Roger Waters

Summary Roger Waters

George Roger Waters is an English songwriter, singer, bassist, and composer. In 1965, he co-founded the progressive rock band Pink Floyd. He left the band in 1985 and began a legal dispute over the use of the band’s name and material. In 1990, Waters staged one of the largest rock concerts in history, The Wall – Live in Berlin. He has toured extensively as a solo act since 1999. Waters was inducted into the US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996.

About Roger Waters in brief

Summary Roger WatersGeorge Roger Waters is an English songwriter, singer, bassist, and composer. In 1965, he co-founded the progressive rock band Pink Floyd. He left the band in 1985 and began a legal dispute over the use of the band’s name and material. In 1990, Waters staged one of the largest rock concerts in history, The Wall – Live in Berlin, with an attendance of 450,000. He has toured extensively as a solo act since 1999. Waters was inducted into the US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996. He was made an honorary citizen of Anzio, Italy, on 18 February 2014, and unveiled a monument to his father and other war casualties in Aprilia. In 2005, he released Ça Ira, an opera translated from Étienne and Nadine Roda-Gils’ libretto about the French Revolution. Waters’ father was a coal miner and Labour Party activist. His mother was a schoolteacher, a devout Christian, and a Communist Party member. Waters attended Morley Memorial Junior School in Cambridge and then the Cambridgeshire High School for Boys. He met future Pink Floyd founder members Nick Mason and Richard Wright in London at the Regent Street Polytechnic school of architecture. He had initially considered mechanical engineering and moved into a flat owned by Mike Leonard. In September 1963, Waters moved into the lower flat of Stanhope Gardens, a lower flat in London owned by Leonard, and became a part-time tutor at the school. In the early years of the Second World War, Waters was a conscientious objector who drove an ambulance during the Blitz.

He later changed his stance on pacifism, joined the Territorial Army and was commissioned into the 8th Battalion, Royal Fusiliers as a Second Lieutenant on 11 September 1943. His father was killed five months later at Aprilia, during the Battle of AnZio, when Roger was five months old. He is commemorated at the Aprilia and at the Cassino War Cemetery. At 15, he was chairman of the Cambridge Youth Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, having designed its publicity poster and participated in its organisation. He also played in a band formed by Keith Noble and Clive Metcalfe called Sigma 6, but also used the name Meggade. In early years, Waters, Mason and David Gilmour performed together during private functions and performed with his sister Sheilagh. He played guitar, bass, rhythm guitar and drums, and played any keyboard he could arrange and arrange to use for functions and functions, and provided occasional vocals and use the keyboard for the Sigma 6 band. The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking, Radio K. A. O. S. , Amused to Death, and Is This the Life We Really Want? were Waters’ first solo albums. He performed The Dark Side of the Moon in its entirety for his world tour of 2006–2008, and the Wall Live tour of 2010–13 was the highest-grossing tour by a solo artist at the time.