

On the rear cover, roadies Alan Stiles and Peter Watts are shown with the band's equipment laid out on a runway at Biggin Hill Airport a concept proposed by Nick Mason. On the Australian edition, the Gigi cover is completely airbrushed, not even leaving a white square behind. On most copies of American and Canadian editions, the Gigi cover is airbrushed to a plain white sleeve, apparently because of copyright concerns however the earliest American copies do show the Gigi cover, and it was restored for the U.S. At a talk given at Borders bookstore in Cambridge on 1 November 2008 as part of the "City Wakes" project, Storm Thorgerson explained that the album was introduced as a red herring to provoke debate, and that it has no intended meaning. The British version has the album Gigi leaning against the wall immediately above the "Pink Floyd" letters. The cover of the original LP varies between the British, American/Canadian, and Australian releases. After 4 variations of the scene, the final picture within picture is the cover of the previous Pink Floyd album, A Saucerful of Secrets. The picture on the wall also includes the picture on the wall, creating a recursion effect, with each recursion showing band members exchanging positions. The cover shows the members of the band, with a picture hanging on the wall showing the same scene, except the band members have switched positions. A digitally re-mastered version was released in 1994 in the UK and 1995 in the US. In 1987, the album was re-released on a two CD set. in February 1974 and Platinum in March 1994. The album reached #5 on the UK album charts and #74 on the US album charts, marking the first time the band reached the top 100 in the U.S. The album was released in the UK on 25 October 1969 and then in the U.S. (It would have been one of only two songs on the record to include Syd Barrett as a writer.) Other sources have claimed that the song was dropped because of a conflict over the music publishing rights. The track was dropped at the last minute, some say to maintain the sound fidelity of the record, but numerous test pressings with the original track list were given to friends of the band, including John Peel. The band had also recorded a live version of "Interstellar Overdrive" (from The Piper at the Gates of Dawn), intended for placement on side one of the live album. The first disc of Ummagumma was recorded live at Mothers Club, Birmingham, on 27 April 1969 and the following week at Manchester College of Commerce, on the second disc included four solo segments, one half-side of vinyl each by, in order: Richard Wright, Roger Waters, David Gilmour, and Nick Mason. In footage of the band rehearsing for a Royal Albert Hall appearance in 1969, one of the band members can be heard, off camera, quietly chanting the word "ummagumma". However, some band members have since stated that the word was "totally made up and means nothing at all". The album's title supposedly comes from a Cambridge slang word for sexual intercourse, commonly used by one of Pink Floyd's friends and occasional roadie, Iain "Imo" Moore who would joke 'Am I gunna' have sex tonight?!. The first disc is a live album of their normal setlist of the time, while the second one contains individual compositions by each member of the band. Ummagumma is a progressive rock double album by Pink Floyd, released in 1969. "The Grand Vizier's Garden Party" (Mason) 8:44 "Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict" (Waters) 4:59ĥ. "A Saucerful of Secrets" (Gilmour/Waters/Mason/Wright) 12:48ġ. "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun" (Waters) 9:15Ĥ. "Careful with That Axe, Eugene" (Roger Waters, Rick Wright, David Gilmour, Nick Mason) 8:50ģ.
