MadcapLaughs.Narod.Ru
The Madcap Who Named Pink
Floyd
Rolling Stone
December 1971
by Mick Rock
London: If
you tend to believe what you hear, rather than what is, Syd Barrett is either
dead, behind bars, or a vegetable. He is in fact alive and as confusing as
ever, in the town where he was born, Cambridge. In 1966-67, Barrett was playing
lead guitar with Pink Floyd. He'd named the band and was writing most of their
music, including the only two hit singles they ever had. His eerie electronic
guitar style and gnome-like stage presence made him an authentic cult figure
for the nascent London underground, then just beginning to gather at the UFO
club and the Roundhouse. The Floyd were a house band
and the music went on into the wee hours. Cambridge is an hour's train ride
from London. Syd doesn't see many people these days. Visiting him is like
intruding into a very private world.
'I'm disappearing', he says, 'avoiding most
things.'
He seems
very tense, ill at shock. He has a ghostly beauty which one normally associates
with poets of old. His hair is short now, uncombed,
the wavy locks gone. The velvet pants and new green snake skin boots show some
attachment to the way it used to be.
I'm
treading the backward path,' he smiles. 'Mostly, I just waste my time.'
He walks a
lot. 'Eight miles a day,' he says. 'It's bound to show. But I don't know how.'
'I'm sorry
I can't speak very coherently,' he says, 'It's rather difficult to think of anybody being really
interested in me. But you know, man, I am totally together. I even think I
should be.'
Occasionally,
Syd responds directly to a question. Mostly his answers are fragmented, a
stream of consciousness.
'I'm full
of dust and guitars,' he says.
'The Madcap
Laughs', his first solo
LP, he says, was pretty good: 'Like a painting as big as the
cellar.'
Before the
Floyd got off the ground, Barrett attended art school. He still paints. Sometimes crazy jungles of thick blobs. Sometimes
simple linear pieces. His favourite is a white
semi-circle on a white canvas. In a cellar where he spends much of his time, he
sits surrounded by paintings and records, his amps and guitars. He feels safe
there, under the ground. Like a character out of one of his own songs.
Syd says
his favourite musician is Hendrix. 'I toured with him
you know, Lindsay (an old girl-friend) and I used to sit on the back of the
bus, with him up front; he would film us. But we never spoke really. It was
like this. Very polite. He was better than people
really knew. But very self-coconsciousness. He'd lock
himself in the dressing room with a TV and wouldn't let anyone in.'
Syd himself
has been known to sit behind locked doors, refusing to see anyone for days at a
time. Frequently in his last months with the Floyd, he'd go on stage and play
no more than two notes in a whole set.
'Hendrix
was a perfect guitarist. And that's all I wanted to do as a kid. Play a guitar
properly and jump around. But too many people got in the way. It's always been
too slow for me. Playing. The pace
of things. I mean, I'm a fast sprinter. The trouble was, after playing
in the group for a few months, I couldn't reach that point.'
'I may seem
to get hung-up, that's because I am frustrated work-wise, terribly. The fact is
I haven't done anything this year, I've probably been chattering, explaining
that away like anything. But the other bit about not working is that you do get
to think theoretically.'
He'd like
to get another I don't know where they are. I mean, I've got an idea that
there must be someone to play with. If I was going to play properly, I should
need some really good people.'
Syd leaves
the cellar and goes up to a sedate little room full of pictures of himself with
his family. He was a pretty child. English tea, cake and biscuits, arrives. Like
many innovators, Barrett seems to have missed the recognition due to him, while
others have cleaned up.
'I'd like
to be rich. I'd like a lot of money to put into my physicals and to buy food
for all my
friends.
'I'll show
you a book of all my songs before you go. I think it's so exciting. I'm glad
you're here.' He produces a folder containing all his recorded songs to date,
neatly typed, with no music. Most of them stand alone as written pieces. Sometimes simple, lyrical, though never without some touch of
irony. Sometimes surreal, images weaving dreamily,
echoes of a min'Wolfpack,' a taut threatening,
claustrophobic number. It finishes with:
Mild the reflecting electricity eyes
The life that was ours grew sharper
and
stronger away and beyond
short wheeling fresh spring
gripped with blanched bones moaned
Magnesium proverbs and sobs.
Syd thinks
people who sing their own songs are boring. He has never recorded anyone
else's. He produces a guitar and begins to strum out a new version of 'Love
You,' from Madcap. 'I worked this out yesterday. I think it's much better. It's
my new 12-string guitar. I'm just getting used to it. I polished it yesterday.'
It's a Yamaha.
He stops and eases it into a regular tuning,
shaking his head. 'I never felt so close to a guitar as that silver one with
mirrors that I used on stage all the time. I swapped it for the black. Syd is
25 now, and worried about getting old. 'I wasn't always this introverted,' he
says, 'I think young people should have a lot of fun. But I never seem to have
any.'
Suddenly he
points out the window. 'Have you seen the roses? There's
a whole lot of colours.'
Syd says he
doesn't take acid anymore, but he doesn't want to talk about it... 'There's
really nothing to say.'
He goes
into the garden and stretches out on an old wooden seat. 'Once you're into
something...' he says, looking very puzzled. He stops. 'I don't think I'm easy
to talk about. I've got a very irregular head. And I'm not anything that you
think I am anyway.'