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HIT-salad
Peter Gabriel’s new selection from his oeuvre as a chaotic deception maneuvre |
Thirteen years have passed since Peter’s first ‘greatest hits’ compilation Shaking The Tree appeared. It had a well-chosen selection of tracks, there was nothing to complain about it and a new album was about to be released, too. The situation is similar in 2003. Eighteen months ago Peter promised that a new album would be released. It was to be called IO and was allegedly almost completed. What followed was an extensive tour, numerous interview in which he mentioned even more different album titles and ideas for new project, the Growing Up Live DVD, even his collaboration on a fantasy game for PC, an almost finished songwriters’ version of OVO and the announcement of a new soundtrack project. Now there is HIT. Peter Gabriel is and will remain the master of getting distracted. HIT is
a difficult collection. Shaking The Tree was really something
like a Greatest Hits collection. HIT, however, is no HIT
compilation. CD1 contains few HITs but some complete flops
as well. The biggest HIT Peter will have with this compilation
is thorough confusion. Hit was released in four different versions.
It comes once on its own, in three version it is accompanied by a MISS
that paints question marks on the face of listeners. Are you confused?
So what is on the CDs, then? In the end what is around it may be more
interesting than what’s inside. More about that later … San Jacinto – no question! It’s a must on Miss. No Self-Control is another classic, but not a hit. Cloudless is a gem on the Long Walk Home soundtrack featuring the fantastic Blind Boys Of Alabama. It even is a radio edit, but it has earned a place on MISS. The Rhythm Of The Heat is one of Gabriel’s ultimate songs. Perfect! I Have The Touch is the first surprise. MISS features not the 1986 remix, but the 1995 version with Robbie Robertson and additional lyrics. It’s a great version and a good choice! I Grieve was basically not new on UP, but in a different, more intense mix which can be found here, too. D.I.Y is the only track off the second album, and it really MISSed the charts. If one read MISS as “Miss the charts” this were one of few songs that were not out of place on this CD. A Different Drums had not stood any chance had it been released as a single. Still, it’s a huge favourite with the fans. The Drop is rumoured to have a video, too, but no one has seen it yet. It was no single and never will be one, but it’s a terrific song nevertheless! The version of The Tower That Ate People that was included here comes from the Red Planet soundtrack. The movie was abysmal, but the song is very convincing. Lovetown was released as a single, but in this case the film was better than the song. Philadelphia was one of the milestones of the 90s, and Lovetown is just a small but precious part of it. Father, Son (from Ovo) was the fitting ending of the Growing Up tour shows. This, however, is the studio version. Signal To Noise is another monument in Gabriel’s oeuvre. This song was premièred in 1996. Before it was released on Up in 2002, Gabriel’s co-vocalist on this song, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, passed away, which gave this song an almost grotesque popularity. Downside Up is a song Peter had not sung on the original release, so we are happy that this great number is featured as the live version. Washing Of The Water is a peculiar choice for the last track of the international version. The German MISS adds the following songs: Du Bist Nicht Wie Wir (from his first German album) replaces No Self-Control. Kon Takt! regrettably replaces the new version of I Have The Touch. Both D.I.Y. and A Different Drum have to make way for Handauflegen. The German version of Family Snapshot, Schnappschuss (Ein Familienfoto) replaces Washing Of The Water and makes for a better ending of the CD. The U.S. version finishes with Cloudless. One also finds In Your Eyes, the song that has been played to death on too many concerts in recent years. I Don’t Remember replaces No Self-Control. D.I.Y. and A Different Drum give way to Family Snapshot and Love To Be Loved. Got that? Oh, and all CDs feature an interactive version of The Tower That Ate People which didn’t work at the time this review was written. A particular highlight at the end: What is the German translation of Burn You Up, Burn You Down? It apparently is Dich Niederbrennen, Dich Zur Weissglut Bringen! [literally: to burn you down, to make you see red; translator’s note] That’s what it says on the back cover of the German version. Yessir, all song titles were translated. One had to fear the worst. Image the first lines of Erwachsen Werden (Growing Up) in German: “folded in your fleshy purse” – actually, better don’t. Luckily enough, we were spared. Only the four songs mentioned above were sung in German. The record company has admitted to have fouled up. It was an accident that all titles were translated. Well, almost all titles. Solsbury Hill did not become Solsbury Berg. But a title like Signal An Den Lärm [literally: a signal directed at the noise; translator’s note] is embarrassing. Well, this flawed version is being replaced, but it still can be found in shops. Once again, the confusion is complete. What is this all supposed to be about? A box set or a release of Odds and Sodds would have pleased the fans better – and the single CD version would have been quite sufficient for the mainstream market. Come Talk To Me and Mercy Street are glaring omissions. The first Up single, The Barry Williams Show was not included and neither was Shaking The Tree. The second album is underrepresented as usual. A compilation of video clips on DVD is not planned, either. This release sometimes hits the bullseye, often it misses by far. HIT and MISS. A peculiar distribution across the CDs, though. Author – Christian Gerhardts (2003)
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