Security Project, in addition to Cummins, features Michael Cozzi on guitar and backing vocals, David Jameson on keyboards and Eigenharp, Trey Gunn (from King Crimson) on guitar and vocals, and Jerry Marotta on drums and backing vocals. (Jerry Marotta played drums on several Peter Gabriel recordings, including one of my favorites, that great self-titled 1980 release with “Games Without Frontiers.”) The recordings on this CD are from February and March of 2015, as well as May of 2016. At times I forget this is a live album. First of all, it’s a very good, clear recording. But also, there is nothing messy about these tracks; these are polished performances. And there isn’t much stage banter included, with the focus being on the material.
This CD opens with “Family
Snapshot,” a song from that 1980 self-title record. (The first four Peter
Gabriel solo albums are all self-titled.) This rendition by Security Project
features a really good vocal performance. Near the end, the vocals are delivered
nearly a cappella, and those moments are compelling, and will certainly draw
you in. That’s followed by “Moribund The Burgermeister,” which is the opening track
from what is arguably Peter Gabriel’s best album, the self-titled one from
1977, his first solo record. (It’s the album that also features “Solsbury Hill.”)
As with the original, this one features a great, kind of creepy voice on the
line, “But I will find out, I will find out, I will find out.” I love it. Also
from that album is “Humdrum.”
From what is still probably Peter
Gabriel’s most popular album, So, comes “Mercy Street.” (I’m glad Security
Project didn’t choose “Sledgehammer” or “Big Time,” two songs I never cared for.)
In one of the CD’s few bits of stage banter, the band introduces this song, “This is from me to you, and it proves
everybody deserves just a little bit of mercy.” The band delivers a
delicate, moving rendition, which is actually quite a bit different from Peter
Gabriel’s original version. It’s also somewhat shorter.
While the majority of these
tracks are from early in Peter Gabriel’s solo career, Security Project does
cover “Father, Son,” from Gabriel’s 2000 release OVO. Then, interestingly, they reach much farther back in Gabriel’s
career to his time with Genesis, covering two songs from the 1974 record The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway. They do
the first two songs from this double album – the title track and “Fly On A
Windshield.” The CD then concludes with “On The Air,” the first tune from Peter
Gabriel’s second self-titled album. The audience clearly knows the song, as you
can hear them echo “On the air” – one
of the only moments when the audience plays a key part in the recording.
CD Track List
- Family Snapshot
- Moribund The Burgermeister
- Humdrum
- Mercy Street
- Wallflower
- White Shadow
- Father, Son
- The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
- Fly On A Windshield
- On The Air
Live 2 was released on October 21, 2016.
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