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Peter Gabriel Concert

Bottom Line (New York, NY)

Peter Gabriel concert at Bottom Line on Oct 4, 1978

10.04.1978/ Early Show
Tracks: 18 / Total Time: 1:34:19
Catalog: King Biscuit

Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

Following his 1975 departure from Genesis, at the height of their popularity, and after a period of rest and creative rejuvenation, Peter Gabriel returned with his compelling first solo album in 1977. In the two-year interim, Gabriel had matured as both an artist and a songwriter. His new music was scaled down considerably and gone were the rhetorical and prog-rock musical flourishes that characterized Genesis. Over the course of his first three solo albums, he would become increasingly adventurous and increasingly…entire summary

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  • paj | Wednesday, May 13, 2009 | 2:22 pm

    After seeing Gabriel perform with Genesis for THE LAMB tour i was a bit skeptical as to what he would sound like and even wondered if he would spend his time trying to reproduce old Genesis songs. It was the second night of his first solo tour and i had 3rd row center seats. Television opened the show and at the time the audience made up mostly of Genesis fans booed them but i thought that that Television was the perfect band to hit the road with Gabriel. Television didn't let the heckling get to them and they kicked ass. Peter put on one hell of a hot show that not only blew me away but also showed that he was not going to live in the past. Before i had not heard any of the new lp so it was not only new to me but, was very impressive. Funny how Levin & Morotta ended up playing with Fripp in KING CRIMSON years later. Gabriel ended the show with a killer version of BACK IN NYC and and after that i knew that he was off and running. I've seen him 3 other times including opening nights of his world tours and he hasn't let me down yet. Let's not forget that the man is a good flute player and drummer as well. When Collins was turning pop Gabriel was out kicking ass and creating new exciting material. Sorry Genesis fans but after Gabriel and Hacket left the band they rally became nothing more that a commercial machine lacking the originality they once prided themselves on. These people are just that, people and we all age and sometimes look for easy ways out, but Gabriel hasn't done that and he continues to create great music. Too many young guys taking pot shots at the aging stars-you try doing what they have been doing for as many years as they did. Good luck with that. Oh, by the way, you also have to write good music and put on performances and be creative.

  • conedog | Friday, May 08, 2009 | 6:28 pm

    Caught him at Stonybrook University in 1982 and have been hooked since.

  • Pokerstar | Tuesday, January 27, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    To anonymous; I was also at the Merriweather Post Pavillionin 83 show, and was completely blown away. That was the 2nd time I saw PG, and every time I see him, he astounds with his musical brilliance.

  • pgravelle | Sunday, January 25, 2009 | 5:11 pm

    I saw the Philly shows @ The Tower for this tour. Wow, so great to hear again!

  • roarvis | Tuesday, December 23, 2008 | 5:05 pm

    This is a fun show. The sound is a lot warmer than the later Gabriel live recordings I've heard. It's great to hear some of these more obscure early songs being performed live.

  • Brian S. | Saturday, November 29, 2008 | 11:35 pm

    I' ve seen Peteter many times since 1980. First show I saw was at Asbury Park in 1980-- Peter sat next to me and ny friends w/ a shaved head and a spotlight-- had no clue who he was!!! What a show!!! Witnessed many shows over the years-- One of the most memorable was at the Ritz-- now called Webster Hall- in 1982 or so when Peter played a Thanksgiving Night show. I stood next to Liza Minnelli, who swore it was one of the best shows she had ever seen. First time I saw Pete go into the crowd during "Lay Your Hands On Me" Last Time I saw Pete was in Brittanny, France where my wife, son, and niece had the honor of experiencing Pete doing a number of the classics from his repetiore. Lucky Us!!!

  • Cerberus | Monday, October 27, 2008 | 1:12 pm

    One word can really sum this show up. WOW!!

  • Anonymous | Saturday, October 25, 2008 | 3:14 am

    My first Gabriel show was at Merriweather Post Pavillionin 83. I had no idea what I was in for. This was right after the release of the Security album. He came out with his face paint and danced around like a monkey throughout the show. The stage was a series of white steps that provided Peter plenty of room to jump around. He literally walked on top of the audience singing "Lay your hands on me." I completely lost it after that show feeling like I had just witnessed an alien encounter. I've seen about 5 other shows since, but that was the one that left an indellible footprint on my brain. Merriweather has seen some great shows over the years, but that night was special.

  • nedhead | Saturday, October 25, 2008 | 2:00 am

    i saw the Baltimore Constitution Hall concert the next week(?), having listened to this on the radio, so of course i was absolutely trembling with anticipation, and it will always remain in my top 10 concerts ever. We didn't know that Gabriel had shaved his head (we were still thinking of the Prince Valiant shag he had from Genesis and the first PG album.) So as we were going in, there was this skinhead-looking guy leaning on the wall outside the ticket booth, and my friend Doug Bland said "I think that's him!" which we all pooh-poohed. So we weren't prepared for the beginning. We were sitting in the balcony, and the house lights were still up and the audience still yakking away, when this fellow in a jumpsuit came wandering up the center aisle, jumped up on the stage, shook someone's hand in the front row, and then sat at the piano. i thought he was a roadie, but slowly it sank for the whole crowd that it was indeed PG himself!!. He made the announcement about bringing "someone I'm very fond of" and i was about to completely lose it, thinking "It's Fripp!! He's gonna bring out Fripp!!!!", when he reached behind the piano and pulled out his teddy bear! (Fripp had played the NYC show seated behind a screen, as i recall!) So that was great. Then when he announced the game of 'Hunt the Musician", the house lights went down to complete darkness, and PG lifted a hand-held searchlight, which he began waving around the room. Then from the back and side doors of the hall appeared, one by one, other searchlights weaving shafts of light through the dark as the band wandered through the crowd and up the aisles, finally converging in the stage. (This is the "Introduction Music" track.) Quite a breathtaking visual experience. So that was great. Once the music began, there was just so much new stuff! This was the first concert i recall seeing cordless guitars and mikes. During the set, there was a point when the band was jamming and i realized that PG was no longer on stage. Suddenly he was singing again, but not visible until a searchlight lit up the balcony, revealing him sitting two rows in front of me, right next to my friend Tommy Penrod!!!!! So that was amazing. Then there was the theatricality of the stage set. As i recall, there was a slanting central ramp which was clear and full of black lights, on which he would stand and dance and sing, lit from below. Very cool. Then there was TL's Chapman stick, which we'd never seen such a thing before. And LF was playing an Arp 2600 or 2700, actually programming on the fly, looking like an old-time telephone operator as his hands flew plugging and unplugging the patch cords. Just jaw-dropping. They evidently pretty much reproduced this show in Baltimore. We did not however, as far as my foggy mind recalls, get the Kinks tune nor the LLDoB encore. But i definitely remember walking out completely shaken to my core. So it's a distinct pleasure to rediscover this experience thanks to old BG.

  • Anonymous | Saturday, October 25, 2008 | 12:29 am

    Some thoughts...thanx to avianbrain for comparing his version..I also recorded 100 KBFH shows...many questions surface about the WV concerts..PG played 2 shows this night..KB most likely recorded them both..used the better takes for the broadcast..WV version is most likely the board tape that BG had his people record as he did for all his shows..if you look at all the shows on WV,you will notice that the soundboard guy screwed up often...didn't start the tape on time,fell asleep when it was time to flip the casette etc...I think KB also covered PG 1st tour 'live' from the Roxy in LA...I have a couple of wild pix of PG on my website if you're interested...peterstupar.com Archivist @ Work.....peter

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