
In thirty years of solo career, Peter Gabriel has published only seven albums (collateral projects aside): the four first eponymous albums, So, Us and Up. Released un 2002, Up is and outstanding piece of musicianship, perhaps underrated by critics and public alike.
Some of the songs of the album echo prior works of PG: Growing Up comes from Schledgehammer, we remember Steam when we listen to The Barry Williams Show, and Sky Blue is a child of Washing of the Water. But even in these songs we can see an evolution: the African inspiration is not so evident as in So, and there are also airs from the Far East, such as the voice sample of Nusrat Fathe Ali Khan in Signal to Noise. But I am wrong: PG has created a new sound and style, quite different from his other albums. The music sounds mainly in the lower octaves of the scale, and benefits from the modern techniques of musical engineering. The sophisticated engineering provides Up with a rich variety of sound textures, which is evident in the work of Tony Levin in the bass and of the crowded rythm section. That work on textures, loops and programming is specially interesting in No Way Out and My Head Sounds Like That (I've never heard a song like this before).
Perhaps the explanation of the underrating of Up is that it's a work stuck in the middle of the way: too comercial to be considered experimental music (like, for instance, the works of Tortoise or the ex-members of Japan), and too experimental to get a huge commercial success (like PG's So). But it is indeed an excellent record. eMule users will miss the wonderful black and white photographs of the booklet, which fit the mood of each of the songs.


