10. Proceeds from the album helped fund Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
As if Dark Side of the Moon wasn’t enough of a pop cultural landmark in itself, the album’s success was also partly responsible for the existence of the brilliantly absurd 1975 film comedy Monty Python and the Holy Grail. The members of Pink Floyd often spent their downtime during the Dark Side sessions watching Monty Python’s Flying Circus on BBC2, so when the British comedy troupe ran into difficulty raising money for their first full-length feature film, the Floyd – now flush with cash from the sales of Dark Side – were more than happy to pony up 10 percent of the film’s initial £200,000 budget.
“There was no studio interference because there was no studio; none of them would give us any money,” Holy Grail director Terry Gilliam recalled in a 2002 interview with The Guardian. “This was at the time [British] income tax was running as high as 90%, so we turned to rock stars for finance. Elton John, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, they all had money, they knew our work and we seemed a good tax write-off. Except, of course, we weren’t. It was like The Producers.”
rollingstone.com
Slipknot frontman Corey Taylor's wife Alicia Taylor shared a post on her official Twitter page…
Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder will release the "Matter Of Time" package on Friday, December…
Swedish metalheads Sabaton will be entering the studio "in a few days" to begin recording…
Leslie West, co-founder, and guitarist of pioneering hard rock band Mountain has died at age…
In a new interview with Kerrang from the UK. Magazine, Corey Taylor talked about what…
Metallica's Kirk Hammett laughed at the fact that bandmates James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich have…
View Comments