Shine On (Pink Floyd box set) explained

Shine On
Type:box
Artist:Pink Floyd
Cover:Shineoncover-300.jpg
Released:2 November 1992[1]
Recorded:1967–1987
Genre:
Length:380:15
Language:English
Label:EMI
Producer:
Prev Title:Delicate Sound of Thunder
Prev Year:1988
Next Title:The Division Bell
Next Year:1994

Shine On is a nine-CD box set by English rock band Pink Floyd, released in 1992 through EMI Records in the United Kingdom and Columbia Records in the United States, to coincide with Pink Floyd's 25th anniversary as a recording and touring band. All CDs were digitally remastered.

Content

The eight albums included in this box set are:

The packaging on each of the previously released albums was unique to this set, with each CD housed in a solid black jewel case with a small sticker of the album cover affixed to the front. When lined up in order of release, the spines of the eight CD cases displayed the prism image from the cover of The Dark Side of the Moon.

Included with the box set was a hardcover book chronicling the career of Pink Floyd, from its inception to the late 1980s, and an envelope of postcards depicting artwork from the included seven albums and the cover of the box set itself.

As the collection was meant to showcase the best of Pink Floyd, the decision was made to not include the soundtrack albums More or Obscured by Clouds, or the albums Ummagumma, Atom Heart Mother and The Final Cut. The band's first album, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, was also omitted, as EMI were planning to release a special edition of the album at the time, and it was hoped that new fans would buy both this set and the re-released debut album.

David Gilmour said the title of the Shine On box set (taken from the Wish You Were Here track "Shine On You Crazy Diamond") was not meant to indicate retirement on the band's part but rather a continuation of the band's progress. According to drummer Nick Mason, an initial suggestion for the title of the set was The Big Bong Theory.[2]

The Early Singles

Shine On contained a bonus CD which compiled, for the first time ever, the band's first five 7" single A- and B-sides, in their original mono mixes.[3] Some promotional copies of the disc were also issued separately to radio stations. Unlike the other discs in the box set, The Early Singles was housed in a digipak case.[4]

Original release dates

Personnel

Production

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pink Floyd official site.
  2. U.S. radio show Rockline, 1992
  3. Web site: Pink Floyd - the Early Singles. Discogs. 1992 .
  4. Web site: Pink Floyd – the Early Singles (1992, CD). Discogs. 1992 .
  5. Web site: Pink Floyd official site.