Peter Watts (road manager)

Manager

Birthday January 16, 1946

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Bedford, Bedfordshire, England

DEATH DATE 1976-8-2, Notting Hill, London, England (30 years old)

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1946

Peter Anthony Watts (16 January 1946 – 2 August 1976) was an English road manager and sound engineer who worked with rock band Pink Floyd.

Watts was born on 16 January 1946, in Bedford, Bedfordshire, England, the son of Jane Patricia Grace (née Rolt; born 1923, in Naivasha, Kenya Colony) and Anthony Watts.

Watts had one older brother, Michael, and one younger sister, Patricia.

1966

In 1966, Watts married Myfanwy Edwards-Roberts, the daughter of a Welsh father and Australian mother, who was an antiques dealer and costume and set designer.

1967

They had two children, Ben (b. 1967; a photographer), and Naomi (b. 1968; an actress).

1969

Alongside fellow roadie Alan Styles, he appears on the rear cover of Pink Floyd's 1969 album Ummagumma, shown with the band's van and equipment laid out on a runway at Biggin Hill Airport, with the intention of replicating the "exploded" drawings of military aircraft and their payloads, which were popular at the time.

1972

The couple divorced in 1972.

After the divorce, the children were raised by their grandparents and their mother as she built a career.

The family relocated to London.

1973

On the 1973 album The Dark Side of the Moon, he contributed the repeated laughter on "Brain Damage", and was also heard in the album's overture, "Speak to Me".

His wife Patricia 'Puddie' Watts was responsible for the line about the "geezer" who was "cruisin' for a bruisin used in the segue between "Money" and "Us and Them", and the words "I never said I was frightened of dying." heard near the end of "The Great Gig in the Sky".

1974

Peter Watts left Pink Floyd's service in 1974.

1976

In 1976, he married Patricia Deighton, known as "Puddie", who can also be heard on The Dark Side of the Moon.

In August 1976, Watts was found dead in a flat in Notting Hill, London, from a heroin overdose.

After his death, Pink Floyd provided financial support to his two young children.

1982

The money allowed the family to move to Sydney, Australia, in 1982, where Edwards-Roberts became part of a burgeoning film industry.

1989

Watts' mother remarried, to Anthony Daniells, in 1989.

Watts was the road manager for Pretty Things before joining Pink Floyd as their first experienced road manager.