Somewhere on a British road in the summer heat of 1967, Roger Waters pulled his Ford Zephyr over to the shoulder of the road and turned the volume all the way up.
He sat there alone for the entire record. His mouth was open. He wasn’t moving and was barely breathing.
“Just sitting there with my mouth hanging open,” he recalled years later, “going, ‘Wow, this is so complete and accomplished.'”
The album was Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band by The Beatles. And in that parked car, on that ordinary afternoon, the future of Pink Floyd was quietly being put into action.
What makes this story extraordinary is what was happening behind the scenes. When The Beatles – John, Paul, George and Ringo- were recording Sgt. Pepper’s at Abbey Road Studios in 1967, Pink Floyd were in the same building making their first album. Waters wasn’t just an ordinary fan hearing the record. He was an artist who was only feet away from it’s creation. A handful of years younger than The Beatles and exactly the right age to watch them change the world, Waters was one of the first people outside their inner circle to hear it, given a rare glimpse of the sessions while it was still being made.
Related: 1971 Beatles Feud: McCartney’s Lyric Pushed Lennon Too Far – Caught on Camera
He still couldn’t wait to get his hands on the finished thing.
When it arrived, he pulled over and listened to every second of it. That experience didn’t just move him at the moment. It changed the entire direction of his life.
The Permission That Changed Everything
What Waters heard that day wasn’t just a collection of brilliant songs by The Beatles. It was an argument for what music could be.
“It had a ton of ideas and a ton of narrative in it,” he said. “I feel more than any other record it was the record that gave me and my generation permission to branch out and do whatever we want.” Permission granted.
That word, permission, carries a lot of weight. Before Sgt. Pepper’s, the music industry had rules. Songs followed set formats. Albums were collections of singles. Experimentation was a risk few were willing to take. Why mess with what wasn’t broken?
The Beatles blew all of that apart.
“If they can do it, we can do it,” Waters said. “We don’t need Tin Pan Alley anymore and we can write our own stuff. It changed everything.”
Tin Pan Alley was the commercial songwriting machine that had controlled popular music for decades. Waters was done with all of that.
For Waters, an album was no longer just a product. It was a voice – a statement. It needed a narrative weaved throughout. It needed a reason to exist from beginning to end; a story worth telling. When Waters later described what made The Dark Side of the Moon and The Wall different from anything else in rock, the answer came back to the same thing Sgt. Pepper’s had taught him: an album needed to tell a story, not just songs.
Pink Floyd would go on to fill the void that The Beatles had left behind. Their records were unrecognizable in sound but identical in spirit: brave, ambitious and completely unwilling to do what was expected of them. The student had surpassed the teacher by absorbing everything the teacher had to offer.
The Beatles gave rock music a new set of expanded possibilities in 1967. Roger Waters pulled over to listen and take it all in. And then, he spent the next five decades proving he’d been paying close attention.
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