Looking back on Rick Wrightโs contribution to Pink Floyd, Nick Mason considers, โWhere he really is unique, is this thing in him of being able to come up with ideas and just work them into whatever else is going on at any given moment.โ
Manzanera, meanwhile, describes Wright as โa hippy musician, in it for the musicโ and that he โprovided a very broad musical context for David to play his guitar into and, earlier, for Syd to put his songs into. He held his line right through the career and provided sonority. You take that out of the equation, and it doesnโt sound like Pink Floyd.โ
Youth, for his part, cites โOne Of These Daysโ as emblematic of Wrightโs considerable talents. โHis Farfisa, his organ playingโฆ I canโt think of anyone Iโd rather listen to on an organ that him. โThe Great Gig In The Skyโ is up there with Beethoven and Bach. Itโs a stunning piece of music. Wish You Were Here is probably my favourite album, and itโs mainly Rick. The long keyboard sections, his Moog lead lines. Listening to them now, they remind me of the more German, Tangerine Dream-style ambient passages, but he managed to imbue then with a very English, pastoral sensibility. Thereโs something very melancholic and whimsical at the same time. Itโs beautiful music. Heโs always had a massive part to play with me for Floyd.โ

Writing in Inside Out, Mason noted, โRick perhaps never received the credit โ both inside and outside the band โ that he deserved for his talents, but the distinctive, floating textures and colours he brought into the mix were absolutely critical to what people recognise as the sound of Pink Floyd. Musically he knitted us all together.โ
Evidently, then, it was essential that The Endless River deliver not only a Pink Floyd album strong enough to stand alongside its many illustrious predecessors; but also one that provided a substantial showcase for Wrightโs craftsmanship. Sitting in his smart north London studio, Phil Manzanera described his own first-hand experiences with Wright. โHe was very astute and could speak very well. Though he didnโt seem to have done tons of interviews, when he did, he nailed it. He could verbalise a lot of what the music was about.โ
Close by Manzanera sits his cherished Gibson Firebird VII, a strap wound round it with Manzaneraโs nickname, โEl Magnificoโ, picked out in metal studs. On the wall, above a compact black mixing desk built into a wooden frame, hangs a large burgundy carpet. This is where, among many other projects, work was partly done on the unreleased Roxy Music album from 2005, and where his old friend Robert Wyatt is soon due to record some new music. Sipping a herbal tea, Manzanera considers an invitation he received in August 2012 from David Gilmour. โHe just said, โThereโs this stuff. Do you fancy having a listen to it, to see if thereโs anything there?โ So I went down to Astoria. Andy Jackson was there and Damon Iddins, who also works for the studio. I said, โRight, Iโve come to listen to the stuff.โ That was when I heard that Andy had put together a thing called โThe Big Spliffโ, which rather annoyingly I said, โI donโt wanna hear. I wanna hear every single piece or scrap that was recorded, everything. Outtakes from Division Bell. Everything.โ So we commenced on a 20-hour epic listening sessions over six weeks. That was when I learned they thought of having a double-album for The Division Bell. One was going to be the instrumentals, a bit like Ummagumma. Or, as Nick calls it, โOommagooma.โ I was like, โOommagooma? Who calls it that?โโ
โPhil was heavily involved in On An Island,โ says Andy Jackson. โDavid had a huge amount of potential material, and Phil was really good at keeping track of everything. Heโd have lists and say, โRemember that bit there, that could go really well as a middle-eight in thisโฆโ He was really helpful to David in that way and it was an obvious thing for David to say, โDo you want to do that process again?โโ
โTheyโve got a very good archiving system,โ Manzanera continues. โSo you can even find footage from them doing those original jams at Britannia Row. Theyโre not pretty โ itโs like CCTV footage. But you have got footage, and footage of them on the boat, too. The material was all on different formats. They were on DAT, some were on stereo DAT, some bits were on 24-track, and some bits were on half-inch tape. Every time I heard something I liked, I wrote it down. I had pages and pages. When theyโre looking through the tapes, thereโs time to think. โOK, what the fuck am I going to do? Iโve got 20 hours of stuff. How am I going to organise this?โโ
โPhil logged everything, recorded everything,โ continues Jackson. โHe thought about it and jigsaw puzzled and came up with the concept: โLetโs think of it like a symphony, letโs make four pieces that are 10, 12 minutes long that are thematic and it flows like a classical piece would.โ We made a mash-up at that point. The vast bulk of it was from these stereo DAT tapes. It was a skeleton at this point. Itโs like Masterchef. โWe can do this, hereโs a dish.โโ
โThis isnโt whatโs on the album now,โ Manzanera stresses, โbut I needed a narrative. I visualised a scenario with a tone that was a product of the cosmic bang. Letโs have it so only people in a certain frequency can hear the tone. Eventually it arrives at the tunnel entrance to Astoria, under the road. The door clanks, and you can hear them walking on the gravel towards the boat, the three of them, our heroes, they come onto Astoria and start jamming. Thatโs the first section. The second section, the boat takes off and weโre in outer space. They arrive on a planet that is all acoustic. Then thereโs this end bit, where it goes back. So I had this narrative and I started putting all the things together. I would take a guitar solo from another track, change the key of it, stick it on an outtake from another trackโฆ โOh, that bit there, it reminds me of Live At Pompeii, but letโs put a beat underneath it.โ So then Iโd take a bit of Nick warming up in the studio at Olympia, say, take a bit of a fill here and a bit of a fill there. Join it together, make a loop out of it. My brief was to use what was there.โ
Two months later, in December 2012, Manzanera presented his workings to Gilmour onboard Astoria. โI think he thought, โThis guyโs mad,โโ laughs Manzanera. โHe said, โCan you play it to Nick?โ So I got him here, played it to him. He could see the potential in it, but he was slightly worried. Itโs a lot more extreme than how it ended up. But they saw there was enough stuff there to make something good. It ticked all the Pink Floyd boxes. A year passed of them wondering what to do with it, and towards the end of that year, David sent two parts of what I did to Youthโฆโ
โDavid had started writing his own album and he didnโt want to get torn away from it,โ Jackson explains. โHe ends up being quite busy all the time, not least of all living in two different houses. He lives in one in the week and another in the weekend. Itโs like moving court. Children, nannies and dogs. So the logistics of everyday life becomeโฆโ he pauses. โAnd the social lifeโฆ Tuesdays and Thursdays, go to the gym and itโs like the weekโs gone. So it sat on the back-burner for a while. Iโm not sure he knew what to do with it or where to react to it.โ