Close Menu
Digpu News  Agency Feed
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Technology
    • USA
    • Business
    • Education
    • Startups and Entrepreneurs
    • Health
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Digpu News  Agency Feed
    Subscribe
    Friday, January 2
    • Home
    • Technology
    • USA
    • Business
    • Education
    • Startups and Entrepreneurs
    • Health
    Digpu News  Agency Feed
    Home»Entertainment»When rock music met ancient archeology: the enduring power of Pink Floyd Live at Pompeii
    Entertainment

    When rock music met ancient archeology: the enduring power of Pink Floyd Live at Pompeii

    DeskBy DeskAugust 5, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link

    The 1972 concert film Pink Floyd Live at Pompeii, back in cinemas this week, remains one of the most unique concert documentaries ever recorded by a rock band.

    The movie captured the band on the brink of international stardom, released seven months before their breakout album Dark Side of the Moon, which would go on to sell 50 million copies and spend 778 weeks on the Billboard charts.

    The film was the first time a rock concert took place in the ruins of an archaeological site. This intermingling of art and archaeology would change the way many thought of Pompeii.

    The amphitheatre of Pompeii

    The amphitheatre of Pompeii has quite a history as a venue for spectacles.

    Constructed around 70 BCE, it was one of the first permanent constructed amphitheatres in Italy, designed to hold up to 20,000 spectators.

    From graffiti and advertisements, we know it was used in antiquity for gladiatorial fights and displays and hunts of wild beasts and athletic contests.

    Famously we are told by Roman historian Tactius in 59 CE a deadly brawl occurred between Pompeiians and residents of the nearby town of Nuceria during games, resulting in a ten-year ban on gladiatorial contests at the venue. The amphitheatre was destroyed by the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 CE.

    There is a long tradition of authors, artists, filmmakers and designers taking inspiration from the site and its destruction. A 13-year-old Mozart’s visit to the Temple of Isis at the site inspired The Magic Flute in 1791.

    In the rock music era, Pompeii has inspired numerous artists, especially around themes of death and longing. Cities in Dust (1985) by Siouxsie and the Banshees was perhaps the most famous until Bastille’s 2013 hit Pompeii. In The Decemberists’ Cocoon (2002), the destruction of Pompeii acts as a metaphor for the guilt and loss in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks.

    Since 2016, the amphitheatre has hosted concerts – with audiences this time. Appropriately, one of the first was a performance by Pink Floyd’s guitarist David Gilmour. His show over two nights in July 2016 took place 45 years after first playing at the site.

    But how did Pink Floyd come to play at Pompeii in 1972?

    Rethinking rock concert movies

    It was the peak era of rock concert documentaries. Woodstock (1970) and The Rolling Stone’s Gimme Shelter (1970), and other documentaries of the era, placed the cameras in the audience, giving the cinema-goer the same perspective as the concert audience.

    As a concept, it was getting stale.

    Filmmaker Adrian Maben had been interested in combining art with Pink Floyd’s music. He initially pitched a film of the band’s music over montages of paintings by artists such as Rene Magritte. The band rejected the idea.

    Maben returned to them after a holiday in Naples, realising the ambience of Pompeii suited the band’s music. A performance without an audience provided the antithesis of the era’s concert films.

    The performance would become iconic, particularly the scenes of Roger Waters banging a large gong on the upper wall of the amphitheatre, and the cameras panning past the band’s black road case to reveal the band in the ancient arena.

    It was as far away from Woodstock as possible.

    The performance was filmed over six days in October 1971 in the ancient amphitheatre, with the band playing three songs in the ancient venue: Echoes, A Saucerful of Secrets, and One of These Days.

    Ancient history professor Ugo Carputi of the University of Naples, a Pink Floyd fan, had persuaded authorities to allow the band to film and to close the site for the duration of filming. Besides the film crew, the band’s road crew – and a few children who snuck in to watch – the venue was closed to the public.

    In addition to the performance, the four band members were filmed walking over the volcanic mud around Boscoreale, and their performances in the film both were interspersed with images of antiquities from Pompeii.

    The movie itself was fleshed out with studio performances in a Paris TV studio and rehearsals at Abbey Road Studios.

    Marrying art and music

    Famously the Pink Floyd film blends images of antiquities from the Naples Archaeological Museum with the band’s performances.

    Roman frescoes and mosaics are highlighted during particular songs. Profiles of bronze statues meld with the faces of band members, linking past and present.

    Later scenes have the band backdropped by images of frescoes from the famed Villa of the Mysteries and of the plaster casts of eruption victims.

    The band’s musical themes of death and mystery link with ancient imagery, and it would have been the first time many audience members had seen these masterpieces of Roman art.

    Pink Floyd Live at Pompeii marked a brave experiment in rock concert movies.

    Watching it more than 50 years later, it is a timepiece of early 70s rock and a remarkable document of a band on the brink of fame.

    Because of their progressive rock sound, sonic experimentation and philosophical lyrics, it was often said by Pink Floyd’s fans that they were “the first band in space”. They even eventually had a cassette of their music played in space.

    But many are not aware of their earlier roots in the dust of ancient Pompeii. The re-release of the film gives an opportunity to enjoy the site’s unlikely role in music history.

    Source: The Conversation – Australia / Digpu NewsTex

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
    Previous ArticleThese 3 climate misinformation campaigns are operating during the election run-up. Here’s how to spot them
    Next Article Is it too late to solve some of our most wicked problems? The Australia Institute won’t let us die wondering

    Related Posts

    Culture

    Leeds targets attacking reinforcements to stay in Premier League

    September 26, 2025
    Read more
    Asia

    WATCH: Emotional Fan Urges Haris Rauf ,’India Ko Chhodna Nahi Hai’

    September 26, 2025
    Read more
    Cricket

    Salman Ali Agha hails Pakistan as ‘Special Team’, Confident of beating India in Asia Cup 2025 final

    September 26, 2025
    Read more
    Culture

    American Black Film Festival Returns for Milestone 30th Anniversary

    September 26, 2025
    Read more
    Entertainment

    Ghana Hosts Fourth Afrobreak Championship Amid Breaking’s Olympic Recognition

    September 26, 2025
    Read more
    Business

    ESE Entertainment Asset Bombee Achieves Record Revenues

    September 26, 2025
    Read more
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
    • Home
    • About
    • Team
    • World
    • Buy now!

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.