I understand a clip from each song also plays in the background, but I've never been able to hear them.
That's amazing. They're not particularly buried and, if memory serves, at least a couple of them are quite dissonant.
I can hear (to varying degrees) SOMETHING going on in the background on some of them, but none are identifiable to me. Unfortunately, I've never blasted it on quality speakers other than in my car (where my primary focus is obviously on something else), so....
Most of the rest of the "nuggets" are not things that, in a million years, I would have noticed on my own, but some of them are kind of cool when someone tells you that they're there. Needless to say, I'm NOT someone who really notices or looks for stuff like this.
I remember when this album came out and the MP forum was all in a tizzy about Teh Nuggetz but honestly don’t think I ever picked up on any of them. I don’t recall hearing the Roger Waters thing but then again I wouldn’t have known what it was anyway (never listened to The Wall).
You've never listened to The Wall? I would strongly recommend you do, it's a masterpiece in my opinion!
I remember when this album came out and the MP forum was all in a tizzy about Teh Nuggetz but honestly don’t think I ever picked up on any of them. I don’t recall hearing the Roger Waters thing but then again I wouldn’t have known what it was anyway (never listened to The Wall).
You should give it a spin. It's a good album.
I have heard a lot of the music on The Wall of course, but haven’t ever sat down and listened to the whole thing. I probably should give it a try though.
Edit, I just read that you have heard music from the album - still, The Wall deserves to be listened from beginning to end
Ok, but why should a person who has heard only about 4-5 songs on that album and thinks they suck and/or are boring, and who likes nothing he has ever heard by Pink Floyd, listen to the other 20+ tracks? That's like saying, "oh, you hate rap, but you should listen to such and such 2-Pack album because it's a masterpiece and deserves to be listened to from beginning to end."