In the summer of 1974, 21-year-old photographer Jill Furmanovsky received a commission from Storm Thorgerson of Hipgnosis to spend six weeks on the road with to document their winter '74 tour for a potential coffee table art book, with words to be supplied by Nick Sedgwick, a friend of Roger Waters. Sadly, as Furmanovsky reveals in a new interview with , the band considered the resulting photos “too revealing” and the idea was permanently shelved. “They were indifferent to it,” the 71-year-old photographer admits.

“The thing about Floyd is they didn’t have record company people backstage. They didn’t have support bands. They were in a kind of – as [drummer] Nick [Mason] has said to me – a bubble.

They had their own sort of weather patterns, and their gigs were booked according to sports facilities. A good squash court, or golf course, and cricket in the summer. That was pre- having video recorders.

So if was on and the concert overran, they’d probably speed up the last song to make sure they got to watch it! “They were sporty types which was a surprise to me,” she adds. “I thought they’d be spliffing away. But I didn’t see any of that.

They were forever off playing some sport, or playing backgammon.” Sadly, the world has been denied the privilege of seeing the Southern Rhodesian photographer's images of Roger Waters and David Gilmour locked in combat over a backgammon board, for the mooted book was never given the green light for publication. �.