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A Q & A With Peter Gabriel [img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/cYgEi.jpg[/img:$uid]
September 28, 2011
Peter Gabriel is a man who does things on his own schedule. He's only released three studio albums of new material since 1982's Peter Gabriel IV, and he's resisted the immense pressure to reunite with Genesis for a brief (and highly lucrative) reunion tour.
He did call a band meeting in 2005 to talk about it, but quickly changed his mind. Two weeks ago we sat down with Gabriel to talk about his new album,New Blood, but we couldn't resist grilling him about Genesis.
Is there part of you that thinks it might be fun to do a few Genesis concerts? Wouldn't it be a great way to end the band and bring your career full circle?
Phil [Collins] has had a lot of physical troubles recently, back problems that have restricted his drum playing, so there may be other reasons that would make it difficult now. So I assume we won't lose any sleep if we don't do more. You know, we had a great run. They did way better after I left anyway. So I don't know think anyone has anything to complain about.
True. But there's a huge fan base that's just dying to see you guys onstage one more time. What happens in a few years if Phil's condition improves?
Oh, I guess, you know if Phil was . . . Who knows. I mean, I did enjoy the Led Zeppelin one for example. I went to that gig, and they certainly worked their assess off rehearsing. The only time I've ever had a reunion with Genesis is whey they very generously agreed to play the Womad music festival [in 1982], which had lost lots of money at the first outing. And because they were on tour, we didn't get to rehearse much. And I said, "If we ever do this again, I really want to get it right."
So never say never?
Do you still have all the masks from your time in Genesis?
How about the old man mask and the bat wings?
Have you ever thought about singing Genesis songs at your solo shows like you used to do in the late 1970s?
And then Phish – they do these projects where they take an old record and do it. I had a conversation about The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway with them at one point.
Wow. They wanted you to sing it with them?
On your next solo tour, might you do some Genesis songs?
You've sort of taken the same stance as Robert Plant and David Gilmour. All three of you have the chance to reunite with your old bands and play to huge crowds, but it clearly just doesn't hold any interest with you.
At the same time, a lot of hardcore prog fans are very frustrated at your refusal to do it.
Right, but Led Zeppelin did one final concert and they ended the band on such a high note.
Sorry to keep harping on this one point. People are just so interested in it.
As I'm sure you know, the tribute band The Musical Box recreates 1970s Genesis shows and plays to gigantic crowds.
Fans are always debating whether or not a film of The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway tour exists.
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[Edited 9/28/11 22:46pm] You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Phil Collins pretty much said he was done with Genesis after the Hollywood Bowl concert. It was intended to be a "thank you to the fans" tour, and the last solo CD were songs from his teenage years that he wanted to revisit. Now he gets to watch his daughter become a movie star.
I think Peter Gabriel's kind of intimidated by trying to do the old songs, but at the same time, it's not like the world is beating down his doors to do Lamb Lies Down on Broadway, but no one gets why he doesn't do any Genesis-era songs, when he's the one who wrote the words to them.
To him, they're old songs from a different era, but there's people in the audience that want to hear him put one or two in the setlist.
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