Showing posts with label live. Show all posts
Showing posts with label live. Show all posts

Friday, 16 February 2024

#30 Brest, Hall de Penfeld, 28.10.1983 (In memory of Mike K. & Michael B.)

Last nights on tours are usually "messy": there's a lot of accounting to be cleared, many knots to untie and everybody's tired. Yet, at the same time, there's a tangible, diffused feeling of elation at having accomplished it all. A feeling which is usually behind some of the most disruptive happenings on stage on those final nights.

One example: on the last European show of 1993 a small scale replica of the Statue Of Liberty made it's unannounced and inexplicable way onto the walkway between the round and square stages of the Secret World tour, to much delight and laughter of Peter and the band - except for L.Shankar, who had been tied up by the roadies and took quite a while to get back on stage when it was time for his introduction by PG...

Oh well...





Back to 10 years before Paris and the Zenith, the scene was already set in France, this time in its top North-Western corner, Brest, 'capital' of Brittany. It was a late autumn night, October 28th, and as previously said, the atmosphere was at the same time hot and relaxed, providing a perfect combination for a great performance.

We had travelled from Nantes by train – one of the very few I could afford on the whole tour, as I usually hitchhiked –, and we happened to share the space with some of The Call and their crew. The band had supported Peter during the summer of 1983 US dates, then joined him again for the last leg of the tour in continental Europe.

Onto the last night... 


As he always did with the support acts, Peter came on stage wearing make up but in "civilian" clothes and hat, jokingly introduced them talking in French making fun of Michael Been.

    PG: Merci, bonsoir! J'essaie a parler un peu français

    MB: What did ya say?

    PG: I said you're shit, Michael!

The real words with which PG described The Call’s songs were "chanson tres interessant pour moi... lors musique vien du coeur" – "interesting songs, and music which comes from the heart”. 

That has stayed with me ever since: there was such a heartfelt, truthful passion in their performance and in Michael Been’s delivery that in my experience very few other bands ever got close to it.

I can’t remember exactly on which song, but it must have been close to the end of their set when Peter suddenly reappeared on stage: this time he was in full concert mode, dressed in white, wearing the monkey make-up and also... carrying a large plant or a small tree of some sort: he was not alone, as the other members of his band did the same and caused havoc on stage, depositing the large vases here and there while The Call kept on playing - amazing pros!!


In the end, the French audience was very appreciative and even asked for an encore, which Michael and the rest of the guys happily delivered (not the "Delivered" song, but "Notified").

The surprise incursion was later reciprocated when all of The Call re-entered the stage during PG’s set: this time they were also all made-up in monkey attire, but were also wearing towels made to look like giant diapers! They emerged from the top of the stage and jumped up and down throwing bananas all over the place... 

Yep, you guessed right: it happened during “Shock The Monkey”, and it was PG’s turn to try and keep on going with the chorus while everybody was laughing real hard!

What else can I say?

The music, the friends, the whole package: that night is burned into my memory cells as one when I experienced the most fun in my life... notwithstanding the totally anti-climactic after show, as we found out most of our luggage and properties had gone, stolen from the friends car we had left them in!

Saturday, 1 July 2023

#182 - 21/05/2023 Milano, Forum [multicam video]




Peter Gabriel
21/05/2023 - Milano, Forum

"Four Kinds Of Horses"


VIDEOS (thanks to:)
Claudia Patrone
iPhonealex66
Joy2050
Roger
Stefano
Tony Faby 91

AUDIO
db-rdwm

EDITING
the intruder


PS: words coming soon ;-)

Sunday, 16 December 2018

#1. It was 40 years ago... today

pix only... words are here



Advert
Trip Reservation
Ticket
Stage design
Moi et mon Teddy Bear



On The Air


Moribund the Burgermeister
 








Perspective



Waiting for the Big One

Mother of Violence






'Cig' Mc Ginnis

The Lamb lies down on Broadway


The bootleg



The review & interview (Ciao 2001)







Monday, 12 February 2018

Happy Birthday Mr. Gabriel!

A Different PoV
And, happy melodist, unwearied, 
         For ever piping songs for ever new; 
More happy love! more happy, happy love! 
         For ever warm and still to be enjoy'd, 
                For ever panting, and for ever young; 
 (John Keats, Ode on a Grecian urn)
It all happened over 30 years ago, at the end of the This Way Up Tour. The 12 months between November 1986 and October 1987, when Peter and the band travelled all over Europe and the USA, have already been quite well described on the special book issued on the occasion of the official So album re-release, together with the companion audio and video sets previously known as P.O.V. (you can read about it here).

There is nothing of great significance I could add to what better wordsmiths than I have already said and told. And I don’t feel any need to bore anybody to death with loads and loads of very personal memories: suffice it to say I have witnessed in person 50 of the European tour dates – all that took place bar 6, which I sadly missed being busy with my journalist exams in Milan –, sharing travels, accomodations, stories and experiences with a bunch of fabulous friends all across France, Italy, Germany, UK, Belgium, Sweden, Holland, Hungary, Austria, Switzerland, Spain and, finally, Greece.
But to stay with the title of the old VHS release, I wished to briefly add my very own – a fan’s – Point Of View about those last 5 nights, which are some of my most cherished memories, still incredibly alive and vivid in my mind. And in my heart.

First of all, as the website states, The Making Of P.O.V. did happen “over three nights”: to be precise, on Monday the 5th of October, Tuesday the 6th and Thursday the 8th. I saw the first from the front row, but then I decided to tape the remaining two shows and sat a few rows in front of the mixing desk to get perfect sound and views. Those recordings, including a few “Extras” J, make up the first 8 discs (all audio-only) of the whole package that the most avidly oriented fans and collectors can now find on the Genesis Movement Torrent Site .
But from my very own “fan P.O.V.”, the real essence of that week were the 2 special filming nights which happened on Wednesday the 7th and Friday the 9th. Nights like no others, that’s for sure (which on the Movement site are also available as dvds).
Doors opened – for free… – at 7.00 pm, and the proceedings started soon after, as soon as the sun was down. The Lycavitos Theatre is situated in the middle of a park on the top of a hill with amazing views of the whole Greek capital and nobody to disturb in the neighborood. This means there was no curfew, and the only “limit” was due to the sun rising again in the morning at about 5.30/6.00 am. All in all, then, the audience was treated to just about 10 hours of “performances”.
During those long hours, since I knew a friend was filming, I had no need to tape or record. I was thus free to stand in the front once more. The stage was quite high and I had to hang onto it most of the time to keep my head above it, and at the end of the night I ended up with an actual piece of the stage in my hands!!

As the following videos clearly testify, it was slow going: some songs had to be repeated to catch different angles with different cameras set-ups, while the usual technical hold ups caused real long waits before everything was ready for every shoot. That’s especially true for the second night, when almost nothing seemed to go according to plan: at the very beginning Peter announced a mini-set of 6 songs to be played back to back, which never materialized because of one single spotlight was not behaving correctly! And it took at least a couple of hours to get it fixed… while the planned setlist was changed, and scrapped, again and again.
But that doesn’t mean the audience had a chance of getting bored!! The pauses between filming were filled up by Peter and the band playing a whole bunch of songs as crowd pleasers, accepting requests, trying out numbers that were not in the usual tour setlist, or improvising a few ‘grooves’ for numbers that would then be performed “for real”.

On to some brief technical notes…
The video wa shot on a Sony Video 8 camera by a close friend. He made frequent pauses in filming, as he only had 3 batteries which should have lasted about one hour each, and all in all I believe he did a fantastic job capturing the best of those 2 nights. Then there was humidity, as those Greek nights were a wet nightmare, rather than a dream! This meant a sudden death for the third battery on the first night, which means he could obviously film but a fraction of what was played: I’d say he managed to cover about 4 hours per night, with the other 5 or 6 sadly unrecorded and unaccounted for.
Because of humidity, the Video 8 cassettes also suffered a lot: most of the problems like stuttering, dropouts, tracking issues, etc., were on the original masters (now sadly lost) which were transferred (at the time) to my VHS copies. I digitized those about 8 years ago, and since I started working on this project in 2010 I have been constantly trying to tweak and improve both audio and video. The many works and re-works, tests and experiments have inflated the *PG ATHENS* folder on my Mac to over 800 GigaBytes! But it was time to put it to rest and accept that, as you will see, the overall final quality is still very far from perfect.. Still, for a 30 years old collection of private tapes I reckon it still makes for a more than pleasurable viewing and listening experience.

I hope you’ll enjoy it…






february 13th, 2018

Sunday, 14 December 2014

Saturday, 13 December 2014

#183 - Dublin, 3 Arena, 10.12.2014



Peter Gabriel
Dublin, 3 Arena
10.12.2014

Final show of the "Back to Front Tour" which for the past 2 years celebrated the 25th anniversary of So, the album which gave Peter fame and fortune.

A tour write-up and a few personal musings will follow after Xmas...

- - - - -


DUBLIN
3 ARENA
10.12.2014


Setlist
What Lies Ahead
Come Talk to Me
Shock the Monkey
Family Snapshot
Digging in the Dirt
Secret World
Darkness
No Self Control
Solsbury Hill
Why Don't You Show Yourself
Red Rain
Sledgehammer
Don't Give Up
That Voice Again
Mercy Street
Big Time
We Do What We're Told
This Is the Picture**
In Your Eyes

Encores
The Tower That Ate People
Biko

Friday, 28 November 2014

#182 - Bologna, Unipol Arena, 21.11.2014



Though not at the top of his voice – Torino the day before was pretty bad, and it evidently got even worse with the cancellation of the Lyon date –, but what a wonderful and amazing show Bologna was!

Proof, in case anybody is still searching for one, that a great concert can only stem from a great artist AND a great audience.

And coincidentally or not, there was "another Gabriel" in the audience that night, whom besides making his father proud I'm pretty sure helped the general mood too ;-)


- - - - -

BOLOGNA
UNIPOL ARENA
21.11.2014

Setlist
What Lies Ahead
Come Talk to Me
Shock the Monkey
Family Snapshot
Digging in the Dirt
Secret World
The Family and the Fishing Net
No Self Control
Solsbury Hill
Why Don't You Show Yourself
Red Rain
Sledgehammer
Don't Give Up
That Voice Again
Mercy Street
Big Time
We Do What We're Told
This Is the Picture**
In Your Eyes

Encores
The Tower That Ate People
Biko

Tuesday, 25 November 2014

#180 - Munchen, Olympiahalle, 30.04.2014

Digging In The Dirt



The Family And The Fishing Net



Though the videos have been on my YouTube channel since May, I never had the time to finish a proper write up of the show, so this was post-poned at least a dozen times...
Now, after 2 further show in Torino and Bologna, it's finally time to let go and forget about it, with a view to a few more complete musings on the whole tour after the last show in Dublin will be over (by the way, if anybody does have standing tickets for that date please, please get in touch!)

- - - - -

MÜNCHEN
OLYMPIAHALLE
APRIL 30th, 2014


Setlist
OBUT [Daddy Long Legs]
Come Talk To Me
Shock The Monkey
Family Snapshot
Digging In The Dirt
Secret World
The Family And The Fishing Net
No Self Control
Solsbury Hill
Why Don't You Show Yourself
Red Rain
Sledgehammer
Don't Give Up
That Voice Again
Mercy Street
Big Time
We Do What We're Told (Milgram's 37)
This Is The Picture (Excellent Birds)
In Your Eyes

Encores
The Tower That Ate People
Biko

Friday, 7 December 2012

# 71/72/73+174/175 – Another P.O.V.

SO... Here's just a little taster, call it teaser if you want, of quite an ambitious project. Not time to give any details yet: watch this space and all will soon(ish) be revealed :-)

Sunday, 3 June 2012

#94 - Marino (Roma), Palaghiaccio, 18.5.1993




I chose this specific track to upload as the Secret World Live official dvd is getting a second release in July. Apparently, this will correct and improve the awful digitization job that characterized the first issue, and will also restore the track Red Rain to its original place in the setlist: although it appeared on the cd, it was nowhere to be found in the original VHS release and it the subsequent dvd.
Unfortunately, none of the official releases featured - or will feature - the show finale, which could be very different from date to date.

Here, from the same tour but from the earlier leg, is a brilliant and emotional version of Here Comes The Flood filmed in Rome, or to be more precise in Marino, at the Palaghiaccio, on May 18th, 1993.

I think the smile on Peter's face all through the song says it all about what a great show that had been!
Also, a fun thing to notice is how Peter used to only sing the first half of Flood and let it hang out there... But check the video at 2'50": although the song was virtually finished another smile and another chord bring it to its 'natural' completion :-)

Saturday, 5 May 2012

#176 Munchen, Olympiahalle, 2.5.2012



Another year, another show. This is in itself amazing!
We're talking PG here, the man that used to tour once or twice per decade at the most!
Not complaining, though... :-)

The show in Munich was the first in a new series of New Blood dates across Germany, and as all 'firsts' it had is highs and lows (though mostly highs), which is especially true when you are dealing with a full orchestra where only a handful are 'stable' musicians and the rest keep varying. I'm sure that in the ten days between now and Stuttgart (which I hope will be my next show...) the amalgam of the players will have vastly improved, making it all tighter and without the few 'loose ends' that one could notice in Munich.
Again, that is not to say that the show was anything less than great!

Peter's voice sounded relaxed and in good shape. Tom Crowley keeps doing an amazing job on piano (but so do all the others on their respective instruments!).
Melanie was back and she was accompanied by a new (to me) second vocalist, Rosie Doonan, with a great stage presence and very good voice.

Setlist-wise, we were treated to a couple of 'newish' songs: Secret World and Father Son. I know the former has been played only occasionally before (mostly in the US), and can't remember wether the latter ever was on the last tour. Both showed signs of absolute brilliancy, but they did not sound fully matured, and I expect them to improve daily till they reach perfection. Once in Stuttgart, of course... ;-)

Setlist

Heroes
Wallflower
Apres Moi
Intruder
San Jacinto
Secret World
Father Son
Signal To Noise
Downside Up
Digging in the Dirt
Mercy Street
The Rhythm Of The Heat 
Red Rain
Solsbury Hill
Biko

In Your Eyes
Don’t Give Up
The Nest That Sailed The Sky

Thursday, 22 March 2012

#113 Paris, Bercy, 24.11.1993

I know, I know, it's been long time since the last post but as mentioned below the "success" of the In Your Eyes clip, now past the 170.000 mark, has really surprised me and left me undecided on how to put up something equally interesting.
I am currently working on a "slightly different" project, but it will take a while to finish it, so I thought I'd post something anyway and chose this clip from the penultimate show of 1993.


Besides Italy (and Glasgow, especially in the 80s...), the Parisian audiences have always been fantastic. That night in Bercy was no exception: my only regret is that the footage does not come from the following night performance, at the Zenith, where all sorts of (fun) things happened above and below the stage!

Sunday, 12 June 2011

San Jacinto@Hammersmith (multicam edit)


Here's the second multicam song.
Again, sound comes from the Digital Brothers tape from the night of the 24th (freely available on the genesis movement torrent site), while images are from both the 23rd and 24th.
Besides my own footage, I also used some by YouTube users silentbobpc and radiosjohn. The title sequence once again features funkymanT's cells animation sequence.

Friday, 25 March 2011

Friday, 17 December 2010

#1 - Geneva, 17.12.1978

More from the vaults. Gig #1. 32 years ago this very day. Recollections were put down about 10 years ago, but it's obvious that this show still holds a very special place in my heart... 


I had only seen Genesis once before - in Paris on September 9th, that same year - and had never heard of any Peter gigs until that moment. When I found from subsequent reviews that on that very day Peter had performed in Knebworth I was quite unsettled and began having regrets... So when I saw the small ad in the Italian magazine Ciao 2001 that Medianova Spettacoli (a specialist company that organized trips abroad to see rock concerts) had set up busses to see Peter in Paris and in Geneva I didn't want to miss my chance.

It must be pointed out for youngsters and foreigners that in the late Seventies Italy was completely left out by any international artist tour schedule due to the long history of chaos at Italian gigs in the first half of the decade: sometimes concerts would not be affected and the havoc took place outside (many of the Torino 1975 Genesis reviews titled something along the lines of "cars burn in the street while the lamb lies down"...), but plenty of times the show themselves were interrupted by self proclaimed "autonomi" that under the slogan "music should be free" really did make a mess forcing their way inside halls without buying tickets.

Witness of these asshole's behavior were for example Led Zeppelin in 1972 (when large part of the audience was forced to get onto the stage itself to avoid fights), Lou Reed in 1973 (after disorders during his Italian support act, his set only lasted three or four numbers), and Santana in 1977 (whose show was abruptly cut short by molotov bombs and police tear-gas shots...).

I was 16 years old at the time, young and naive, and didn't care much for all the political protest. Music was all I cared for, and I remember "working" at my mother's house chores for a week to raise the money for the trip to Switzerland (it was like: half a buck for each of the brass pieces that I would wash and polish...)!! It was my very first Gabriel gig, as I said, but to this day - over 20 years later - memories are quite vivid: it would be impossible, though, trying to recapture that magic with words, and my aim in writing this down is only to fix some points and give voice to some of my feelings as I remember them from that night. Thus be warned that what you will read are obviously and evidently biased opinions...

The busload of Italians that like me had decided to "give Peter a try" arrived at the doors of the hall in the early afternoon. We were the first ones and as soon as the gates opened it was an easy job filling up all of the rows at the front of the stage with fellow countrymen...

Support act was a great (IMHO) new wave american group - The Shirts - fronted by a singer with an excellent voice - Annie Golden. As far as I know they split up around 1980, and Annie Golden went on to become an actress (she did "Hair!" and another film I saw with her also featured Debbie Harry from Blondie - but this is bringing me quite off topic...). All I wanted to say is that ever since then Peter showed the exquisite politeness of coming out before the support band to introduce them to an audience that simply ignored there would be such an act: a gesture that I believe still has no equals in rock. Between ballads and rockers, their set (and Golden's voice) was enough to make me appreciate the group, and once back home I did get three of their albums and a couple of singles (don't know if they put out any more than that...) and always enjoyed them ever since.

Anyway, The Shirts were soon through and with all lights still up in the hall (a big unremarkable squarish venue - only thing I seem to remember is that sits on the sides and at the back of the hall, opposite the stage - were made of some weird sort of scaffolding), a white jeans and white t-shirt clad Peter (but with a "Mozo!" headline on the front) began slowly walking his way through the crowd. Most of the Swiss didn't notice anything special, and only when he arrived in sight of "our" rows the commotion really began. I still remember that my first reaction in shaking hands with my "idol" (hey: I was a spotty teenager at the time!) was that he looked much older than the pictures of him I knew. But I will say more of his audience walk later on. Among jumps and screams, handshakes and embraces, it took Peter over ten minutes to finally make it through and get onto the stage. This was quite simple and unadorned, with 8 or 9 lamps that hanged down from the ceiling - something like those you can find in homes or offices - helped building an intimate atmosphere. The oddest thing was a sort of octopus puppy also hanging down from one of them: I never knew whether this was from one of the band or the roadies or what... I spent over an hour, waiting for the show to start, drawing a sketch of the stage (I remember counting each single light to make a faithful portrait...): this I kept for years and years and I must still have it somewhere, but now that I can finally use it for something and show it on this page I can't seem to find it... :-(

Peter started talking in French introducing his old friend Teddy (a rather large and inflatable version - not the same panda he had for example at Knebworth and which a lot of pictures portray him with). The actual song, Moi Et Mon Teddy Bear, was in fact cut up into different parts: first a verse then some chitchat; another verse and more chat... and so on. All was in French and I confess I didn't get a single word. In my position was probably half of the audience: true, Geneva is in the French side of Switzerland, but more and more voices started shouting to Peter to speak English, and Peter's answer was that that night he would only speak French... "or Italiano". That, of course, stirred up another couple of minutes of commotion that drowned any attempt of going on with Teddy Bear. And it was not the first nor the last time that such "accidents" would happen during the night.

As it as already been well documented elsewhere, at the end of this number Peter started donning large fluorescent gloves and the orange fluo shirt that characterized his appearance on that tour. Finally as he was talking and explaining that it was time to get to work and call some coworkers, the lights in the hall started dimming and some electronic music started in the background (the track is called On Presuming To Be Modern, - there's three different mixes/versions of it on the cd, and it's taken from the "Chords" album by Synergy that you can find here). Peter picked up a powerful spotlight and with it started roaming the audience. After a couple of minutes other lights began responding to Peter's call, and once again walking through the audience Jerry Marotta (drums), Larry Fast (Mr.Synergy himself - keyboards), Sid McGinnis (guitars & cigarette hanging down his lips), Tony Levin (bass) and Timmy Capello (sax and keyboards) joined our man on the stage.

The show could then start "for real" with such a rocking version of On The Air that it was impossible to simply stay down on the floor, and all Italians (and quite a few Swiss, I suppose) stood suddenly up and started swaying and jumping in a frenzy (it was more like a punk scene at that moment than a b.o.f. ex-Genesis' gig). The crowd reaction was not that happy at our gesture, and the constant cries of "assit! assit!" (sit down! sit down!) kept creeping up during all subsequent pauses between each song and the next one. They were all constantly ignored too except for a brief moment during Mother of Violence... but that's a few songs ahead)

Moribund The Burgermeister - and I will point out once again that this was a first "live" impression, and not forewarned by videos or photos - was an eerie experience: Peter's walk and expressions (that nowadays can be very well seen on the Rockpalast video...) were something that really struck a note of oddity which the "I will find out" refrain only helped enhancing. The strange lyrics and at times dissonant arrangement, together with an infectious but slightly "uncoordinated" rhythm, all contribute to make this one of the songs I still recall more vividly.

With Perspective we were back in more traditional rock territory, but in this case the visual attraction, rather than Peter, was Timmy Capello saex playing... No, that's not a typo: he really did perform in quite a "suggestive" way (with Peter playing along and sort of humping him from behind!), and if you only have in mind his "Conan" looks on the Tina Turner shows and videos in the late Eighties, you are far far away from what he looked like then (again, the gallery or the Rockpalast video can give a fair idea of what I'm saying!).

To my ears, this is the tour where Humdrum sounded at its best. Larry's textures together with Peter's work on piano and synth were the essential elements in building a real kind of magic: the "meaningless" words (by Peter's own admission they were picked for sound rather than sense) in the coda got such a coloring from all this that the song - a veritable trademark of Peter's early years - really stood out as a central piece of the first part of his career.

After Teddy (that for the British might have been a single b-side, but to me was totally unheard of...) this was the second New Song of the night: actually untitled, it has gone under a different set of names from bootleg to bootleg and review to review (sometimes "New Song" - as opposed to "new new song" which was an early incarnation of Family Snapshot more conveniently titled from it's refrain, again, by bootleggers and tape traders, as "Get On Back"... - sometimes "Nothing" or its French and German counterparts, respectively "Rien" and "Nichts"). Whatever the name, the "negative" in the title - as well as more obviously the music - gave away the fact that this early sketch would later become Not One Of Us. The funny thing is that while the verse in the early version disappeared from the final song, the chorus remained but lost the words and turned into the instrumental bridge of the released track. Lyrics were mostly improvised and gabrielese, and the music, though catchy and with a "hanging finale" (that was left to the audience caught in the little trick of catch phrase and response), definitely gained from subsequent changes and rearrangements that turned it into the released official number.

Then it was time for another favorite from that era/tour: what I said for the final part of Humdrum holds even more true for White Shadow. This time with the "added value" of Timmy Capello as second keyboard player (actually third one, in the song long instrumental section, when Peter was playing his Prophet too) and some really excellent steel guitar work by McGinnis (in other parts of the show his sound was far too metallic and rough for my taste, but here it fit in perfectly).

DIY always was an incredibly nice pop song, though I don't really understand Peter's high hopes for charting with such a single (he brought it out twice): for a start, the lyrics were far too clever; and though the melody was and is quite catchy and the refrain rocks, it still remains far too quirky for an age where Abba and the likes were top of the charts! That he was never completely satisfied with the recorded version it's testified by the three different ones available (not including the live one from Plays Live), but also by the worked and reworked live arrangement.

Like on the previous tour (of which I had read a couple of reviews) during Waiting For The Big One Peter once again introduced his crowd walking routine. First of all, though one could hear him singing, looking on stage he was nowhere to be seen, and his place was taken by Timmy Capello on the piano. Then, since Peter voice kept coming through the PA, you started looking around, and all of a sudden there was a noise from the crowd at the far end of the hall: there was Peter all right, but only illuminated during the verses. The fact that he sung one verse on one corner and that the next verse was done in a totally different place where he had moved to in the dark added to the spooky effect and sense of "displacement": reading about it was one thing, but seeing it was different. Peter always said it was done to establish a "closer" relationship with the audience and to break down the traditional barriers between public and performer, but I must confess that this kind of displacement had different effects on me: first, I was angry because I couldn't see much of what was happening, and also, though my experience of real life rock concerts was at the time very limited, I always thought it looked more like a showoff than an act of "getting on the level"... I'm not saying it was, but I believe that Peter's point was much better clarified later on by beginning the show with either Intruder or Rhythm Of The Heat and with the stage dive for Lay Your Hands On Me - maybe because the gesture acquired a sort of iconic status that it totally lacked in 1978. Oh, well: whatever... To finish with the song, Big One was also a way for displaying the whole band instrumental ability and professionalism by swopping their roles all around. And even Peter ended up at Jerry's kit thumping away, more or less in time...

Though possibly one of the greatest numbers Peter ever wrote from a melodic point of view, Mother Of Violence has often struggled to come out even half decent on stage. Maybe theaters and smaller clubs were better, but in larger halls it almost invariably totally lost sound and significance if you were not standing two meters from Peter. In this case I was, and I loved every tenth of a second of it...

For totally different reasons, Slowburn is another song that I always liked more in its studio incarnation rather than live: I remember its complex changes of mood and rhythm breaks, the full blown orchestral bits as opposed to the much quieter piano passages were quite complicated to reproduce on stage, and that night version was no exception.

Then it was time for another new number: I Don't Remember, Peter has been known to say, marked the start of his working method "rhythm up" (using the very first programmable PAiA drum machine - that Larry Fast had helped programming, if I'm not mistaken). As many others, the song went thorough a number of changes: the Geneva version was very close to the one that finally ended up as the b-side of the Games Without Frontiers single. The lyrics were almost finished by then (compared with some of the European or American earlier dates version the Gabrielese vocals had virtually disappeared) and the bass still played the lead role in building the track spine (rather than piano & guitar).

There's frankly very few words that I can spend on Solsbury Hill and Modern Love: both singles off the first album (much better received than either version of D.I.Y.) they have always been among PG's most heard songs of all and especially the first - an "anthem" since it's very first appearance. An orgy of dancing and rocking for the very audience that I believe was hardly characteristic for those that might have expected something along the lines of old Genesis shows...

A little bit of which surfaced during the first encore of The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway. It was, though, even then, sheer nostalgia. Wearing Rael's leather jacket was fun, and this was indeed what made Peter's solo version peculiar: it became a "funny" song, loosing any kind of dramatic overtone that it used to have before. In the final chorus Peter even dropped the mike in one of the jacket pockets and started strutting up and down the stage, swaying his hips, with a silly grin and waving good-bye with his hand... A great song, of course, nonetheless hilarious to say the least...

That's were usual shows would end, but this was the last night of an extremely long tour - though split into a few different legs - that had brought Peter all over the world since August. There would be an appendix in London the following week with a five night residency at the Hammersmith Odeon, but that probably felt like a "home match" and didn't count too much. Anyway, as I would learn in the following years, last nights on any tour are always meant for some sort of celebration (I'm specificaly thinking of the French 83 tour finale in Brest, and the Secret World Tour at the Paris Zenith), and this was no exception. So after the obvious encore, Peter and the band came back on stage, this time accompanied by all of The Shirts for a raging version of All Day And All Of The Night (the Kinks' classic that used to be part of the set in 1977 but, as far as I know, was unplayed since... they probably just rehearsed it during the soundcheck for a while). It was evident that both Peter and Annie were enjoying the duet (probably thinking of the rest they would get after that night) and it was a more than fitting conclusion for the show, the tour and my own private dream come true...


Setlist

Moi Et Mon Teddy Bear
On Presuming To Be Modern
On The Air
Moribund The Burgermeister
Perspective
Humdrum
New Song
White Shadow
D.I.Y.
Waiting For The Big One
Mother Of Violence
Slowburn
I Don't Remember
Solsbury Hill
Modern Love

The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
All Day And All Of The Night (w./The Shirts)


(This review was originally posted over 10 years ago on my old, old website. The original format is still available here)