angrysoba
Philosophile
Imagine you're sitting around listening to a brand new Pink Floyd album "somewhere in Georgia", November, 1969, and tripping like a big dog with some friends. "Several Species" come up and everybody just loses it. The upshot was a large and serious battle over the difference between a Celt and a Pict. Luckily nobody had their **** together will enough to do any damage, and all the firearms were safely locked away before we started partying.
And, in reference to the work itself:
"It's not actually anything, it's a bit of concrete poetry. Those were sounds that I made, the voice and the hand slapping were all human generated - no musical instruments."
—Roger Waters , University of Regina Carillon Interview, October 1970
Well, there you go. To me that's pretty interesting. I could agree if they were to say that they were trying to expand the scope of music, and probably your friends who lost it might agree.
Now, other people might disagree with this, but I think that Radiohead are a good example of a band who have tried to further the spirit (if not the sound) of Pink Floyd.
However, the track that my wife declared to be "not music" was this: