Peter Gabriel
The Bottom Line - New York, NY

Recording Date   10/4/1978

Rock/Pop
Files, 17   Tracks, 96:35  Length
01 Teddy Bear Peter Gabriel 06:39
02 On The Air Peter Gabriel 04:17
03 Moribund The Burgermeister Peter Gabriel 05:08
04 Perspective Peter Gabriel 03:08
05 Humdrum Peter Gabriel 04:40
06 A Wonderful Day In A One-Way World Peter Gabriel 04:40
07 Home Sweet Home Peter Gabriel 06:21
08 DIY Peter Gabriel 04:31
09 Waiting For the Big One > band intros > White Shadow Peter Gabriel 13:00
10 Mother Of Violence Peter Gabriel 03:52
11 Slowburn Peter Gabriel 05:52
12 Flotsam And Jetsam Peter Gabriel 04:23
13 I Don't Remember Peter Gabriel 05:13
14 Solsbury Hill Peter Gabriel 05:09
15 Modern Love Peter Gabriel 07:44
16 All Day All Night Here Comes The Flood Ray Davies; Peter Gabriel 10:18
17 Lamb Lies (cut) Tony Banks; Phil Collins; Peter Gabriel; Steve Hackett; Mike Rutherford 01:40
Music Details
Product Details
Venue The Bottom Line
City, State/Country New York, NY
Packaging FLAC
Live Yes
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals Peter Gabriel
Synthesizer Larry Fast
Bass Tony Levin
Saxophone Timmy Capello
Guitar Sid McGinnis
Drums Jerry Marotta
Guitar Robert Fripp
Personal Details
Index # 1235
Owner Dave
User Defined
Purchased ROIO
ROIO Source Pre-FM
Notes
Peter Gabriel
Bottom Line Late Show
NYC
October 4, 1978

Soundboard Pre-FM King biscuit?

Teddy Bear
On The Air
Moribund
Perspective
Humdrum
One Way World
Home Sweet Home
DIY
Waiting for the Big One
White Shadow
Mother Of Violence
Slowburn
Flotsam Jetsam
I Dont Remember
Solsbury Hill
Modern Love
All Day and All of the Night
Here Comes the Flood
Lamb Lies Down On Broadway


Timmy Capello - saxophone, keyboards
Larry Fast - synthesizers
Peter Gabriel - vocals, piano
Tony Levin - bass, Chapman stick, backing vocals
Sid McGuinnes - guitar, backing vocals
Jerry Moratta - drums
Guest: Robert Fripp - guitar

Following his 1975 departure from Genesis, at the height of their popularity, and after a period of rest and creative rejuvenation, Peter Gabriel returned with his compelling first solo album in 1977. In the two-year interim, Gabriel had matured as both an artist and a songwriter. His new music was scaled down considerably and gone were the rhetorical and prog-rock musical flourishes that characterized Genesis. Over the course of his first three solo albums, he would become increasingly adventurous and increasingly introspective, creating music on his own terms. He began working with some of the most talented and esoteric musicians of the era, including King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp, (who was then pursuing his own solo and session work career), and the extraordinarily talented bass player, Tony Levin, a veteran of the New York studio session scene. Gabriel's new music could be explosively powerful one minute and psychologically introspective the next, taking listeners on a dark, brooding journey through the bleak recesses of his mind.

Peter Gabriel collectors may be familiar with a few of the tracks here, initially broadcast worldwide by the King Biscuit Flower Hour. However, here for the first time is the unedited Bottom Line recording from the late show of October 4, 1978, when Gabriel debuted his second album material to a highly enthusiastic New York City audience. The intimacy of the venue, which only held several hundred listeners, brings a palpable (and easily audible) immediacy to this performance that is utterly unique and quite engaging.

The performance begins with Peter alone at the piano. He begins with a brief monologue about psychiatry, while displaying a teddy bear to the audience. He then opens the set with "Me and My Teddy Bear." This intimate beginning to the show is followed by Larry Fast's "On Presuming to be Modern I" synthesizer music over the PA as the band joins Gabriel on stage and then kick into "On The Air," the energetic pop/rocker that led off his debut album. Over the course of the next two hours, Gabriel delivers most of the songs that comprised his first two albums, nearly playing both albums in their entirety.

From his debut album, highlights include the majestic tribal sounding "Moribund The Burgermeister," the cocktail-jazz ballad "Waiting For The Big One," “Slowburn," with its modular sections reminiscent of his work with Genesis, and "Hum Drum," which replaces "Indigo" from the early show. And of course there's the beautiful "Solsbury Hill," his most autobiographical song of this era. Two additional first album tracks surface at the end of the show and during the remarkable encore, which will be addressed shortly.

The bulk of the rest of the set features material from his recently released second album. It met with mixed reviews at the time, but gradually gained respect over the years and contained several of his most enduring songs. In this live context, Gabriel and the band shed new light on "Perspective," an up-tempo number showcasing saxophone player Timmy Capello, and the artistically adventurous and lyrical "Mother Of Violence." There's also a little optimism here, displayed in the catchy "A Wonderful Day In a Wonderful World," and the stripped down "D.I.Y." The new album is additionally represented by the aforementioned set opener, "On The Air," and another scorching take on "White Shadow," which allows guitarist Sid McGuinnes to cut loose. "Home Sweet Home" a song not included in the early show performance, surfaces here.

Gabriel also performs an embryonic version of "I Don't Remember," a new song that would eventually surface on his third album. Which leaves the tail end of this remarkable show. For the last song of the set, Gabriel returns to the first album and brings a special guest onstage, the producer on his new album and guitarist extraordinaire, Robert Fripp. They launch into a seven minute take on "Modern Love," with Fripp adding chunky rhythmic washes of sound to the already heady mix of musicians. It's a smoking conclusion to the set and the crowd is at a veritable frenzy by the end.

After overwhelmingly enthusiastic applause, the entire entourage, including Fripp, return to the stage for an encore. Gabriel is obviously in great spirits as he launches the group into a pummeling take on the Kinks classic, "All Day And All Of The Night.” This is one hellacious cover, with Fripp adding scorching Frippetronics to the proceedings. His leads bite through like a wall of guitar players here and it is one thoroughly exciting performance. Then, almost diametrically opposed to what just preceded it, Gabriel begins the hauntingly beautiful "Here Comes The Flood." This is another highlight of this performance, with a penetrating vocal from Gabriel and Fripp adding poignant sonic textures in all the right places. As Fripp exits the stage, they close the encore with the ambitious title track of his Genesis opus, The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway as the tape stock runs out.

Much like the trilogy of his first three solo albums, this music can be insightful, morbid, beautiful, powerful, bleak, innovative, disturbing and delightful; occasionally all these things simultaneously. Listening to these Bottom Line performances makes it fairly obvious why Gabriel needed to leave Genesis. He was discovering a way to reach far beyond his progressive-rock roots while simultaneously exploring the inner depths of his own psyche. This recording, as well as the early show recording, capture that initial era perfectly, when Peter Gabriel was exploring musical possibilities and creating personal and innovative music with a broad range of stylistic colors.