Free Four

August 15, 2008 6:25 pm

Free Four” is a Pink Floyd song written by Roger Waters, with Waters also taking on lead vocals, from the album Obscured by Clouds. The song begins with a rock and roll countdown; but in this case Pink Floyd decided to play with words and record, “One, Two, FREE FOUR!”. The song deals with themes that would become standard for Roger in albums following this, notably his father’s death and the “evils” of the record industry. Although the song is mellow during the lyrical portions, the guitar solo surprisingly launches into a heavier tone, with a progression that is reminiscent of the instrumental “One of These Days”, capturing the classic Pink Floyd guitar sound. “Free Four” was released as a single in 1972 and managed to break into FM radio’s top 50 list.

The song is referenced at the end of Not Now John off the album The Final Cut, which is too, about Eric Fletcher Waters. At the end of the song Waters yells One, Two, FREE FOUR!


Personnel

  • Roger Waters - Bass, Vocals and Hand clapping
  • David Gilmour - Guitar
  • Richard Wright - Synthesiser
  • Nick Mason - Drums and Percussion
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Commercial refile

August 15, 2008 4:50 pm

Commercial refile: In military communications systems, the processing of a message from (a) a given military network, such as a tape relay network, a point-to-point telegraph network, a radio-telegraph network, or the DSN to (b) a commercial communications network.

Commercial refiling of a message will usually require a reformatting of the message, particularly the heading.

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