Roger Waters has never been one to back down from a tough subject. As Pink Floydโs primary lyricist and rockโs most notorious misanthrope, heโs written concept albums about insanity (1973โs Dark Side of the Moon), absence (1975โs Wish You Were Here), capitalist greed (1977โs Animals), alienation (1979โs The Wall), and war (1983โs The Final Cut). His bleak worldview often jarred with Floydโs drug-friendly space-rock, but the friction helped make those albums some of the most successful and influential recordings ever made.
It also eventually splintered the band irreparably, and Waters has spent much of his post-Floyd solo career taking potshots at his former bandmates. The feud resolved itself when the group reformed at 2005โs Live 8 benefit concert, and in recent years Waters has seemed kinder and gentler than ever beforeโat times sounding like heโs downright happy to be here. In other words, Roger Waters hasnโt been acting very much like Roger Waters at all.
His new solo album, however, suggests that while the 73-year-old Waters has certainly mellowed, he still knows how to spit venom when he wants to. The title track, โIs This the Life We Really Want?,โ starts with a short sample from a Donald Trump interview (with our nationโs president sounding as cretinous as ever) before Watersโ cracked voice whispers, โThe goose has gotten fat/On caviar in fancy bars/And subprime loans/And broken homes.โ The song goes on to condemn xenophobia, isolationism, global warming, and reality TV, but itโs mostly a critique of our tendency toward apathy and our failure to become outraged at the everyday injustices of the world.
โPicture That,โ meanwhile, is a jumble of anger directed in every direction. โPicture a shithouse with no fucking drains/Picture a ruler with no fucking brains,โ Waters sings, going off on, among other things, the war in Afghanistan and concertgoers taking cell phone videos, before reaching the final line: โThereโs no such thing as being too greedy.โ If the words are unfocused, the music is incisive and dark, one of the highlights of the album. It starts with a simple octave leap cribbed from the beginning of Pink Floydโs โSee Emily Play,โ before going on to echo that bandโs most aggressive track, โOne of These Daysโ; singers Jess Wolfe and Holly Laessig (of Lucius) deliver โBrain Damageโ-style backing vocals, and the musical backdrop is filled with shimmering synthesizers straight out of โShine on You Crazy Diamond.โ
The rest of Is This the Life We Really Want? is similarly filled with aural throwbacks to well-known Floyd tracks. Much of this is courtesy of the Easter-egg type sound effects that emerge out of Nigel Godrichโs elaborate production. (Godrichโs presence hereโand his deference to Watersโ established sonic universeโproves just how much he and his Radiohead partners in crime plundered from those old Floyd albums.) Thereโs the factory whirr of โWelcome to the Machineโ underpinning โBird in a Gale,โ while the howling dog from Animals turns up on โSmell the Rosesโโa song that also borrows, lock and stock, the familiar groove from that same albumโs โPigs (Three Different Ones).โ Elsewhere, The Final Cutโs seagulls dip in and out of the soundscape, and the album even begins with Dark Side of the Moonโs heartbeat and ticking clock.
Comparisons to Watersโ past work are unavoidable, and thatโs surely deliberate. Because Waters has more to be angry about now than everโhis bugaboos of the past have not gone away, theyโve gotten bigger and eviler with time. Trump is perhaps the epitome of the greed and corruption that have always preoccupied Waters, and it astonishes how clearly some of his older themes resonate today. Watch the remarkable YouTube video of an October 1, 2016 performance of โPigs (Three Different Ones)โ filmed in Mexico City: It shows massive video screens filled with defaced images of Trump, and a giant inflatable pig drifting over the crowd, seeming to feast on the bodies beneath it. Although Waters originally penned the screed during the height of the indulgent, inward-gazing โ70s, with its context reframed for today, it remains shockingly vital.
Watersโ current tour pits new songs against Floydโs imposing back catalog, finding the common strands between them and injecting new life into work that would otherwise be well past its shelve-by date. His last visit to Seattle in 2012 was a complete, track-by-track performance of The Wall that used over-the-top arena-rock spectacle to create a powerful, emotive experience; that albumโs original story, about a rock star disappearing into drugs and isolation, was reworked into a vigorous anti-war treatise shot through with a surprising amount of real-world humanity.
Thereโs every reason to think that this weekโs show will be similarly cathartic. Waters, by all accounts a warmer, more well-adjusted person these days, has displayed the ability to turn the bitterness that imbued the music of his past into a positive force. Your high-school self may be stunned to learn it, but thereโs a lot more in the grooves of those Pink Floyd records than some freaky jams to get stoned to.
