Topic: I've said it once if I've said it a thousand times: Peter Gabriel's 4th album is his masterpiece.
Father Merrin !u5oFWxmY7U started this discussion 6 years ago#87,199
The Rhythm of the Heat radiates tension and primal energy. San Jacinto is his single greatest song and his crowning achievement. Lay Your Hands On Me is a yearning from the deepest and loneliest recesses of the human soul. I Have The Touch affirms that even in the exiled chaos of our atomised and selfish lives these stone age brains of ours fundamentally crave contact with one another.
A flawless 10/10 masterpiece, one of the few truly great records of an otherwise mediocre decade for music.
I shall now open up the floor for questions about 'dadrock'.
Anonymous D joined in and replied with this 6 years ago, 22 seconds later, 7 minutes after the original post[^][v]#998,312
> I've never listened to it but it is awful.
A Fellow Creative joined in and replied with this 6 years ago, 2 hours later, 2 hours after the original post[^][v]#998,367
You shouldn’t listen to him as he composed the score for the sacrilegious and heretical movie, The Last Temptation of Christ, directed by so-called Catholic and premiere peddler of smut Martin Scorcese
Father Merrin !u5oFWxmY7U (OP) replied with this 6 years ago, 47 minutes later, 3 hours after the original post[^][v]#998,386
Scorsese if you please. And in fact I find Nikos Kazantzakis' novel to be a profound and thought-provoking look at the agony of Christ's passion. And the final segment of Peter Gabriel's remarkable score for the movie...