"More Than This" | ||||
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Single by Peter Gabriel | ||||
from the album Up | ||||
Released | December 2002 | |||
Length |
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Label | ||||
Songwriter(s) | Peter Gabriel | |||
Producer(s) |
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Peter Gabriel singles chronology | ||||
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"More Than This" is a song by English rock musician Peter Gabriel from his 2002 album, Up . [1] The song was released as the second single from Up and was the only song from the album to chart in the UK, reaching number 47. It was also included on the Growing Up Live concert film in 2003. The live performance featured projections of a balloon suspended above the stage. [2]
Progress on "More Than This" began late in the development process for Up. [3] Gabriel was playing around with a Fender Telecaster guitar that producer Daniel Lanois left in the studio and decided to sample the instrument on a keyboard. [2] Gabriel quipped that he "can't play guitar to save my life, but I can make noises on it." [3] He drew further inspiration from a groove on a cassette he was listening to while traveling the Italian Alps. [2]
The song begins with manipulated guitar sounds from Gabriel's keyboard, after which the first verse starts. These guitar samples also return in the song's second verse. [4] Lyrically, the verses describe a long walk to an unfamiliar place and a vision of people struggling at sea. After the second chorus, which describe the narrator feeling 'alone and so connected', a quieter bridge emerges, which borrows some of the lyrical motifs from the preceding section. [2] Several of electronic devices were used on the song, including a Mutator, which engineer Richard Chappell described as a filter box. Chappell explained that "Mutator" and "Wonky Nord" were listed in the song's liner notes because of Gabriel's preference to credit instruments in a particular way that convey their utility. [5]
The single artwork is a photo taken by NASA. Gabriel had provided Marc Bessant, who designed the image, a book titled Full Moon, which featured over 30,000 negative images from the Apollo 11 moon landing. From those images, Bessant selected a picture of a footprint on the moon's surface. [3] In the liner notes of Up, Susan Derge's photo Hermetica was included instead, which depicts nine objects resembling buttons in a circular formation. [2]
Credits from the Up liner notes. [6]
Chart (2002) | Peak position |
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Italy (FIMI) [7] | 39 |
UK Singles (OCC) [8] | 47 |
US Adult Alternative Songs ( Billboard ) [9] | 20 |
The Polyphonic Spree is an American choral rock band from Dallas, Texas that was formed in 2000 by singer/songwriter Tim DeLaughter. The band's pop and rock songs are augmented by a large vocal choir, and instruments such as flute, trumpet, french horn, trombone, violin, viola, cello, percussion, piano, guitars, bass, drums, electronic keyboards, and EWI.
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Up is the seventh studio and thirteenth album overall by the English rock musician Peter Gabriel, released on 23 September 2002 through Geffen and Real World Records. The album rose to number 9 in the US, number 11 in the UK, and captured the number 1 position in Italy. Most critics reviewed it positively, though Rolling Stone said Gabriel was "out of touch". This would be Gabriel's last studio album of new original material for 21 years until the release of I/O (2023), although he did release several studio projects in the interim.
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Long Walk Home: Music from the Rabbit-Proof Fence, released in June 2002, is the fourth soundtrack album and twelfth album overall by the English rock musician Peter Gabriel. Devised as the soundtrack to the Australian film Rabbit-Proof Fence, it was the first release of new music by Peter Gabriel since OVO, a commissioned work for the Millennium Dome Show in 2000. The soundtrack contains elements from and references to songs which Peter would release on his album Up. The track "A Sense of Home" samples the drum loops used on "No Way Out". "Running to the Rain", "Crossing the Salt Pan", and "The Return" are reworked arrangements of "Signal to Noise", track nine of Up. "Ngankarrparni" and "Cloudless" are reworked arrangements of track three, "Sky Blue".
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"Growing Up" is a song by English rock musician Peter Gabriel from his 2002 album, Up. The song was released as the third single from Up where it reached the top 40 in Italy. It was also included on the Growing Up Live concert film in 2003.
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I/O is the tenth studio album by English singer-songwriter and musician Peter Gabriel, released on 1 December 2023 through Real World Records. It is Gabriel's first album of new original material in over 21 years since Up (2002), marking the longest gap between two studio albums in his solo career. I/O features 12 tracks, each with two different mixes labeled the "Bright-Side Mix" and "Dark-Side Mix". It is also Gabriel's longest studio album of original material, with both mixes each clocking in at over 68 minutes and the total project lasting over two hours. An additional "In-Side Mix" of the album is available on versions which include the Blu-ray audio disc.
"The Barry Williams Show" is a song by English rock musician Peter Gabriel from his 2002 album, Up. The song was released as the album's lead single and charted in various European countries. In 2003, the song received a Grammy nomination for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance, although it lost to Bruce Springsteen's "The Rising".
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