"Point Me at the Sky" is the fifth United Kingdom single by the British band Pink Floyd, released on 17 December 1968. It was their last single in the UK for nearly a decade. The song was an early collaboration by bassist Roger Waters and guitarist David Gilmour. The single was not released in the United States, but was in Canada, Japan, and some European countries. The vocals on the verse of the song are sung by Gilmour, and the bridge vocals are shared between Gilmour and Waters. Promotional U.K. copies and some foreign releases mistakenly printed the title "Point Me to the Sky" on the label and or sleeve.
Other releases
"Point Me at the Sky" has since become one of the rarest of all officially released Pink Floyd recordings. It was not intended for album release, resulting in the recording being mixed in mono only. The single did not chart in the U.K. The B-side, "Careful with That Axe, Eugene", became far more popular, as it was included on two Pink Floyd albums and played regularly at concerts through the early 1970s. "Point Me at the Sky" was left out of the 1971 collection Relics, though it was re-issued on the 1992 CD collection The Early Singles, a bonus disc in the Shine Onbox set. The song was released in the United Statesfor the first time in 1978 on a now rare promotional album, "A Harvest Sampler". This album contained an otherwise unavailable re-channeled stereo version which was derived from the mono mix. The first widespread release of "Point Me at the Sky" occurred in 2016, when the song was included in the box set The Early Years 1965–1972 and its sister release , a 2-CD highlights compilation of the full box set. A performance of "Point Me at the Sky" recorded and broadcast by the BBC in late 1968 was also included in the Early Years 1965–1972 box set.
Video and photos
The group made a promotional film for the song in which they posed in goggles and flight outfits with a vintage aeroplane, registration G-ANKH A still picture from this photo session was included in promotional materials given away with the U.K. single and on a picture sleeve version released in The Netherlands. Alternate still shots from the same session appeared in the artwork for the 1973 LP A Nice Pair and the booklet for 1992 remastered CD of A Saucerful of Secrets. The film also features another vintage aircraft, G-ADBO, plus scenes of trains at Kings Cross Station.
has called "Point Me at the Sky" a "notable failure" of the post-Barrett era. Following its lack of chart success, the band decided to stop releasing singles in the U.K. altogether and concentrate only on albums, since, according to Waters, "we were no bloody good at it." The song was played by Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets in 2018 and 2019.