The List

4 Times Roger Waters Proved He Was a Lyrical Genius

Roger Watersโ€™ incredible contributions to Pink Floyd just canโ€™t be ignored. A fantastic creative director and musician, Waters provided the lyrical and songwriting power behind so much of their works, particularly in the concept album The Dark Side Of The Moon. Letโ€™s look at a few other times Roger Waters proved he is a lyrical genius!

1. โ€œHave A Cigarโ€

On โ€œHave A Cigarโ€ from the 1975 album Wish You Were Here, Waters wasnโ€™t afraid to throw some punches at the music industry. 

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Specifically, the lyrics โ€œYou gotta get an album out / You owe it to the people / Weโ€™re so happy we can hardly countโ€ is a pretty brash criticism of the pressure the band was put under to release a commercial successful follow-up to The Dark Side Of The Moon. And the song as a whole still manages to be quite beautiful, shade and all.

2. โ€œMoneyโ€

Roger Waters is a lyrical genius for a few reasons, one of which being his ability to quite poetically critique the human condition and, well, capitalism. So much of The Dark Side Of The Moon was about human motivations, which led Rogers to think about how money often gets in the way of connection between human beings. 

He explores this concept in โ€œMoneyโ€ without taking himself out of the equation. After all, as a rich rock star, he fell for the same thing in Pink Floyd.

3. โ€œUs And Themโ€

Like โ€œMoneyโ€, โ€œUs And Themโ€ is a pretty intense confrontation of how modern humanity has failed itself, namely through loss of genuine love and connection. 

Waters is at his most poetic on this track as he explores how being human doesnโ€™t really involve oneโ€™s humanity anymore. The balance between scathing critiques and begging for empathy is beautifully done on this song.

4. โ€œDogsโ€

As we mentioned above, Roger Waters is a lyrical genius in the way he explores empathy and human connection. However, no true artist is stationary in their themes or temperment. 

In โ€œDogsโ€, Waters flips his own script and gets quite agro about the villains of the time. โ€œDeaf, dumb and blind, you just keep on pretending / That everyoneโ€™s expendable and no one has a real friendโ€ is like a punch to the gut.

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