May 16, 2026
Category: General
This is the story behing the most successful albom from Pink Floyd, The Dark Side of The Moon (1973). More than 50 years old album, and it is still on the top of my playlist.
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Apr 27, 2026
Category: General
Release announcement of my iot services offering. syncs.id
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Jun 8, 2024
Category: General
David Gilmour has announced the release of his first new album in nine years. Entitled Luck and Strange, it will be released on September 6th through Sony Music.
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Lyrics:
When you're one of the few to land on your feet
What do you do to make ends meet?
Teach.
Make them mad, make them sad, make them add two and two.
Make them me, make them you, make them do what you want them to.
Make them laugh, make them cry, make them lie down and die.
"One of the Few" is a song by the English progressive rock band Pink Floyd. It was released as the third track on their twelfth studio album The Final Cut (1983). The song is 1 minute and 12 seconds long. It features a ticking clock in the background and a steady drumbeat. The melody features most of the D minor scale. The lyrics describe a war veteran's return from the battlefield (specifically a pilot from the Battle of Britain, commonly known as "The Few") to pursue teaching. The ticking clock continues to the next track, "The Hero's Return", which is sung from the veteran's perspective. This is one of the rejected songs from The Wall (1979), and its working title was "Teach".
The lyrics "Make 'em laugh, Make 'em cry" in the third and final verse of the song is reprised in the third verse of "Not Now John" which is the eleventh track on The Final Cut.
The title, "One of the Few", is a reference to Winston Churchill's speech before the House of Commons on 20 August 1940 in which he stated "Never was so much owed by so many to so few" in reference to the Royal Air Force's defence of Great Britain.
The song was also covered by the English rock band Anathema on their fourth studio album Alternative 4 (1998).
In a retrospective review for The Final Cut, Rachel Mann of The Quietus described "One of the Few" as "plaintive and consciously echoes Wilfred Owen's poem The Send Off, with its talk of siding sheds and the trains ready to take young men to their deaths."