There are two “In the Flesh”(es) on The Wall, a concept album by Pink Floyd that some of you who are reading may know inside out, may have heard something about it somewhere, or have no idea about. The first one, ‘In the Flesh?’, is right at the beginning of the album. It introduces the story’s main character. It sets the scene. The second one, with no question mark at the end, comes near the end where the main character is hallucinating and believes he’s a massive fascist dictator at a concert. You need to listen to it to properly understand. Or just read its Wikipedia page.
The two songs have the exact same guitar introduction. Though the straight ‘In the Flesh’ is lengthened out by a glorious vocal choir (featuring Beach Boy Bruce Johnston) that eventually segues into the first verse. What I’ve always liked about this version of ‘In the Flesh’ are the drums. Those pack a punch with each hit. Very militaristic in style. I’ve always enjoyed the long drawn out big-rock ending too. It was during this time that the band’s bassist Roger Waters was very much taking over everything the group did and if the other members didn’t like it they could leave. This did actually happen during the making of the record. When he’s singing about getting ‘queers up against the wall’ and shooting people who smoke pot and have spots, I can imagine him singing it with no hesitation. You see, all of this sounds bad out of context. You really have to hear the whole package. He doesn’t obviously believe in any of it in real life. It is just a plot point in a story, don’t worry about it too much.