Pink Floyd star Roger Waters would like to perform at the site of Donald Trump’s proposed wall on the Mexico and US border.

The bassist and singer commemorated the fall of the Berlin Wall with a live performance in 1990 to a crowd of half a million in the German capital.

Explaining that the lyrics on the band’s 1979 record are “about how detrimental the building of walls can be”, Roger, 73, said it was “symbolic” at a time when the US President was erecting a physical border.

“I get asked quite often if I’d do The Wall again because I stopped a couple of years ago,” he said.

“I’ve always said I’d do it again if they ever figure out what to do about Israel and Palestine and get rid of that appalling security barrier.

(Image: Getty)

“If there was a resolution and we could realise there is no ‘us and them’ and that we’re all human beings and we all need to figure out how to live together because at the moment the systems we use are destroying the planet... as an act of celebration, if that moved towards a humane way of organising ourselves, I would be only too happy to perform that concert in some place that was significant geographically.

“If that happened to be the border between the United States and Mexico then yeah absolutely.

“But there needs to be an awakening period... before something like that can happen... because at the moment enough of us are being convinced by our leaders that the problems that we face are because of foreigners and because they are bad people and because they need to be destroyed or at least competed with to the point where they are stopping.

(Image: Pink Floyd Music)

“Trump and Theresa May and the right wing as you know is raising its ugly head all around the world so yeah as an act of celebration.

“The sewers are clogging with greedy powerful men as we speak and they are backing up and that is what is causing this stuff.”

Roger made a rare appearance with former bandmate Nick Mason to launch the Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains, which opens at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum in May, and will documents their 50 year career.

(Image: Victoria & Albert Museum)

Despite fears the band would not be able to emulate the success of David Bowie’s exhibition, the pair collected their own stash of memorabilia including more than 350 objects and artefacts, including hand-written lyrics, instruments, artwork and stage props, including a “seventy foot tall teacher”.

Meanwhile, Nick, 73, says the band would reunite - if the right political event came along.

Former member David Gilmore last performed together with Nick, Roger and Richard Wright in 2008, for Bob Geldof’s Live 8 concert.

(Image: Pink Floyd Archive)

And despite a long running feud between Roger and David, Nick is optimistic that the group would come together again for the right event.

“An event could occur,” he told the Mirror. “I think the biggest problem is we’re short of great world leaders, that aren’t right wing dictators.

"What you need is another Nelson Mandela. Bob Geldof was good in his own way, but you need someone a little bit more global and a little bit more powerful.... you’d get the call and you’d do it.”