Peter Gabriel - White Shadow - LIVE 04 October 1978 video free download


49,519
Duration: 05:09
Uploaded: 2008/04/25

Audio recording of Peter Gabriel performing White Shadow live at the Bottom Line in New York City, 04 October 1978. Photos from that year are also included. This is the best performance of this song that I have found so far.

Featured Musicians:

Timmy Capello - keyboards

Larry Fast - synthesizers

Peter Gabriel - vocals

Tony Levin - bass

Jerry Marotta - drums

Sid McGinnis - guitars

Comments

9 years ago

M. Eugenia La Rocca

Prosigamos.....

9 years ago

kinseymilkbone

This was recorded for the King Biscuit Flower Hour, a syndicated radio program. And yes, that's Robert Fripp playing the solo at the end. What's even weirder is that Timmy Cappello, later the '80s most revolting saxophonist (see Tina Turner's videos from that era) was playing keyboards.

9 years ago

burgersoft777

Is that Ellis on guitar? Can't imagine anyone else sounding quite like that.

9 years ago

Chris Ruth

i was there. and yes, a memorable show!

9 years ago

kdo84221

1978年4月、ニューヨーク・ボトムラインでのおガブさん。

10 years ago

Gavin Steiner

I am so glad to have discovered these early PG video's. I've always been a big fan, but once I saw the Rockpalast 1978 video I was blown away!Peter Gabriel - Rockpalast 1978 (full show)I spent three weeks listening not stop to every PG album literally non stop. And I was amazed when I finally got to UP, and heard him go right back to his solo roots :-)What an artist.

10 years ago

Gavin Steiner

Does anyone know how the swirling keyboard effect is done? It sounds like some kind of Phaser but I've never been able to recreate it!

10 years ago

raimon arruebo sanchez

me gustaria tenerte de amigo en faceboo

10 years ago

raimon arruebo sanchez

me gustaria tenerte de amigo en faceboo nos encanta el amigo peter gracias

10 years ago

Gabriel Quezada

P.G II, another underrated album :/

10 years ago

CthulhuWaitsDreaming

As far as I know, he was not present at this concert. I do not think he played at many (any?) of the 1978 shows.

10 years ago

David Leoni

They seemed to have left out the mystery guest, Mr. Robert Fripp.

10 years ago

easterntrees

Levin, but not Fripp. that's Sid McGuinness doing a (tepid, in my opinion) stand-in for Fripp's solo at the end. Fripp did make a special guest appearance for this show, since he lived in NYC at the time; he played on the last song of the set ('modern love') and the first two songs of the encore ('all day and all of the night' by the kinks and the amazing 'here comes the flood').

11 years ago

1wizardofx

soooo.. was this Fripp and Levin live?? Sure sounded like them. Fripp played with real emotion on Scratch.

12 years ago

Tippersnore

My favorite King Biscuit tape of all time.

12 years ago

pastalavista

Our tribute to the great man!

12 years ago

CthulhuWaitsDreaming

@twostikks1 that's cool that the french performance is on youtube. I believe that particular photo (as well as the cake) was borrowed from Larry Fast's web site. The photo would be of the performance when it was being broadcast.

12 years ago

CthulhuWaitsDreaming

@FerranK68 Bob Ezrin produced PG1. If Bob Ezrin's name sounds familiar, it's because he produced a bunch of classic albums... Pink Floyd - The Wall (and Momentary Lapse, Division Bell), Alice Cooper - Welcome to My Nightmare (and just about everything else by AC), Kiss - Destroyer, Lou Reed - Berlin

12 years ago

twostikks1

I really enjoyed looking at the pictures while listening to this one (something I find I don't usually do). Many I've seen before, but they're all cool shots. The pic disc & the cake were neat! But I noticed the shot on the TV @ 2:43 is the band from French TV performing Humdrum, which you can find right here on YouTube (just do a search for Humdrum and Mother of Violence and you can see both tunes).

12 years ago

Fernando Cañada

@crimfan Exactly! I couldn't remember it!!! Thanks :) "Dusty Rhoades" was Mr Fripp used like a "Undercoved name" (As P. Hammill maybe could said) About the production of PG1 I'm not doubt your affirmation, but I will to see to corroborate it. About Mr. Fripp (And Hammill too) musical pitions like a workers, with his dignity and rejecting the "mass media" (You know Mr. Fripp ethic' principles he put in all of DGM CD's... ) I share absolutly his words. He only defens his works. Yours FCN :)

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