Taking another swipe at his former bandmate, Roger continued: 'David thinks he owns it. But would I trade my liberty for those chains? No f***ing way. 'I know in the wake of it I've been cast as something of a villain by whoever … so be it! I can live with that. 'Obviously if you're a fan of those days of Pink Floyd, well then you have a different point of view. He said at the time: 'It wouldn't be nice. Roger revealed he aimed to make peace with David when he met up with him and Nick, but it didn't go to plan and he insisted that a reunion is just not going to happen. Tense: There were several reports of in-fighting within Pink Floyd (L-R) Nick Mason, Dave Gilmour, Rick Wright (center front), Roger Waters in 1968 Roger said he tried to make peace with the band by calling a meeting in 2016 however he claims that his efforts to reconcile fell flat.Roger has claimed that David has seen him as 'irrelevant' ever since he left the band.The lawsuit failed and Roger did not reunite with the band in 2005 when they played together for the last time at the Live 8 concert.Their ongoing feud was sparked after Roger attempted to sue David and the rest of the band for using the Pink Floyd name without him.It is believed that during their time in the band they had a strained relationship and disagreed over their hit song Comfortably Numb.Roger left the band in 1985 and last year it was claimed that he hadn't spoken to his former bandmate Waters for 30 years.Roger, 76, has stated that David won't allow him to advertise his new material on the official Pink Floyd website.as their long-running feud rumbles on after he is 'BANNED' from their website It was inspired by his disillusionment playing huge stadium shows with Pink Floyd, climaxing in a notorious occasion in Montreal in 1977 when he spat at a disruptive fan.'He thinks I'm irrelevant and should keep my mouth shut!' Pink Floyd's Roger Waters launches attack on ex bandmate David Gilmour. Pink’s breakdown into isolation and self-loathing as a result of rock stardom mirrors Waters’ experiences. Pink’s marriage collapses, like Waters’ turbulent first marriage to the potter Judy Trim did in 1975. Pink’s father dies in the Second World War, as did Waters’ father Eric. The album, which was also made into a film starring Bob Geldof, tells the story of Pink, loosely based on Waters himself. “It has been incredible it couldn’t have been more successful,” he says. He is on the European leg of a tour that began in North America last year, where it was one of 2010’s highest-grossing concert tours, taking more than $89 million. Waters has ordered what must be one of the most expensive pieces of gravadlax in history (£75!) but leaves his exorbitant slice of fish untouched as he talks about The Wall’s return. Barrett may be portrayed as the band’s doomed genius, a psychedelic Icarus, but it was intense, single-minded Roger Waters who made Pink Floyd fly. During his years as Pink Floyd’s helmsman, from The Dark Side of the Moon in 1973 to The Final Cut in 1983, they became one of the biggest bands in rock history.