Pink Floyd’s The Final Cut is one of my favorite albums. I bought the CD when it was first released and spent hours listening to all the rich layers of sound, much like those in The Wall. A lot of the album consists of gritty, more personal outtakes from The Wall sessions, all written by Roger Waters around the same time.
In the track Paranoid Eyes, I noticed a faint whisper that I replayed many times on headphones: “Hello… (something)… How are you tonight?” Years later, when I searched online, I found a few people guessing it was “Hello Hello…” or “Hello Kenna,” but neither felt right. Take a listen at 00:38…
With the remastered audio and better modern headphones (even though my ears are 30 years older), it finally became clear. Right around the 38-second mark, just after Waters sings “And if they try to break down your disguise with their questions,” a soft female voice whispers to the gunner as he walks down the street toward the bar.
She says, in a gentle English accent: “Hello kiddo. How are you tonight?”
It’s a subtle moment, but it adds depth to the story. The gunner — an older war veteran — is already wearing his emotional armor, his “bulletproof mask,” as he heads to the pub for “a jar” with his mates. Before he climbs the steps, this woman (possibly a door promoter or streetwalker) greets him warmly with “Hello kiddo.”
I like to imagine the gunner gave a small grin and a nod — maybe even tipped his hat.