Peter Brian Gabriel
(born 13 February 1950) is an English musician and songwriter who rose to fame as the lead vocalist and flautist of the progressive rock group Genesis. [1] After leaving Genesis, Gabriel went on to a successful solo career. More recently he has focused on producing and promoting world music and pioneering digital distribution methods for music. He has also been involved in various humanitarian efforts. Gabriel was awarded the Polar Music Prize in 2009.
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PETER GABRIEL TICKETS
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Early life
Gabriel was born in
Chobham,
Surrey,
England.
[2] His father, Ralph Parton Gabriel, was an electrical engineer, and his mother, Edith Irene Allen,
[3] from a musical family, taught him to play the clarinet at an early age. He attended Cable House, a private
preparatory school in
Woking, Surrey, then
Charterhouse School from 1963.
Genesis
Gabriel founded Genesis in 1967 with fellow Charterhouse School pupils
Tony Banks,
Anthony Phillips,
Mike Rutherford, and drummer
Chris Stewart. The name of the band was suggested by fellow Charterhouse alumnus, the pop music impresario
Jonathan King, who produced their first album,
From Genesis to Revelation
.
A lover of
soul music, Gabriel was influenced by many different sources in his way of singing – mainly
Otis Redding and other soul singers, as well as
Family lead singer
Roger Chapman. In 1970, he played the flute on
Cat Stevens' album,
Mona Bone Jakon
.
Genesis drew some attention in England and eventually also in
Italy,
Belgium,
Germany and other European countries, largely due to Gabriel's
flamboyant stage presence, which involved numerous bizarre costume changes and comical, dreamlike stories told as the introduction to each song (originally Gabriel developed these stories solely to cover the time between songs that the rest of the band would take tuning their instruments and fixing technical glitches). The concerts made extensive use of
black light with the normal stage lighting subdued or off. A backdrop of fluorescent white sheets and a comparatively sparse stage made the band into a set of silhouettes, with Gabriel's fluorescent costume and make-up providing the only other sources of light.
Costumes
thumb
Among Gabriel's many famous costumes, which he developed to visualize the musical ideas of the band as well as gain press coverage were "Batwings", for the usual opening number, or "
Watcher of the Skies".
Other costumes included "The Flower", and "Magog" which were both alternately worn for "
Supper's Ready", from the album,
Foxtrot
.
"Britannia" was worn for "
Dancing with the Moonlit Knight", and "The Reverend", worn for "
The Battle of Epping Forest" from
Selling England by the Pound
.
"The Old Man" was worn for "
The Musical Box", from
Nursery Cryme
.
"The Slipperman", and "Rael", were worn during "The Colony of Slippermen", in which "Rael" was the
protagonist of the album
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
.
Backing vocals in Genesis during Gabriel's tenure in the band were usually handled by
bassist/
guitarist
Mike Rutherford,
keyboardist/guitarist
Tony Banks, and (most prominently)
drummer,
Phil Collins, who — after a long search for a replacement — eventually became Genesis's lead singer, after Gabriel had left the band in 1975.
The departure
Gabriel's departure from Genesis — which stunned fans of the group and left many commentators wondering if the band could survive — was the result of a number of factors. His stature as the lead singer of the band, and the added attention garnered by his flamboyant stage persona, led to tensions within the band. Genesis had always operated more or less as a collective, and Gabriel's burgeoning public profile led to fears within the group that he was being unfairly singled out as the creative hub; in addition, the band had begun to feel confined by the reputation (and fans' expectations) attached to their famously elaborate theatrical performances.
Tensions were heightened by the ambitious album and tour of the concept work
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
, a Gabriel-created concept piece which saw him taking on the lion's share of the lyric writing. During the writing and recording of
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
, Gabriel was approached by director
William Friedkin, allegedly because Friedkin had found Gabriel's short story in the liner notes to
Genesis Live
interesting. Gabriel's interest in a film project with Friedkin was another contributing factor in his decision to leave Genesis. The decision to quit the band was made before the tour supporting
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
, but Gabriel stayed with the band until the conclusion of that tour. Although tensions were high, both Gabriel and the remaining members of Genesis have stated publicly that Gabriel left the band on good terms, supported by the fact that he officially left eight months after telling the band it was time for him to move on.
The breaking point came with the difficult pregnancy of Gabriel's wife, Jill, and the subsequent birth of their first child, Anna. When he opted to stay with his sick daughter and wife, rather than record and tour, the resentment from the rest of the band led Gabriel to conclude that he had to leave the band. "
Solsbury Hill", Gabriel's début single as a solo artist, was written specifically about his departure from Genesis. The song also charted on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1978, reaching the Top 70.
[4]
Solo career
Gabriel refused to title any of his first four solo albums, which were all labelled
Peter Gabriel
using the same typeface, but which featured different cover art. They are usually differentiated by number in order of release (I, II, III, IV), or by sleeve design, with the first three solo albums often referred to as
Car
,
Scratch
and
Melt
respectively, in reference to their cover artwork. His fourth solo album, also called
Peter Gabriel
, was titled
Security
in the U.S. at the behest of Geffen Records.
After acquiescing to distinctive titles, Gabriel used a series of 2-letter words to title his next three albums:
So
,
Us
, and
Up
. His most recent
greatest hits compilation is titled
Hit
; within the two-CD package, disc one is labelled "Hit" and disc two is labelled "Miss".
Peter Gabriel
albums (1977–1985)
thumb
Gabriel recorded his
first self-titled solo album in 1976 and 1977 with producer
Bob Ezrin. His first solo success came with the single "
Solsbury Hill", an autobiographical piece expressing his thoughts on leaving
Genesis. Gabriel begin a period of self-exploration and reflection, during which he grew cabbages, carrots, parsnips, broccoli and a wide range of other garden vegetables, played the piano for long hours, practised
yoga and
biofeedback, and spent time with his family. Although mainly happy with the music, Gabriel felt that the album, and especially the track "Here Comes the Flood" was over-produced. Sparser versions can be heard on
Robert Fripp's
Exposure
, and on Gabriel's greatest hits compilation
Shaking the Tree
(1990).
Gabriel worked with guitarist Fripp as producer of his
second solo LP, in 1978. This album was leaner, darker and more experimental, and yielded decent reviews, but no major hits.
Gabriel developed a new interest in world music (especially percussion), and for bold production, which made extensive use of recording tricks and sound effects. Gabriel's interest in music technology is considered by many people to be the spark of his success as it inspired his
third album. The third album is often (though some
[who?] would say wrongly) credited as the first LP to use the now-famous "
gated drum" sound.
[5] Collins played drums on several tracks, including the opener, "Intruder", which featured the reverse-gated, cymbal-less drum kit sound which Collins would also utilize on his single "
In the Air Tonight" and through the rest of the 1980s. Gabriel had requested that his drummers use no cymbals in the album's sessions, and when he heard the result he asked Collins to play a simple pattern for several minutes, then built "Intruder" around it. The album achieved some chart success with the songs "
Games Without Frontiers" (#48 U.S.), "
I Don't Remember", and "
Biko".
Arduous and occasionally damp recording sessions at his rural English estate in 1981 and 1982, with co-producer/engineer David Lord, resulted in Gabriel's
fourth LP release (Security
), on which Gabriel took more production responsibility. It was one of the first commercial albums recorded entirely to digital tape (using a Sony mobile truck), and featured the early, extremely expensive,
Fairlight CMI sampling computer, which had already made its first brief appearances on the previous album. Gabriel combined a variety of sampled and deconstructed sounds with world-beat percussion and other unusual instrumentation to create a radically new, emotionally charged soundscape. Furthermore, the sleeve art consisted of inscrutable, video-based imagery. Despite the album's peculiar sound, odd appearance, and often disturbing themes, it sold very well. This album featured his first
Top 40 hit in the U.S., "
Shock the Monkey", as well as the song "
I Have the Touch". The music video for "Shock the Monkey", which featured Gabriel in white face paint and a caged macaque, held the #1 spot on "
MTV" for 9 weeks. Geffen records forced Peter to give his fourth self-titled album a name in the US -
Security
- to mark his arrival on the label and to differentiate his fourth album from the other three.
Alternate versions of Peter's third and fourth albums were also released with German lyrics.
Peter Gabriel
3 consisted of basically the same recording overdubbed with new vocals, while
Security
was also remixed and several tracks were extended or altered in slight ways.
Gabriel toured extensively for each of his albums. Initially, he pointedly eschewed the theatrics that had defined his tenure with Genesis. For his second solo tour, his entire band shaved their heads. By the time of
Security
he began involving elaborate stage props and acrobatics which had him suspended from gantries, distorting his face with
Fresnel lenses and mirrors, and wearing unusual make-up. His 1982–83 tour included a section opening for
David Bowie. Recordings of this tour were released as the double LP
Plays Live
.
The stage was set for Gabriel's critical and commercial breakout with his next studio release, which was in production for almost three years. During the recording and production of the album he also found time to develop the film soundtrack for
Alan Parker's 1984 feature
Birdy
, which consisted of new material as well as remixed instrumental tracks from his previous studio album.
So
, Passion
and Us
(1986–1994)
Gabriel achieved his greatest popularity with songs from the 1986
So
album, which produced three UK Top 20 hits ("
Sledgehammer", "
Big Time", and "
Don't Give Up" — a duet with
Kate Bush). The album also produced three Top 40 hits in the U.S. ("Sledgehammer", "
In Your Eyes"), and "Big Time" (Gabriel's most recent Top Ten hit), as well as the single "
Red Rain". "Sledgehammer", peaked at no.4 in the UK but was a #1 hit in the U.S., knocking Genesis' "
Invisible Touch" off the top spot. The ballad "Don't Give Up" was about the devastation of unemployment. Gabriel co-produced
So
with
Daniel Lanois, also known for his work with
U2 and
Brian Eno.
Gabriel's song "Sledgehammer", which dealt specifically with the themes of sex and sexual relations, was accompanied by a much-lauded
music video, which was a collaboration with director
Stephen R. Johnson,
Aardman Animations, and the
Brothers Quay. The video won numerous awards at the 1987
MTV Music Video Awards, and set a new standard for art in the music video industry. A follow-up video for the song "
Big Time" also broke new ground in music video animation and special effects. The song is a story of "what happens to you when you become a little too successful", in Gabriel's words.
Gabriel played a prominent role in supporting
Amnesty International at this time, appearing on the 1986 U.S.
A Conspiracy of Hope Tour and on the 1988 worldwide
Human Rights Now! Tour.
In 1989, Gabriel released
Passion
, the
soundtrack for
Martin Scorsese's movie
The Last Temptation of Christ
. For this work he received his first
Grammy Award, in the category of Best New Age Performance. He also received a
Golden Globe nomination for Best Original Score - Motion Picture.
Following this, Gabriel released
Us
in 1992 (also co-produced with Daniel Lanois), an album in which he explored the pain of recent personal problems; his failed first marriage, his relationship with
Rosanna Arquette, and the growing distance between him and his first daughter.
Gabriel's introspection within the context of the album Us can be seen in the first single release "Digging in the Dirt" directed by John Downer. Accompanied by a disturbing video featuring Gabriel covered in snails and various foliage, this song made reference to the psychotherapy which had taken up much of Gabriel's time since the previous album. Gabriel describes his struggle to get through to his daughter in "Come Talk To Me" directed by Matt Mahurin, which featured backing vocals by Sinéad O'Connor. O'Connor also lent vocals to "Blood of Eden", directed by Nichola Bruce and Michael Coulson, the third single to be released from the album, and once again dealing with relationship struggles, this time going right back to Adam's rib for inspiration. The result was one of Gabriel's most personal albums. It met with less success than So had done, reaching #2 in the album chart on both sides of the Atlantic, and making modest chart impact with the singles "Digging in the Dirt" and the funkier "Steam" which evoked memories of "Sledgehammer". Gabriel followed the release of the album with a world tour (with Paula Cole or Joy Askew filling O'Connor's vocal role) and accompanying double CD and DVD Secret World Live in 1994.
Gabriel employed an innovative approach in the marketing of the
US
album. Not wishing to feature only images of himself, he asked artist filmmakers Nichola Bruce and
Michael Coulson to coordinate a marketing campaign using contemporary artists. Artists such as
Helen Chadwick,
Rebecca Horn,
Nils Udo,
Andy Goldsworthy,
David Mach and Yayoi Kusama, collaborated to create original artworks for each of the 11 songs on the multi-million-selling CD. Coulson and Bruce documented the process on Hi-8 video. Bruce left Real World and Coulson continued with the campaign, using the documentary background material as the basis for a promotional EPK, the long-form video
All About Us
and the interactive CD-ROM
Xplora1
.
Gabriel won three more
Grammy Awards, all in the genre of Music Videos. He won the Best Music Video - Short Form Grammy in 1992 and 1993 for the videos to "Digging in the Dirt" and "Steam" respectively. Gabriel also won the 1995 Grammy for Best Music Video - Long Form for his
Secret World Live
video.
Later albums (1995–present)
After five years of not releasing any new music, Gabriel re-emerged with
OVO
, a soundtrack for the live
Millennium Dome Show in
London in 2000, and
Long Walk Home
, the music from the Australian movie
Rabbit-Proof Fence
, early in 2002. This soundtrack also received a
Golden Globe nomination for Best Original Score - Motion Picture.
In September 2002, Gabriel released
Up
, his first full-length studio album in a decade. Entirely self-produced,
Up
returned to some of the themes of his work in the late '70s and early '80s. Three singles failed to make an impression on the charts — in part because almost every track exceeded six minutes in length, with multiple sections — but the album sold well globally, as Gabriel continued to draw from a loyal fan base from his almost forty years in the music business.
Up
was followed by a world tour featuring his daughter
Melanie Gabriel on backing vocals, and two concert DVDs,
Growing Up Live
(2003) and
Still Growing Up: Live & Unwrapped
(2004).
In 2008, Gabriel contributed to the
WALL-E soundtrack with several new songs with
Thomas Newman, including the film's closing song, "
Down to Earth", for which they received the
Grammy Award for Best Song Written for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media. The song was also nominated for the
Golden Globe for Best Original Song - Motion Picture and the
Academy Award for Best Original Song.
Since the end of the Still Growing Up tour, Gabriel has sporadically talked about working on new material for the next album, tentatively titled
I/O
, but as yet there has been no solid news. However, as of November 2008, Gabriel has spoken of recording and releasing a covers album entitled
Scratch My Back, whereby he will record a cover of an artist's song if that artist then reciprocates by recording one of his. It appears that this latter project may see the light of day before the
I/O
one; although work still continues on this.
Musicians and collaborators
Gabriel has worked with a relatively stable crew of musicians and recording engineers throughout his solo career.
Bass and
Stick player
Tony Levin, for example, has appeared on every Gabriel studio album, although not the soundtracks
Passion
and
Long Walk Home
, and has performed on every Gabriel solo tour.
Guitar player
David Rhodes has been Gabriel’s guitarist of choice since 1979. Prior to
So,
Jerry Marotta was Gabriel's preferred
drummer, both in the studio and on the road. (For the
So
and
Us
albums and tours Marotta was replaced by
Manu Katché, who was then replaced by
Ged Lynch on parts of the
Up
album and all of the subsequent tour). Gabriel is known for choosing top-flight collaborators, from co-producers such as Ezrin, Fripp, Lillywhite, and Lanois to musicians such as
Natalie Merchant,
L. Shankar,
Trent Reznor,
Youssou N'Dour,
Larry Fast,
Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan,
Sinéad O'Connor,
Kate Bush,
Paula Cole,
John Giblin,
Peter Hammill,
Papa Wemba,
Manu Katché,
Bayete, and
Stewart Copeland.
Over the years, Gabriel has collaborated with singer
Kate Bush several times; Bush provided backing vocals for Gabriel's "Games Without Frontiers" and "No Self Control" in 1980, and female lead vocal for "Don't Give Up" (a Top 10 hit in the UK) in 1986, and Gabriel appeared on her television special. Their duet of
Roy Harper's "Another Day" was discussed for release as a single, but never appeared.
He also collaborated with
Laurie Anderson on two versions of her composition "Excellent Birds" – one for her 1984 album
Mister Heartbreak
, and a slightly different version called "This is the Picture (Excellent Birds)", which appeared on
cassette and CD versions of
So.
In 1987, when presenting Gabriel with an award for his music videos, Anderson related an occasion in which a recording session had gone late into the night and Gabriel's voice had begun to sound somewhat strange, almost dreamlike. It was discovered that he had fallen asleep in front of the microphone, but had continued to sing.
Gabriel sang (along with
Jim Kerr of
The Simple Minds) on "Everywhere I Go," from
The Call's 1986 release,
Reconciled
. On
Toni Childs' 1994 CD,
The Woman's Boat
, Gabriel sang on the track, "I Met a Man."
In 1998 Gabriel appeared on the soundtrack of
Babe: Pig in the City
, not as a composer, but as the singer of the song "That'll Do," written by
Randy Newman. The song was nominated for an
Academy Award, and Gabriel and Newman performed it at the following year's Oscar telecast. Many who saw him on that broadcast didn't recognize him, as his hair had greyed and thinned since his most recent tour several years earlier. He performed a similar soundtrack appearance for the 2004 film
Shall We Dance?,
singing a cover version of "The Book of Love" by
The Magnetic Fields. This cover version was recently used in the series finale of ABC's
Scrubs.
Gabriel has also appeared on
Robbie Robertson's self-titled album, singing on "Fallen Angel"; co-written two
Tom Robinson singles; and appeared on
Joni Mitchell's 1988 album
Chalk Mark in a Rainstorm
, on the track "My Secret Place."
In 2001 Gabriel contributed lead vocals to the song "When You're Falling" on
Afro Celt Sound System's
Volume 3: Further in Time.
[6]
Gabriel collaborated on tracks with electronic musician
BT. The tracks were never released, as the computers they were contained on were stolen from BT's home in California. He also sang the lyrics for
Deep Forest on their theme song for the movie
Strange Days. In addition, Gabriel has appeared on
Angelique Kidjo's 2007 album
Djin Djin
, singing on the song "Salala."
Gabriel has recorded a cover of the
Vampire Weekend single "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa" with
Hot Chip, where his name is mentioned several times in the chorus. He substitutes the original line "But this feels so unnatural / Peter Gabriel too" with "It feels so unnatural / to sing your own name. "
WOMAD and other projects
Gabriel has been interested in
world music for many years, with the first musical evidence appearing on his third album. This influence has increased over time, and he is the driving force behind the
WOMAD (World of Music, Arts and Dance) movement. He created the
Real World Studios and record label to facilitate the creation and distribution of such music by various artists, and he has worked to educate Western culture about the work of such musicians as
Yungchen Lhamo,
Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and
Youssou N'dour. He has a long-standing interest in
human rights, and launched
WITNESS,
[7] a nonprofit which trains human rights activists to use video and online technologies to expose human rights abuses. In 2006 his work with WITNESS and his long standing support of peace and human rights causes was recognised by the
Nobel Peace Prize Laureates with the
Man of Peace award.
In the 1990s, with Steve Nelson of Brilliant Media and director
Michael Coulson, he developed advanced
multimedia CD-ROM-based entertainment projects, creating the acclaimed
Xplora
(the world's largest selling music CD-ROM), and subsequently the
EVE
CD-ROM.
EVE
was a music and art adventure game directed by
Michael Coulson and co-produced by the
Starwave Corporation in Seattle; it won the prestigious Milia d'Or award Grand Prize at the Cannes in 1996 and featured themes and interactivity well in advance of its time.
Xplora
and
EVE
can no longer be played on modern PCs, due to changes to their
operating systems.
In 1994, Gabriel starred in the Breck Eisner short film "Recon" as a detective who enters the minds of murder victims to find their killer's identity.
Gabriel helped pioneer a new realm of musical interaction in 2001, visiting
Georgia State University's Language Research Center to participate in keyboard jam sessions with
bonobo apes from the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. (This experience inspired the song "Animal Nation," which was performed on Gabriel's 2002 "Growing Up" tour and was featured on the
Growing Up Live
DVD and
The Wild Thornberrys Movie
soundtrack.) Gabriel's desire to bring attention to the intelligence of primates also took the form of
ApeNet, a project that aimed to link great apes through the internet, enabling the first interspecies internet communication.
[8]
He was one of the founders of On Demand Distribution (
OD2), one of the first online music download services. Its technology is used by
MSN Music UK and others, and has become the dominant music download technology platform for stores in Europe. OD2 was bought by US company Loudeye in June 2004 and subsequently by Finnish mobile giant
Nokia in October 2006 for $60 million.
Additionally, Gabriel is also co-founder (with
Brian Eno) of a musicians union called Mudda, short for "magnificent union of digitally downloading artists."
During the latter part of 2004, Gabriel spent time in a village in eastern Nepal with musician Ram Sharan Nepali, learning esoteric vocal techniques. Gabriel subsequently invited Nepali to attend and perform at the Womad festival in Adelaide, Australia.
In June 2005, Gabriel and broadcast industry entrepreneur
David Engelke purchased
Solid State Logic, a leading manufacturer of mixing consoles and digital audio workstations.
[9] SSL is among the top 2 or 3 recording console manufacturers in the world of recording.
Humanitarian initiatives
In 1992 Gabriel co-founded WITNESS; a non-profit group that equips, trains and supports locally-based organizations worldwide to use video and the internet in human rights documentation and advocacy.
In 1995 he was one of the two winners of the
North-South Prize in its inaugural year.
[10]
In the late 1990s, Gabriel and entrepreneur
Richard Branson discussed with
Nelson Mandela their idea of a small, dedicated group of leaders, working objectively and without any vested personal interest to solve difficult global conflicts.
On 18 July 2007, in
Johannesburg,
South Africa, Nelson Mandela announced the formation of a new group,
Global Elders, in a speech he delivered on the occasion of his 89th birthday. The present members of this group are
Desmond Tutu,
Graça Machel,
Kofi Annan,
Ela Bhatt,
Lakhdar Brahimi,
Gro Harlem Brundtland,
Fernando Henrique Cardoso,
Jimmy Carter,
Mary Robinson,
Muhammad Yunus, and
Aung San Suu Kyi (with an empty chair for her).
[11]
The Elders will be independently funded by a group of "Founders", including Branson and Gabriel.
Desmond Tutu serves as the chair of The Elders, who will use their collective skills to catalyze peaceful resolutions to long-standing conflicts, articulate new approaches to global issues that are causing or may later cause immense human suffering, and share wisdom by helping to connect voices all over the world. They will work together over the next several months to consider carefully which specific issues they will confront.
In November 2007 Gabriel launched The Hub http://hub.witness.org/ a 'YouTube' for human rights.
In September 2008 Gabriel was named as the recipient of Amnesty International’s 2008
Ambassador of Conscience Award
. In the same month, he received
Quadriga United we Care
award of Werkstatt Deutschland along with
Boris Tadic,
Eckart Höfling and
Wikipedia. The award was presented to him by
Queen Silvia of Sweden.
[12]
Personal life
Gabriel has two daughters — Anna-Marie (born 26 July 1974) and
Melanie Gemma (born 23 August 1976) — with his first wife Jill Moore. Married on 17 March 1971, they divorced in 1987. Moore's father was
Lord Moore of Wolvercote.
Anna-Marie is a filmmaker; Melanie is a musician. Anna-Marie filmed a documentary —
Growing Up On Tour: A Family Portrait
— during Gabriel's 2002 "Growing Up" tour, whilst Melanie was a vocalist — she also sang on Gabriel's 2007 "Warm Up" tour.
In the late '80s and early '90s Gabriel lived with actress
Rosanna Arquette but they never married. Gabriel also has two sons — Isaac Ralph (born 27 September 2001) and Luc (born 5 July 2008) — with Meabh Flynn. They have been married since 9 June 2002.
Appearances 2005-2008
Gabriel actively coordinated and performed at the
Eden Project Live 8 concert in July 2005.
In his earliest days, Gabriel played flute on
Cat Stevens's first album on the
Island records label,
Mona Bone Jakon
as a "nervous
session musician". Stevens, now known as Yusuf Islam, joined him on stage 33 years after that experience, in
Johannesburg during
Nelson Mandela's
46664 concert. The two performed the Stevens hit "
Wild World".
A double DVD set,
Peter Gabriel Live & Unwrapped
, was released in October, 2005. Another DVD was released with the concert film
PoV, previously available on VHS.
FIFA asked Gabriel and
Brian Eno to organise an opening ceremony for the
2006 FIFA World Cup finals in Germany, planned to take place a couple of days before the start of the tournament. Gabriel had recently become a fan of the game and
2005 champions league winners Liverpool, and worked on songs for the show in Berlin's Olympic Stadium, however, the show was cancelled in January 2006 by FIFA after going over budget with an apparent lack of interest in the project. The official explanation was potential damage to the pitch.
Rumours of a possible reunion of the original Genesis line-up began circulating in 2004 after Phil Collins stated in an interview that he was open to the idea of sitting back behind the drums and "let Peter be the singer." The classic line-up has only reformed for a live performance once before,
in 1982. However, the group did work together to create a new version of the 1974 song "
The Carpet Crawlers", ultimately released on the
Genesis Hits
record as "The Carpet Crawlers 1999". Gabriel later met with other Genesis band members, to discuss a possible reunion tour of
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
. He chose to opt out of a reunion tour, and his former bandmates, Collins, Banks, and Rutherford chose to tour as Genesis without him.
At the opening ceremonies of the
Winter Olympics in
Torino,
Italy, Gabriel performed
John Lennon's "
Imagine" during the opening of the festivities on 10 February 2006.
- Cingular Wireless has aired commercials featuring Gabriel's "Solsbury Hill."
- Gabriel is recording a new studio album entitled Input/Output, which will be his first new album release since Up
in 2002. No release date has been announced.
- Gabriel's song "Digging in the Dirt" is now being used for promotional videos for the FX show "Dirt"
- Gabriel is involved in The Filter, an add-on application for iTunes, Windows Media Player and some Nokia phones which can automatically generate playlists based on music you select.
November 2006, the Seventh World Summit of
Nobel Peace Laureates in Rome presented Gabriel with the
Man of Peace award. The award, presented by former President of the USSR and Nobel Peace Prize winner
Mikhail Gorbachev and
Walter Veltroni, Mayor of Rome, was an acknowledgement of Gabriel's extensive contribution and work on behalf of
human rights and peace. The award was presented in the Giulio Cesare Hall of the Campidoglio in Rome. At the end of the year, he was awarded the
Q Magazine Lifetime Achievement Award.
Gabriel took on a project with the
BBC World Service's competition "The Next Big Thing" to find the world's best young band. Gabriel is judging the final six young artists with
William Orbit, Geoff Travis and
Angelique Kidjo.
The Times
newspaper reported on 21 January 2007, that Peter Gabriel had announced that he planned to release his next album in the U.S. without the aid of a record company. Gabriel, an early pioneer of digital music distribution, had raised £2 million towards recording and 'shipping' his next album,
Big Blue Ball
in a venture with investment boutique
Ingenious Media. Gabriel is expected to earn double the money that he would through a conventional record deal. Commercial director Duncan Reid of Ingenious explains the business savvy of the deal, saying, "If you're paying a small distribution fee and covering your own marketing costs, you enjoy the
lion's share of the proceeds of the album. Gabriel is expected to outsource CD production for worldwide release through
Warner Bros. Records. The new album deal covers the North America territory, where Gabriel is currently out of contract.
[13]
Recent work
The album,
Big Blue Ball
, was launched in America thanks to a venture capital trust initiative. Bosses at London-based firm Ingenious raised more than $4 million (GBP 2 million) to help promote the release in the United States. The venture capitalists, Gabriel and his Real World Limited partners, have created a new joint venture company, High Level Recordings Limited, to oversee the release of the new album, which took place in 2008. Gabriel will also appear on a nationwide tour for the album in 2009.
[14]
- On 24 May 2007, he was honoured with the Ivor Novello Award for lifetime achievement. [15]
Gabriel was a judge for the 6th and 8th annual
Independent Music Awards to support independent artists.
[16]
- Gabriel invested in online advertising-supported free music download site, We7. [17]
- In February 2009, Gabriel announced that he would not be performing on the Academy Awards telecast because producers of the show were limiting his performance of "Down to Earth" from WALL-E to 65 seconds.
Gabriel's 2009 tour of Mexico and South America included visiting Mexico, Argentina, Chile, Peru, and Venezuela.
[18]
His first ever performance in Peru was held in Lima on Friday, March 20, 2009, during his second visit to the country. His daughter Melanie sang in the chorus.
[19]
- His concert in Mexico City, on 27 March, 2009, attracted more than 38,000 fans.
- On 25th July 2009, he played at WOMAD Charlton Park, his only European performance of the year, to promote Witness. The show included two tracks from the forthcoming 'Scratch My Back' album; Paul Simon's 'Boy in the Bubble' and 'Book of Love'.
[20]
Other information
- In 1976, Gabriel covered the Beatles song "Strawberry Fields Forever" for the musical documentary All This and World War II
. He has also recorded covers of Leonard Cohen's "Suzanne," the Gershwin standard "Summertime," the Magnetic Fields' "The Book of Love", and Joseph Arthur's "In the Sun." A cover of Marvin Gaye's "Ain't That Peculiar", part of his set list for his first solo tour, is available on some bootlegs but was never commercially released, and he also covered the Kink's song "All Day and All Of The Night" on his second tour. A recording of this was released as part of King Biscuit Flower Hour.
- The 2003 videogame Uru: Ages Beyond Myst from game companies Cyan Worlds and Ubisoft featured the song "Burn You Up, Burn You Down".
- The 2004 release of Myst IV: Revelation featured "Curtains", originally a B-side from the single "Don't Give Up" from So
. The song, slightly remixed from its original version, is also known as "Portal to Dreamworld". Gabriel also performs a voice acting part in the game.
- He is mentioned in two Vampire Weekend songs: Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa and Ottoman. He has responded by covering Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa backed by Hot Chip.
- Between 4 and 5 May 2008 the servers housing www.petergabriel.com were stolen [21] from the data centre of the ISP that was hosting them at the time.
- In 1982 Gabriel reunited with his former Genesis colleagues for the one-off concert, Six of the Best.
- In 2001, Boston USA radio station 92.5 The River used a computer program to generate the artist to whom all their listeners will listen. The artist was Peter Gabriel. Since 2001, Gabriel's greatest hits are required to get played every two hours, causing some to call the station "Gabriel FM".
- His cover of "The Book of Love" by The Magnetic Fields was used in the soundtrack for the 2004 film, "Shall We Dance?, as well as the final episode of TV-sitcom Scrubs, "My Finale".
- An instrumental version of his song Signal To Noise was featured in one of the fight scenes of the movie Gangs Of New York.
- After he suggested a specific feature to the developers, Submersible Music named the feature in it's DrumCore software "Gabrielizer" after Peter.
Discography
See also
- List of best selling music artists
- List of artists who reached number one on the Hot 100 (U.S.)
- List of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart
- List of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Mainstream Rock chart
References
- Peter Gabriel Biography ''PeterGabriel.com''
- Peter Gabriel Profile ''LyricsOnDemand.com''
- Family detective: Peter Gabriel ''Telegraph.co.uk''
- Solsbury Hill by Peter Gabriel ''Songfacts.com''
- Classic Tracks: Phil Collins' "In the Air Tonight"
- Volume 3: Further in Time Real World Records
- http://www.witness.org
- 'Peter Gabriel goes ape for research project' ''Top40-Charts.com'', 20 July 2001
- Solid State Logic purchased by Peter Gabriel and David Engelke
- The North South Prize of Lisbon
- http://www.theelders.org/elders/
- Die Quadriga - Award 2008
- Durman, Paul. Gabriel deals a blow to the record business, ''The Times''. 2007-01-21.
- Gabriel Calls on Venture Capitalists To Help Album Launch, ''contactmusic.com''. 2007-01-24.
- Winehouse, Madonna win U.K. songwriting prizes
- Independent Music Awards - Past Judges
- TechCrunch UK » Blog Archive » We7 proving ad-supported music has a future?
- [1] Peter Gabriel » Live » South America And Mexico tour 2009.
- [1] La conquista de Peter Gabriel en Lima - Diario El Comercio.
- http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/festivals/article6728136.ece
- Server theft knocks Peter Gabriel off the web The Register