: The year of the specific CD reissue used for this rip. In the late 80s, several high-quality pressings were released, including the notable Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab (MFSL) (1989) and Toshiba-EMI "Black Triangle" versions.

Furthermore, a perfect EAC rip preserves the at the start of "One of These Days." There are exactly 1.8 seconds of absolute digital silence (not analog noise) before the iconic sliding bass note. A poorly executed MP3 transcode fills that silence with dither noise.

In the quiet hours of 1971, Pink Floyd retreated to London’s Abbey Road and Morgan Studios to record , a transitional masterpiece that bridge their psychedelic past with the monumental future of Dark Side of the Moon . Working with fragments they called "Nothings," they eventually forged the 23-minute epic "Echoes," capturing a sonic landscape of deep-sea sonar pings and swirling wind.

Released in 1971, Meddle is often cited as the moment Pink Floyd found their post-Syd Barrett identity. It moved away from the whimsical psych-pop of their early years and the experimental sprawl of Ummagumma , landing on a sound that was oceanic and atmospheric. The centerpiece, occupies the entire second side of the vinyl. Its sonar-like "ping" and 23-minute transition from ambient dread to funk-driven grooves laid the groundwork for The Dark Side of the Moon . The Pressing: 1988

Recorded between January and August 1971 at Abbey Road, Air, and Morgan Studios, Meddle was a deeply collaborative effort. Unlike later Roger Waters-led projects, it saw all four members—Waters, David Gilmour, Richard Wright, and Nick Mason—weaving disparate musical fragments into a cohesive whole.

Pink Floyd - Meddle -1971- 1988 -eac - Flac--oa... «2026 Edition»

: The year of the specific CD reissue used for this rip. In the late 80s, several high-quality pressings were released, including the notable Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab (MFSL) (1989) and Toshiba-EMI "Black Triangle" versions.

Furthermore, a perfect EAC rip preserves the at the start of "One of These Days." There are exactly 1.8 seconds of absolute digital silence (not analog noise) before the iconic sliding bass note. A poorly executed MP3 transcode fills that silence with dither noise. Pink Floyd - Meddle -1971- 1988 -EAC - FLAC--oa...

In the quiet hours of 1971, Pink Floyd retreated to London’s Abbey Road and Morgan Studios to record , a transitional masterpiece that bridge their psychedelic past with the monumental future of Dark Side of the Moon . Working with fragments they called "Nothings," they eventually forged the 23-minute epic "Echoes," capturing a sonic landscape of deep-sea sonar pings and swirling wind. : The year of the specific CD reissue used for this rip

Released in 1971, Meddle is often cited as the moment Pink Floyd found their post-Syd Barrett identity. It moved away from the whimsical psych-pop of their early years and the experimental sprawl of Ummagumma , landing on a sound that was oceanic and atmospheric. The centerpiece, occupies the entire second side of the vinyl. Its sonar-like "ping" and 23-minute transition from ambient dread to funk-driven grooves laid the groundwork for The Dark Side of the Moon . The Pressing: 1988 A poorly executed MP3 transcode fills that silence

Recorded between January and August 1971 at Abbey Road, Air, and Morgan Studios, Meddle was a deeply collaborative effort. Unlike later Roger Waters-led projects, it saw all four members—Waters, David Gilmour, Richard Wright, and Nick Mason—weaving disparate musical fragments into a cohesive whole.