Peter Gabriel – Stockholm, Sweden (10/11/77)

Peter Gabriel
Konserthuset
Stockholm, Sweden
1977-10-11

1.1 Here Comes The Flood 2:47
1.2 Slowburn 5:10
1.3 Moribund The Burgermeister 5:20
1.4 Modern Love 4:39
1.5 Indigo (beginning cut) 3:48
1.6 Humdrum 4:45
1.7 White Shadow 5:19
1.8 I Heard It Through The Grapevine 10:30
2.1 Excuse Me (fades in) 4:12
2.2 Waiting For The Big One 7:48
2.3 band intros 1:11
2.4 Solsbury Hill 5:25
2.5 Down The Dolce Vita 6:39
2.6 On The Air 4:49
2.7 All Day And All Of The Night 4:32
2.8 Here Comes The Flood 6:45
2.9 Back In N.Y.C. 4:43

Peter Gabriel – Piano, Flute, Tambourine, Vocals
Sid McGinnis – Guitars, Backing Vocals
Tony Levin – Bass, Stick, Tuba, Backing Vocals
Jerry Marotta – Drums
Bayette – Keyboards, Synthesizers

audience recording
FLAC (from movement site)->wav->audacity (remove gaps, retrack->wav->FLAC8

Peter Gabriel – Copenhagen, Denmark (10/09/77)

Peter Gabriel
Tivolis Conzertsal
Copenhagen
1977, 9th October

cd1
Here Comes The Flood (piano)
Slowburn
Moribund The Burgermeister
Modern Love
Indigo
Humdrum
White Shadow
I Heard It Through The Grapevine

cd2
Excuse Me
Waiting For The Big One
Band Introductions
Solsbury Hill
Down The Dolce Vita
On The Air
All Day And All Of The Night
Here Comes The Flood (Reprise)
The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
Soundcheck (bonus track)

Peter Gabriel – Piano, Flute, Tambourine, Vocals
Sid McGinnis – Guitars
Tony Levin – Bass, Stick, Tuba, Backing Vocals
Jerry Marotta – Drums
Bayette – Keyboards

Matrix edition note:
unknown lineage
OAM cover from “Here Comes The Flood” to “Here Come The Flood (Reprise)”
OAM tape flip from 5:05 to 6:35 on “I Heard It Through The Grapevine”
OAM tape ends at 5:10 of “Here Come The Flood (Reprise)”
Audience has some fills (in mono)
all editings made with Steiberg Wavelab
main EQs on OAM and Audience made with HarBal 2.3
artwork by Highlander included

never buy or sell and trade freely
enjoy the music, Renzo.

A Digital Brother & RDWM collaboration
digital editing and matrix edition (OAM + AUD) by RDWM

Peter Gabriel – Cleveland, OH (03/15/77)

PETER GABRIEL
March 15, 1977
Music Hall
Cleveland, Ohio

Here Comes The Flood (Piano Version) 2:57
On the Air 4:08
Moribund The Burgermeister 4:47
Waiting For The Big One 7:53
A Song Without Words 3:53
Excuse Me 3:20
Solsbury Hill 5:17
Ain’t That Peculiar 5:17
Why Don’t We 7:08
Humdrum 4:19
Peter Talking 1:11
Slowburn 5:20
All Day And All Of The Night 4:12
Here Comes The Flood (Band Version) 4:12
Modern Love 4:37
Band Introductions 1:09
Down The Dolce Vita 10:36
Back In N.Y.C. 7:37

Peter Gabriel – Lead Vocals, Piano, Flute and Percussions
Dusty Rhodes (aka-Robert Fripp – Guitars & Effects
Steve Hunter- Lead Guitars
Tony Levin – Bass Guitars, Stick, Backing Vocals
Larry Fast – Synthesizers
Alan Schwartzberg – Drums, Percussion and Backing Vocals
Phil Aaberg – Keyboards and Backing Vocals
John Maelen – Percussion and Backing Vocals

Source 1:

BROKEN EYES AND CONTACT LENSES

Bonus Track
2.6 Peter Gabriel Interview-Piccadilly Radio
(April 1977-Manchester,UK) 15:56

SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY EDITION 02
“Hello Everyone! My, It’s been a fun-filled 2 years, hasn’t it? Imagine that… 2 years already! And to celebrate the occasion, we are offering you this very
special show. This recording was sourced from the Pre-FM Master Reels of the Radio Broadcast, a source which was previously unavailable until now. The
result is much higher quality sound compared to other available versions of this concert. We hope that you agree. Now, it is time for us to move on to
our 3rd year. We already have some real dandies in the works. Just wait and see 🙂 Thank You for Supporting PRRP!

YOU CAN KEEP MY THINGSÖ
††† The tempest had died down. It was done.† Peter Gabriel had left Genesis in 1975 after The LAMB LIES DOWN ON BROADWAY tour and was now about to embark upon a whole new venture as a solo artist.† Phil Collins was the new lead singer of the band Gabriel had left behind, and with the albums A TRICK OF THE TAIL and WIND AND WUTHERING, both released in 1976, Genesis were enjoying new levels of success in album sales and concert attendances.†
This prompted mixed feelings for their ex-frontman, as he would later explain: ìIt felt kind of strange for me. I mean, I was very happy for the guys because I knew they could make it without me but itís strange how the way people feel about you can change so fast. When I was with Genesis, just because of the costumes and the stage shows, people assumed that I ëwasí Genesis, that I was doing everything, which was a faulty vision that I constantly fought to dispel. But when I had left and the band was reaching new heights, people started to assume that I had done nothing, which was a bit ego-bruising, to say the least !îÖ

†† With that in mind, Peter Gabriel now had to prove that he could stand alone and create his own musical world.† No easy task after such an incredible run with as great a band as Genesis was then, but Gabriel was never a man to shy away from a challenge From the very start, he knew that he had to be as different from Genesis as possible, Both musically and visually – no more long and syncopated musical suites, no more batwings and flower masks.† The last months of 1975 and the first half of 1976 were spent at his home in England, resting with his family and slowly writing new material on the piano.†

Having dug deep into his own musical background, he created a very special collection of songs, each of which had a distinct personality of its own, and he set about recording his first solo album.† In an effort to get away from the archetypal ëEnglishí rock sound, Gabriel sought the help of American producer Bob Ezrin, well known for his work with Alice Cooper and Kiss.† Most of the resulting album was recorded at Soundstage studio in Toronto, Canada. Ezrinís involvement in the project undoubtedly helped bring forth the raw sound that Gabriel was looking for, but it was the choice of musicians in his new recording band that would ultimately make this first solo album such a departure from Gabrielís previous recorded work.

†† Steve Hunterís harsh guitar licks and Allan Schwartzbergís heavy drums were as far removed from the Hackett-Collins combination as could possibly be imagined, while Larry Fastís discrete synthesizer work couldnít be further away from Tony Banksí huge presence on the keyboards. Add Tony Levin, an amazing bass player with a unique style of his own, and the brilliant ex-King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp (who would insist on staying in the shadows, both on the album and the ensuing tour when he was referred to only as ëDusty Rhodesí), and you have all the elements needed to create an album as different from Genesis and progressive rock in general as a fly is from a windshield !† To further accentuate the contrast, Gabriel would also bring in orchestral arrangements for one of the songs, another first for the ex-Genesis angel.† One could still hear vague musical remnants of Peterís days with
Genesis in songs like ìMoribund The Burgermeisterî and ìDown The Dolce Vitaî, but for the most part, this first solo effort was very fresh in its overall approach and it came as a delightful surprise to Peter Gabriel fans the world over.† The advertising campaign which accompanied the release of the album in February 1977 advised listeners to ëExpect The Unexpectedí.† Wise words indeed.
†† With the album and first single ìSolsbury Hillî achieving deserved success, March 1977 saw Gabriel taking his new music out on the road.† Electing to avoid using costumes and elaborate stage choreography, Gabrielís voice, body and music would now be the only weapons he would use to try and conquer a whole new audience.† The set list consisted of the new album in its entirety, along with early versions of new songs that would later appear on his second album, and even a few covers.† By the time the tour reached the UK, the following month, ìWhy Donít We?î had been dropped from the set, never to reappear live or in a recorded version.

†† Was the surprisingly heavy interpretation of Genesisí ìBack In NYCî as an encore a concession to his older fans ?† Only Peter could tell us but after playing ìThe Lamb Lies Down On Broadwayî on the 1978-79 tour for his second album, no more Genesis song would ever be included in the set list of a Peter Gabriel show.† The man was intent on making it on his own !† And it all began with the 1977 tour for his first album, from which we proudly bring you this exceptional recording of what was only Gabrielís sixth ever solo performance.† We most certainly hope that you are going to enjoy it as much as we do.
PRRP Staff

Notes from the Re-Master

††††††††††† This recording comes to us as a CD copy of the master pre-FM reels. The show was initially broadcast in the Cleveland area which has lead to a number of versions of the recording being available to the public. But this is the first time, to our knowledge; this pre-FM source has been available.

††††††††††† Despite its Pre-FM status there was still quite a bit of noise in this recording. Multiple techniques of noise reduction were tried but eventually an inversion-subtraction method was found to be most effective. This noise cancellation technique was variably applied throughout the show as needed to reduce the perceived noise. Manual removal of pops and clicks was necessary as was selective removal of an occasional buzz.

††††††††††† Tonality also needed a bit of adjustment. The original source was quite deficient in the bass and sub-bass components. Those were boosted. There were sections with prominent bass drum where even further bass enhancements were needed. Other sections were a little excessive in the treble range. Rather than a global treble reduction, a dynamic de-esser in the high treble range seemed most effective. This technique smoothed both the excessive sounding ìSSî when sung and the occasional piercing character of the high toned instruments.

††††††††††† Track gaps were found and removed. Some audience noise was reduced in volume but not was cut in length. The discs were re-balanced because the interview was added at the end of the show. This required a mix-pasting of the original cut in the show but fortunately, no patch was necessary as the cut occurred during applause. Finally, a small amount of echo was added to enhance the sound. Since this was a soundboard recording the presence was a bit dry and the sound character of a truly live performance was lacking. Adding a bit of echo helped to correct this problem.

††††††††††† The Interview section had quite a bit of noise that needed reduction. Two different techniques were used to accomplish this. The tonality also needed adjustment. Bass was reduced and treble/midrange was enhanced to better understand the dialogue. Frequent pops and clicks occurred and were manually removed. Finally, the Right channel was suppressed compared to the left and so the two channels were re-balanced.

Source 2:

Source: FM
SQ: A+
Lineage: FLac files (from a Yahoo trading group) > FLAC frontend > WAV > EAC > CDr (Taiyo Yuden Silver) > EAC > WAV > TLH > FLAC-level 8 > Dime
More info and artwork: http://www.genesis-movement.org/php/showdetails.php?uid=2507

Peter Gabriel – Los Angeles, CA (04/10/77)

Peter Gabriel
10-Apr-1977
The Roxy
Hollywood CA

Here Comes The Flood
On The Air
Moribund The Burgermeister
Waiting For The Big One
A Song Without Words
Excuse Me
Solsbury Hill
Ain’t That Peculiar
Humdrum
Slowburn
All Day And All Night
Here Comes The Flood
Modern Love
Down The Dolce Vita
Back In N.Y.C.

Peter Gabriel – Piano, Flute, Tambourine, Vocals
Dusty Roads (Robert Fripp) – Guitars
Steve Hunter – Guitars
Tony Levin – Bass, Stick, Tuba, Backing Vocals
Larry Fast – Synthesisers
Alan Schwartzberg – Drums
Phil Aaberg – Keyboards
Jimmy Maelen – Percussion

Source 1:

FM
Quality * A-
Title Los Angeles 1977
(Golden Stars GSCD1179)

Recording Comments Recording comments
nb. whilst this is the track listing on the cd, the first four tracks should actually be listed as:

1.1 Here Comes The Flood/On The Air 6:19
1.2 Moribund The Burgermeister 4:36
1.3 Waiting For The Big One (Part1) 2:36
1.4 Waiting For The Big One (Part2) 5:56

Source 2:

Early Show

FM broadcast from master reel — from JEMS archives

Lineage: JEMS 2014 Transfer: off-air master reel to reel tape > Otari 5050mkII azimuth-adjusted transfer > Sound Devices USBPre 2 > Audacity 2.0 (24/96) capture > iZotope RX click repair > Peak 6.0 with iZotope Ozone 5.0 > re-sample 16/44.1 > Audigy Audio Cleaning Lab* => FLAC front-end (16-bit)

* Audio Cleaning Lab was used to apply the following effects to the source recording:
– Moderate de-hissing and de-noising (adaptive)
– Boost higher range (primarily 13 kHz)
– Boost lower range (primarily 170 Hz)

The mix on the broadcast improved approximately 15 minutes in; the upper registers opened up and the stereo separation improved slightly. I tried to apply additional EQ lightly on the first portion so that the change appears seamless.

Source 3:

At the Roxy vinyl Boot
LDB Special Series #468

Out of my 17,000+ shows and radio broadcasts, I have many concerts that were special for some reasons: the setlist, the
musicians, the venue or unexpected events. These are the ones I’d like to propose you. Most of these come from my
cassettes collection, so they will be released at a slower pace than my Master Series! But you won’t be disappointed!
I will try to gather the most unusual things I have in my collection and, as always, your feedback and comments will be my
reward for all the work involved in this project.

Lineage: “At Roxy” vinyl boot > 1st generation copy > Teac Tape Deck AD-RW900 > Creative Recon 3D Sound Blaster > HD >
SoundForge 10.0 Pro > CD Wave > FLAC Frontend (level 6)

Source 4:

LDB Special Series #468
“Gilded Sleeve” vinyl boot
Live At The Roxy (KLET FM Broadcast) (Bootleg Vinyl Rip)

Out of my 17,000+ shows and radio broadcasts, I have many concerts that were special for some reasons: the setlist, the
musicians, the venue or unexpected events. These are the ones I’d like to propose you. Most of these come from my
cassettes collection, so they will be released at a slower pace than my Master Series! But you won’t be disappointed!
I will try to gather the most unusual things I have in my collection and, as always, your feedback and comments will be my
reward for all the work involved in this project.


Source 5:

KMET-FM low generation copy

source: KMET FM – remastered by RedNose and LaTortue.

LDB Special Series #468

Source 6:

“Submerge” vinyl boot

Lineage: “Submerge” vinyl boot > 1st generation copy > Teac Tape Deck AD-RW900 > Creative Recon 3D Sound Blaster > HD >
SoundForge 10.0 Pro > CD Wave > FLAC Frontend (level 6)

LDB Special Series #468

Peter Gabriel – Courtrai, Belgium (09/02/77)

Peter Gabriel
02-Sep-1977
Pavilion Des Sports
Courtrai, Belgium

Audience
Quality * B+

1.1 White Shadow 05:49
1.2 On The Air 09:15
1.3 Down The Dolce Vita 06:51
1.4 Waiting For The Big One 04:11
1.5 Waiting For The Big One (continued) 02:51
1.6 Excuse Me 05:15
1.7 Solsbury Hill 04:42
1.8 Indigo 03:58
1.9 Slowburn 10:00
2.1 DIY (Instrumental) 03:52
2.2 Humdrum 03:59
2.3 I Heard It Through The Grapevine 06:31
2.4 Modern Love 05:07
2.5 Here Comes The Flood 05:20
2.6 Back In NYC 05:51
2.7 Animal Magic 06:00

Total Running Time : 1:29:32

Peter Gabriel – Manchester, England (04/29/77)

Peter Gabriel
Apollo Theatre
Manchester England
29 April 1977

“MUPPET09”

Matrix of two audience recordings; rated ‘B+’ at http://www.genesis-movement.org/php/showdetails.php?uid=2508 (Artwork available)
I received this show from the MUPPET trading group years ago. I believe it was in shn, which I converted to wave and burned to cd.
Lineage: CDr > EAC > Wave > TLH > FLAC (level 8)

cd 1
01 Here Comes The Flood
02 On The Air
03 Moribund The Burgermeister
04 Waiting For The Big One
05 A Little Song For Little People
06 Excuse Me
07 Ain’t That Peculiar
08 Solsbury Hill
09 Band Introductions
10 Humdrum

cd 2
01 Slowburn
02 All Day And All Of The Night
03 Here Comes The Flood
04 Modern Love
05 Down The Dolce Vita
06 Back In N.Y.C.

Peter Gabriel – Piano, Flute, Tambourine, Vocals
Dusty Roads (Robert Fripp) – Guitars
Steve Hunter – Guitars
Tony Levin – Bass, Stick, Tuba, Backing Vocals
Larry Fast – Synthesisers
Alan Schwartzberg – Drums, Backing Vocals
Phil Aaberg – Keyboards, Backing Vocals
Jim Maelen – Percussion, Backing Vocals

Included in inreason’s 2009 upload on Dime (Jesper’s original notes?):

original notes:
“For MUPPET06 I did the September 27, 1977 show at the Manchester Apollo. After
the MUPPET06 release kotti passed me on some information, and made me aware that
David Lowe had a tape of the April 29, 1977 gig, which also happened to be at
the Manchester Apollo, and was in fact the very first rock gig at that venue! 🙂

Soon I discovered there was a second version of this recording circulating, from
a 1st gen. tape, transferred by Nigel Butterworth.

After examination I found that the two versions both were from different tapers,
both with a very different sound. The DL source was very distant, but did have
the very low and high frequencies (great bass drum, and those cymbals were
present as well). The NB source was quite compressed with lots of the mid-range,
giving a more raw sound. Both were far from perfect, but the disadvantages of
each could be covered up by each other. Thus came the idea to try a matrix. More
about that in the WHAT WAS DONE? section.

Back to the show:

MUPPET06 came from the second leg of the tour, this show comes from the first
leg. There’s some differences. Mostly in the order of the songs, but there’s
some other changes. Peter covered Marvin Gaye’s I Heard it through the Grapevine
during the second leg, but here he does another song by Gaye: Ain’t That
Peculiar. Also, where the second leg had a more polished version of Indigo, here
we get an early version of the song under the working title A Little Song for
Little People. Also, instead of the encore of The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway,
this time it’s Back in NYC.

WHAT WAS DONE?

This release is a so-called matrix, which uses two sources simultaneously. One
source had lots of lows and higs, the other mostly mid-range frequencies. They
covered each other perfectly, giving the recording a very rich full-spectrum
sound, and giving me the chance to have a little more control over the sound
than usual: kind of like working with a very simple multi-track 🙂

It also caused me a lot of head-ache and trouble though 😉
Speed correction was obviously the first step, since the two sources had to be
perfectly synchronized. This wasn’t as easy as I thought at first: there seemed
to be some miniscule speed-fluctations which would result in the two sources
going out of sync each minute or so. What I had to do therefore was
synchronizing the two sources every minute. Some of the loud songs were
painfully difficult to do: All Day and All of the Night and Back in NYC turned
out so bad that I decided to use one source only for those.
You’ll find that at a few places the two sources seem to go out of sync: I
regret this, but since the majority turned out very nice I hope it can be
excepted 🙂

The DL source was mono. Since it was very hissy, I killed some of the ultra-high
frequencies that didn’t contain music, but did contain hiss. After that some
further noise reduction was done, albeit slightly and manually altered. One
channel was copied to the other to get two identical channels. After that
equalization was done to get an optimal balanced sound.

The NB source was mono as well. I found the right channel to be the best so
copied that to the left channel, to get two identical channels again.
Equalization was done here as well.

The matrix was ‘mixed’ in the multi-track feature of Cool Edit. 80% of the show
was a mix of the two sources. I balanced the volumes of the two, also did some
very slight panning to left and right to create a little stereo. When there was
two sources at the same time I also used some additional equalization for each
of the sources to accentuate their strengths. Very slight reverb was used as
well, with one of the two getting a little more than the other to create some
artificial stereo-space again.
The two sources each had some little bits missing, where I would use the other
to cover it up. The NB source was missing the first few notes of the Here Comes
the Flood piano intro, the beginning of Humdrum, and some audience noise
inbetween the encore. The DL source was missing the end of Humdrum, the middle
of Slowburn, and also some audience noise inbetween the encore.
As said before, All Day and All of the Night and Back in NYC only use one
source: this was the DL source.

After the 32-bit mixdown of these two sources, multi-band compression was done,
to create some more dynamics, to flatten some of the excessive bass, and fiddle
a bit with the stereo image.

Some final equalization was done and the stereo image was expanded a little
again.

Some slight reverb was added as the finishing touch. Hard limiting was used to
flat some of the extremely high peaks, the recording was then normalized for
optimum dynamic capability on the final CD. Fade-ins and fade-outs were applied,
and the recording was converted back to 16-bit with the use of dithering.
Finally, this was cut in tracks.

A FINAL NOTE OF IMPORTANCE

On some systems this recording sounds as was intended by me, with a great rich
sound, and on some dynamic parts like the intro to On the Air, the loud-quiet
contrast in Waiting for the Big One the raw power should really kick in, when
all instruments join in.
However, you may find that the bass is way too loud on your system. I found this
myself on one system.
What you can do is turn off the ‘loudness’ button if that was on, and probably
the sound is very good then. Else, just lower the bass with the help of your
equalizer.”

enjoy!
Lamb79

Peter Gabriel – New York, NY (03/19/77)

Peter Gabriel
The Lostbrook Tape Series Volume 109
March 19, 1977
Palladium
New York, NY

Recording Equipment: Internal Mic>Sanyo M2533 Tape Deck>TDK SD C90>Alesis TapeLinkUSB>Audacity>WAV

Taper: Lostbrook
Mastering: CQ
Artwork: ethiessen1

01 Here Comes The Flood
02 On The Air
03 Moribund The Burgermeister
04 Waiting For The Big One
05 Indigo
06 Excuse Me
07 Solsbury Hill
08 Ain’t That Peculiar
09 Why Don’t We
10 Humdrum
11 Slowburn
12 All Day And All Of The Night
13 Here Comes The Flood
14 Modern Love
15 Down The Dolce Vita
16 Back IN NYC

Peter Gabriel – Piano, Flute, Tambourine, Vocals
Dusty Rhodes (aka Robert Fripp) – Guitars, Effects
Steve Hunter- Guitars
Tony Levin – Bass, Stick, Tuba, Backing Vocals
Larry Fast – Synthesizers
Alan Schwartzberg – Drums, Percussion, Backing Vocals
Phil Aaberg – Keyboards, Backing Vocals
John Maelen – Percussion, Backing Vocals

This tape was recorded from the aisle seat in fifth row center,
in a location affected by a condition I call “sat-too-close-to-
the-stage-at-the-palladium-itis.” Not only was the sound behind
me, but there was a lot of commotion in the aisle, most of it
caused by one of my friends. Howie had a seat elsewhere in the
building, and as a photographer, he naturally wanted to improve
his position by joining me at my seat. The ushers initially
accommodated him, but soon began to clear the aisle aggressively.
They probably knew that Peter Gabriel was going to enter the
audience early in the show. We were completely shocked when Peter
came down our aisle, and you’ll hear us say hello as we shook his
hand. What’s truly shocking is how many times Howie showed up at
my seat and the numerous threats from the ushers that he ignored.
Considering the fact that he shared my seat at times, I can’t believe
that I was able to keep the recorder hidden. It’s stunning that he
didn’t end up on the street. At one point, he was physically removed,
but amazingly, he showed up again during the encore! You might think
I would have copies of the photos after all of this, but you would be
wrong. I don’t recall ever seeing them. Nevertheless, this is a great
performance by Peter Gabriel in his historic return to NYC, but if
you’re looking for a clean, quiet capture, this isn’t it.

One of my friends had information about an Atlantic Records party for
the band, so after the show, we drove to a restaurant (Chinese?) on
49th Street (Lexington Ave?) and stood on the corner. Two of my friends
volunteered to be scouts and attempted to sneak into the restaurant.
Somehow, this involved taking off their shoes and crawling on the floor,
but they were caught and soon returned to us on the corner. Before
long, the band began to arrive in separate limousines. Steve Hunter
was first, and he was extremely friendly as he signed autographs for
us while imitating W.C. Fields. I asked if he would like the honor
of bringing us in as his guests, but he said, “I can’t do that I’m
afraid because I’m in as a guest.” The next vehicle to arrive contained
Robert Fripp, and we were completely intimidated as he crossed the street.
We weren’t really expecting him to say anything, so it was no surprise
when he walked by us. All we could manage was an awkward, “Great to have
you back Robert.” Larry Fast was in the next limo, and he spent several
minutes with us signing autographs. I asked him if he was working on
anything with Nektar, and he said he would be “bouncing in and out of
the studio between tour dates.” The final limo arrived, and Peter Gabriel
and his manager, Tony Smith, stepped out. Peter spent over five minutes
with us signing autographs while we pleaded with him to take us to the party.
Peter gently turned us down and told us that the guest list was “incredibly tight”
and that he “had a lot of people (he) wanted to ask but couldn’t.” We discussed
a range of other subjects, and you won’t be surprised to hear that Peter Gabriel
is extremely polite and respectful to his fans. I recorded the entire encounter
and considered including it here but decided that it’s just for the ears of those
that were there. (Translation – we sound moronic at times.)

Peter Gabriel – Passaic, NJ (03/05/77)

Peter Gabriel
“First Time Ever”
1977-03-05
Capitol Theatre
Passaic, NJ, USA

Audience Recording

01 Here Comes The Flood 2:00
02 On The Air 4:45
03 Moribund The Burgermeister 4:35
04 Waiting For The Big One 7:59
05 Why Don’t We 6:59
06 Excuse Me 3:59
07 Humdrum 3:31
08 Solsbury Hill 4:39
09 Ain’t That Peculiar 4:20
10 Song Without Words (Indigo) 3:01
11 All Day And All Of The Night 3:37
12 Here Comes The Flood 5:55
13 Slowburn 5:06
14 Modern Love 4:20
15 Down The Dolce Vita 7:55
16 Back In N.Y.C 5:24

Peter Gabriel – A Rare Tracks CD Collection (1976 – 2002)

Peter Gabriel
1976-2002 – A Rare Tracks CD Collection
Various lineups 1976-2002

Disc 1:
RARE 1 – Ashcombe (Highland’s Ashcombe works revisited):
1) On The Air (instrumental) (4:59)
2) Bully For You (5:09)
3) Bully For You (instrumental) (4:43)
4) I Go Swimming (Ga Ga mix) (4:34)
5) I Go Swimming (Ga Ga vocal demo) (4:36)
6) Wallflower (demo) (4:16)
7) Milgram’s 37 (instrumental) (5:20)
8) That Voice Again (2:04) *
9) Mercy Street (demo) (1:33)
10) Strawberry Fields Forever (“All This And World War II”) (2:34)
11) Intruder (instrumental) (3:30)
12) Games Without Frontiers (instrumental) (6:20)
13) Start (saxless) (1:24)
14) I Don’t Remember (instrumental) (3:27) **
15) No Self Control (instrumental) (4:04)
16) Walk Through The Fire (instrumental) (3:54)
17) And Through The Wire (instrumental) (4:25)

Disc 2:
RARE 2 – Rare disc:
1) Summertime (“The Glory Of Gershwin” cd, 1994) (3:50)
2) Here Comes The > Flood On The Air (w/Bob Fripp – live at Roxy, West Hollywood, CA – April 1977) (6:21)
3) I Heard It Through The Grapevine (live 2nd 1977 tour – “Across The River” lp) (8:36)
4) All Day And All Of The Night (with Robert Fripp – live at the Roxy, West Hollywood, CA – April 1977) (4:34)
5) Why Don’t We (live in Detroit, MI – March 1977) (6:54)
6) A Whiter Shade Of Punk (“A Whiter Shade Of Pale” – live in Boston, MA October 1978) (5:09)
7) Back In NYC (with Robert Fripp – live at the Roxy, West Hollywood, CA – April 1977) (5:37)
8) interview (“Across The River” lp) (5:44)
9) Across The River (“Across The River” lp) (6:39)
10) Wallflower (live in Chile September 1993) (7:27)
11) My Heart Sounds Like That (live in Milano, It September 2002) (7:19) ***
12) I Grieve (live in Milano, It September 2002) (8:23)
13) Teddy Bear (“Across The River” lp) (2:14)

Disc 3:
RARE 3 – Guest disc (collaborations and guest-on shows):
1) Another Day In 1977 (live 1977 with Kate Bush) (3:39)
2) This Is The Picture (with Laurie Anderson, 1986) (3:19)
3) Gravity’s Angel (with Laurie Anderson) (6:11)
4) Qualquer Coisa A Haver Com O Paraiso (with Milton Nascimento) (7:01)
5) Fallen Angel (with Robbie Robertson) (5:55)
6) My Secret Place (with Joni Mitchell) (5:03)
7) Be Still (with Sinead O’Connor and Feargal Sharkey, 1993)(3:48)
8) While The Earth Sleeps (with Deep Forest, 1995) (6:24)
9) Reach Out, I’ll Be There (live with Steve Hackett- & Mike Rutherford 1983-01-28 – Guildford, UK) (4:28)
10) I Know What I Like (live with Steve Hackett & Mike Rutherford – 1983-01-28 – Guildford, UK) (6:03)
11) That’ll Do (with Randy Newman, Academy Award Nominees, Los Angeles 1999) (3:12)
12) Red Rain (with Michael Stipe and Natalie Merchant, Witness, Los Angeles 1996) (4:43) $
13) Signal To Noise (with Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Witness, Los Angeles 1996) (6:08)
14) In Your Eyes (with Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Natalie Merchant and Joan Osborne, Witness, L.A. 1996) (6:00)
15) Warm Doorway (with Manu Katche, 1992) (3:16)

Disc 4:
RARE 4 – Rare live disc:
1) Ain’t That Peculiar (live – 1st tour 1977) (4:30)
2) Kiss Of Life (live) (5:08)
3) Not One Of Us (live in Leicester, UK, 1980) (5:13)
4) Humdrum (live at the Diplomat Hotel in New York, NY, 1980) (4:01)
5) Shosholoza (live 1st WOMAD Festival, Shepton Mallet, UK – 1982-07-16) (2:49)
6) Dog 1 Dog 2 Dog 3 (live w/Shankar & Copeland, 1st WOMAD festival, Shepton Mallet, UK 1982-07-16) (7:13)
7) Indian Melody (live w/Shankar & Copeland, 1st WOMAD festival, Shepton Mallet, UK – 1982-07-16) (10:46)
8) Across The River (live w/Shankar & Copeland, 1st WOMAD festival, Shepton Mallet, UK 1982-07-16) (18:48)
9) D.I.Y. (rare live 1983) (3:07)
10) Intruder (rare live 1987) (5:37) =
11) San Jacinto (“Secret World” live missing song 1993) (8:23)

Disc 5: –

As all of these seem to have been officially released in some capacity I have removed them – Mat

RARE 5 – Studio disc:
1) Here Comes The Flood (alternate erly version) (5:14)
2) Party Man (5:40)
3) Suzanne (5:14)
4) Shosholoza (5:21)
5) Soft Dog (4:12)
6) Fisherman Song (1:17)
7) Walk Through The Fire (3:59)
8) In The Sun (6:40)
9) No More Apartheid (7:13)
10) Don’t Break This Rhythm (3:57)
11) Curtains (3:24)
12) Shaking The Tree (“Jungle 2 Jungle” soundtrack 1997) (5:34)
13) Bashi-Bazouk (4:45)
14) Love Town (5:29)
15) Taboo (with Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan) (4:23)

Disc 6:
RARE 6 – More rare disc:
1) Not One Of Us (live early version late 1978) (3:27)
2) The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway (Genesis classic live) (5:53)
3) No Self Control (live early version as “Don’t Know How To Stop” – Reading Festival, UK – 1979-08-26) (3:42)
4) The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway (live with Phil Collins – Reading Festival, UK – 1979-08-26) (7:44)
5) The Rhythm Of The Heat (alternate mix) (4:14)
6) In The Sun (6:39)
7) Love Town (live 1993) (6:12) &
8) In Your Eyes (alternate mix) (7:12)
9) Sledgehammer (alternate mix) (7:22)
10) That’ll Do (“Babe Pig In The City” soundtrack, 1988) (3:50)
11) I Grieve (“City Of Angels” soundtrack) (8:10)
12) Blood Of Eden (live with Sinead O’Connor) (7:00) #
13) Family Snapshot (live at Madison Square Garden in New York, NY, 2002) (5:55) +

* Listed as instrumental but it’s sung.
** Vocals only appear on chorus.
*** “E questa Ë prima volta che suono questa canzone in pubblico, questa si chiama La Mia Testa Suona CosÏ”.
$ “Joined by Michael Stipe and Natalie Merchant here’s a Peter Gabriel anthem and a lot of you came here…”.
= “Und Jetzt etwas uber den schovinismus von nationen”.
& Skips at 2:17, 2:24 and 5:53.
# “…Levon Minassian doudouk and (…) Sinead”
+ “Thank you very much…great to be back in the Garden…David, Ged, Richard, Melanie, Rachel…thank you…”.

Peter Gabriel – Before the Flood – Demos 1975

Peter Gabriel
Before the Flood
Demos 1975
goody PitchFix version

Original FLACs >
goody – dBpowerAMP (Convert to WAV) > Cool Edit Pro (Pitch Correction +47 cents) > TLH (FLAC, sigs)

01 Howling At The Moon 3:05
02 Excuse Me 3:42
03 Funny Man 4:27
04 No More Mickey (aka Richard MacPhail) 2:45
05 Get the Guns (listen carefully for the root of “Down the Dolce Vita”) 2:55
06 Here Comes the Flood 3:39
07 God Knows 4:59

These are evidently very early demos recorded for “car” (1976, Atco – Atco being Atlantic, a Warner subsidiary label). They are extremely raw; they may have been done in Gabriel’s home studio. Most are acoustic piano with a few accompanying support tracks and Peter singing.

The songs come from a white tape box marked: 7 1/2ips 1/4 trk stereo Gabriel/Hall Fuse Music

The lead sheets had the composer’s names given as “Peter Gabriel and Tony Hall” and were marked with a stamp from Fuse Music, England; they were merely lead melody transcriptions for copyright purposes, not hand-written by Gabriel or anything.

At that time, the best research i could come up with was that Fuse was somehow connected to Warner Bros (maybe like Sire was, but English; a sub-distribution deal?)… I later heard that the Fuse Music building burned down and took a whole lot of master tapes with it, and that this reel is quite probably the only surviving record of these demos.

This brown-oxide tape was discovered rotting in a water-soaked box shoved into a cleaning closet, along with the lead sheets, in a cavernous and seldom-used warehouse. It was lost/forgotten/abandoned. The tape had some warbley spots from the neglect and also quite a lot of tape hiss and lost tone.

I processed the material for several weeks before I was satisfied as to the quality, although “Get the Guns” was problemmatic to begin with; the Master appears to have been recorded badly or with misaligned heads. On the whole there is a tiny bit of tape hiss but no more than you’d expect from such a “live” environment. There is unfortunately one small glitch from a later cassette-to-cd transfer in “Excuse Me” (“Looking for Lost Angeleeeeee”) so don’t think it’s your file or player 🙂

Enjoy this very raw and simple glimpse into the creative process of Peter Gabriel.

(man-on-the-spot), June 2006

Pitch was approx. 47 cents flat. Corrected by goody. 5/7/07