(1985-2005) Early solo years
After his departure from
Pink Floyd, Waters embarked on a solo career producing three
concept albums and a movie soundtrack which did not garner impressive sales. His solo work has managed critical acclaim and even some comparison to previous work with Pink Floyd..
His first truly solo album,
1984's The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking, was a project about a man's dreams in a night. The list of musicians helping Waters during recording included legendary guitarist
Eric Clapton and jazz saxophonist
David Sanborn. Conceived around the same time as
The Wall, the concept was shown to the Pink Floyd members, but they preferred
The Wall over
The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking. The album had been demoed by Waters at the same time as The Wall, but the band had voted it too personal. Waters decided to shelve it until he could do it as a solo project. The album received mixed reviews, with
Kurt Loder describing
Pros And Cons Of Hitch Hiking in
Rolling Stone as a "strangely static, faintly hideous record," adding that "Waters sounds like the kind of guy who'd bring
Hershey bars and
nylons along on a first date." (Loder gave the album one star out of five, though user ratings have averaged four out of five). On the other end of the spectrum, Mike DeGagne of the
All Music Guide praised the album for its "ingenious symbolism and his brilliant use of stream of consciousness within a subconscious realm," rating it four out of five stars.
In 1986 Waters contributed songs to the soundtrack of the movie
When the Wind Blows. His backing band, featuring
Paul Carrack, was credited as "The Bleeding Hearts Band".
In 1987 Waters (still accompanied by the Bleeding Hearts Band, although not always credited as such) released another concept album,
Radio K.A.O.S., about a man named Billy who can hear radio waves in his head. Waters followed the release with a supporting tour, also in 1987. The sound system for the arena portion of the tour used numerous speakers which created a
surround sound effect. His album did not garner the impressive sales he had achieved in Pink Floyd. One possible reason was that he was now competing with a reformed Pink Floyd who were touring to support their latest release,
A Momentary Lapse of Reason. At the time Waters was quoted to have said "I'm competing against myself and losing."
After the
Berlin Wall came down in 1989, Waters staged
a gigantic charity concert of The Wall in Berlin on
July 21, 1990 to commemorate the end of the division between
East and
West Germany. The concert took place on
Potsdamer Platz (a location which was part of the former "no-man's land" of the Berlin Wall), featured many guest superstars:
The Band, Bryan Adams, Cyndi Lauper, Sinéad O'Connor, The Hooters, The Scorpions, Marianne Faithful, and
Joni Mitchell. It was one of the biggest concerts ever staged with an attendance of over 300,000 and watched live by over five million people worldwide.
1992's Amused to Death, about the corrupting, desensitising nature of
television, is perhaps Waters' most critically acclaimed solo recording, with music critics comparing it to later Pink Floyd work, such as
The Wall. The album had one hit which was "
What God Wants, Pt. 1" which hit #4 on Mainstream Rock charts.
Jeff Beck, another legendary guitarist, saw action on Waters' album as he played lead guitar. There was no tour in support of this record, Waters would later perform several songs from this record nearly eight years later on his
In the Flesh tours.
In 1999 Waters embarked on the
In the Flesh tour which saw him performing some of his most famous work, both solo and Pink Floyd material. The tour was a success in the US, and after Waters had booked mostly smaller venues (after the letdown in attendance from his 1987 tour), tickets sold so well that most of the concerts had to be upgraded to larger venues. With Gilmour's Pink Floyd retiring after 1994, and many Floyd albums selling at the pace of Beatles records, Waters was in great demand. The tour eventually stretched across the world. Tickets were at such high demand, that the tour had to be spanned over three years. Almost every show was sold out with some venues garnering more sales than Pink Floyd shows of early touring years. One concert (Filmed in Portland, Oregon) was released on CD and DVD, named
In the Flesh Live, after the tour. During this tour he played two new songs from his next solo album, "Flickering Flame" and "Each Small Candle", as the final encore to the show.
In 2002 Waters performed at a concert organised by the
Countryside Alliance . In June of 2002 Waters played the
Glastonbury Festival performing many classic Pink Floyd songs. This was the first time a special speaker system had been set up among the Glastonbury audience to enable sound effects to appear to be moving around amongst the crowd.
Miramax Films announced in mid-2004 that a production of
The Wall was to appear on
Broadway with Waters playing a prominent part in its production. Reports stated that the musical contained not only the original tracks from
The Wall, but also songs from
Dark Side of the Moon,
Wish You Were Here and other Pink Floyd albums, as well as new material.
On the night of
1 May 2004, the
overture for
Ça Ira was pre-premièred on occasion of the
Welcome Europe celebrations in the accession country of
Malta, performed over
Grand Harbour in
Valletta and illuminated by light artist
Gert Hof. The event was broadcast over all
EBU television stations.
In September 2004, Waters released two new tracks, "To Kill The Child" and "Leaving Beirut". These were released only on the Internet. Both of these tracks were inspired by the U.S./UK
2003 invasion of Iraq. Waters, who currently resides in the U.S., has said that the songs were written immediately after the start of the war, but he delayed releasing them until just before the 2004 Presidential election, hoping to derail
George W. Bush's re-election. The lyrics included "Oh George! Oh George! That
Texas education must have fucked you up when you were very small" (from "Leaving Beirut"). Although the songs' criticism was primarily aimed at the American government,
Tony Blair is also referenced: "
Not in my name, Tony, you great war leader". They were also released as a limited edition on CD in Japan.
After the
2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake and subsequent
tsunami disaster, Waters performed "
Wish You Were Here" with
Eric Clapton during a
benefit concert on the
American network
NBC.