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The Best of the Pink Floyd

The Best of the Pink Floyd
TheBestofthePinkFloyd.jpg
Greatest hits album by Pink Floyd
Released 1970
Recorded 1967–1968
Genre Psychedelic rock, space rock, experimental rock, avant-garde
Length 29:40
Language English
Label Columbia (EMI)
Producer Norman Smith and Joe Boyd
Pink Floyd chronology
Atom Heart Mother
(1970)Atom Heart Mother1970
The Best of the Pink Floyd / Masters of Rock
(1970)
Relics
(1971)Relics1971
Masters of Rock
First of two covers
First of two covers
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 2/5 stars

The Best of the Pink Floyd, also issued as Masters of Rock, is a compilation album of early Pink Floyd music, concentrating on singles and album tracks from 1967 to 1968.

Later editions titled Masters of Rock were released in 1974 in France, Germany,Italy, and the Netherlands, to capitalise on the success of The Dark Side of the Moon. It is one of the Masters of Rock series of budget EMI compilations with identical titles, each volume for a different artist. Two different sleeve designs were used: one (by Herman Baas) based on the picture from the centre of the album sleeve for Meddle, with Syd Barrett's face superimposed over the original photo of David Gilmour, who had not yet joined the band during most of the period covered by the album; and a later edition with the title filling the front cover. The latter edition is titled Masters of Rock, Volume 1; subsequent volumes of Masters of Rock featured other artists.

There are no song variations between the original Best of edition and the Masters of Rock LPs. Both The Best of edition and Masters of Rock are made from the same master tape and matrix (5C 054-04299) and were notable for containing the first stereo release of "Apples and Oranges" and "Paintbox", this latter also appearing a year later on Relics. However, The French edition of Masters of Rock, released in 1974, contains the stereo mix of "Julia Dream" as in Relics. These albums were also the only LP source of "It Would Be So Nice" prior to the era of CD re-issues and compilations. The version of "It Would Be So Nice" appearing on these albums is the single version, with lyrics mentioning "the Daily Standard" (no known version with "the Evening Standard" has ever been released).

Counterfeit editions with different track lists exist. Any edition with a track list that does not match the list shown here, is a counterfeit.


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