On this day 13th July 1967, Pink Floyd made their second appearance on BBC Top Of The Pops to promote their new single, the Syd Barrett penned, ‘See Emily Play’. The single went on to peak at No.6 on the UK chart.
Much mystery and myth surrounds Barrett. Depending on which tale you believe, Barrett either acquired the nickname “Syd” as a reference to an local Cambridge jazz musician, Sid ‘The Beat’ Barrett, or at Scout camp, after wearing a flat cap instead of his Scout beret – the other referring to him as “Syd”, allegedly the kind of name that would go with a working man’s cap.
Barrett’s lifelong passion was painting, although he took up the guitar at a young age, inspired by blues and r&b singers including Bo Diddley. In Cambridge he was friendly with future Pink Floyd members Roger Waters and David Gilmour, so when he attended Art College in London in 1964, he sought out Waters, who had formed a band with fellow students Nick Mason and Richard Wright.
Syd joined The Tea Set in 1965 and in time assumed front man duties on guitar and lead vocals. It was Syd who renamed the band ‘The Pink Floyd Sound’, juxtaposing the names of American Blues artists Pink Anderson and Floyd Council.
In short order, Syd established himself as an adventurous and imaginative songwriter, creating swathes of free-form sound with his Fender Esquire guitar and penning some of the most idiosyncratic, yet quintessentially English, songs ever written.
Now just ‘Pink Floyd’, they helped launched the UFO Club, birthplace of the UK underground. UFO founder Joe Boyd recorded a session for a Syd song, Arnold Layne, in January 1967 at Sound Techniques studio, which became their debut single when EMI signed them. It hit No. 20 in March, and Floyd were on their way. Debut album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, (of which Barrett wrote eight and co-wrote another two of the songs), was created next door to The Beatles, who were recording ‘Sgt Pepper’s….’ at the time.
Then it all started to go wrong. Although another Syd song ‘See Emily Play’ gave Floyd their biggest hit (until 1979), throughout 1967 Syd’s became increasingly erratic and unpredictable. It may just have been that Syd wasn’t temperamentally suited to the often repetitive behaviour required of a pop band, but on several occasions he proved unable, or unwilling, to perform. Around Christmas that year, David Gilmour, with whom Syd used to practice guitar licks at Cambridge College of Technology, was asked to join the band as a second guitarist to cover for Syd. The arrangement didn’t work, and soon there was a parting of the ways.
After leaving Pink Floyd, Syd embarked on a brief solo career, releasing two albums, The Madcap Laughs and Barrett, both of which enjoyed production and musical contributions from his former band members. Although well-received, the albums were not big sellers at the time, and Barrett gradually withdrew from the music industry.
When Roger ‘Syd’ Barrett died in 2006, his influence was as strong as ever, making it acceptable to sing in an English voice and helping to develop an indigenous kind of rock, less influenced by Americana. Syd’s songs are continually cited as seminal influences on modern musicians, his anarchic brilliance still much appreciated and revered.