Peter Gabriel - Toronto, September 19, 2012 |
Peter Gabriel and I have quite a
history together. Last week at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto I saw
him for the sixth time, which I will discuss shortly, but nothing
will ever top the first time on the evening of
October 16, 1978, also in Toronto, at Maple Leaf Gardens. And no, I'm
not rainman with dates. There's a wonderful, and very obsessive
website called setlist.fm that lists all his (and many many
perfomers') concerts from the start of his
solo career to the present.
In 1978, I was a broke university
student, so I could only afford nosebleed seats in the greys high up
in MLG's rafters. A friend and a girl I was seeing at the time came
with me. After a terrible opening act (what they were thinking
putting Nick Gilder on as Peter Gabriel's opening act is beyond me.
We booed him off the stage in 15 minutes – poor bastard – though
we gave him polite applause for his one hit that I can recall, “Hot
Child in the City”), I snuck down to the top of the reds with my
camera, telephoto lens and high-speed black and white film. I hoped
that the lens and fast film would allow me to get good shots.
Review of the 1978 Toronto concert |
I returned to my seat and told my
girlfriend and buddy what had transpired. And no, I didn't have a
photo of him. About three-quarters of the way through the concert
Gabriel's band began “Here Comes the Flood,” the song he always
sang at that time when he ventured into the audience. Two feet from
me (I was sitting on the aisle) an usher came down beside me followed
by a man. I could see neither of their faces. The usher, instead of
showing this guy a seat, used his flashlight to send a signal to the
mostly darkened stage (Gabriel's band were playing riffs on the
song). A spotlight flashed on, blinding us, and there, two feet from
me, was Peter Gabriel (yup, I recognized him this time). Everybody
around us went nuts. The only thing I had time to do before he moved
off singing the song was to clap him on the back. As it later turned
out, none of the photos I took were much good, and by the time I had
my second encounter with Gabriel, I was out of film.
Throughout the 1980s, I saw Gabriel
four more times. None could top the first. How could they, especially
my double encounter with him on that evening in 1978? The
last time was also the same night I saw Bruce Springsteen
for the first time, the Amnesty International Tour concert on
September 15, 1988, also at Maple Leaf Gardens. Over the years, he
continued to release the occasional CD, such as his great soundtrack,
Passion (1989), to
Martin Scorsese's outrageously misunderstood masterpiece, The Last
Temptation of Christ (1988),
Us (1992), Up
(2002) and last year's New Blood. But I never had an urge
to attend another Gabriel concert. I believe it is hard, if not impossible, to top the
first time seeing any artist, which is why I have no intention of
seeing Youssou N'Dour or Bruce Springsteen again now that I've seen
full concerts by both (N'Dour and Springsteen both had truncated
roles on the same Amnesty concert as Gabriel in 1988). But with less
than a week to go, my wife told me she'd never seen him live, so I
got tickets at the last minute.
Again
nosebleed seats (that's all that were left). Unlike the tour to
support New Blood,
which featured a full orchestra (no drums or guitars) playing his old
songs, this tour did have an intriguing premise. He and his original
band (bassist Tony Levin, guitarist David Rhodes, percussionist Manu
Katche, and keyboardist David Sancious) were going to play, in track
order, the entire So (1986)
album to celebrate its 25th
anniversary. The rest of the evening would be from his other records.
After
a short opening set (just three songs) by his Swedish-based back up
singers, Jennie Abrahamson and Linnea Olsson, Gabriel came on to
outline the evening. The first part would be an acoustic set with
just piano, voice, double bass and acoustic guitar and drums. Part
two would be electronic featuring a full assault. Part three would be
So played track by
track.
To
say the evening then got off to a very distancing and distracting
start would be an understatement. For some ill-conceived reason,
Gabriel decided to illuminate this first section with the house
lights on. The only other light source during the acoustic section on the
stage was a bare light bulb, so I guess he wanted to replicate that
idea in the audience. The problem was that the strongest house lights
were right above our heads. The effect was to put a distancing veil
between us and our ability to view the stage. To understand what this
was like, try this. Take a fluorescent desk lamp and hold the light
just above your eyes and look at someone. It's like you are looking
through a fog. It also didn't help that he decided to start the
evening with a new “unfinished” and “untitled” song that a
few days later I discovered Gabriel had finally titled “OBUT.” Since Gabriel has always loved to wear literal or figurative masks as
a performer he may have decided to obscure a vague song even
further with this technique, but it just didn't work. I figured out
quickly that this was deliberate, but many people around me didn't,
calling out, “turn out the house lights!”
Like
many singer/songwriters (Randy Newman comes to mind), Gabriel has
always loved to put on a dark persona with his songs. On tracks like
“Intruder” (off of his 1980 third solo album, also called Peter
Gabriel, aka Melt)
he's a sexual predator. On “Big Time” (off of So)
he's an arrogant and self-entitled businessman. And on “Family Snapshot” (also on Melt)
he took on the persona of Arthur Bremer. Bremer was a would-be
assassin who, in 1972, shot and seriously wounded Governor George
Wallace. Amongst Bremer's belongings a diary was found that was later
published. Gabriel read the work and wrote “Family Snapshot” as a
narrative from the point-of-view of an assassin about to shoot a
politician. Throughout his solo career, Gabriel has often explored
the cracks and crevices of damaged psyches in his own attempt to
understand the dark corners of life on our planet. This was the last
song in the weak acoustic section and it became, half way through,
part of the electronic section as the house lights finally went down
and the electric guitars came out. Though the So
portion at the end was fun, the best part of this concert, and most
unnerving, was this second “act.”
Toronto 2012 - Video Imagery |
The
concert hit a completely different level when they began to perform “Digging in the Dirt” off of Us,
a song about the explosion of a
man's personal life. Gone was the tentativeness of the opening
portion (this was only the third night of the whole tour). The
lighting, song choice and video imagery from this point onwards were
used to examine one overriding theme: the insecurity and fear that
invades our every day life post 9/11 (even though all the songs came
out before 9/11). The lights moved around the stage on a rail by
balaclava-wearing men. They came in close to Gabriel and the
band in an almost threatening manner on songs like “Secret World”
and “The Family and the Fishing Net,” or they twirled around in
confusion to suggest a man's deteriorating mental state in “No Self
Control.” The feeling created by the video technology (edited live
and on the fly) was dislocating. The stage was littered with tiny
cameras seemingly attached to everything (instruments, lights,
microphones, people). This all led to fragmented, rapid-fire imagery
which at some moments were like the flashes out of a war zone, or
broken images from a rebel news cast. It is no stretch to suggest
that this portion of the concert was Gabriel commenting upon the
uncertain post 9/11 world we live in.
The
So portion continued
with these ideas on songs like “Red Rain,” “Don't Give Up”
(with Jennie Abrahamson doing a credible stand-in for Kate Bush),
and “We Do What We Are Told (Miligram's 37).” But the stunt of
playing the whole album track by track lacked the frightening
immediacy of the second portion. Part of the joy of live performance
is that you are never sure when the concert will end. Here you knew
exactly when we would be heading to encores: “In Your Eyes,” as
it's the last track on the album.
Unlike
most recording artists, Peter Gabriel has always attempted to
understand the world he lives in through his songs and the manner in which he stages
his concerts, whether it was back in 1978, or now. In 2012, as Syria tears
itself apart, the Muslim world freaks out over a childish and
despicable trailer for a film, and Iran continues to threaten
Israel's existence, there is plenty of material Gabriel wrote in the
past that still has deep resonance to the present, and his live
performances, such as this, continue to add to that legacy.
His
tour continues through the end of October across the US. For upcoming
shows, go to www.petergabriel.com.
– David Churchill is a critic and author of the novel The Empire of Death. You can read an excerpt here. Or go to http://www.wordplaysalon.com for more information (where you can order the book, but only in traditional form!). And yes, he’s begun the long and arduous task of writing his second novel.
I was at that '78 MLG show as well, and helped you boo Nick Gilder off the stage. All I remember is that between every one of his three or four songs all you could hear was people chanting "Gabriel. Gabriel". The next time he was at MLG 'Random Hold' opened, and they were amazing (I arrived late, fearing a repeat). I've read that show was their best performance in that whole tumultuous tour - I even bought the album (still have it). I recall them opening with the 'spotlights' in that second show. Not after Nick Gilder. But they all blend into one concert after a while. Regardless, I'm sure (I hope) Nick Gilder still recalls that night as vividly as I do. The palpable disappointment after the house light went down and they announced "Please welcome, Decca recording artist... Nick Gilder!"
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