
Witness History When Pink Floyd played in Venice
Feb 10, 2026
Fran Tomasi, an Italian music promoter who organised Pink Floyd’s 1989 Venice concert, recounts the planning and fallout. He describes the floating barge stage and the surreal sight of crowds on boats and rooftops. He also discusses the last-minute permit scramble, the massive cleanup problems and the political storm that followed.
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Floating Stage Idea Came From Promoter
- Fran Tomasi proposed a Pink Floyd gig on a floating stage facing St Mark's Square and the band enthusiastically agreed.
- The stage was a massive barge towed from Norway and became the unique centerpiece of the concert.
Permit Signed From A Boat At The Last Minute
- The town council was deeply divided with 49% against and 51% in favour, causing last-minute legal hurdles.
- Fran had to find and get the deputy mayor to sign the permit from a boat half an hour before showtime.
Heritage Concerns Turned Down The Volume
- Officials imposed a strict 60-decibel limit to protect frescoes, halving normal concert volume.
- That constraint frustrated the band but reflected Venice's priority to preserve fragile heritage.
