It Would Be So Nice

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"It Would Be So Nice"
Single by Pink Floyd
B-side"Julia Dream"
Released19 April 1968[1]
RecordedFebruary 1968
StudioAbbey Road Studios, London, UK
Genre
Length3:47
Columbia (EMI) (UK)
Songwriter(s)Richard Wright
Producer(s)Norman Smith
Pink Floyd singles chronology
"Apples and Oranges"
(1967)
"It Would Be So Nice"
(1968)
"Let There Be More Light"
(1968)

"It Would Be So Nice" is a song by the English rock band Pink Floyd, written by the keyboard player/singer Richard Wright.[4][5] It was the fourth single released by the group and the first to feature new guitarist David Gilmour, following the departure of founding member Syd Barrett.

The song was left out of the 1971 collection Relics which collected other rare tracks from Pink Floyd singles. Its B-side, "Julia Dream", was written by the bass guitarist Roger Waters (who was gradually transitioning into his eventual role as the predominant songwriter and vocalist)[6] and was also re-released on The Early Singles.

Alleged alternate version

According to a newspaper story published in April 1968, there are two versions of the original single with slightly different lyrics.

UK Singles Chart.[citation needed
]

Reception

In The Dark Side of the Moon: The Making of the Pink Floyd Masterpiece, John Harris writes about the song:

"The first recorded work [Pink Floyd] released in the wake of Syd Barrett's exit was Richard Wright's almost unbearably whimsical 'It Would Be So Nice,' a single whose lightweight strain of pop-psychedelia—akin, perhaps, to the music of such faux-counterculturalists as the Hollies and the Monkees—rendered it a non-event that failed to trouble the British charts; as Roger Waters later recalled, 'No one ever heard it because it was such a lousy record.' Waters' own compositional efforts, however, were hardly more promising. 'Julia Dream', the single's B-side, crystallized much the same problem: though the band evidently wanted to maintain the Syd Barrett aesthetic, their attempts sounded hopelessly lightweight."[2]

Nick Mason was even more vocal than Waters in his dislike for the song:

Mason: "Fucking awful, that record, wasn't it? At that period we had no direction. We were being hustled about to make hit singles. There's so many people saying it's important you start to think it is important. It is possible on an LP to do exactly what we want to do. . . ."[7]

Roger Waters: "Live bookings seem to depend on whether or not you have a record in the Top Ten. I don't like 'It Would Be So Nice.' I don't like the song or the way it's sung."[7]

Mason: "We were a rock and roll band and if you're a rock and roll band and you've got a record that you want to be number one, you get it played and if they say 'take something out' or whatever - you do it. In fact what you do is exactly what was done - you make as much press out of it as possible. You ring up the Evening Standard and say: 'Did you know that the BBC won't play our record because it mentions your paper?'"[7][8]

Personnel

Other versions

Captain Sensible recorded the song for his second solo album, The Power of Love.

References

  1. ^ "Pink Floyd 1968 Timeline".
  2. ^ .
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  6. ^ Schaffner, Nicholas. Saucerful of Secrets: The Pink Floyd Odyssey, chapter 11 ("burning bridges"), p.129
  7. ^ .
  8. ^ "p8". Digilander.libero.it. Retrieved 2016-10-02.