Pink Floyd's studio discography from 1967 to 2014 spans 15 albums, evolving from Syd Barrett's whimsical psychedelia to the world-conquering progressive rock of the 1970s and the atmospheric finality of the 21st century [14, 30]. The Studio Albums (1967–2014)
Led by Syd Barrett, featuring whimsical yet experimental tracks like "Interstellar Overdrive". The Golden/Progressive Era (1971–1979): The band's creative peak, including masterpieces like The Dark Side of the Moon (which spent a record 996 weeks on the Billboard 200) and The Post-Waters Era (1987–2014): Pink Floyd - Discography -1967-2014-320Kbps-
This era was defined by whimsical, psychedelic pop and experimental sounds led by founding member Syd Barrett. The Piper at the Gates of Dawn (1967) The only album led by Barrett. Essential Tracks: Interstellar Overdrive Astronomy Domine A Saucerful of Secrets (1968) Transition album featuring both Barrett and David Gilmour. 🧪 The Experimental Era (1969–1972) Pink Floyd's studio discography from 1967 to 2014
Led by David Gilmour, moving toward more atmospheric and polished sounds in The Division Bell The Endless River Technical Review: 320Kbps Bitrate For most listeners, 320Kbps MP3 The Piper at the Gates of Dawn (1967)
Waters was wrong. David Gilmour and Nick Mason regrouped (with Wright returning as a session musician) to reclaim the Pink Floyd name. After a legal battle, they released A Momentary Lapse of Reason . While criticized for sounding like a Gilmour solo album, it featured the radio hit "Learning to Fly" and launched one of the highest-grossing tours in history.
Are we missing a specific tour bootleg or solo album? While the studio discography covers 1967 to 2014, the beauty of the 320Kbps format is that it handles the raw, loud, crowded dynamics of live shows (like Is There Anybody Out There?) just as well as the studio masters.
Pink Floyd's discography from 1967 to 2014 includes the following studio albums, live albums, and compilations, all encoded at a quality of 320Kbps: