When The Tigers Broke Free, 2 - Pink Floyd - The Wall - 4K Remastered

3 years ago
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"When the Tigers Broke Free" is a Pink Floyd song by Roger Waters, describing the death of his father, Eric Fletcher Waters, in the Battle of Anzio during the Italian Campaign of the Second World War.

The song was originally titled "Anzio, 1944". Its working title was "When the Tigers Break Through" and was written at the same time as The Wall, hence its copyright date of 1979, and was originally intended to be part of that album, but was rejected by the other members of the band on the grounds that it was too personal. It was subsequently recorded and included in the movie version of The Wall and first released as a separate track on a 7" single on 26 July 1982 (running time 3:00), before appearing in The Wall film.

The second verse of the song (which makes up the reprise later in The Wall film), describes how Waters found a letter of condolence from the British government, described as a note from George VI in the form of a gold leaf scroll which "His Majesty signed / with his own rubber stamp." Waters' resentment then explodes in the final line "And that's how the High Command took my daddy from me."

In the second verse (after "Another Brick in the Wall Part 1"), it shows Pink finding his father's uniform, the letter of condolence, straight razor, and bullets. He then puts on the uniform, where it cuts between his father doing the same.

Input: 720x480 29.97fps (source: DVD)
Output: 3840x2160 59.94fps

The Wall full movie playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLyGHs2yXwu1SWIXC6TLHT4a-2rdr9Un0f

All rights reserved to Pink Floyd and Roger Waters. No copyright infringement intended.

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