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44 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
UP Brings Gabriel Full Circle, December 4, 2002
I have listened to UP closely 50 or more times and saw Gabriel's recent show at the MCI Arena in Washington, D.C. The arena was far from sold out, with the average age of those in attendance being about 48. Sales of the album are going slowly, too. UP is not listed on Billboard's top 100 album chart.Yet with UP, Gabriel finally does what I hoped he would do since I discovered him in 1974: he has given his dedicated fans a work of art that stands above all his previous releases perhaps even including those from Genesis three decades ago. I can understand why Rolling Stone magazine would give this CD two stars. (Rolling Stone also gave "Selling England By the Pound" two stars upon its release in 1973). I was tempted to give UP two stars after buying it and surviving the first abrasive burst of guitar on the opening cut "Darkness." That and Tony Levin's persistent, penetrating bass that can drown out an unlearned melody were almost enough to turn my family into a covey of Gabriel haters. I've never had so many people yelling at me in unison to turn down the stereo. I still don't much care for David Rhodes's initial guitar work on "Darkness." However, once you get to know it in the context of the song, it works exceedingly well, along with every bit of "Darkness," a masterpiece and the closest Gabriel has come to his seminal work on "The Battle of Epping Forest" or "Broadway Melody of 1974." UP is not perfect, but perfect is hard to find -- perhaps only existing in one album that I know of: Sgt. Peppers from the Beatles. But I firmly believe that UP is as close to perfection as Gabriel has come in his solo career. Having just re-listened to "Selling England" and "The Lamb," I have to say that the vocal virtuosity on UP exceeds both by a long shot. Take a close listen to "Growing Up" with "one dot, that's on or off, defines what is and what is not, one dot..." and you'll hear something resembling "and Harold Demure, who's still not quite sure, fires acorns from out of his sling. Here comes the cavalry!" It is the first time in Gabriel's solo career that he has approached the vocal skill exhibited with Genesis. While the opening guitar riff on "Darkness" has killed sales of UP, that demented riff means diehard Gabriel fans have Gabriel to ourselves again. Welcome back Peter. You left us for a long time and while we've loved your music between "PG-1" and "Us" (including "Passion"), UP ties you back to Lamb, England, Cryme and Foxtrot and what made us love you so much in the first place. You can't get much better than UP. You just can't. Some of the most beautiful songs Gabriel has ever written are on UP, and despite its initial lack of commercial success, songs like Growing Up, More Than This, Sky Blue, I Grieve, and Signal to Noise could be getting tons of air play. They are pop tunes that are deftly cloaked in Gabriel's techno-industrial mutators, reverse strings, telecasters, loop manipulations, JamMans, MPC grooves, sampled guitars and wonky nords. (What are all these instruments? I remember he used to play the flute and oboe.) If Gabriel "regresses" next year with a "So" -- so as to regain his commercial footing -- well, that's fine because with UP Gabriel has provided nourishment for his long-term fan base. He has solidified us for life with this album. We are at your mercy, Mr. Gabriel, because on UP you have written songs that nobody else could ever have created; songs like Lillywhite Lillith that will age beautifully and gain in stature. Gabriel's record label won't be able to generate substantial sales for UP -- that will come through word of mouth and perhaps through people like us buying the CD as gifts for our grown children and others, explaining to the lucky recipients that it will take a few spins before they can understand the logic. We'll tell them that it's complicated music that might sound abrasive at first and will require active participation. We'll tell them that once they've gotten to know the melodies that they need to print out the lyrics and read along. We'll say: "You will find refrains that will blow you sideways and off your feet, such as: 'Don't leave us, don't leave us like this.' " They will discover Gabriel's poetry: "The world is turning to noise and the more that it surrounds us, the more that it destroys." They will find that Gabriel is able to combine Middle Eastern and African rhythm with Western classical symphony in its best tradition in a cascading climax on "Signal to Noise." Even the small songs will grow on them like "My Head Sounds Like That," a cut worthy in every way to be included in this collection. They'll get to appreciate the range of Gabriel's voice, and his willingness to expose its vulnerabilities such as on "The Drop." Somehow, us older folks need to entice youngsters to get started on a journey that they will have to travel backwards through Peter Gabriel's artistic life. Today's 16-year-olds were infants when "So" was released in 1986. PG-1 was released almost three decades ago. That's a long time. Imagine in 1969 listening to music that was produced in 1939? If the real buying audience of teenagers latch onto such a line as "My ghost likes to travel, so far in the unknown..." they will be converts, and Gabriel's next tour will be a sell-out. It will take work to get the next generation to go back deeply in time to discover the link between UP and Gabriel's brilliance with Genesis. But to get to the Lamb, Selling England, Cyrme and Foxtrot, they have to start someplace, preferably with UP. It's a place worth starting.
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