Bike

Pink Floyd

Score: 25
/
Played: 98

Album:

The Piper at the Gates of Dawn

Released: 06 Oct 2008

Wiki:

...allegedly inspired by a large Raleigh bicycle belonging to his new Cambridge girlfriend Jenny Spires... although she has since dismissed the connection as rubbish. -- Watkinson/Anderson, Crazy Diamond, p 32. 'The Bike Song' (aka "Bike") .... [was] the forthcoming album's [i.e. Piper at the Gates of Dawn -- eH] closer. Cliff ["Syd's Blind From Diabetes"] Jones wrote, The tempo changes at the end of every verse. The rising glissando note that finishes each chorus was achieved using a crude oscillator and varispeeding the tape down while the track was running. The apparently double-tracked vocal on 'Bike' is set far enough apart from the lead to disorient the listener. One fears the vocal tracks will become unglued and drift farther out of phase than they already are. Artificial double tracking was developed at EMI to save the trouble of recording a separate back-up vocal The song started out as a playful Barrett ditty in the style of 'The Gnome', but the haunting coda imbues it with a prophetic, sinister overtone. The finale of the song proper is a parody of the sort of fanfares to be found at the end of an operetta by Gilbert and Sullivan or in English vaudeville. Waters, Wright and Barrett join in on a campy chorus, inviting the girl 'who fits in with my world' into Syd's 'room of musical tunes'. At the beginning of the coda, footsteps echo down a long hallway, a door opens with a heaving creak and a most extraordinary sound collage free of melody or harmony erupts; as if Barrett was trying to let everyone else hear the sounds in his head: a wash of cymbals, discordant string instruments, clockwork echoing the bell towers of Cambridge. The final ingredient in this sonic bouillabaisse is a repeated loop of shrill and horrific laughing voices, rising discordantly as the 'room of musical tunes' fades back into the recesses of Syd's mind. Slowed down by half, the loop reveals itself to be a roughly edited loop of bellowing laughter. It resounds from the speakers like the riotous drunken laughter of pub regulars ringing in the ear of one fleeing a pub into a cold, raining night. The twisted laughter is both funny and frightening, disarming you as it hits home. And its eerily reminiscent of the run-out groove on "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band", which Syd and the Floyd were directly inspired by when they heard a special advance copy. Indeed, the day "Sergeant Pepper" was released, the Floyd were at Abbey Road working on a version of 'Bike'. -- Palacios, Lost in the Woods, p. 151.

Lyrics:

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[Verse 1] I’ve got a bike, you can ride it if you like It’s got a basket, a bell that rings And things to make it look good I’d give it to you if I could, but I borrowed it [Chorus] You’re the kind of girl that fits in with my world I’ll give you anything, everything if you want things [Verse 2] I’ve got a cloak it’s a bit of a joke There’s a tear up the front It’s red and black, I’ve had it for months If you think it could look good, then I guess it should [Chorus] You’re the kind of girl that fits in with my world I’ll give you anything, everything if you want things [Verse 3] I know a mouse, and he hasn’t got a house I don’t know why I call him Gerald He’s getting rather old, but he’s a good mouse [Chorus] You’re the kind of girl that fits in with my world I’ll give you anything, everything if you want things [Verse 4] I’ve got a clan of gingerbread men Here a man, there a man, lots of gingerbread men Take a couple if you wish. They’re on the dish [Chorus] You’re the kind of girl that fits in with my world I’ll give you anything, everything if you want things [Verse 5] I know a room of musical tunes Some rhyme, some ching, most of them are clockwork Let’s go into the other room and make them work [Instrumental outro]