SAUCERFUL OF SECRETS
SINCE LAST JUNE, FANS
OF PINK FLOYD, ROCKS MOST MYSTERIOUS BAND, HAVE BEEN ENGAGED IN A BIZARRE
TREASURE HUNT. PUBLICITY STUNT? BALD-FACED HOAX? YOU DECIDE.
Pink Floyd fans, take note:
There's a treasure hunt going on and The Division Bell is the map. In
what could be the biggest mystery in the annals of rock, Floyd disciples
around the world have been carefully following a trail of clues, left
by a self-proclaimed messenger known only as Publius. The person who
deciphers the enigma has been promised a special, secret reward.
Publius-who may or may not
be a member of the band-first began leaving mysterious messages this
past summer in the midst of a Pink Floyd discussion on the worldwide
computer network known as the Internet. His rather cryptic clues have
caused confusion and controversy among Pink Floyd stalwarts-and sent
them racing back to listen to The Division Bell with new ears.
The mystery began last June
11 with an anonymous, generically titled note left in the alt.music.pink-floyd
newsgroup, an electronic forum where Floyd fans from around the world
"meet" on the Internet and discuss the band. It read:
My friends, You have heard
the message Pink Floyd has delivered but have you listened? Perhaps
I can be your guide, but I will not solve the enigma for you. All of
you must open your minds and communicate with each other, as this is
the only way the answers can be revealed. I may help you, but only if
obstacles arise. Listen. Read. Think. Communicate. If I don't promise
you the answers would you go. -Publius
The message was immediately
greeted with the nasty, often insulting responses known as "flames,"
which attempt to expose the messenger's phoniness. There was some speculation
that Publius was out to mock Floyd fans for their penchant for seeking
deep meanings in the band's music; others felt that the whole thing
was a record company plot to drum up sales of The Division Bell. Less
cynical fans suggested that Publius was David Gilmour, himself. In any
case, approximately every two weeks, Publius would offer more veiled
clues and references to The Division Bell's lyrics, such as this post
from July 8:
AS SOME OF YOU HAVE SUSPECTED,
"The Division Bell" is not like its predecessors. Although
all great music is subject to multiple interpretations, in this case
there is a central purpose and a designed solution. For the ingenious
person (or group of persons) who recognizes this-and where this information
points to-a unique prize has been secreted. How and Where? The Division
Bell Listen again Look again As your thoughts will steer you Leading
the blind while I stared out the steel in you eyes. Lyrics, artwork
and music will take you there
With most net users remaining
skeptical, Publius promised a demonstration of his ligitimacy in the
form of "flashing white lights" at the July 18th Pink Floyd
concert in New Jersey's Meadowlands Arena. Sure enough, as the band
performed The Division Bell's "Keep Talking," the words "ENIGMA
PUBLIUS" lit up the front of the stage. This occurred nowhere else
on the tour-neither before the Giants Stadium show nor afterwards. To
some this special display was ample proof of Publius' validity, and
readers eagerly scanned his previous messages for Floydian slips. Skeptics
maintained that Publius was simply someone who knew the lighting staff
at the stadium and had pulled a good scam.
While Publius' posts are
cryptic and melodramatic-the classic signs of a net.crackpot-there's
plenty of mysterious fodder surrounding The Division Bell to fuel his
fire. Why is the artwork different for the CD and vinyl releases? What's
going on in the audio collage that interrupts "Poles Apart"?
Why does the boxing referee count out of order during "Lost For
Words"? It certainly wouldn't be out of character for a band who
put backwards messages and quirky audio tricks in many of their previous
albums to plant a hidden puzzle within their latest release.
Proposed solutions to the
mystery have involved a wide variety of people, places and things-among
them physicist Stephen Hawking, Easter Island, the Federalist Papers
and the geography of Cambridge, England. "My personal favorite,"says
net user Allison Clark, "was when they were organizing an expedition
to go dig up the grounds of Ely Cathedral [the structure pictured on
the album cover], last August. I could just see the police picking up
a bunch of teenagers chanting Pink Floyd lyrics as they excavated the
grounds with their shovels, and the newspapers dutifully reporting that
the youths would say only that Dave Gilmour had sent them there on a
mission."
The band, meanwhile, will
neither confirm nor deny any knowledge of or involvement with Publius.
Whatever the outcome, most newsgroup readers agree that the experience
hasn't been a complete waste of time-even if there isn't a hidden treasure
buried somewhere, just waiting for some lucky Floyd fan. "It has
been great to see people take heed of Pink Floyd's advice to 'keep talking,'"
says Rudi Riet, a concertgoer who witnessed the ENIGMA PUBLIUS light
show. "If anything, the Publius Enigma has widened the channels
of communication on alt.music.pink-floyd. And if that was the ultimate
goal, Publius-whoever he may be-has succeeded."
If you are interested in
researching the Publius Enigma further, join and read the messages of
the alt.music.pink-floyd newsgroup through a commercial online service,
such as CompuServe, America Online or Delphi, or contact a local direct
Internet provider. Many colleges offer direct Internet access to their
students as part of their tuition. To subscribe to the Pink Floyd mailing
lists, send Email to ECHOESERV@FAWNYA. TCS. COM, with ADD ECHOES(for
general Pink Floyd discussion) or ADD PUBLIUS(for Publius-related messages
only) as the message. Publius' previous posts are still readily available
on the newsgroup and from many of its members. Watch the pages of Guitar
World for more Publius information as it develops.
Special thanks to the members
of alt.music.pink-floyd and the Echoes and Publius Concern mailing lists
for their assistance with this story.