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NEWS : STORIES
On his first studio album in a decade, Peter Gabriel is moving in the right direction. Up, due September 24, follows in the two-letter tradition he started with 1986's So and continued through his last studio recording,
"The title was there about 10 years ago," Gabriel said. "I was playing with words, and I put myself in this two-letter-title box for a number of years." For the follow-up to So, which featured the hit "Sledgehammer," Gabriel simply changed one letter to come up with Us. Another quick fix led to Up, and I/O will probably be the title of the next LP, noted the methodical former leader of Genesis at their '70s prog peak. Despite the immediate connotation of the title, Up is anything but cheery. It's actually downright gloomy, rife with themes of loss, loneliness and the most obvious premise derived from song titles like "Darkness," "Dark" and "I Grieve" death. The music enhances such surface feelings with sparse melodies and delicate structures held aloft by breathy electronic atmospheres. Gabriel's trademark worldbeat influences abound, but unlike before, they're not immediately perceived as celebratory. The telltale track "I Grieve," as it moves from solemn to a more upbeat groove, helps makes sense of the album as a cohesive body of work, especially in its mantralike chorus: "They say that life carries on." "Quite a few of the songs are about death, and in a way, people think that's a pretty miserable, depressing subject, but I would say the opposite probably," he explained. "If you live in a dominant youth culture that pretends death doesn't exist, you're sort of ending up going directly toward it. Whereas if you face it head on and accept it as a part of life as a lot of other cultures do then you live life more fully." The LP's first single is one of the few offerings on the 11-track album that's more social commentary than introspective soul baring. While it may seem "The Barry Williams Show" would be the best thing to happen to the actor familiarly known as Greg Brady since The Return of Johnny Bravo, it actually has nothing to do with him. Rather, the song, ominously driven by a plunging bassline and punctuated with horns, is about the proclivity of reality TV. "In some ways it's more outside observation and less of an internal track," Gabriel said. "But somehow sonically it still feels of the same palette." Gabriel is planning a video to accompany the song, though he kept ideas for the treatment under his hat. However, he did reveal his choice for the ideal director: Sean Penn. "I like his films a lot," said Gabriel, who met with Penn Thursday to bandy ideas about. "And this track should have a dark edge to it, and he definitely knows how to get that." Obviously, Gabriel's is a condemning view of the current TV craze, so you won't be seeing him on "Dog Eat Dog" anytime soon, but that doesn't mean he's not watching. "I think we're probably just beginning with reality television in some ways," he said. "I can enjoy watching it myself sometimes, but it's a little like junk food after consuming it, you feel like sh--. And you're just conscious that some people's suffering is turned into advertising dollars, and it doesn't always feel very good." This report is provided by MTV News
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