Wolfgang's Vault Wolfgang’s Vault:

Peter Gabriel Concert

Bottom Line (New York, NY)

Peter Gabriel concert at Bottom Line on Oct 4, 1978

10.04.1978/ Late Show
Tracks: 20 / Total Time: 1:36:16
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

share on facebook seed newsvine delicious bookmarks StumbleUpon
  • Batmagoo | Thursday, June 25, 2009 | 4:10 am

    In many ways, this is PG at his best - in his post-genesis mode - His voice and energy are still "up" and wild, and his songs are still experimental - His first 3 solo albums had the amazing quality of taking the listener to new places every time. This was, of course, before the radio "hits" taught him how to behave musically. You never knew what he was going to do next...Waiting for a PG album was exciting, and anyone intimately familiar with his career knows he's now been repeating himself for the last 20 years; in fact, shortly after his catastrophic bankruptcy after the first WOMAD festival, it seems he cowered away into the safety of mellow, didactic, political-message Pop Music. Back in 78 at the Bottom Line, that night, he still played Rock & Roll, without being in the least self-conscious. Just fun. Some time back, a younger girlfriend of mine caught me listening to a Gabriel boot from the late 70's and asked who the fellow telling stories was; when I told her "Peter Gabriel," she was dumbfounded. She simply answered: "Now, he seems like a man who became afraid of his own shadow!" ...From the mouth of babes... Enjoy this Bottom Line concert in its full glory, it's a beauty, and a rare testimonial of what it really was like to be into Prog Rock, back in those days.

  • balthes | Monday, June 15, 2009 | 7:19 am

    Good old Peter

  • slomo | Tuesday, May 12, 2009 | 7:43 pm

    never able to see Peter or any of Genesis still love there music thank you wlofgang

  • Todd G | Monday, December 29, 2008 | 11:35 am

    Seen Peter 4 times, what a talent , great concert , great sound

  • Anonymous | Wednesday, December 17, 2008 | 10:15 pm

    AN AMAZING TALENT. FAR AHEAD OF MOST MUSIC AT THE TIME ! SAD HE LEFT GENESIS BUT WE ALL GET TO HEAR THIS GREAT MUSIC !

  • bama110musik | Sunday, December 14, 2008 | 10:35 am

    I prefer his early work to his later more "sophisticated". Sledgehammer changed everthing. For me it was downhill from there. Nowadays, none of his songs is under 6 to 8 min. Early solo work was more to the point. Songs with max. 5 min. But what a power ...

  • J-Love | Wednesday, November 26, 2008 | 8:42 pm

    is he better then sting

  • avianbrain | Monday, November 03, 2008 | 11:51 am

    I recorded the King Biscuit Flower Hour Peter Gabriel concert(off the FM radio) from this period and it is not the same concert. I transferred it to digital about ten years ago. "On The Air" has a very Genesis flavored (keyboard based) arrangement and although the set list is similar - the stories Gabriel tells between songs differs.

  • ginadance | Friday, October 24, 2008 | 6:43 pm

    Brutal.

  • Mozo | Monday, October 13, 2008 | 11:21 am

    Great music quality, but Peter's voice is not sounding very good on this night. He shouts rather than sings a lot of the lyrics. Still great to hear an early concert from his solo career. Please add more solo concerts...

To post your comment please either choose your screen name or elect to remain anonymous

screen name
anonymous set preferences