Peter Gabriel
Security

Geffen    2011-2  (1982)

Rock/Pop
CD, 8   Tracks, 45:58  Length
01 The Rhythm of the Heat Peter Gabriel 05:18
✷  Recording Date   1982  ✷ 
02 San Jacinto Peter Gabriel 06:29
✷  Recording Date   1982  ✷ 
03 I Have the Touch Peter Gabriel 04:36
✷  Recording Date   1982  ✷ 
04 The Family And the Fishing Net Peter Gabriel 07:04
✷  Recording Date   1982  ✷ 
05 Shock the Monkey Peter Gabriel 05:29
✷  Recording Date   1982  ✷ 
06 Lay Your Hands on Me Peter Gabriel 06:11
✷  Recording Date   1982  ✷ 
07 Wallflower Peter Gabriel 06:35
✷  Recording Date   1982  ✷ 
08 Kiss of Life Peter Gabriel 04:16
✷  Recording Date   1982  ✷ 
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals Peter Gabriel
Drums Jerry Marotta
Bass Tony Levin
Synthesizer Larry Fast
Producer David Lord
Engineer Richard Chappell
Personal Details
Index # 1239
Owner Dave
Tags Prog Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Security -- which was titled Peter Gabriel everywhere outside of the U.S. -- continues where the third Gabriel album left off, sharing some of the same dense production and sense of cohesion, yet lightening the atmosphere and expanding the sonic palette somewhat. The gloom that permeates the third album has been alleviated and while this is still decidedly somber and serious music, it has a brighter feel, partially derived from Gabriel's dabbling in African and Latin rhythms. These are generally used as tonal coloring, enhancing the synthesizers that form the basic musical bed of the record, since much of this is mood music (for want of a better word). Security flows easily and enticingly, with certain songs -- the eerie "San Jacinto," "I Have the Touch," "Shock the Monkey" -- arising from the wash of sound. That's not to say that the rest of the album is bland easy listening -- it's designed this way, to have certain songs deliver greater impact than the rest. As such, it demands close attention to appreciate tone poems like "The Family and the Fishing Net," "Lay Your Hands on Me," and "Wallflower" -- and not all of them reward such intensive listening. Even with its faults, Security remains a powerful listen, one of the better records in Gabriel's catalog, proving that he is becoming a master of tone, style, and substance, and how each part of the record enhances the other. -- Stephen Thomas Erlewine (allmusic.com)

If Gabriel can't resist orchestrating his rock and roll, better he should lay on third-world rhythms than simulate first-world themes. But self-conscious primitivism hasn't cured his grandiosity--lyrical protestations notwithstanding, the only time those rhythms are around him and inside him, in control and in his soul, is on "Shock the Monkey," which has a good old first-world hook. Only Gabriel probably doesn't want to be cured--bet he admires African music not because it flows like a stream but because it taps the divine, and while he may know in his head that animists can't have one without the other, he's not about to become a believer. C+ -- Robert Christgau