Product Details
Peter Gabriel

Peter Gabriel
Peter Gabriel

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Track Listing

  1. Moribund the Burgermeister
  2. Solsbury Hill
  3. Modern Love
  4. Excuse Me
  5. Humdrum
  6. Slowburn
  7. Waiting for the Big One
  8. Down the Dolce Vita
  9. Here Comes the Flood

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #38811 in Music
  • Released on: 2002-05-07
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Formats: Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered

Customer Reviews

Peter Gabriel's Classic First Solo Flight5
With the tribal beat intro to the opening track, "Moribund The Bergermeister," the incredibly talented Peter Gabriel made his introduction to the music world as a solo artist. After leaving the band Genesis in 1975, partially due to exhaustion, and partially to spend more time with his family, among other reasons, Peter Gabriel took a couple of years off from the music business before roaring back in 1977 with his very first solo album. Simply called "Peter Gabriel" (or "Car" or "Rainy Windshield"---see cover art), it's an excellent debut from a musical genius with a long, fruitful solo career ahead of him. This is the album that features Gabriel's first signature tune, "Solsbury Hill," partially about his departure from Genesis (certainly the second verse, featuring "I was feeling part of the scenery/I walked out of the machinery", directly addresses it). It also features the lovely "Here Comes The Flood," another Gabriel staple, as well as the humorous barbershop-quartet number, "Excuse Me," the grand cocktail-jazz piece, "Waiting For The Big One," another fine ballad in the form of "Humdrum," and the great orchestral rocker, "Down The Dolce Vita." Gabriel's singing & songwriting is world class, and the sound, especially on this new remastered edition, is excellent.Peter Gabriel already made a name for himself as the lead singer for Genesis, and God bless him for his amazing years with the band. But with his 1977 debut solo album, it was time for Gabriel to spread his wings and forge his own musical path. Boy, did he ever. :-)

What more do you want?5
Forget all of the Peter Gabriel you've heard before and start a clean slate with his first solo project. The comical tracks "Moribund The Burgermeister" and "Excuse Me" not only convey utter absudity in their lyrics, but the music itself needs no words to make you giggle. "Solsbury Hill" stands with few others (like Pink Floyd's "Money") in making waves in the charts while having a 7-beat pattern instead of your standard 4- or 8-beat patterns. What makes "Waiting For The Big One" unique is that it ends several times. After a little over 2 minutes, when you hear a resounding ending chord, you would not expect the song to last another 5 minutes. "Humdrum" begins timidly, turns into a polka, and then suddenly assumes an extremely majestic tone with very strong drums: all of this in about 3 minutes! "Modern Love" comes as close to "standard" rock ala Bon Jovi as Gabriel gets for a few more years. "Slowburn" is a musical chameleon: you never know which musical color you will hear from one line of lyrics to another. "Here Comes The Flood" is the emotional highlight of the album. Intensity is present throughout regardless of the volume at any given second. But far and away, the musical highlight has to be "Down The Dolce Vita," which beautifully blends the worlds of classical music and rock-& roll. The presence of The London Symphony Orchestra will surprise the first-time listener. It is featured for nearly an entire minute before the band comes in. The interweaving of the band and symphony are excellent throughout. The fake ending that leads to an alhemiolic interlude (a six-beat pattern in the temple blocks playing against a seven-beat pattern in the triangle) capped by a guitar solo that reminds you that you are in the same song, leads to one last minute of the most brilliant recording you may hear. The band and symphony do not intertwine, but become one in a massive wall of sound that could only be made better by a sudden ending instead of a fade. This album is totally satisfying throughout.

Just what is Gabriel up to on this one?5
At a first listen, it might sound like Peter Gabriel simply took a bunch of different songs he'd had cooking in his head, and decided to release them all on the same album, regardless of whether or not they had anything in common. What other way could there be to explain the musical diversity on this album, both between songs and in the songs themselves? But the second time you listen to this, hopefully you'll realize, as I did, that Gabriel only pretends not to know what he's doing.

As this is Gabriel's first album after leaving Genesis (which had been a genius progressive rock group under his influence), it's as if he decided to take a musical journey, testing the creative waters now that he was a solo artist, and had complete creative control. And he uses that control in some interesting ways. The end result is an album that is more engaging than his second solo album, but less solid and coherent than his third.

There really isn't a song on here that I dislike. Gabriel, through his exploration, runs the gamut from folk (Solsbury Hill), pop rock (Modern Love), cheesy retro barbershop (Excuse Me), epic symphonic hard rock (Down the Dulca Vita), and what could best be described as Broadway showtunes on acid (Slowburn). Some songs work better than others, but the way the album is sequenced (for example, following an edgy rock number like Modern Love with something more silly, like Excuse Me) keeps the listener engaged, and marveling at what Gabriel could possibly be thinking. It's also interesting the way he changes direction within the songs themselves. Humdrum almost seems to go through three phases: we start with only a low-key piano and Gabriel singing, then shift into something that almost sounds like bistro-jazz, then we end with something that sounds more epic, with a sweeping synthesizer overscoring the rest of the music. This song also provides an excellent display of Gabriel's vocal range: he starts soft, then shifts into a higher pitch, then finishes in a lower, almost grumble. For me, though, the stand-out tracks are the following:

-Moribund the Burgermeister. Some might find it bizarre that he starts the album out with such a bizarre number. But those that know Gabriel from his days with Genesis won't find it bizarre at all. Gabriel's penchant for being delightfully weird shines through in the tale he weaves, a tale that is both morose and lighthearted, just what you'd expect from him. Here again, he also displays the diversity of his vocal range, from soaring high notes to a deep, bass rumble.

-Waiting For the Big One. Gabriel's love of shifting direction especially holds true for this one. It's almost as if he was writing two songs in one. We start with a delightful 40s cocktail jazz-rock motif, then the song seems to stop suddenly, and we hear a guitar piece with a bit more edge to it. Then we go back to what we were hearing before. We go back to this guitar number again a few times, and at the climax of the song, it's accompanied by a small choir. It may not seem like it, but this is definitely one of the more accomplished tracks on the album.

-Here Comes the Flood. This is a beautiful closing song, and if one listens to both the musical undertones and the somber tones with which Gabriel sings, it almost serves as a prelude to the music Gabriel would go on to write for much of his solo career.

Overall, we're left with an album that's more disjointed than the rest of Gabriel's solo work, but in the style of the former Genesis frontman, it's magnificently disjointed. Gabriel invites the listener along on a musical exploration, and if one is prepared to listen to the album on those terms, one will see it as brilliant.