Roger Waters is a Massive Fan of David Gilmour’s Guitar Solos
Roger Waters is praising the guitar solos of former Pink Floyd bandmate David Gilmour after saying he was misquoted in a recent interview. The interview in question was with Stuart…

Roger Waters is praising the guitar solos of former Pink Floyd bandmate David Gilmour after saying he was misquoted in a recent interview.
The interview in question was with Stuart Maconie for The New Statesman and was published on February 15. In the interview, Waters touches on how he re-recorded Pink Floyd's landmark album The Dark Side of the Moon.
"There is a crappy article in 'The New Statesman,' written, if you can call it writing, by a chap called Stuart Maconie. It’s the usual, sh*t-stirring, ill-informed nonsense. However, there is, in the article, something upon which I need to set the record straight," begins Waters in a note via social media.
He continued, "When talking about a new recording I have made of DSOTM, he writes, with an unearned condescending authority, about the process of making this new recording, and I quote, 'Part of this will involve him removing, as quoted in Spain’s El Pais newspaper, Gilmour’s 'horrible guitar solos'.' Now, I don’t know who he thinks he’s quoting when he says Gilmour’s 'horrible guitar solos” but it sure as sh*t ain’t me."
Waters added, "I was there, I love Dave’s guitar solos on DSOTM, both of them, and on WYWH and on ANIMALS and on THE WALL and on THE FINAL CUT. In my, albeit biased view, Dave’s solos on those albums, constitute a collection of some of the very best guitar solos in the history of Rock and Roll."
He concluded, "So, Stuart Maconie, you little prick, next time, please check your copy with the subjects of your grubby little piece, before you go to print."
RELATED: Roger Waters on the 'Dark Side of the Moon'/'Wizard of Oz' Connection
Waters praising Gilmour certainly seems like an interesting development between the oft-feuding former bandmates. Earlier this month, Gilmour and his wife, Polly Samson publically called out Waters for comments he made in an interview with German newspaper Berliner Zeitung.
Waters, himself, shared the translated interview to his official website prefacing it with a personal message saying, in part, "Against the backdrop of the outrageous and despicable smear campaign by the Israeli Lobby to denounce me as an anti-semite, which I am not, never have been and never will be." He also alleges the "Israeli Lobby" tried to cancel his "85% sold out series of concerts in Germany."
Samson took to Twitter in response to Waters' interview. She wrote, "Sadly @rogerwaters you are antisemitic to your rotten core. Also a Putin apologist and a lying, thieving, hypocritical, tax-avoiding, lip-synching, misogynistic, sick-with-envy, megalomaniac. Enough of your nonsense."
Following Samson's tweet, Waters shared the following statement to social media: "Roger Waters is aware of the incendiary and wildly inaccurate comments made about him on Twitter by Polly Samson which he refutes entirely. He is currently taking advice as to his positions."
After Waters' response, Gilmour injected himself in this back-and-forth by retweeting his wife's comments and adding, "Every word demonstrably true."
962 weeks. That’s the amount of cumulative time Pink Floyd’s iconic album Dark Side of the Moon has spent on the Billboard 200 album chart (so far) since its release 48 years ago.
(Fun fact: The next longest run is Bob Marley and the Wailers' Legend, which only has netted 719 weeks thus far. How pathetic!)
Sarcasm aside, that type of staying power is incredibly rare, and it’s unlikely we’ll see anything else quite like it in music. However, there are other mind-blowing streaks throughout history. Here are just five of them.
Longest Concert Tour By A Rock Band: Thirty Seconds To Mars (309 show dates)

U2? Guns N’ Roses? The Rolling Stones? Nope, the Jared Leto-fronted outfit tallied 309 shows during a single album cycle, and they have the endorsement of Guinness World Records to prove it.
Most Weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200: 'Thriller' (37 weeks)

Not a real shocker here considering the impact of this Michael Jackson album. The only other album to spend 30+ weeks at number one is Fleetwood Mac’s 'Rumours.'
World’s Longest-Serving Living Monarch: Queen Elizabeth II

Queen Elizabeth II’s reign began on February 6, 1952. She will turn 96 in April...and her poor son Prince Charles is still waiting for his time in the sun.
Longest-Running Game Show Host: Alex Trebek (37 Seasons)

Trebek began hosting 'Jeopardy!' in 1984. While he passed away in November 2020, he managed to host even while he was battling stage 4 pancreatic cancer.
Longest-Running Box Office Consecutive No.1 Streak: Titanic (15 weeks)

The epic movie’s run at number one seemingly went on…and on…and on until it was finally dethroned by 'Lost in Space' starring Gary Oldman, William Hurt and Matt LeBlanc.
Longest Concert Tour By A Rock Band: Thirty Seconds To Mars (309 show dates)

U2? Guns N’ Roses? The Rolling Stones? Nope, the Jared Leto-fronted outfit tallied 309 shows during a single album cycle, and they have the endorsement of Guinness World Records to prove it.
Most Weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200: 'Thriller' (37 weeks)

Not a real shocker here considering the impact of this Michael Jackson album. The only other album to spend 30+ weeks at number one is Fleetwood Mac’s 'Rumours.'
World’s Longest-Serving Living Monarch: Queen Elizabeth II

Queen Elizabeth II’s reign began on February 6, 1952. She will turn 96 in April...and her poor son Prince Charles is still waiting for his time in the sun.
Longest-Running Game Show Host: Alex Trebek (37 Seasons)

Trebek began hosting 'Jeopardy!' in 1984. While he passed away in November 2020, he managed to host even while he was battling stage 4 pancreatic cancer.
Longest-Running Box Office Consecutive No.1 Streak: Titanic (15 weeks)

The epic movie’s run at number one seemingly went on…and on…and on until it was finally dethroned by 'Lost in Space' starring Gary Oldman, William Hurt and Matt LeBlanc.