Originally published in 1991, Crazy Diamond was one of the first serious attempts to document the life of Pink Floyd founder and cautionary tale Syd Barrett. Recently updated after Barrett’s death in 2006, it’s still the best Barrett biography I’ve read.
Its greatest strength is that it looks past the mythic and questionable tales of Barrett’s post-Pink Floyd life to create a revealing portrayal of the musician as a person, not a caricature of LSD abuse or the many other labels both fans and music journalists have applied to Barrett ever since he disappeared from the music scene in 1967.
The book takes a chronological approach to Barrett’s life, including how he first became interested in art and music at a young age, the founding of Pink Floyd and the band’s influence on the psychedelic scene. It also follows Barrett’s exit from the band and his two solo albums, and of course, his mental issues. These include his well documented behavioral “eccentricities,” and retreat from public view, as well as the possible factors that resulted in this retreat.
The book is nicely rounded out with the critical and commercial responses to Barrett’s only Pink Floyd album, The Piper At the Gates of Dawn, why Barrett continues to hold people’s interest despite a scant recording career, and how his decline is eerily similar to that of other artists.
In any book about Syd Barrett, there will inevitably be a focus on his mental decline. The authors do an admirable job of chronicling this without turning into hack armchair psychologists. What becomes clear is that starting around 1967, Barrett became increasingly withdrawn, and his behavior increasingly bizarre, with the initial and obvious culprit being his extreme regimen of acid intake. The authors also suggest other factors, with varying degrees of plausibility, including the singer’s sensitive personality, his fear of the fan worship he found himself subject to, and a never-diagnosed mental condition (possibly Asperger’s disease).








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