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Peter Gabriel 10/02/12 HP Pavilion, San Jose
#1
Hi All,

It's time to get proactive up in here.

Peter called me and begged me to give him another chance. He said he would perform "So" start to finish to make up for the crappy orchestral thing he put Dee Dee and I through. I eventually capitulated and agreed to the cheap seats:

section 204, row 1, seats 5-6

Side one

"Red Rain" – 5:39
"Sledgehammer" – 5:12
"Don't Give Up" (featuring Kate Bush) – 6:33
"That Voice Again"– 4:53

Side two

"In Your Eyes" – 5:27
"Mercy Street" – 6:22
"Big Time" – 4:28
"We Do What We're Told (Milgram's 37)" – 3:22
"This Is the Picture (Excellent Birds)" (featuring Laurie Anderson) – 4:25

Why, Yes; I expect Kate Bush and Laurie Anderson to be there. Why is that unreasonable?

I also expect an encore of:

Solsbury Hill
Games without Frontiers
Biko
In Your Eyes
and some mothballed old Genesis song (his choice)

Cheers!

EDIT: ACTUAL REVIEW!

We had excellent seats for once. Front row of the upper tier in the 'Shark Tank'.

Peter introduced the show saying it would be performed in three parts. First would be an acoustic set exploring the development of a new song. Then would come a 'studio session' in which the song would be developed. Those who survived the first sets would be treated to "So" from start to finish.

This was pretentious bullshit.

Yes - the first couple songs were 'acoustic' with Peter on piano and Tony Levin on stand-up bass, but the video screens were active and the full band came out after the first number. Don't get me wrong; it was awesome, but no need for the pretense.

The band then played "Family Snapshot" which was incredible, "Digging in the Dirt" (which I never really liked) and a few other obscurities including "Humdrum" which was neat. They ended the 'Studio' set with a hilariously bad rendition of "Solsbury Hill" done with electric piano and a sit-com/game-show arrangement that bordered on parody. I hope that's what Peter was aiming for, a 'here's my single now fuck off' performance.

Finally they launched into "So". From "Red Rain" to "In Your Eyes" it was pitch-perfect. Peter's voice was flawless. There was some choreographed 'dancing' which was totally unnecessary but I closed my eyes and listened to the music.

All in all I was torn. "So" was note-for-note perfect, but if that is what I wanted why not just sit at home and listen to the album? On the other hand Peter Gabriel is a mesmerizing performer and seeing it live is like having the album come to life.

I think the answer is in the performance. If you are going to perform the album, then provide a visual element that cannot be 'heard'. Sets, props, costumes, FX etc. Pink Floyd, Alice Cooper, Iron Maiden, Ozzy Osbourne get it and give you a unique visual experience. Peter needs to reach back to the Genesis days and pull a theatrical performance out of his...heart.

Had fun though.
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#2
It seems your needs are simple. Do you want Mike Rutherford, Steve Hackett, and Tony Banks to back him up?
So much for the flickr badge idea. Dammit
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#3
Don't be ridiculous. Tickets aren't cheap anymore.

I expect the performers on the album:

Guitar: Daniel Lanois, Nile Rogers
Bass: Bill Laswell
Drums: Stewart Copeland
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#4
El Dingo Wrote:I expect the performers on the album:

Guitar: Daniel Lanois, Nile Rogers
Bass: Bill Laswell
Drums: Stewart Copeland


I'd pay to see that...

--tg
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#5
I used to love that song. Then there was this drunken 'I can win the lip sync contest' incident. Thanks ED. Thanks for all the mental scars...
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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#6
and the performers from PG I: <!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=4287792394432">https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=4287792394432</a><!-- m -->

--tg
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#7
wish i could be there. i must dig out my So CD, if i haven't sold it back yet. have fun, ed! hope you have a mortified flashback of lip-synching contests and what your friends had to go through just to hang out w/you!

Quote:Peter Gabriel tour powered by 'So'
Aidin Vaziri
Updated 3:06 a.m., Sunday, September 30, 2012

Peter Gabriel, an artist who is rarely prone to reveling in past glories (as in, never), made an exception this year to mark the 25th anniversary of his breakthrough pop album, "So." The former Genesis front man, who has consistently refused reunion offers from his old band, is giving his blockbuster 1986 release the deluxe reissue treatment with a new mix, live tracks and loads of extras. He's also taking it on the road with musicians from the original band he toured with in 1987, performing the entire quintuple-platinum album from start to finish in a tour billed - what else? - "Back to Front."

During tour rehearsals in Quebec earlier this month, Gabriel, 62, let us know why he decided to pop the cork for this milestone. He performs at HP Pavilion in San Jose on Tuesday.

On why, as an artist who has always looked ahead, he picked this occasion to look back:

"There were two things. I went to see the Brian Wilson 'Pet Sounds' tour. There was something about seeing it performed as a whole record I liked a lot. That convinced me of the format. The second thing was there was a good offer. I felt like I should do something because I was going to take a sabbatical year, traveling around the world with my family. With record sales dead, income for quite a few musicians is centered around live work. We've still got our Real World operation and charitable things that have hungry mouths, so I feel a responsibility to generate an income."

On reconnecting with an album he released 25 years ago:

"It's a bit like a spiral: You can get to the same point in the circle, but you're in a different position. We're approaching the tour with that idea. Something that I've recently been into is the idea that the process is as important as the end product. I'm thinking of starting the show with an unfinished song, then going into the acoustic and electric performances. The third part will be 'So,' which has never been performed as a whole. There were some songs we have never done live. In the last five years I haven't done 'Sledgehammer.' It's not as if I feel uncomfortable or awkward about those songs, like they were cheaper or less valuable. I see them as my other songs that happened to catch the zeitgeist."

On what it feels like to have the songs from "So," most notably "In Your Eyes," become ingrained in pop culture:

"I had a conversation with John Cusack saying we're forever trapped in a bubble of contemporary culture together because of that scene with the boom box in 'Say Anything,' which has been one of those parodied romantic moments of all time."

On why it was a good idea for him to lie under a sheet of glass for 16 hours to make the animated video for the single, "Sledgehammer" - to this day the most played music video in MTV history:

"One of the things I love in my life was brainstorming with people smarter than myself. You start generating some heat and zapping some ideas around each other. That definitely happened with that video. We had a wonderful director, Stephen R. Johnson. He brought in the Brothers Quay, who are American. I brought in Aardman Animation (of 'Wallace and Gromit' fame), because they had a more British quirkiness. When we were initially sitting together the air was electric. Ideas were just falling out all over the place. Many of the people involved have gone on to direct films of their own. It was a heady creative bunch."

On why the tour is billed as "Back To Front":

"In the digital era people listen to tracks at will. While I appreciate that freedom, I also like preordained sequence of things. That was important to me after seeing 'Pet Sounds.' When you feel like if you have a good order to songs, then you feel a little more like you've been taken on a carefully selected journey."

On why he took six years to make a follow-up to "So":

"I think music business people thought I was stupid to take so long between albums. I always put having an interest in life above the commercial practice. I think that's why I'm lucky enough to still have an audience. It might not be the same size, but it's there. It's partly because I go away and recharge my batteries. I do follow other things in life I'm interested in rather than going from the studio to the hotel to the road and back. I often find other artists are merely chasing their own tails." {sbox}

Peter Gabriel: 8 p.m. Tuesday. HP Pavilion, 525 W. Santa Clara St., San Jose. $71.75-$152. (408) 998-8497. <!-- w --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.ticketmaster.com">www.ticketmaster.com</a><!-- w -->.

To hear Peter Gabriel's music, go to <!-- w --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.petergabriel.com">www.petergabriel.com</a><!-- w -->.

Read more: <!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.sfgate.com/music/article/Peter-Gabriel-tour-powered-by-So-3899639.php#ixzz285kk17d8">http://www.sfgate.com/music/article/Pet ... z285kk17d8</a><!-- m -->
http://www.sfgate.com/default/article/Pe...899639.php
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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#8
Count your blessings DM.

These days my favorite song is "Don't Give Up".

You know I would have convinced you to don a wig and hold me close as we slowly rotated around the dance floor.

We would have won, too.
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#9
TRUE STORY: When ED was in his 'I'm gonna win a lipsynch contest for beer money' phase, he pitched the idea of singing Bowie's China Girl to dm who in his fevered brain would don a wig and sit on a barstool as he was lipsynch serenaded. I mean WTF?!?!

Man, we did way too many drugs back then. :oops:
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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#10
I went digging for my old SO cd, but I sold it back, probably for lunch money. I used to have all of Gabriel's CDs. Now I just have PG#1 and the soundtracks to Birdy and Passion. Why I kept those three, I don't know. I might still have some on vinyl in storage. I seem to remember having his German versions on vinyl.
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