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  1. Jon “The Backtracker™️” Carin. He tried to copy Roger’s petulance and autocracy for a day but apparently just couldn’t stomach it, let alone match it. Perhaps the real lesson in here for Jon with regards to credits has little to do with the other members and more to do with attempting to copy Roger’s style of public discourse.

  2. tr.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jon_CarinJon Carin - Vikipedi

    Jon Carin (d. 21 Ekim 1964, New York), Amerikalı müzisyen, besteci, müzik yapımcısı. Pink Floyd ile olan ilişkisiyle tanındı. David Gilmour ve grubun eski üyesi Roger Waters ile 1985'ten beri ortak çalışmalar yürütmektedir. Seksenlerin başında, Industry isimli grubun vokalisti ve klavyecisiydi. Industry önce 1983'te çıkardıkları State of the Nation single'ı ve daha sonra ...

  3. Written by Arash Danesh. Friday, 17 August 2007. [Click picture to enlarge] To most of our readers, the multi-talented, multi-skilled Jon Carin needs no introduction. For those who need a clue, He's a member of the touring and studio bands of: Pink Floyd (A Momentary Lapse of Reason, on which he co-wrote “Learning to Fly”, and the follow up ...

  4. "Learning to Fly" is a song by the English progressive rock band Pink Floyd, written by David Gilmour, Anthony Moore, Bob Ezrin, and Jon Carin. It was the first single from the band's thirteenth studio album A Momentary Lapse of Reason. It reached number 70 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart and number 1 on the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart in September 1987, remaining three consecutive ...

  5. Jon Carin (born October 21, 1964) is a multi-instrumentalist, singer, producer and engineer. He has been known to play piano, synthesizer, drums, bass, guitar and lap steel guitar. His first claim to fame came with being the lead singer of the band Industry (2), as well as being their keyboardist and songwriter.

  6. Carin actually did leave David's band about half way through (after the North American and before the 2nd European leg). I read before this was due to him also being on Roger's band, but there wasn't really any overlap between Roger's and David's performances, so that explanation doesn't add up.