Pink Floyd plans to rake in their provident fund
As a pink paper with a readership that loves the opening bars of the song, 'Money', with its cash registering chi-chinging with apparent irony, we would like to think we have a divine right to comment about anything Pink Floyd.

Bidders include music companies like Sony, BMG and Warner, who frankly sound as much classic rock (read: mood muzak for boomers) as PF, as well as investment firm Blackstone. Speaking of provident fund, back catalogues are a sure signal that there is no quality output left in a band. Blackstone owns the back catalogues of Leonard Cohen and Justin Timberlake. Q.E.D. The firm probably wants to use 'We don't want no education' - the double negative officially the coolest thing about Pink Floyd - as its company ringtone, the cheapest way for middle-of-the-road middle-agers to think they are edgy. For a band that invented woke with 'Comfortably Numb', whoever does buy the music rights must think of it as a weapon. Listening to the needlessly operatic 'Shine On You Crazy Diamond' can force shareholders to forgive any corporate governance trespass. Chi-ching.
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