Edited by Aideen Devine, Sunday, 11 Oct 2020, 09:44
I took my life in my hands and headed out on
Friday night to see Atom Heart Floyd in the Balor Theatre, in Ballybofey.
I didn't realise at the time, I was taking a chance with my life by
going. Storm Eric was forecast, it was raining and a bit windy but
nothing overly tempestuous. However, by the time the show was over, Eric
had arrived in full force. Between the howling gale and the torrential
rain, it was a treacherously slow drive home, much of the time on the wrong side or in
the middle of the road, to avoid the pools of water.
Was it worth
it? Definitely! A great time was had by all!
Atom Heart
Floyd hail from the south of England so keep an eye out for them if you're a
Floyd fan, they put on a good show and if they come back this way again, I'll
definitely be there.
They started
off with some early Floyd from the Sid Barrett era and finished the show with
Comfortably Numb. They had a large circular screen and throughout the
show, there were mini films projected on to it featuring, among others,
Sid Barrett and other surreal graphics and images. During Brain
Damage, from the Dark Side of the Moon album, they showed film of politicians
from the 80's, Maggie Thatcher, Ronald Reagan, Yasser Arafat, Saddam Hussein,
Boris Yeltsin, Gorbachev and a few other less notables. While listening
to the lyrics and watching the screen, I was struck with the thought that at
one time these people were all giants on the political world stage, inspiring
admiration and loathing in equal measure. Now, practically all of them
are dead.
Considering
the state of politics in the world at the moment, this was a comforting
thought, because it made me realise that no matter how big they are politically
or how much power they might wield, eventually, their time will pass, things will
change and they too, will become a footnote in the history books or an
image on a screen, reminding us of the past insanity of our 'leaders'. I can
safely look back now to all the anti-Russian rhetoric of the 80's and the
threat of nuclear war that hung over us like a cloud of lead and see that it
was nothing more than egotistical grand-standing by idiots with too much power
and not enough sense to realise the limits of their time on earth. They could
have done so much good but most of them wasted it. In a thousand years,
who will even remember them? So, if you're worried about Trump, Putin,
Brexit or anything else in the world, political or otherwise, take comfort in the fact that it won't last forever or as Shakespeare so brilliantly put it -
Atom Heart Floyd
I took my life in my hands and headed out on Friday night to see Atom Heart Floyd in the Balor Theatre, in Ballybofey. I didn't realise at the time, I was taking a chance with my life by going. Storm Eric was forecast, it was raining and a bit windy but nothing overly tempestuous. However, by the time the show was over, Eric had arrived in full force. Between the howling gale and the torrential rain, it was a treacherously slow drive home, much of the time on the wrong side or in the middle of the road, to avoid the pools of water.
Was it worth it? Definitely! A great time was had by all!
Atom Heart Floyd hail from the south of England so keep an eye out for them if you're a Floyd fan, they put on a good show and if they come back this way again, I'll definitely be there.
They started off with some early Floyd from the Sid Barrett era and finished the show with Comfortably Numb. They had a large circular screen and throughout the show, there were mini films projected on to it featuring, among others, Sid Barrett and other surreal graphics and images. During Brain Damage, from the Dark Side of the Moon album, they showed film of politicians from the 80's, Maggie Thatcher, Ronald Reagan, Yasser Arafat, Saddam Hussein, Boris Yeltsin, Gorbachev and a few other less notables. While listening to the lyrics and watching the screen, I was struck with the thought that at one time these people were all giants on the political world stage, inspiring admiration and loathing in equal measure. Now, practically all of them are dead.
Considering the state of politics in the world at the moment, this was a comforting thought, because it made me realise that no matter how big they are politically or how much power they might wield, eventually, their time will pass, things will change and they too, will become a footnote in the history books or an image on a screen, reminding us of the past insanity of our 'leaders'. I can safely look back now to all the anti-Russian rhetoric of the 80's and the threat of nuclear war that hung over us like a cloud of lead and see that it was nothing more than egotistical grand-standing by idiots with too much power and not enough sense to realise the limits of their time on earth. They could have done so much good but most of them wasted it. In a thousand years, who will even remember them? So, if you're worried about Trump, Putin, Brexit or anything else in the world, political or otherwise, take comfort in the fact that it won't last forever or as Shakespeare so brilliantly put it -
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.