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Pink.Floyd.P.U.L.S.E.Live.At.Earls.Court.1994.1...

Pink.floyd.p.u.l.s.e.live.at.earls.court.1994.1... Link

: The show utilized a huge circular screen (Mr. Screen), a choreographed laser light show, and a massive 16-foot diameter mirror ball that opened during "Comfortably Numb" to reveal a 12-kilowatt lamp.

: The band achieved "CD-quality" audio in stadium environments through advanced quadraphonic sound systems. Media Releases The 1994 Earls Court footage has seen several iterations: Pink.Floyd.P.U.L.S.E.Live.At.Earls.Court.1994.1...

: The set used three massive stage sets that leapfrogged across the continent, requiring over 50 trucks and a crew of 161. : The show utilized a huge circular screen (Mr

: Released on VHS and Laserdisc, featuring a flashing LED on the initial CD packaging to mimic a pulse. DVD (2006) : Included bonus features and improved audio. Media Releases The 1994 Earls Court footage has

The Pink Floyd performance at on October 20, 1994, serves as the definitive visual and audio documentation of the band's final world tour, The Division Bell Tour . Released as the concert film and live album P.U.L.S.E (stylized as P•U•L•S•E ), it is widely regarded for its massive production scale and for being the first time the band performed their 1973 masterpiece, The Dark Side of the Moon , in its entirety since the mid-1970s. Performance Overview

According to technical archives at TheatreCrafts.com , the production was one of the most ambitious in rock history.

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