Thursday 28 October 2010

#74 - St,.Austell, Cornwall Coliseum, 28.8.1988

Another one frome the "recycled bin": I had actually reworked and honed this article 3 years ago when I posted it to the "Womad Stories" website, launched on the occasion of the Festival's 25th anniversary. Since that site seems to be gone, and for the moment I have no access to the updated file, here's once again the original Intruder website first draft version. If and when Womad Stories will come back (or I'll buy me a new Mac... ;-) ), I'll swop texts.



St.Austell's Cornwall Coliseum used to be a huge squarish or better cubic concrete/metallic box. I say used to, since as far as I know the whole setting was tore down a few years ago to make place for a newer entertainment center... Anyway, set at the very heart of Carlyon Bay - a really enchanting bay on the southern coast of Cornwall, which, and it's not my opinion only, was the most perfect setting for a Womad Festival - the Coliseum constituted the centre for all the festival's weekend main acts. This, as it used to be a tradition with Womads in the past, were supposed to be "surprise guests" (on the very first one, for example, one got as headliner the incredible line-up of PG, Peter Hammill, David Rhodes, Shankar and Stewart Copeland... but that's another story!).

Since Gabriel was one of the founders, until the late Eighties papers tended to "announce" his presence at each and every Womad regardless of his true intentions and/or availability. But on that night expectations were quite high: the whole festival was sold-out (though it always was, and well in advance) even without any official rumour about Peter's presence. Everybody was waiting for Nusrat's set as a highlight (his previous Womad appearance, in 1985, took not only the UK but the whole soon-to-be-born World Music scene by storm), but I remember that around four or five o'clock in the afternoon, a strange mood strated taking over the whole bay... and that by 6 the main hall of the Coliseum was fully packed - a more or less 5.000 people capacity, I believe - and HOT!

At a quarter past eight, the house announcer came on stage to introduce the special guest, and by Jove!, it was Peter indeed... Dressed in a black jacket and trouser suit, he looked relaxed and acknoledged the crowd's ovation by saying:
«It's nice to be back at Womad. We have quite a bunch of musicians on stage tonight, and we tried to put together a set that was different from the usual. We start with our own cotribution to the Womad phenomenon: it goes under the title of Across The River».

That was just the first in a long series of master strokes that night. On stage with Peter were Manu Katche, David Sancious, and David Rhodes - i.e.: 4/5ths of the 1987 band, with only Tony Levin missing. On bass was indeed a new face for me, Daryl Jones (who had previously played with Sting and which later joined the Rolling Stones on tour). But that was not all, since four more musicians were on stage from the very first minute: on guest vocals Youssou N'Dour, accompanied by two of his band's most important members, Babacar Faye and Hassan Thiam on percussion and odd dance steps, with a further special guest appearance on vocals and electronic violin by L.Shankar. And from such a line-up one immediately could surmise big surprises might come at every step.

Across The River was, to say the least, sublime: a very long, choral, vocal introduction slowly gave way to the rhythm, harder and harder and more infectious with each passing beat. Probably one of the best incarnations ever of the track: given that kind of a band, a much fuller and warmer sound than either the studio or previous/later live versions. Literally, one of a kind.

Not much time to start breathing again or realize that you were really there, than Peter introduced a totally new song, described as part of The Last Temptation Of Christ soundtrack (NB: the film had been out in the States for a couple of months, while in Europe it was still unscreened - I actually took a 42 hours Milan-London-Milan train trip to see it right a the end of the HRN European tour leg!! but that's another story...). The title, improvised as musch as the song itself on that night: African Shuffle.

It being the first hearing of the (much) later to come «Passion» album, the first impression that struck me was how much rhythm really was at the base of Peter's writing process: the drum machine pattern was at the forefront of the sound, and upon that the voices and other instruments began drawing unexpected twists and turns. It was all - on Peter's behalf - sung in classic style gabrielese, with the refrain that literally seemed to cut the song into different sections. I might as well point out that what I'm trying to describe is a very "early" version (the man himself would probably label it unrehearsed) of A Different Drum...

Peter was, as usual, standing behind his faithful Yamaha piano and Prophet 5 synth: often searching for the other musicians eyes to give instructions about the different "sections" they are actually playing. A process which has always left me with the feeling that his method for "improvising" actually needs to learn every minimal detail first and then forget/discard it in search of a different/better way during the actual performance... Hey: no complaints, there, as this very kind of improvising style was always able to give me shivers down the spine!

After these kind of kicks - and after Shankar and Youssou had left the stage - the following three numbers - «some songs that are part of the usual set» - might sound like a sort of letting down. The first is Red Rain, a remarkable execution, even more powerful than the 1987 version, followed by the almost total disaster of Don't Give Up: here is where Tony's absence is more felt, since Daryl's touch - great in other parts - really doesn't help the building up of the whole first part of the song. The chorus and the finale are excellent as usual, and even though the crowd really doesn't take part as much as a proper Gabriel audience would, the end makes justice of it all.

No Self Control is another strike: memories of 1987 and the amazing lightshow linger in my mind but are soon swept away by the newer rendition. The Varilites absence makes for some odd moments, though, and Peter himself walks up and down the stage looking a wee bit lost himself... At times he almost smiles embarrassed while looking for the booms' sweeps that never come. The lack of acting and visuals, in the end, does not subtract one bit from the musical performance, on par with the best.

Then came the moment that one might dream all of one's life but never sees it happen... For me it was worth the whole trip from Italy to Cornwall and more: it was a "payback" for all the crazy things I've done in order to see Peter perform live.

Peter walked out of the stage for a couple of minutes. On coming back he brings a simple wooden chair that he places in the centre of the stage. Out again only to come back in another minute guiding a huge man that I had never seen in person before and that surely made an impression. The man is none other that Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. «This song is totally improvised» announces Peter, «except for the base of the track that was written for The Last Temptation Of Christ - and for this reason we cast our faith to the wind». Incidentally, as I found out later on from a print out of the setlist, the title of the song for that night was Islamic Offbeat. Now, this is really something that I find hard to describe in words.

Being wise after the event is easy, and since on the HRN Tour (which started one week later at London's Wembley Stadium) he actually performed it again, though in an abbreviated form, the real title can be unveiled as Of These Hope. But if you keep reading you will find out that that was not all. The slow chord sequence at the beginning immediately built an amazing mood. Keyboards and violin merging and then leaving it up to Peter's and Youssou's vocals - clear and cutting as ice. Slowly, really slowly, Nusrat started joining in. I find myself wondering what he might be thinking: after all, though he's played in front of Western audiences before, this must indeed be his very first "rock" performance ever...

Slowly, really slowly, Nusrat gains confidence and enter"s the riff's mood. Both Peter and Youssou at this point simply shut up in awe, and only assent to each other and to Nusrat, inviting him to just go ahead on his own. An thus the song gets to its climax. In the space of a couple of seconds that Nusrat stops singing and the music apparently fades slowly out, the whole crowd jumps up as one for the most incredible and heartfelt standing ovation I have ever witnessed. Nusrat, just like the audience, is probably fooled into believing that would be the end of the song: he stands up as well and repeatedly bows in thanks. Nonetheless, Islamic Offbeat is everything but finished.

I don't know wether it was intended that way - with the middle pause - or wether it was just on the spur of the moment, but Peter starts signalling Daryl Jones to keep pumping that bass, so that the rhythm gets tighter and tighter and the song takes up again (again, with the wisdom of the here and now, this time they shift from Of These Hope to the chords and riffs of the actual "Passion" track: amazing!). Another sign from Peter and the rest of the band get back into the beginning riff with double the strenght and a series of sudden bursts of chopped piano that just go to show how much Peter himself is getting carried away by it all. Nusrat turns to look at Peter, then sits down again and once again he begins transporting all of us on higher level of conscience.

He accompanies/guides himself with little gestures of his hands, just like directing the full orchestra that lies within his own voice. Peter, Youssou and Shankar join back in the chant, and I really believe that you can forget all that three tenors crap and hype: here were three of the best singers ever, together on the same stage, not showing off their ability but giving vent to such a wall of feeling that it's enough to bring me to tears. I wish - I believe as everybody else - that such a moment could go on forever. But, alas!, it is not so. Once again, more from the audiences scream than for the musicians real intentions, the sound is covered by another standing ovation. Peter announces Nusrat's name and the crowd covers the fading notes once and for all. All in all, it lasted 9 minutes and a handful of seconds. 9 minutes that were some of the best in my whole life.

Again, after such a piece going back to Sledgehammer and In Your Eyes is like getting back on your feet to walk after having felt what it's like to have wings and soar the skies... I only have enough attention to mark a really shortened version of IYE (in comparison to the 1987 tour version), that something special happens again. This time it's even more of a surprise because it comes from where I least expected it: ie, from Biko.

Yes indeed! Having heard it at every single Gabriel gig since 1980, I wasn't too fond of it anymore (as I am not now... I will confess), but Peter managed to rework it in such a way that besides putting the sense of novelty into it, really gave the song even more meaning. And the Womad performance beats hand down any of those (though with a similar arrangement) from the subsequent Human Rights Now world tour.

Starting out in the utmost silence (and that in itself could only have been possible at a Womad gig...!), no drums, no guitar, no keyboards: just a drone made up of the band's vocals (uhmmm hah-uhmmm hah...) and Peter's voice less than whispering the first verse's words.

The chorus gets a slightly fuller instrumental background, while the voices all together remain unbelievably quiet and loose. As it gets to the second and third verse the whole slowly, very slowly gatheres momentum. And the addition of one simple sentence before the final chorus (Waiting for a change, waiting for a change to come) lets Peter play around with the song even more. And I sincerely believe that out of the 5,000 people inside the Coliseum not a single one of them was silent or didn't raise his/her hand for the finale.

Setlist

Across The River
African Shuffle
Red Rain
Don't Give Up
No Self Control
Islamic Offbeat
Sledgehammer
In Your Eyes

Biko

Friday 15 October 2010

The Rhythm Of The Heat@Hamburg

Live in Hamburg, at the O2 Arena, on the last night of the New Blood Tour.
A majestic performance by the Orchestra. 


Friday 8 October 2010

Xtra #1 - Milton Keynes, 2.10.1982


Here's another rehashed piece...
This was written around 1984/1985, as a response to the literally hundreds of times people asked me "what was the reunion like?". With the friends from Paperlate (an Italian Genesis & Prog fanzine) we published the whole step by step - emotional, rather than musical - account as a special Xmas issue. It has since become a collector's item and I saw it for sale at Record Fairs for outrageous money...! 
The article was later slightly revised and included as an appendix in my book "Sognando Un Mondo Reale" (published in 1986) - later still, this was nearly verbatim quoted in the liner notes of the bootleg "The Lamb Woke Up Again". 
Sometimes in 2006 I made my first (very short lived) steps in the "blogging arena": there were huge rumours about another possible reunion, at the time, and I decided to translate the old article into English. In doing so, I tried to stick as much as possible to the original idea of a "flow of (un)consciousness" report. I thought of republishing it last saturday, on the anniversary day of that historical October the 2nd, but I was (luckily!) too busy watching PG in Koln. Oh, whatever... "here it comes again" ...

Foreword #1
1980 saw the birth of a very peculiar fanzine, by the name of The Bristol Recorder. It consists of a written part (articles, interviews, reviews...) and an audio one in the form of an Lp (dedicated to "local" bands and musicians out of the Bristol area). Bath is in fact only a handful of miles away from Bristol, and Peter Gabriel has just finished sorting out his own studio in the district, so he offers it to the fanzine people to record some local act. As a thank you, one might believe, and at the same time as a way of gaining a wider appeal and recognition, the second issue of The Recorder includes an interview with PG - one of the most interesting I had seen at the time, showing a clever approach steering quite far off the beaten path of the "why did you leave genesis?" times. Plus, featured in the audio section on the Lp, are 3 live takes from different stages of Peter's career, remixed and dabbed with for the occasion... (sigh!). Amongst the fanzine authors and promoters is a guy called Thomas Brooman, and the friendship between him and Peter, sparked on that occasion, survives alive and robust to this day.

Foreword #2
A dream is born as friends talk, exchange opinions, and discover their shared interested in non-western music. And in the course of nearly two years they organize a three day festival to be held at the Royal Bath And West Show-ground, near Shepton Mallet, between the 16th and the 18th of July 1982). 
Three days dedicated to a World Of Music Arts And Dance. WOMAD
What is it exactly? That's not easy to say for the rock crowd that was used to the Readings and Knebworths of those years: there's music of course, but also books, stalls, foods, costumes, meetings, lessons... Taking part in it are artists from 56 different countries, from all over the world. Fort those who attended a revealing experience of something we had never seen the like of. But for the organizers it's the beginning of a nightmare: not enough media coverage and a British Railway strike crash the original dream of gathering something between 50 and 60 thousand people. Only about 20.000 show up at the gates. Gabriel had helped spend his name with potential sponsors and the site workers, and when things turned sour his name was the one the creditors appealed to seeking compensation. Big time trouble indeed. 

Foreword #3
On September the 15th, 1982, Genesis play a concert on the very same ground that Womad had used 2 months earlier. Peter is there too to say hi to his old band-mates. Having learned of his troubles the band offers him the proceeds from one of their shows. Peter gracefully declines. Enters Tony Smith, at the time manager of both Peter and Genesis: he is the first to devise a way that the group might help its former singer without hurting any feelings. A reunion show. After some internal struggle - he had done all he could to separate his own solo career from the band's past years - Gabriel accepts. The show is set for October the 2nd, 1982, and will take place at the end of Genesis' European leg of the tour, at the Milton Keynes Bowl. On that day, Mike Rutherford celebrates his 31st birthday. This time, the show his publicized all over the globe, on both sides of the Atlantic and even in AUstralia and Japan. The result is that on October 1st, at about 10 p.m., under a steady rain, there's already a few hundred people sleeping and queuing in front of the gates... It has begun... (sleeping?) 

October 2nd, 1982
John Martin... 
Blues Band... 
Talk Talk... 
and then...

Black curtains are drawn to reveal the stage, still immersed in darkness. A few blue spots are turned on. A weird guy with a glittering green livery, full of shiny buttons and ribbons, gets to the centre of the stage and starts to talk: "About 15 years ago...". We don't have a clue, but from his words we gather he is Jonathan King. Heck, who cares... 60.000 people are jumping up and down as one when his speech gets to an end: "...Please welcome Six Of The Best!". 
We hear drums, a pre recorded and very familiar pattern. All the musicians walk in and take their place at their respective instruments and positions. The drums go on. And on.
4 more guys out of a funeral parlor, all in black with matching top hats, walk onto the stage carrying a white coffin. It lasts for a couple of minutes but it feels like hours. The guys walk away and the coffin lid starts to move, almost imperceptibly. Amidst the huge crowd noise it seems one can actually hear the evil creaking from the wood being unriveted. 

I see faces and traces of home... 
Resurrection?! Indeed, the man that comes out of the coffin has nothing to do with the Peter Gabriel we had learned to love in those 7 years since he did "resign". The guy standing there, shouting his lungs out, is none other than Rael. And even though you have never seen the band before 1976 you just "get it" in a flash, grasping what a "Gabriel era" Genesis show must have been like. It really is just a matter of seconds, while Rael runs all over the place, and you do understand it all. 

Can you tell me where my country lies? 
And it's a giant chorus that entirely submerges the sound system. We don't have time to breathe, to reassure ourselves that it's all true, and the classic synth arpeggio of Carpet Crawlers brings us to yet another dimension. 

The crawlers cover the floor... 
Yes, I realize that there is no way of treating this as a concert review. Everything one can write about this "concert" just becomes sort of obvious, useless, redundant. When Peter literally crawls, slowly, on his knees, towards the edge of the stage, everybody in the front rows of the audience is simply convinced that his eyes are firmly planted on him. Each and every one. And they're all probably right! It doesn't matter if the voice is different, the tone has changed and it really doesn't match the majestic music the other five guys are pushing through in the background. It doesn't matter if he forgets the words. It might be sweat, or rain, but those on his cheeks - on our cheeks - are the sweetest tears ever. Shivers so intense get hold of my spine, running from head to toes, that I'm literally, physically, out of myself. 

You've got to get in to get out... 
This time, as the last notes fade away, all of the 60.000 delirious fans sing together "Happy Birthday" to Mike. When we're through, Peter speaks for the first time: he tells us about Womad and explains that "In return for your cash we will try to give you what we think you would like of this combination". Phil counts the time and 

The path is clear, though no eyes can see... 
What can I say about such a piece? We smile when Peter picks his flute up, but has to look back at Phil and wait for him to signal - counting out the time once more - for the right moment to join in the instrumental. But you're immediately captured by the guitar and keyboards which seem to be there, at that precise moment, reminding everyone that there's some amazing musicianship on that stage. I guess most of the people were there looking for a night of nostalgia and discovery at the same time: it was Peter back with Genesis, not the other way round... But Phil sitting "quietly" behind his drums, dueting with Chester, gives us an unheard of, unprecedented sound. Mike and Tony are there: what else could I say that doesn't sound trite? Clean, efficient, majestic. To my ears the weakest link is Daryl: not that he isn't an excellent musician, he just isn't Steve... After the instrumental bridge, Peter comes back on stage but he has changed from Rael's leather jacket to a white shirt. "The sands of time were eroded by the river of constant change". And the last piano notes hang there in the air for what seems like an eternity.

"This is a message  from all up here to you down there, particularly at the back [the stage was at least 3 meters high]: it's a good job it isn't raining. We appreciate that you're still here". 
Now, besides the fact that it WAS raining... who in his right state of mind would have ever dreamed of leaving the place at that moment? "Naah, seen a couple of songs, you seen them all... Let's go for a pint..." Yeah, like that would happen! 

"Croquet is a particularly vicious British sport..." 
Cynthia, Henry, the nurse: all the characters from the best musical fable ever written come back to life. And I'm reminded of all the critics who have written off Genesis music as "stinking", "old", "dated and unable to withstand the passing of time". Well, there we are, and when the Musical Box is opened once again the sound it delivers is as current as can be. It is in fact eternal. Energy on stage is at its peak: phenomenal. It's almost as if they never went their separate ways: even the voice now matches the music to perfection. Maybe I did get distracted and had a quick glimpse at the other musicians, but when the time comes for the guitar/keyboard solos Peter is nowhere to be seen. As suddenly as he vanished he reappears, donning a long black coat and an old man's mask. Different from the one I knew from pictures. With longer hair, and I smirk to myself at the thought that in the magical world of Genesis even props get older... 

I've been waiting here for so looong... 
why don't you touch me... 
NOW... NOW... NOW... NOW... NOW... 

This is crazy. When the old man falls back on his knees, in unrequited love/lust, you feel yourself falling down with him. And if it were not for the astonishing crowd at your back you'd just be happy to end it there and then, drowning in the mud that by now is up to our knees. 

After some really weird and not totally understandable babble form Peter about soap bars, birthday boy and traveling in a wardrobe... it's time for something "that has nothing to do with one of these: Solsbury Hill". 

Wow. Double wow! 
We're really getting too far out here: Peter is singing the song that everybody thinks "explains" the reasons why he left Genesis... together with them! A nearly impeccable execution and it's time for introducing all the rest of the guys on stage. Chester, Daryl, Mike, Tony and then "a talented new singer who I'm sure you will like, and he will sing you one of his songs: Phil Collins!" He jumps out of his hiding kit and in turn announces: "and for the first time on drums: Peter Gabriel!" and Chester drives it on with the 4/4ths beat on the bass drum for Turn It On Again. 

Another aside reflection that seemed to emerge in my deeply altered state of conscience [entirely due to the current event and not chemically or alcoholically induced, let me reassure you!], was that the songs, title and verses, all had some "deeper" meaning, and that their sequence in itself had a sort of not-too-hidden message... 
  • "I see faces and traces of home"
Yes, everyone there, even the farthest out, are faces and traces from a past that has been brought back. 
  • "Can you tell me where my country lies?"
How many people are here from how many countries? 
  • "You've got to get in to get out"
How about the band itself? All those who entered the chamber of 32 doors, at the end of the corridor, invariably tried to get out but were led back inside. Except for Rael? 
  • "The path is clear"
Everybody today is following its own path, totally free. All part of the "river of constant change". 
  • "I've been waiting here for so long"
7 years... Seven long years filled with doubts and questions: will you (Peter) and you (Genesis) manage to go on your separate ways? And how? But they're here and Now, now, now, now, now... Time has gone backwards for one night, everything has been restarted, and the record in the juke-box has been selected once more. Time to turn it on again... 


After a "wonderful" mistake by PG in telling the "wrong" story, we're introduced to the adventures of a man by the name of Saplock (uh?). He was a collector of all kinds of rubbish, so when his dog Renaldo died he decided he wanted to keep him all the same and brought him to a taxidermist... After a week, Saplock tried to find for the stuffed Renaldo a more comfortable position and put him on the table in front of the fireplace. All of a sudden the dog's eyes started to move, as well as his tail. And even the table began sprouting leaves and branches. Everything started moving back in time and even a rock went back to life. And it was a little "Lamb". 

"Early morning Manhattan..." 
Yes indeed: Rael comes back with a vengeance and we're chasing him around the New York City scenery and into a world that allows for a new journey of discovery with every listen. 8 years have passed since this music was written and performed first, and it is amazing, in the age of synth-pop, that one can still hear it coming alive! The doubled-up drums are doing an extraordinary job, and nobody gives a damn when Peter messes up a wee bit of the newly arranged finale to the song. But wait: that is not a finale... 

"Something solid's forming in the air..."
WTF? What are they getting themselves - and us - into? 

"Echoes of the Broadway everglades..." 
Good grief. I don't believe it: it can't be true! 

"I got sunshine in my stomach..." 
Blimey! I start to believe they'll keep on going, so even though I hear In The Cage drawing to a conclusion, I'm partially deluded of having been transported back to 1975 and that the full Lamb will follow... When some of the shock wears down and flows in waves out of my body, I can begin to breath again. Not for long, though, as Peter goes back to the story he mistakenly anticipated before this totally new "Lamb stew": the girl in green trousers suit (and matching poodle...). And again, I think how bizarre is the fact that we're listening to one of the factual reasons why Peter left the band. The story, printed on the back sleeve of the Genesis Live album of 1973, actually prompted director Will Friedkin to get in touch with Gabriel offering him to write a movie script. And in due turn this brought to the first major fracture in the group, way before the Lamb was actually written or even conceived. 

Anyway, the end of the story reveals that the words written on the laundry ticket pinned to the suit were... 
... Supper's Ready ... And this is "the moment". The one song that every one of the 60.000 people inside the Bowl - bar a dozen or two (and I'm talking about the cleaning squad for the venue after the show) - probably wanted to hear the most. It's easily the most allegorical and symbolical song in the whole Genesis repertoire. For most simply the best. And finally, it's at this point that it enters my mind that I'm actually witnessing a real Genesis concert. 

"Walking across the sitting room" 
On stage, Peter looks as emotional as he probably was at that very first Charterhouse gig with The Anon and Garden Wall. Those in the crowd, if they feel half of what I am feeling, are reduced to nervous wrecks. 

"It's been a long long time..." 
The mixture of tears and rain is what I remember the most.

"Hey you!"
It's a giant, gripping and enthralling chorus. And Peter is evidently crying once again.

"Wearing feelings on our faces..." 
No need to, in fact. There is no possible way of masking the real sentiments pouring out of his and our visages. 

"Today's a day to celebrate..." 
...and so it will for years and years to come, in some private yet shared ritual, everyone with his private memories and feelings, yet all aware that tonight is something so special that it will always be with us for as long as we live. 

"Wandering in the chaos..." 
Chaos in and out of ourselves. We don't really know where we are or who we are any more. I realize, putting this down on paper, that readers who were not there will pity such evident exaggerations. But I can only try to convey and share what I was feeling. The input of data to my brain was a total overload. No way of rationally explain all of it. And thinking back of it I'm transported again against that front row barrier, shouting like a madman totally out of myself. And although I know that these will be different for every person there that night, millions of little details flash again in front of my eyes, and twice as many probably escape me... 

"A flower?"
The new flower mask frames Narcissus face (still a little dirty with Rael's make up). An incredible dance that can probably only be approximately described as a cross between an Irish jig and Monty Python's Ministry Of Silly Walks sketch. 

"All change!" 
And every expression on Peter's face changes in tune with the music and words. And we finally get to the Apocalypse. The "uncovering". The "revelation". Varilites bring on an atmosphere that Saint Peter's has been seriously studying to try and copy it on Judgement's Day: sudden lightning and flashes, smoke clouds and thundering music... 

"Six six sis is no longer alone" 
It's a revelation of all your innermost sensations. 

"I've been so far from here, far from your loving arms: now I'm back again..." 
I realize that I've been shouting at the top of my voice but not a single sound as come out of my throat. Peter's voice is broken, fractured. The sword/light of good triumphs over evil, and the neon reflected in Peter's eyes provokes visions of angels... Maybe the New Jerusalem, paradise, the place for peace by antonomasia is right here, in this lake of mud, were we are tired and wet to our marrows, and yet happy as clams at high tide, at peace with ourselves and the rest of the world. Nirvana. 

It's the beginning of the end... 
The six are back on stage to give us what we know and what we like. And when Steve arrives on stage to join the rest of the band, while Peter is tirelessly thanking everybody - organizers, promoters, musicians, audience... - adrenalin is being pumped once more from our kidneys to our brains! After the first time I saw them, I had never really enjoyed Phil's tambourine and audience routine... But there and then, the fully relaxed atmosphere, the feeling that we had lived through it all and survived helped me enjoying it to the core. Maybe because a little unexpected help came from Peter, who started "pushing" ("sledging", if you catch my drift...) Collins behind his back till about an inch off the edge of the stage... The stare he got back from Phil was priceless! 
Six, no, Seven Of The Best. 
A total far bigger than the sum of its parts. Something unique to that time and place. It's impossible to make any kind of comparison between that and "old" Genesis, between old and new, or Hackett or Gabriel solo careers... Utter nonsense. 

"It's your show!"
Everybody's show: the musicians and the managers, the technicians and the fans. It's Milton Keynes. And it's not over yet. 

"The kniiiiife!" 
The shortened version. As if, on such a night, they could have even thought of doing the full one! Rock, prog, whatever: call it what you want, it's something so special that this band is a "genre" of its own. And one of the most vivid details I still have burnt in my memory cells is Peter's final jump at the end of the song. 

But it ain't over yet. 
Once again, they all come back on stage, donning some funny and clownish red noses. Why? I don't have a clue, and I still wonder to this day why did they want to end the night in bloodshed: as it happens, they took the noses off and threw them to the crowd. And where they fell, sudden hills of people amassed on each other kicking and screaming, searching in complete darkness in a sea of mud for some small red plastic ball to carry home as a souvenir! 
The final words from Peter are "Good night! See you next time!". 

Whh... what? next where? next when?!?!?



Setlist

Back In NYC
Dancing With The Moonlit Knight/Carpet Crawlers
Firth Of Fifth
The Musical Box
Solsbury Hill
Turn It On Again
The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
Broadway Melody Of '74
In The Cage
Supper's Ready

The Knife
I Know What I Like

Tuesday 5 October 2010

Digging In The Dirt@Koln

Thanks to a much tighter Orchestra and a brilliant performance from Peter, this song has subtly but at the same time dramatically changed since its first appearance in March.