It also helps us understand who's doing what in other songs later. It's a bit of a trope but it gives us insight as to where each band member is coming from, and what they are bringing to the table. Essentially each member made of tiny album on their own. The second disc here though, is a different Beast.
#The prodigy discography blogspot free
Feel free to skip the first disc, which is just live versions of things you just heard. If you listen to these albums in chronological order, like I've suggested, Ummagumma is next. The album is good, but I have a hard time considering albums that were made in conjunction with another piece of art as a part of the band's Canon. More is a soundtrack for a film by the same name. This album gets pretty Space Rock and is a great listen, but brings us to the end of the first Pink Floyd. Saucer has a few more Syd Barrett tracks, and brings in David Gilmore. "Interstellar Overdrive" is another notable track on Piper. "Emily" is the only chance we get to see a love some from Syd Barrett while with the band. Piper has two versions, so I'm not sure where you are listening to these albums, but the UK version contains the aforementioned "Astronomy Dominae", while the US version contains "See Emily Play". Piper at the Gates of Dawn and A Saucerful of Secrets, the first two albums, contain my two favorite Pink Floyd tracks, "Astronomy Domine" and "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun".
Seems easy enough, but the problem here is there is four or five different iterations of Pink Floyd as band members came and went in as the members changed in themselves as well. In my experiences with delving into a band with as large a discography as their reputation, it's always best to start at the beginning.