
Peter
Gabriels live spectacle GROWING UP on DVD |
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The History Growing Up is a visual experience. The show was planned through to the last detail and left little room for spontaneity. Now and then Peter still managed to surprise the “repeated offenders”. Of course there is no room for anecdotes on a concert DVd based on two shows in Milan. Or is there? As in 1993/1994, the two performances in Milan were picked for recording and release. When the North American shows were released as official CDs publishing the Growing Up tour on DVD was the next logical step. It seems the time of the normal live album has passed. It is not only Peter Gabriel’s Secret World Live that returned to the Top 100 in the DVD charts. The importance of DVDs in the album charts keeps growing, too. That’s no reason at all for Peter Gabriel to produce something
by halves. His usual perfectionism makes it all the more surprising
that the DVD reached the stores less than half a year after the tour
The show was filmed in 16:9. This has long become the standard. Most us have a 16:9 tv set at home or plan on getting one. The video quality is brilliant (unlike the Secret World Live DVD), but of course this time around the team could plan for the requirements of DVD technology. The image is artistically tampered with, but there is not interruption between songs. Everything is very smooth. The show was filmed by a large number of cameras and the DVD offers a fine mix of totals, close-ups and audience point of views. The Sound Peter goes for the big option here. One can choose from the dated Dolby Digital 2.0 stereo, Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound and the new but rapidly spreading dts sound (Digital Theatre System). The sound lives up to the expectations. Crystal clear, delicious, voluminous, just great! The Extras There are the credits with a Growing Up remix as background music. There is also a nine minute tour documentary and a slideshow with photos taken by Tony Levin, accompanied by a different Elbow Remix of More Than This. The images cannot be accessed individually, but they form a video sequence. The tour documentary is different from the one on the Secret World Live DVD. There is current interview material where Peter talks about the preparations and about his experiences during the show parts of the Growing Up tour. .
Shortened set? Forget it. Except for No Way Out and Come Talk To Me, which were both played once each at the two nights in Milan, Gabriel performed the original set of the Growing Up tour. We get to see the concert with a set list that was normal also at the German shows, except, of course, for the German version of Jetzt Kommt Die Flut which was Here Comes The Flood in Milan. The introductions were all done in English, there are only a few words of Italian here and there. Not all introductions were included, the remarks before Red Rain is missing as is the political introduction for Signal To Noise. Some of the introductions have been overdubbed. More about that later. The Show If you’ve seen the show more than once you know just how much is to be seen there, how many things went by unnoticed on the first show or were noticed only on the third night. This DVD cannot change that. Growing Up is a stimulus overload. Just jump on and enjoy the ride. The DVD also offers another approach. It becomes part of the show instead
of just documenting it. There are many different camera perspectives,
but there’s more than that. During Sledgehammer the colours change
and the image contrast is very high – the manipulations of the
video become so apparent for The Barry Williams Show that the advice
“Do Not Adjust Your Set” was faded in. The tv screen does
not only turn into Peter’s camera, but we also regularly see a
colour chart or a ninefold Peter. All in all this is a journey into
the DVD or into the production of the show that leaves the borders of
a tour documentary far behind. This is intentional but may not be to
everyone’s liking. There are frequent moments when the image is
split horizontally and the upper half shows the whole stage while the
lower half shows the Orange Men busily preparing the next song. Sometimes
there are aerial shots, as it were, sometimes images filmed from out
of the audience, from below and from the side. Only rarely do we see
images from the camera that would be uses to show Peter on the big screens
during the show. Occasionally the image slows down before the perspective
changes again. There are jumps in the video during Digging In the Dirt,
sudden zooms and switches in the p.o.v. Some of these effects are fascinating
and enliven the 134 minutes of the show. Peter and Melanie are often
filmed upside-down on Downside Up so that the viewer has the impression
that they are walking rightside up. Some more long shots of the performers
hanging from the sky stage would have been useful. It is good to see
that less effects can be more – compare Sky Blue. Few German fans
will have seen The Blind Boys or Alabama perform, but now they have
been immortalized on DVD.
Less,
probably, than came from Gabriel’s lips. He often cannot be seen
during the introductions which gives the impression that some overdubbings
took place. The introduction to Downside Up is a good example. It is
quite possible that Peter wanted to use English introductions because
of the world-wide release. However that may be, the intros are all in
easily comprehensible English. Some overdubbings are noticable, though.
The Milan audience is, as nobody doubted, a very special one for Peter Gabriel. The beginnings of the sung band introduction after Animal Nation were made by a group of Italian fans who attended the Berlin show. Milan celebrates Peter Gabriel more than any other city. During the Sledgehammer intro the crowd sings the melody, Peter is celebrated with “Peter, Peter” chants. One may have hoped for a German concert on DVD, but Milan had absolutely the right audience! The end titles are a last surprise. They show Gabriel in his Zorb ball
rolling through the city centre of Milan. And the surprised faces of
the lookers-on Author – Christian Gerhardts Links (Still) Growing Up Tour - Dates
and Setlists
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