Full, standalone ‘A Momentary Lapse of Reason’ reissue due out next month

Pink Floyd will break out the streamlined remix of their 1987 album, A Momentary Lapse of Reason, that recently appeared on their box set, The Later Years, as its own release this fall. For the release, frontman David Gilmour and engineer Andy Jackson reconfigured the album from scratch, with help from Damon Iddins, getting rid of a lot of Eighties signposts (like ultrareverberated drums) and boosting the contributions of late Floyd keyboardist Rick Wright. It also features newly recorded drum parts by the band’s Nick Mason. The album is home to the singles “Learning to Fly,” “On the Turning Away,” and “One Slip.”

A new video for “Learning to Fly,” which was a Number One Mainstream Rock Song upon its release, showcases how they rebuilt the song into something more intimate than the original recording. The release, now called A Momentary Lapse of Reason: Remixed & Updated, will come out next month.

The physical release, out October 29th, will be available on vinyl, CD, and CD combo sets with either a DVD or a Blu-ray featuring stereo and 5.1 mixes. The LP edition will be a double-disc release cut on 45 rpm vinyl for enhanced sound. A digital version will also be available on October 19th in Sony’s new format, 360 Reality Audio, which is meant to emulate a live performance using 360-degree spatial sound, and in UHD and Dolby Audio. The band intends to present all of its albums in these formats. The “Learning to Fly” video simulates the 360 Reality Audio for anyone listening with headphones.

“Some years after we had recorded the album, we came to the conclusion that we should update it to make it more timeless, featuring more of the traditional instruments that we liked and that we were more used to playing,” Gilmour said in a statement. “This was something we thought it would benefit from. We also looked for and found some previously unused keyboard parts of Rick’s which helped us to come up with a new vibe, a new feeling for the album.”

“I think there is an element of taking the album back in time and taking the opportunity to create a slightly more open sound — utilizing some of the things we had learned from playing so much of the album live over two massive tours,” Mason said. “I enjoyed re-recording drum tracks with unlimited studio time. Momentary Lapse had been recorded under considerable stress and time constraints, and indeed some of the final mixing was done at the same time as rehearsals for the forthcoming tour. It was also nice to have an opportunity to enhance some of Rick’s work. Again, that positive tidal wave of technology just might have provided too many digital opportunities to overwhelm the band feel. Hopefully that’s one of the benefits of this remix!”

In addition to remixed audio, the release also features remixed artwork. Aubrey “Po” Powell of the design firm Hipgnosis, whose Storm Thogerson masterminded many of Pink Floyd’s iconic album covers, dug up an unused picture from the cover shoot for the project. “I was looking to update the iconic 500-beds picture my partner in Hipgnosis, Storm Thorgerson, had designed,” Powell said. “On looking through the archives I discovered a version where the sea was encroaching on the set, just before Storm shut down the shot worried he would lose all the beds. I also wanted to make something more of the microlight. There were no shots of the plane in close up, so I hunted one down that was similar but white, and had Peter Curzon retouch the fuselage with the right coloring — red —  then strip the microlight into the picture in an upfront position. David Gilmour and Nick Mason gave their approval and, voila, a fresh approach to an original favorite.”

The Blu-ray and DVD releases feature two videos for “Learning to Fly,” as well as footage from the album cover shoot. They also contain the concert screen films for “Signs of Life,” “Learning to Fly,” and “Dogs of War,” as well as an interview with Gilmour and Thorgerson and live audio from an Atlanta concert in 1987 of “The Dogs of War,” “On the Turning Away,” and “Run Like Hell.”

In a 2019 review, Rolling Stone praised the new mix. “The new Momentary Lapse doesn’t drown in Eighties reverb the way the original did (if anything, the music now sounds more tasteful with more real drumming by Nick Mason and restored Rick Wright analog synth lines) but the songs themselves aren’t any different,” the review said. “The album’s closing cut, ‘Sorrow,’ now sounds more minimal — more like how Gilmour has been doing it live in recent years — and it aches more.”

Just like he did on The Death of Slim Shady, Eminem is once again serving his STANS a wave of nostalgia with “Everybody’s Looking at Me.” The track is one of twelve featured on the official soundtrack that accompanies his documentary, which explores how his music has shaped and influenced his devoted fan base. Beyond that, it also reflects on the Detroit icon’s early breakthrough and rise to fame.

The film’s theatrical run may have wrapped up, but today Eminem officially released the soundtrack that goes along with it. The project is a blend of his classic hits alongside unreleased material. Familiar favorites like “Rap God” and “Just Don’t Give a F*ck” appear, while deeper unreleased cuts add something fresh for longtime listeners.

“Everybody’s Looking at Me” falls into the latter category. Rather than being a forgotten song left on the cutting room floor, Eminem built it from a freestyle with the same title that Funk Flex first premiered back in 2002. The original version featured Proof, though in this updated release, his part is absent, and Slim Shady comes through with two brand new verses.

The first verse remains intact from the freestyle, but what makes it even more interesting is the fact that a brief snippet of the track can be heard for just a moment on “The Kiss (Skit)” from The Eminem Show.

On “Everybody’s Looking at Me,” Eminem sounds like his old self at the top of his game. The song combines his signature dark comedy, sharp commentary on the music industry's flaws, and layers of clever wordplay.

To add to the nostalgia, the beat crafted by Dr. Dre instantly takes listeners back to the chemistry that has defined so much of their past work together. In the end, it is impressive to see Eminem rework this freestyle into a whole track that still feels high-quality and true to his legacy.

You can stream it below.

Eminem "Everybody's Looking At Me"

Quotable Lyrics:

Type who might throw his underwear in the trash and wipe his a*s with the American flag like Marilyn Manson (Ha-ha)
Updated Axl Rose
White vеrsion of Shaft, pimp slappin' h*es
Pull up like a Mac, jet black limos
Strеtch so far back, can't see the back windows

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