthalle master, Reeling in Vienna, Animalisation, Hot ashes for tree (hcv version)
  • 3 February – Look over Jordan
  • 4 February – With Bright Knives
  • 19 February – Rotterdam 77
  • 20 February – Ducks on the wall
  • 22 February – Pavillon de pigs
  • 23 February – Paris 1977
  • 24 February – Pavillon de Paris
  • 25 February – Unauthorized live volume 2
  • 27 February – Wolfsschanze
  • 15 March – Knobs
  • 18 March – Animals on Empire
  • 19 March – Wembley 1977 March 19
  • 31 March – Last nite in Stafford
  • 22 April – Hurricane Floyd hits Miami, a.k.a. Miami baseball stadium
  • 24 April – Tampa 1977
  • 26 April – Southern bbq
  • 28 April – Assembly center
  • 30 April – Deaf, dumb and blind
  • 1 May – Iron pigs on fire
  • 6 May – The evil tide
  • 9 May – The abdabs, a.k.a. Animal instincts, Mr pig, Welcome to the Machine (oakland)
  • 19 June – Chicago 1977
  • 25 June – Animals in Cleveland
  • 27 June – Hot ashes for trees – the curse from the pig, a.k.a. Have a Cigar, The Perfect Day, Boston gardens
  • 1 July – New pork
  • 2 July – In a Pig's Eye, also released as In the grassland away
  • 3 July – Pigs might fly
  • 4 July – Sheep independence day, a.k.a. An even smile
  • 6 July – Oink oink baaa, also released with titles as Who was trained not to spit on the fans, Azimuth coordinator, part 2 and All is forgiven

The bootleg Animals Instincts concerns the recording of the Pink Floyd concert at 9 May 1977, at the Oakland Coliseum in Oakland.

The Wall Tour (1980–1981)

  • – "Under Construction", also released as "The Wall Demos" (demo tape from the recording of The Wall in 1978, unofficially released by bootleggers. The songs here are not the same versions as those officially released on The Wall album.)
  • 1 February – "The Wall Rehearsals", also released as "Behind the Wall" and "Brick by Brick"
  • 7 February – "Azimuth Coordinator, part 3" a.k.a. "The Wall – Sport Arena L.A."
  • 8 February – "The Wall 08 feb 80"
  • 10 February – "The Wall – L.A. Sport Arena"
  • 13 February – "L.A. Sport Arena – 2/13/1980"
  • 28 February 1980 – Untitled LP with "hammers" cover, also released as "Behind the Wall", "Brick by Brick", "Nassau Coliseum Definitive Edition" and "The Wall From The Master Tape"
  • 6 August – "The Show Must Go On", a.k.a. "The Wall on wrpi 91.5" and "Bars in the Window"
  • 8 August – "The Wall Earl's Court 8 August 1980"
  • 9 August – "Divided We Fall", also released as "The Wall Live at Earls Court August 9, 1980"
  • 14 February – "Tear Down The Wall (Zeus version)"
  • 18 February – "The Wall – Dortmund 18 February 1981"
  • 19 February – "Tear Down The Wall"
  • 20 February – "The Wall Dortmund Germany 20 feb. 1981"
  • 16 June – "Watching The World Upon The Wall"
  • 17 June – "Live Wall", a.k.a. "The Wall Earl's Court June 17th 1981"

A Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour (1987–1989)

  • 9 September – "A New Era"
  • 12 September – "Montreal Day One", a.k.a. "Echoes by the Lake" and "Final Echoes" (including a complete version of Echoes)
  • 16 September – "Echoes by the Lake"
  • 19 September – "Prism"
  • 28 September – "A Clear View", also released as "On The Turning Away"
  • 10 October – "Pink Floyd live in East Rutherford 1987 – 2CD – October 10" (140:17 Mins)
  • 17 October – "Pink Floyd live in Providence 1987 – 2CD – October 17"
  • 30 September – "Delusions of Maturity"
  • 1 November – "Pink Floyd live in Miami 1987" [Soundboard Recording]
  • 03-05/11/1987 – "Would You Buy a Ticket to This Show?"
  • 26 November – "World Tour"
  • 27 November – "Pink Floyd live in Los Angeles 1987 – 2CD – November 27"
  • 27 January - "Pink Floyd Sydney 27 January 1988", the first show of the Australian Leg of their tour
  • 11 February – Live In Adelaide 11 2 88
  • 2 March – Another Lapse in Japan
  • 4 June – "When You Are Young"
  • 7 June – "Pink Elephants Flew over Torino"
  • 21 June – "Château de Versailles (1st day)"
  • 22 June – "Château de Versailles (2nd day)"
  • 8 July – "Nothing is Changed"
  • 2 August – "Another Movie in Long Island" – Live at Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, New York, USA
  • 3 June – "Moscow"
  • 7 July – "Dockland Arena"
  • 15 July – "A Venezia" [Soundboard Recording]
  • 30 June – "The Knebworth Tales '90", a.k.a. "Of Promise Broken" (not part of the A Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour) [Soundboard Recording]

The Division Bell Tour (1994)

  • 16 March – Norton Air Force Rehearsals (≈ soundboard recording of rehearsal)
  • 30 March – The Live Bell
  • 14 April – For Whom The Bell Tolls
  • 16 April – Your Favorite Disease
  • 17 April – Jurassic Sparks
  • 6 May – Just Warmin' Up (Rehearsals)
  • 11 June – The Bell Gets Louder
  • 30 July – Bells From Notre Dame
  • 30 August – Fly Again The only recorded Pink Floyd Performance of Marooned
  • 9 September – Confortablement Engourdi en France
  • 11 September – Lyon 94
  • 13 September – A Passage of Time (≈ soundboard recording)
  • 17 September – Mutinae
  • 17 September – The Concert in Modena
  • 19 September – The Nights of Wonder
  • 21 September – The Nights of Wonder
  • 20 October – Out Of This World (Broadcast/Soundboard, Later Officially released As P.U.L.S.E DVD & Including un-edited Songs)
  • 29 October – The Last Ever Show
  • 29 October – The Last Bell

2000s

  • 2 July – Live 8, their performance at Live 8

The classic line up of Pink Floyd (David Gilmour, Roger Waters, Richard Wright and Nick Mason) played together on stage for the first time in 24 years (the band toured without Waters in 1987–1989 and 1994).

The band performed the songs "Speak to Me", "Breathe / Breathe (Reprise)", "Money", "Wish You Were Here" and "Comfortably Numb". They were the only band not to be verbally introduced; instead the house and stage lights were darkened while the introduction to "Speak to Me" was played, accompanied on the video screens by an animated version of the heart monitor graphic from The Dark Side of the Moon sleeve. Due to the death of Richard Wright in September 2008, this would be the only reunion of all four members of the post-Syd Barrett incarnation of the band.

  • 2 July – No More Excuses – Hyde Park – Live 8 (BBC Radio 2 FM Live Broadcast SB)
  • 10 May – Syd Barrett Tribute London, Barbican Centre, two bonus tracks ("Arnold Layne" and "Bike") on the bootleg "David Gilmour & Rick Wright live in Copenhagen 1988"

Recent releases

The bootleg label The Godfather released in March 2011 an 8-CD box set of Pink Floyd songs called The Complete Rainbow Tapes. The box contains four Pink Floyd shows, recorded at the Rainbow Theater in London (17–20 February 1972).[28]

In 2012 The Godfather label released a 10-CD box set of Pink Floyd songs called The Massed Gadgets of Hercules 1970–1974. The box contains five Pink Floyd shows, recorded at 14 March 1970, Live at Meistersingerhalle, Nürnberg, West Germany / 13 February 1971, Live at Students Union Bar, TechnicalCollege, Farnborough, Hampshire, England / 16 April 1972, Live at Township Auditorium, Columbia, South Carolina, USA / 12 October 1973, Live at Olympiahalle, München, West Germany / 14 December 1974, Live at Colston Hall, Bristol, Somerset, England.

See also


References

  1. "The Pink Floyd Vinyl Bootleg Guide – A Brief History of Bootlegs". floydboots.com. Archived from the original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  2. Manning, Toby (2006). "Soundtracks, Compilations & Bootlegs". The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd (1st ed.). London: Rough Guides. p. 225. ISBN 1-84353-575-0.
  3. Heylin, Clinton (11 June 2003). Bootleg : the rise & fall of the secret recording industry. London ; New York : Omnibus. ISBN 9781844491513 via Internet Archive.
  4. Cooney, Bob. "spare bricks :: pink floyd webzine". Sparebricks.fika.org. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  5. "Pink Floyd". Ace Bootlegs. Archived from the original on 10 March 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  6. "Various Artists News – Yahoo! Music". New.music.yahoo.com. 5 July 1999. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  7. David Pallister (18 August 1999). "Heavy sellers: Led Zeppelin top bootleg list | UK news". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  8. "Entertainment | Led Zeppelin rock bootleg chart". BBC News. 17 August 1999. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  9. "BigO Worldwide". Bigozine2.com. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  10. "Omnibus – Pink Floyd". Omnibus. November 1994. 60 minutes in. BBC.
  11. "Sounds of the 60s: 1967-8 – Hip to the Trip". Hip to the Trip. 23 November 1991. BBC. Archived from the original on 29 January 2009. Retrieved 17 September 2012.
  12. Sean Michaels (8 December 2010). "Swedish restaurant to relive Pink Floyd gig with bootleg on the menu | Music | guardian.co.uk". London: Guardian. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  13. Jem Aswad (8 December 2010). "Rare Tape of 1967 Pink Floyd Concert Found | Music News". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  14. Waters, John. "spare bricks :: pink floyd webzine". Sparebricks.fika.org. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  15. Palacios, Julian (1998). "'Like Summer Tempests Came His Tears' (July 1967 – January 1968)". Lost in the Woods: Syd Barrett and the Pink Floyd. London: Boxtree. p. 202. ISBN 0-7522-2328-3.
  16. "Bootlegs, An insight into the shady side of music collecting!". Moremusic.co.uk. Archived from the original on 10 July 2015. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  17. "RoIO LP: psychedelic games for may". Pf-roio.de. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  18. "Pink Floyd – Outtakes From Outer Space". discogs.com. Retrieved 1 March 2015.
  19. "Pink Floyd / Bootlegs (1969)". Ace Bootlegs. Archived from the original on 10 March 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  20. "Unreleased Pink Floyd Material". Pinkfloydhyperbase.dk. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  21. Echoes: The Complete History of Pink Floyd. Glenn Povey. 2007. ISBN 9780955462405. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  22. Manning, Toby (2006). "Soundtracks, Compilations & Bootlegs". The Rough Guide to Pink Floyd (1st ed.). London: Rough Guides. p. 227. ISBN 1-84353-575-0.
  23. Holger Kaminski. "Pink Floyd Roio/Roios/Bootlegs". Hokafloyd.com. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  24. "Yeeshkul". Retrieved 17 September 2012.
  25. Heylin, Clinton (2004). Bootleg: The Rise & Fall of the Secret Recording History. Music Sales Group. p. 121. ISBN 978-1-84449-151-3.
  26. Photo by Mark C. Austin (16 February 2011). "Bootleg Label Readying Bruce Springsteen, Pink Floyd Box Sets :: Music :: News :: Paste". Pastemagazine.com. Retrieved 13 August 2012.

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