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    Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason brings his Saucerful of Secrets tour to Fox Theater in Oakland. (ANDREW REDINGTON/GETTY IMAGES)

  • British musicians Richard Wright (1943 - 2008), Roger Waters, and...

    British musicians Richard Wright (1943 - 2008), Roger Waters, and Nick Mason of rock group Pink Floyd at Heathrow Airport before leaving for a 22-date US tour, London, UK, July 1968. (Photo by George Stroud/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

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Jim Harrington, pop music critic, Bay Area News Group, for his Wordpress profile. (Michael Malone/Bay Area News Group)
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Nick Mason’s Saucerful of Secrets touched down Friday (March 15) at The Masonic, delivering a spellbinding evening of early Pink Floyd music for the fans who filled the San Francisco venue to capacity.

It was part of the band’s inaugural North American tour, which marks the first time Mason — who co-founded the British rock act Pink Floyd with vocalist-guitarist Syd Barrett, bassist Roger Waters and keyboardist Richard Wright in 1965 — has performed on this side of the pond since Floyd’s blockbuster Division Bell trek in 1994.

But one would have to go even further back — much, much further — to see a show like the one Mason and company so wonderfully delivered at the Masonic.

The genius of this project is that is concentrates solely on Pink Floyd’s pre-1973 catalog, which significantly differentiates it from the classic-rock nostalgia fests that fellow Floyd mates Waters and, to a lesser extent, David Gilmour have been peddling over the years.

“I knew I couldn’t play ‘Comfortably Numb’ better than David or Roger, or indeed even the Australian Pink Floyd [tribute band],” Mason told Rolling Stone magazine. “It became a matter of finding something else that engaged us.”

The result is a heady psychedelic workout that, simply put, all big Pink Floyd fans should experience.

And what makes it so necessary is that shines a much-needed spotlight on those early records — beginning with the 1967 debut “The Piper at the Gates of Dawn” and continuing through 1972’s “Obscured by Clouds” — which are so often overlooked in favor of Floyd’s blockbuster later releases like “The Wall.”

Despite what classic rock radio would have you think, the Pink Floyd journey does not start with “Dark Side of the Moon” and it’s worth the time and energy for fans to get familiar with the works that led up to that 1973 masterpiece.

The drummer and his terrific band — consisting of Spandau Ballet guitarist Gary Kemp, longtime Pink Floyd touring bassist Guy Pratt, guitarist Lee Harris and keyboardist Dom Beken — kicked off the evening with a trip back to the beginning, opening the show with an epic workout of the “Interstellar Overdrive” from “The Piper at the Gates of Dawn.”

The group stayed course through “Astronomy Domine” and “Lucifer Sam,” which also happen to be the first two tracks off “Piper,” before veering off into a gorgeous, acoustic-guitar-driven “Fearless,” from Floyd’s masterful 1971 release, “Meddle.”

The whole band sounded terrific, but special recognition goes out to Kemp and Harris, who did a great job filling in for the guitar parts originally laid down by Barrett and, later, Gilmour.

I almost had to do a double take at times while watching Kemp, since it was hard to reconcile that the guy burning through those big guitar hero moments at The Masonic was the same person who crafted the glistening Spandau Ballet prom/pop anthem “True” in the early ‘80s.

Kemp was the closest thing this swirling, spacey concert had to a front man, handling the lion’s share of the lyrics, with some help from Pratt and, to a lesser extent, Harris.

The group touched on six of seven studio albums that Pink Floyd released prior to the career-altering “Dark Side of the Moon.” The only one missing, thankfully, was 1969’s “Ummagumma,” by far the worst album Pink Floyd ever made. (To be fair, the live half of the two-disc affair is worth hearing, but the studio recordings are dreadful.)

It was great to finally get to hear such relative rarities as “When You’re In” (from 1972’s “Obscured by Clouds”) and “Remember a Day” (from this band’s namesake album, 1968’s “A Saucerful of Secrets”) live.

And “Vegetable Man”? A tune that Pink Floyd never officially released or even played live?

Yeah, that’s the type of moment that made this show so special.

And it just kept getting better as the night progressed, as Mason and company locked into a pair of soaring “Saucerful” tracks — “Let There Be More Light” and “Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun” — and then closed the main set with a thunderous take on “One of These Days” from “Meddle.”

Here is the set list, based on my notes and information from setlist.fm:

Interstellar Overdrive

Astronomy Domine

Lucifer Sam

Fearless

Obscured by Clouds

When You’re In

Remember a Day

Arnold Layne

Vegetable Man

If

Atom Heart Mother

The Nile Song

Green Is the Colour

Let There Be More Light

Childhood’s End

Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun

See Emily Play

Bike

One of These Days

Encore:

A Saucerful of Secrets

Point Me at the Sky