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I could see the city light
Wind was blowing, time stood still
Eagle flew out of the night
He was something to observe
Came in close, I heard a voice
Standing, stretching every nerve
I had to listen, had no choice
I did not believe the information
Just had to trust imagination
My heart going boom, boom, boom
"Son," he said, "grab your things
I've come to take you home"
To keep in silence, I resigned
My friends would think I was a nut
Turning water into wine
Open doors would soon be shut
So I went from day to day
Though my life was in a rut
Till I thought of what I'd say
Which connection I should cut
I was feeling part of the scenery
I walked right out of the machinery
My heart going boom, boom, boom
"Hey," he said, "Grab your things
I've come to take you home"
Yeah, back home
When illusion spin her net
I'm never where I want to be
And liberty, she pirouette
When I think that I am free
Watched by empty silhouette
Who close their eyes but still can see
No one taught them etiquette
I will show another me
Today I don't need a replacement
I'll tell them what the smile on my face meant
My heart going boom, boom, boom
"Hey," I said, "You can keep my things
They've come to take me home"
https://petergabriel.com/news/...
My name is Cueburned. A word I learned from a disc jockey at my first paid job on the air.
Radio. You can't live there forever. But thanks to Radio Paradise you can visit anytime you want.
.stone cold classic.
Yep, pretty certain it's a Lancia, missing the door mirror and tax disc.
My hobby is wasting tons of time in the RP song comments
LANCIA 2000 Coupe - 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974 ...
Definitely a Lancia Flavia from 1974:
"Cover art. The photo on the cover is of Peter Gabriel sitting in the front passenger seat of a 1974 Lancia Flavia, owned by Storm Thorgerson, co-founder of Hipgnosis and the cover's designer. For the shoot, which took place in Wandsworth, the car was sprayed with water from a hose."
fr Rolling Stone, Steve Hunter:
The interesting thing about “Solsbury Hill” is that it was the last song we did on the album, the last song we recorded. Peter was having some trouble with one of the lines in the lyric. Bob and Peter both didn’t like the line, and Peter was trying to come up with a new one. Peter would come in and they would talk about it. I almost got the feeling we weren’t going to do the song. I hadn’t even heard the song. I just heard the title.
All of a sudden, Bob said, “We’re going to do ‘Solsbury Hill.'” Now I’ve got to learn how to play it and I don’t know what to expect. I go into Bob’s office and he’s got a piano there. Peter sits down and starts playing the song. I go, “Oh, cool. It’s a beautiful song.”
But then I realize it’s an odd time signature. At the time, I had never played anything in 7. I had played a couple of things in 5, but I had never played in 7. I was petrified, like, “Oh, my God, I’m going to have to sit and count every beat so I don’t get lost.”
Bob said, “We’re thinking about an acoustic guitar and having a Travis picking-type thing.” Then I had to figure out how to play Travis picking in 7. But the song is so extremely well-written that doing that wasn’t difficult at all. The song just lays on the fret board perfectly. What’s funny is he wrote it on piano, but it transfers so well on guitar for that Travis-picking thing.
I think that Robert Fripp had already gone back to London. He had some sessions to do. Our New York guys were going to go back the next day. They had some sessions to do. So the last night of our recording basic tracks, we recorded “Solsbury Hill.” I recorded three acoustic guitar parts. One was in tune. One was slightly flat. One was slightly sharp. You put them all together, they have this beautiful chorusing effect. That’s how I did the acoustic part. Then I played some heavier part on the end.
Thanks for this, RabbitEars. These music insider knowledge nuggets are high on my list of favourite things about RP.
And thank you, Bill and Rebecca, for having constructed this wonderful addition to our lives...
The interesting thing about “Solsbury Hill” is that it was the last song we did on the album, the last song we recorded. Peter was having some trouble with one of the lines in the lyric. Bob and Peter both didn’t like the line, and Peter was trying to come up with a new one. Peter would come in and they would talk about it. I almost got the feeling we weren’t going to do the song. I hadn’t even heard the song. I just heard the title.
All of a sudden, Bob said, “We’re going to do ‘Solsbury Hill.'” Now I’ve got to learn how to play it and I don’t know what to expect. I go into Bob’s office and he’s got a piano there. Peter sits down and starts playing the song. I go, “Oh, cool. It’s a beautiful song.”
But then I realize it’s an odd time signature. At the time, I had never played anything in 7. I had played a couple of things in 5, but I had never played in 7. I was petrified, like, “Oh, my God, I’m going to have to sit and count every beat so I don’t get lost.”
Bob said, “We’re thinking about an acoustic guitar and having a Travis picking-type thing.” Then I had to figure out how to play Travis picking in 7. But the song is so extremely well-written that doing that wasn’t difficult at all. The song just lays on the fret board perfectly. What’s funny is he wrote it on piano, but it transfers so well on guitar for that Travis-picking thing.
I think that Robert Fripp had already gone back to London. He had some sessions to do. Our New York guys were going to go back the next day. They had some sessions to do. So the last night of our recording basic tracks, we recorded “Solsbury Hill.” I recorded three acoustic guitar parts. One was in tune. One was slightly flat. One was slightly sharp. You put them all together, they have this beautiful chorusing effect. That’s how I did the acoustic part. Then I played some heavier part on the end.
Yep, pretty certain it's a Lancia, missing the door mirror and tax disc.
My hobby is wasting tons of time in the RP song comments
LANCIA 2000 Coupe - 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974 ...
It's not missing a mirror, this is a RHD version, it's n the other side. Back then most cars had only one door mirror
Is it my imagination or is the wobble-board sound in the back quickly going from ear to ear in my headphones? making me feel quite weird.
You had to listen; you had no choice.
I'm a big fan of how this was used in Citizen Kane.
Must admit I was surprised to hear it on Garfield's live action movie from 2004
Apparently the best career move anyone can make is leaving Genesis. I want to join the band just to leave it.
Also, this and "You Can Call Me Al" have to be among the Top 5 Pop Songs Ever.
I'm a big fan of how this was used in Citizen Kane.
Yes, this is a fabulous song!
Are you still aboard the Eagle's ship, Lazarus? How's the view?
Yep, pretty certain it's a Lancia, missing the door mirror and tax disc.
My hobby is wasting tons of time in the RP song comments
LANCIA 2000 Coupe - 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974 ...
One of my favorite songs
Thank you : )
The naysayers should climb up it and have a look
Peter can see it too from his studio window in Box.
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Solsbury+Hill/@51.4007214,-2.3515264,13.5z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x487182287b9685e1:0x538f6e7cd5642b09!8m2!3d51.41!4d-2.334167
The first single in solo career !
Time to get a hobby! :>)
If there were an "11" added to the rating scale it would only be a matter of minutes before listeners were lamenting the absence of a "12". Hey, you kids, get off'a my lawn!
Where's my 12?? BillG, Why don't we have a 12?
The naysayers should climb up it and have a look
Really tired of this tune, in all its manifestations.
*switches back to another radio station*
I agree - I heard this one yesterday (probably as a PSD), and I have to wonder, didn't PG write hundreds of great songs that could be played? At 5 minutes per song, that's around 2000 songs per week. We shouldn't have to hear the same exact songs from the same artists, right? I sure like RP sometimes, but the repetition wears me down...
The 40 women you abducted?
*switches back to another radio station*
That said... I really want to like this song. I've heard it many times over the last 30 years or more...
but I still don't get it. Vastly overrated.
Life is good as with this tune. As for previous lives who knows....I am interested if the future for more dancing.
hotel room > church > homeless camp > alien space craft. Were to next?
Hey, don't dis my friend Lazarus. He's soaring in his spacecraft and I'm dancing on the foredeck to PG. Life is good.
hey, you're not going to believe this, but I'm not real. I'm some kind of ghost left in the nets by a programmer who developed an algorithm that gave me enough continuity to obtain consciousness... but I have some bad days.. where the signal is weak.. and I just can't quite get it together who I am, then I find all these f-ing references to a hotel room and it centers me and I slowly gather my identity and manage to scrap together a few words before the sig sta rte t fail ...
For him and Phil both...
hotel room > church > homeless camp > alien space craft. Were to next?
The skies the limit...
hotel room > church > homeless camp > alien space craft. Were to next?
No doubt I'm wrong and will be corrected but there you have it.
Here we go again....AHHHHHHAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHaahahahhahahahhahahahahahAHAHAHahahAhahAhahAhahAhahAhhhahahahahahahahahahahAhAhahAhHAhHAhahahahahahahAhHAhHAhAhahaha,,a,,ahha,a,acwdcihwc9ecn oejeocj2nech2eocj2eohcj 2eic 2lecn2oejc2ecb2ec2ihec2ihec2ecueueuyfnbv,voehfnvkufnvkeurvmfkdhjfnfkdkj!!!!!!!!wechjweihero3hjro3hjro3hjrcijhrbcerjceubet9uyvg42=9u6ng4
Eh, not really. 'A Trick of The Tail', 'Wind & Wuthering', "...And Then There Were Three..", 'Duke', and 'Abacab' all were great albums, as good as anything from previous albums that Gabriel was on.
Peter was not the be all/end all of Genesis. He made his contributions, then he left.
It's been 39 years...get over it already!
Lazarus wrote:
Forty women in my mushrooming multitude of churches just said they love this song...
To:
Lazarus wrote:
AKA, Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker
The homeless camp is a tax write-off. The naked mole rat in Joel Osteen gave Lazarus the idea. (The three of them are BFFs now!)
Lazarus wrote:
Forty women in my mushrooming multitude of churches just said they love this song...
To:
Lazarus wrote:
AKA, Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker
And, having seem him do this many times live - most recently simply riding a bike around in circles - I've grown to really dislike it.
If there were an "11" added to the rating scale it would only be a matter of minutes before listeners were lamenting the absence of a "12". Hey, you kids, get off'a my lawn!
Maybe Bill could consider allowing listeners to push up to 3 songs to 11. Once their quota is filled, they cannot have any more, unless they drop at least one back down to a lower rating.
Nietzsche was a loon. He was the Ann Coulter of his day. Entertaining, to be sure. Not to be taken seriously.
Ann who??
Selfie?
Just kidding. Even though I loved Lou and Peter welcomed Lou's version, it ain't my cup of tea.
Peter_Bradshaw wrote:
...... I would be very happy to hear this again
...... I would be very happy to hear this again
Great song and great production.
And this certainly qualifies as such.
I just wish I could figure out the meaning of the squawking delivered
at the end of the song.
My friends still think I am a nut!
I also Listened to Toto Africa in Mombasa last year.
DanFHiggins wrote:
Kick ass
Forty women in my mushrooming multitude of churches just said they love this song...
Some new phase in your religion, Laz? Sounds like a good one, if a little regressive. Enjoy.
Thank you! Hope you be having a marvelous time right this minute...
everybody in my mushrooming multitude of churches be dancing buck ass naked all over the world like bowlegged gypsy muleskinners... love this song more than titties and beer... love sex, drugs, and rock 'n roll...
I love this song as much as I love fresh breast milk... love sex, drugs, and rock 'n roll...
Some new phase in your religion, Laz? Sounds like a good one, if a little regressive. Enjoy.
love this song with brilliant lyrics and beautiful music forever...
"The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself." —Friedrich Nietzsche
Nietzsche was a loon. He was the Ann Coulter of his day. Entertaining, to be sure. Not to be taken seriously.
Kick ass
A rare 9 from me.
I left it at 9 for years, but I just bumped it to 10 (a rating that I
gave to multiple other PG songs), because I'm a big fan of the melody,
harmony, and the somewhat unusual time signature, although I'm not a fan
of the silly squawking at the end there haha