For me, this is where Pink Floyd became interesting. I didn’t care too much for all the psychedelic nonsense – even though on Obscured By Clouds there were signs to the direction they were going, but it wasn’t until Meddle that the path became clear. It’s also the last album where the whole band contributed, before Herr Waters would wrest control of the band and the arrival of all the tensions in the group.

I love the production on this record as the clarity and separation are amazing. Basically it’s an album of 2 Sides (aren’t they all). Side 1 is all song orientated, and Side 2 is given over to the epic Echoes. It contains the bringing together of instrumental passages that were written by all the band. It’s now become a requirement of every Prog band worth their salt to have one track lasting a full side. If ever you want to test your audio equipment, this is the perfect track to do so as they use the whole of the stereo spectrum.

The opening burst of One Of These Days is one of the greatest opening tracks, with that hypnotic driving Waters’ bass riff that powers the whole song. Fearless is a classic melancholic Floyd melody with the added bonus (if you’re a Liverpool fan) of the Kop at Anfield singing You’ll Never Walk Alone. I think the band did not know where they were headed when they recorded this, as there is also a lounge lizard jazz tune in San Tropez, and the odd blues of Seamus.

It gets 9/10 just for the inclusion of Echoes from The Grooveman.