Solsbury Hill (song)


"Solsbury Hill" is a song by English musician Peter Gabriel. He wrote the song about a spiritual experience atop Little Solsbury Hill in Somerset, England, after his departure from the progressive rock band Genesis, of which he had been the lead singer since its inception. The song was his debut single. The single was a Top 20 hit in the UK, peaking at number 13, and reached number 68 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1977. The song has often been used in film trailers for romantic comedies.
Gabriel has said of the song's meaning, "It's about being prepared to lose what you have for what you might get ... It's about letting go." His former bandmate Tony Banks acknowledges that the song reflects Gabriel's decision to break ties with Genesis, but it can also be applied in a broader sense to situations of letting go in general.
The song is mostly written in time, an unusual time signature that has been described as "giving the song a constant sense of struggle". The meter settles into time only for the last two measures of each chorus. It is performed in the key of B major with a tempo of 102 beats per minute, with Gabriel's vocals ranging from F3 to G4.

Background

Producer Bob Ezrin placed some restrictions on the session musicians to give the song its distinctive sound. While earlier versions of the song featured more prominent electric guitar, Ezrin instructed guitarist Steve Hunter to instead perform main riff on a 12 string guitar, an instrument "he hadn't played in a long time". However, Hunter states that he instead borrowed a Martin acoustic guitar, and Travis picked the voicings with a capo on the second fret. As Ezrin wanted the acoustic guitar to be tripled, Hunter was required to provide three satisfactory takes, all of which had to be aligned with one another.
Rather than employing a full drum kit, Allan Schwartzberg made do with a shaker in one hand and a drum stick in another, which he used to strike a telephone book. For additional rhythmic textures, Larry Fast constructed a fake drum kit on his keyboard, which he dubbed the "synthibam", although the liner notes credit percussionist Jimmy Maelen with the instrument. After all of the session musicians departed, Fast also overdubbed some additional electronics, including the synth horn orchestration. From verse two onwards, a subdued four note flute riff, played by Gabriel himself, sounds-off the beginning of each section of the lyrics.

Use in soundtracks

It has been used in a number of films and television shows, including the 2001 film Vanilla Sky and the 2004 film In Good Company. More recently, it has been used in the trailer of Finding Dory and featured as the send-off song for the series finale of AMC's Halt and Catch Fire. It was used in a Cingular Wireless TV ad campaign, and a Nespresso TV ad campaign. Its prevalence in romantic comedy trailers has been called "ubiquitous", particularly its inclusion in a satirical re-cut trailer of The Shining.

Track listing

7" UK single (1977)

  1. "Solsbury Hill" – 3:24
  2. "Moribund the Burgermeister" – 4:17

    7" "Old Gold" single (1982)

  3. "Solsbury Hill" – 3:26
  4. "Games Without Frontiers" – 3:50

    UK maxi-single (1983, 1988)

  5. "Solsbury Hill" – 3:24
  6. "Moribund the Burgermeister" – 4:17
  7. "Solsbury Hill " – 5:45

    7" European single (1990 re-issue)

  8. "Solsbury Hill" – (4:24
  9. "Shaking the Tree" – 5:06

    12" UK single/UK CD single (1990 re-issue)

  10. "Solsbury Hill" – 4:22)
  11. "Shaking the Tree" – 5:06
  12. "Games Without Frontiers " – 6:06

    Live Version

7" US single (1983)

  1. "Solsbury Hill " – 3:58
  2. "I Go Swimming " – 4:29

    7" Netherlands single (1983)

  3. "Solsbury Hill " – 4:41
  4. "Kiss of Life " – 5:01

    7" US single (1983)

  5. "Solsbury Hill " – 3:58
  6. "Shock the Monkey" – 3:58

    Personnel

Robert Fripp is often credited. However, he has written: "I had nothing to add to the track after Steve 's superb & fitting contribution, although I would love to be on it."

Charts

Certifications

Cover versions

Erasure version

"Solsbury Hill" was recorded by British synthpop duo Erasure in 2003 for their cover versions album Other People's Songs and released as a single in the United Kingdom on 6 January 2003 and in the US on 14 January 2003. This Erasure single became a hit, reaching No. 10 on the UK Singles Chart, No. 7 in Denmark, No. 29 in Germany, No. 39 in Sweden and No. 41 in the Republic of Ireland. The track was chosen for the album by Erasure member Vince Clarke. Clarke and singer Andy Bell turned the song into a mid-tempo electronic dance tune, displaying the signature Erasure sound. The only major change made to the structure of the song was the modification of the time signature to a more basic —except for the chorus, which slips back into time for one line.

Track listing

CD Single No. 1
  1. "Solsbury Hill"
  2. "Tell It To Me"
  3. "Searching"
CD Single No. 2
  1. "Solsbury Hill"
  2. "Solsbury Hill"
  3. "Ave Maria"
DVD Single
  1. "Solsbury Hill"
  2. "Video Killed the Radio Star"
  3. "Dr Jeckyll and Mistress Hyde"
U.S. CD Maxi Single
  1. "Solsbury Hill"
  2. "Solsbury Hill"
  3. "Tell It To Me"
  4. "Searching"
  5. "Video Killed the Radio Star"
  6. "Solsbury Hill"
  7. "Solsbury Hill"
  8. "Ave Maria"
  9. "Dr. Jeckyll And Mistress Hyde"

    Charts

Lou Reed version

In 2010, Lou Reed released a version of the song, as part of the project Scratch My Back where Peter Gabriel did cover versions of other artists, and letting them provide covers of his songs, in return. Lou Reed's version has nothing at all to do with Gabriel's merry original. Reed has transformed the original into a completely different song, just like Gabriel did with many of the songs on Scratch My Back.

Steve Hunter version

In April 2013, an instrumental version of Solsbury Hill was included in guitar player Steve Hunter's album The Manhattan Blues Project. Hunter had played on the original Peter Gabriel recording and he invited his friend and original Solsbury Hill bass player Tony Levin to play bass on the track. In the 2014 biography by Daryl Easley Without Frontiers Gabriel gave Hunter credit for coming up with the guitar parts which became a signature for the song.