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    Pink Floyd - High Hopes Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Pink Floyd - High Hopes? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Pink Floyd - High Hopes from 1990s Music and what is the personality traits.

    Pink Floyd - High Hopes
    INTP

    INTP (4w5)

    Pink Floyd - High Hopes personality type is INTP, and we can see that right off the bat. Just look at the lyrics. If we're looking for someone to match this song with, it's a perfect fit. This is a great case for the INTP contest because it's a song about a dreamer who strives for perfection, someone who's never content with themselves and always trying to find something better. Not only that, but it's also a song about finding a new dream, and finding a new way to be happy. This ties in perfectly with the INTP's need for knowledge and their love of exploring.I'm a fan of all of Pink Floyd's music, but I have to say that this one is probably my favorite. The chorus is just so catchy and I can't get it out of my head. This doesn't really imply anything about the person as a person but I'm still going to go with the INTP because of the lyrics and the way it's written. If you want to find an amazing example of an INTP, look no further than this song.Pink Floyd - Another Brick In The Wall personality type is INTJ, and we can see that right off the bat. This song is a masterpiece of a song.

    "High Hopes" is a song by English rock band Pink Floyd, composed by guitarist David Gilmour with lyrics by Gilmour and Polly Samson. It was released as the second single from their fourteenth studio album, The Division Bell (1994), on 17 October 1994. An accompanying music video was made for the song and was directed by Storm Thorgerson.

    The lyrics refer to the band's early days in Cambridge, specifically before they started making music and it also references ex-bandmate Syd Barrett. Its lyrics speak of the things one may have gained and lost in life, written from Gilmour's autobiographic perspective. Gilmour has said that the song is more about his early days, and leaving his hometown behind, than about the seeds of division supposedly planted in Pink Floyd's early days.

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