Syd Barrett, Pink Floyd Founding Member, Dies at Age 60
I don’t normally blog but there was a call in the Clearinghouse to write a blog about Syd Barrett and, being a music fan, I thought I would take a shot. Without sounding too much like a sermon on the dangers of drug use and how it could eventually lead to mental illness, I thought I would try and show that the problem that Syd Barrett and others in our world have encountered is that chemically enhancing the creative urge can sometimes take one over the edge to the point of no return.
For those of you too young to even know who Syd Barrett was, he was a founder of Pink Floyd in the mid- to late sixties. He came from a middle-class background in England; encouraged by his parents to take up music at an early age, he eventually gravitated to the guitar. Upon discovering LSD, Barrett found a new source of inspiration that would lead to his downfall, according to an obituary posted on the Telegraph Web site.
The first Pink Floyd album was composed almost entirely by Barrett. Two hit singles were culled from the first album and big things were in store for the band’s leader and group. However, by the summer of 1967, friends and associates of Barrett’s started to notice a change in him. The New York Times has reported that other members of Pink Floyd noted Barrett’s eccentric behavior even before he started to use drugs extensively; fueled by copious amounts of LSD, his behavior became even more erratic. His live performance could be marked by playing a single note the entire time or not showing up at all. By spring 1968, Barrett was no longer with Pink Floyd.
It is not known what type of mental illness Barrett had. What is known is that he experienced psychosis and retreated to his childhood home in Cambridgeshire, England, for the rest of his days. He refused almost all contact with the outside world.
Barrett is not the only rock casualty ever to develop a mental illness. Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys was lost for years in a fog of drugs. He has since made a comeback.
I guess the tough thing about this is to realize that recreational drugs can interfere in the mind’s functioning and that their use has the potential to lead to psychosis or some other form of mental illness.
It was never determined whether Barrett had schizophrenia or Asperger’s Syndrome, or some other form of mental illness brought on by drug use. What can be determined is that he never recovered.
According to Xan Brooks of the Guardian, Barrett’s self-imposed exile was not a result of his desire to create a myth or some complex comeback scheme. It was more likely because he was unable to function in any way that closely resembled the person he once was.
Sources: Guardian Unlimited
Mercury News Interactive
Telegraph UK
The New York Times
Posted by BobTurri
For those of you too young to even know who Syd Barrett was, he was a founder of Pink Floyd in the mid- to late sixties. He came from a middle-class background in England; encouraged by his parents to take up music at an early age, he eventually gravitated to the guitar. Upon discovering LSD, Barrett found a new source of inspiration that would lead to his downfall, according to an obituary posted on the Telegraph Web site.
The first Pink Floyd album was composed almost entirely by Barrett. Two hit singles were culled from the first album and big things were in store for the band’s leader and group. However, by the summer of 1967, friends and associates of Barrett’s started to notice a change in him. The New York Times has reported that other members of Pink Floyd noted Barrett’s eccentric behavior even before he started to use drugs extensively; fueled by copious amounts of LSD, his behavior became even more erratic. His live performance could be marked by playing a single note the entire time or not showing up at all. By spring 1968, Barrett was no longer with Pink Floyd.
It is not known what type of mental illness Barrett had. What is known is that he experienced psychosis and retreated to his childhood home in Cambridgeshire, England, for the rest of his days. He refused almost all contact with the outside world.
Barrett is not the only rock casualty ever to develop a mental illness. Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys was lost for years in a fog of drugs. He has since made a comeback.
I guess the tough thing about this is to realize that recreational drugs can interfere in the mind’s functioning and that their use has the potential to lead to psychosis or some other form of mental illness.
It was never determined whether Barrett had schizophrenia or Asperger’s Syndrome, or some other form of mental illness brought on by drug use. What can be determined is that he never recovered.
According to Xan Brooks of the Guardian, Barrett’s self-imposed exile was not a result of his desire to create a myth or some complex comeback scheme. It was more likely because he was unable to function in any way that closely resembled the person he once was.
Sources: Guardian Unlimited
Mercury News Interactive
Telegraph UK
The New York Times
Posted by BobTurri




1 Comments:
Syd Barrett apparently had Asperger's Syndrome rather than schizophrenia.
Shortly after Syd Barrett died, a leading international expert in Asperger's Syndrome and Autism informed a conference (I was there) that Syd had Asperger's Syndrome.
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home