Getting Up
Peter Gabriel makes an elegant return to his art-rock roots
BY TED DROZDOWSKI
Peter Gabriel's elegant Up (Geffen/Interscope) marks his unapologetic
return to full-blown art rock. The album is big, moody, and beautiful -- layers
upon layers of sound built from electronic synthesis, sampling, African
percussion, backward, straight, and twisted guitars, and the lovely voices of
Gabriel, the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, and the Blind Boys of Alabama gospel
group. Most of its songs are fixated on the cycle of life and death, and the
afterlife, and the notion of finding one's place here and then there.
The album was almost eight years in the making, as Gabriel pursued other
interests: soundtracks, jamming with apes in a Georgia language lab, turning
his culture-sharing World of Music and Dance (WOMAD) project into a traveling
international festival. But this seems a perfect time for an artist of his
stature to release an album like Up. If a prickly, metallic outfit with
a taste for pulp science fiction like Rush can finally be embraced for its
art-rock inclinations in 2002, then surely someone with Gabriel's warmth and
vision should be able to find an audience for the music that is closest to his
heart. Besides, what's the point of compromise in today's marketplace? Airplay
has become a paid commodity, the mainstream music press is largely uneducated
and cynical, and the process of marketing CDs is so politically charged and
dumbed down that quality is no longer a factor. As Laurie Anderson puts it,
"CDs or hamburgers -- what's the difference?"
The difference, of course, is that music can be art. (Granted, a gourmand might
make the same argument for a burger.) It's considerably easier and lazier to
shrug off a work of art like Up than it is to dismiss a hot meal. That's
why it's been fun to read the slam reviews. Lacking the easy map of Motown
grooves, simple hooks, and quick rhymes that took 1986's So -- which
yielded the hits "Sledgehammer," "Big Time," and "In Your Eyes" -- to Hitsville
USA and made Gabriel a superstar, Up requires repeated and thorough
listening. A broad field of reference and an open mind help too. For art-rock
fans, that's manna; for most critics, that's bother. So virtually all the pans
of Up have been curt dismissals that carp about the "inexplicable" lack
of hooks, grooves, and other pop-song devices and the overall lack of good-time
vibes. But the truth is that the CD has grooves from Africa, Asia, and the
Middle East wedged into nearly every crevice. Rich images and sonic details
abound in "Signal to Noise," which features Islamic spiritual singer Khan's
unearthly microtonal yodel (a direct 911 to Heaven), and "Sky Blue," the
album's best-bet single.
Up relights torches Gabriel lit decades ago. Its overall sound and tone
reflect his 1982 solo masterpiece, Security (Geffen), the best fusion of
world music, rock, narrative poetry, and studio technology ever recorded. And
its themes flash back to his most epic lyric statements with Genesis, 1972's
Foxtrot (Charisma) and 1974's The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
(ATCO/Charisma), relics of the pre-CD age that also dealt with coming of
age and finding a spiritual path. All but one of Up's songs exceed six
minutes in their elaboration of musical ideas and their working through
emotional baggage. The jungle firestorm that opens the CD in "Darkness" relents
with the pastoral joy of the discovery that fears can be beaten. The tale of
self-discovery, "Growing Up," is jammed with unexpected hooks: Middle Eastern
percussion grooves, bubbling keyboard signatures, and the unlikely but
addictive mantra "My ghost like to travel." "Sky Blue" is a lost soul's story
set to ex-Fleetwood Mac guitarist Peter Green's blues contemplations, the Blind
Boys' harmonies, and Gabriel's weary but enlightened traveler's voice.
And so it goes as these soundscapes accompany Gabriel on his journeys through
emotional landscapes. The only lame track is, surprise, the first single that
the record company is promoting. "The Barry Williams Show" is a naked slam of
Jerry Springer-type talk television. Although lines like "My SM lover hurt
me/My girl became a man/I love my daughter's rapist/My life's gone down the
pan" are funny and unsettling, and programs like the ones the song skewers do
cheapen humanity, the track is out of character with the rest of the album. It
dampens the overall quality that separates Up from almost everything
else in today's pop-music spectrum: a sense of timelessness.
Issue Date: October 11 - 17, 2002
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