— Peter Bergman, as relsted to Frederick C. Wiebel, Jr
Of the Genesis album The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway, a virtual acquaintance wrote:
... an album I've always really struggled to make sense of, both musically and narratively. What's the secret - apart from to go back 40 years and get immersed in it?
To which I replied:
The “narrative” of The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway, whether Peter Gabriel’s lyrics or his prose blurb, which originally appeared inside the gatefold (irreconcilable as they are), is simply a hot mess (at best) with the occasional embarrassingly weak “wordplay” which at times mars even the best efforts of early Genesis at worst. I treat the album kind of like a Wagner opera, in that I pretty much just focus on the music. Apparently (relations already being strained between PG and the rest of the band at that point—IIRC, Mrs PG was having a difficult pregnancy, and the band could have been more emotionally supportive than they were) the band basically communally composed the album song by song, and PG devised/applied lyrics with the music more or less a fait accompli) which anyway supports the notion of receiving the music as the core experience. All that said, it’s kind of surreal to find the audience in the DVD of a live performance. singing along to “Carpet Crawlers.” I love all the rhythmic ingenuity of the album, and of course, Steve Hackett’s colors, especially. For me, the outstanding tracks are “Fly on a Windshield,” “In the Cage,” “Back in N.Y.C./Hairless Heart.” “The Waiting Room/Anyway/Here Comes the Supernatural Anaesthetist” & “Silent Sorrow in Empty Boats.”
On the theme of “a hot mess,” here are five outstandingly less-than-his-best lines from Peter Gabriel’s lyrics on that album:
5. Groucho, with his movies trailing, stands alone with his punch-line failing.
Something failed there, but it wasn't Groucho.
4. With no sign of life at all, I guess that I’m alone.
Well, I guess so!
3. Chances narrow that I’ll make it in the cushioned straight-jacket.
The strained rhyme only accentuates the strained imagery.
2. It’s a yellow plastic Shoobedoobe
Part of me applauds the made-up word, and yet it feels too much like “I don’t know what to write, so let’s just go with, erm, something.”
1. It’s only knock and know-all, but I like it.
Gabriel rarely strained more than right there.
Bonus: the reader is invited to consider which of the following two songs, in their entirety, is worse: “The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging,” or “Counting Out Time.”
For the sake of some balance: five lines from the album which I especially like:
1. Silent sorrow in empty boats.
2. You’re sitting in your comfort, you don’t believe I’m real; you cannot buy protection from the way that I feel.
3. And I’m hovering like a fly, waiting for the windshield on the freeway.
4. They say she comes on a pale horse, but I’m sure I hear a train.
5. They are pulled up by the magnet, believing they’re free.