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Peter Gabriel – i/o The Tour: The Tour Statistics

P.T. McNiff has compiled the statistical features of the latest Gabriel Tour.

i/o The Tour Statstik

After 47 shows performed between May 18 and October 21, 2023 across European and North American legs,

There were 20 songs that were played every night at all 47 shows of the tour.

Half of these were new songs from the upcoming 2023 album i/o: Panopticom, The Court, Playing For Time, i/o, Four Kinds Of Horses, Road To Joy, Olive Tree, Love Can Heal, This Is Home and Live and Let Live.

The other ten songs spanned four decades of Peter’s solo career. These included:

– One song from the 1970s: Solsbury Hill, from 1977’s Peter Gabriel I, aka Car

– Six songs from the 1980s: Biko, from 1980’s Peter Gabriel III, aka Melt; plus Red Rain, Sledgehammer, Don’t Give Up, In Your Eyes and Big Time from 1986’s So

– One song from the 1990s: Digging In The Dirt, from 1992’s Us

– Two songs from the 2000s: Darkness and Growing Up, from 2002’s Up

These songs were always played in the same part of the set – the only slight movement was at shows when one of the “bonus” songs was added (see below).

The Recurring Tracks

In addition to the 20 constants, two more songs were played almost every night of the tour. These also had set positions within the set. One was an additional new song, and the other a live favorite from the past:

And Still (from 2023’s i/o) was played at 42 shows. It premiered on the opening of the European tour in Krakow on May 18th; the final performance was the Palm Springs show on October 14th.

Washing Of The Water (from 1992’s Us) was the campfire opener at 40 of the 47 shows, starting in Krakow and performed last at the final show in Houston.

The Rarities

Then there were four songs that were performed rarely on the tour – but each of them was brought out multiple times.

Here Comes The Flood (from 1977’s Car) was the alternate acoustic opener around the campfire at the seven shows that did not hear. Starting on May 26th in Berlin, the song was performed in German (Jetzt Kommt Die Flut) at every concert on the European leg that took place in Germany or Switzerland. It was also, somewhat randomly, performed in English just one time, at the Detroit show during the North American tour on September 29th.

What Lies Ahead (currently an unreleased and album-less new song) was performed at six dates that bookended i/o The Tour. It was performed at the first three dates of the European leg in May (Krakow, Verona, and Milan) and then at three of the final four North American shows in October (Denver, Austin, and Houston). It is not clear why the song was not played in Dallas, the penultimate show of the tour, despite being played at the shows around it. When performed, it was an added “bonus” song on the setlist (i.e. not replacing another one), coming in the second set before Big Time and after either And Still or So Much. Speaking of which:

Don't Give UpSo Much (another i/o track from 2023) was played five times. The song debuted in Copenhagen on May 30th, reportedly due to the visual artist on the song’s single, Henry Hudson, being in attendance. It then made a comeback at the end of the tour, being played at the final four October shows in Denver and across Texas. Each time it was performed, it replaced And Still in the setlist after Red Rain.

The Tower That Ate People (from 2000’s OVO) was the rarest song of the tour, performed at only four North American shows. It is also unique as it was the only song to be played in different spots in the set. The first time it was played was in Columbus, Ohio on September 25th, where it came as the penultimate song of the first set, in between This Is Home and Sledgehammer. The other times it appeared were across three of the final five stops of the North American tour in October: Palm Springs, Dallas, and Houston. At these shows, it was played as the first encore song, before In Your Eyes. Each time, this was an additional song in the set, not replacing another number..

Set-Lengths

In terms of set length, most concerts had 22 songs performed. The default setlist for the majority of the shows was:

Set 1:

01. Washing Of The Water (campfire version)

02. Growing Up (campfire version)

03. Panopticom

04. Four Kinds Of Horses

05. i/o

06. Digging In The Dirt

07. Playing For Time

08. Olive Tree

09. This Is Home

10. Sledgehammer

Set 2:

11. Darkness

12. Love Can Heal

13. Road To Joy

14. Don’t Give Up

15. The Court

16. Red Rain

17. And Still

18. Big Time

19. Live And Let Live

20. Solsbury Hill

Encore 1:

21. In Your Eyes

Encore 2:

22. Biko

At five shows (Krakow, Verona, and Milan in Europe; Denver and Austin in North America), What Lies Aheadwas added to make it 23 songs. Each time, this was performed immediately before Big Time in the second set.

At three other shows (Columbus, Palm Springs, and Denver in North America), the addition of The Tower That Ate People made it 23 songs. As noted above, it was performed in two locations: in Columbus, it was performed before Sledgehammer as the penultimate song of the first set. In Palm Springs and Denver, it was performed as the first song of the first encore, before In Your Eyes.

Finally, at the North American tour finale in Houston, both songs were added (What Lies Ahead in its normal place, and The Tower That Ate People once again as the first encore song). This brought the total number of songs played that night to a tour-high 24.

Unreleased Songs Performed

As we have seen, but it’s worth noting again, this tour’s setlists were constructed around an ambitious choice: to have around half of the songs performed each night be new material from 2023. Most of these are songs from the forthcoming, tour-titular album i/o, along with What Lies Ahead, a new song that, for now, is presumed to become a non-album track.

Of course, as visitors of this site likely know, while the final album has not come out yet, the songs of i/ohave been released one by one over the course of the year as singles debuting on each full moon. Because of this unique and Very Much Peter release strategy, the number of “unreleased” songs changed over the course of the tour. Here is a breakdown of how that number evolved over the shows:

*The songs with an asterisk did have earlier versions performed live by Gabriel in the 2010s as “works in progress” – but the final studio tracks were not released when the songs were played.

When the European tour started, five songs from i/o had been released: Panopticom, The Court, Playing for Time, i/o, and Four Kinds of Horses. Even with those singles being available, the first three shows on the tour featured seven songs no one in the audience would have heard completed before:

18-21 May (Krakau, Verona, Mailand)

Seven unrelkeased tracks: Olive Tree, This Is Home, Love Can Heal*, Road To Joy, And Still, What Lies Ahead*, Live And Let Live

After What Lies Ahead was dropped, the European Tour continued, with the next seven concerts featuring six unreleased songs. There was a slight variation on what songs were unreleased, due to So Much being played at the Copenhagen show – but as it replaced And Still, another unheard-at-the-time song, each show still had the same number of new tracks:

23-28 May, 31 May – 2 June (Paris, Lille, Berlin, Munich, Stockholm, Bergen)

Six unreleased tracks: Olive Tree, This Is Home, Love Can Heal*, Road To Joy, And Still, Live And Let Live

30 May (Copenhagen)

Six unreleased tracks: Olive Tree, This Is Home, Love Can Heal*, Road To Joy, So Much, Live And Let Live

Between the Bergen and Amsterdam shows, the sixth full moon of the year yielded the release of Road to Joy. This meant that, for the remainder of the European tour, each show featured five unreleased songs:

5-25 June (Amsterdam, Antwerpen, Zürich, Köln, Hamburg, Frankfurt, Bordeaux, Birmingham, London, Glasgow, Manchester, Dublin)

Five unreleased Tracks: Olive Tree, This Is Home, Love Can Heal, And Still, Live And Let Live

During the time off between the conclusion of the European leg in June and the start of the North American one in September, three more full moons passed (including an August blue moon), yielding three more releases: So Much, Olive Tree, and Love Can Heal. This meant that, for the first stretch of the new shows, there were merely three unreleased songs:

8-27 September (Quebec City, Ottawa, Toronto, Montreal, Boston, Philadelphia, New York, Washington DC, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Columbus, Cleveland)

Three unreleased tracks: This Is Home, And Still, Live And Let Live

At the start of the day of the Detroit show, This Is Home was released to coincide with the Harvest Moon. With this song out, it meant that the next stretch of shows only presented the final two unreleased tracks on i/o:

29 September – 14 October (Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul, Vancouver, Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Palm Springs)

Two unrelkeased tracks: And Still, Live And Let Live

For the final run of shows, a minor setlist change removed one of the last unreleased i/osongs, with the already released So Much replacing And Still – but for three of the shows, this was supplanted by the return of the previously played also-unreleased, album-less track:

16-18 October, 21 October 21 (Denver, Austin, Houston)

Two unreleased tracks: What Lies Ahead*, Live And Let Live

And for a lone show in the Lone Star State, the dropping of What Lies Ahead(and the playing of So Much instead of And Still) meant that there was only one unreleased song for the audience:

19 October (Dallas)

One unreleased track: Live and Let Live

All in all

I hope that this was a fun trip down memory lane, thinking back on the tour and seeing the ways that the setlist was constructed and tweaked. In addition, cataloging just how much Peter was asking of the crowds when it comes to performing brand-new, unreleased material underscores just how much confidence he showed in both his audience and the new songs.

I also hope this will give people something to look through when (fingers crossed) the concert film of the tour is released in the near future and we can all re-live, or experience for the first time, this wonderful tour. It may even be a helpful record to look at when we start considering what the setlists may look like for (even more fingers crossed) future tours.

Autor: P.T. McNiff

(All of this information is sourced from the Tour Statistics page at setlist.fm as well as the individual setlists of the shows.)
Photos: Michaela Ix, Ulrich Klemt und Christian Gerhardts

Addendum: The Audience numbers

Red numbers indicate show was sold out

2023 City / Venue Attendance
18/05/23

KrakowTauron Arena 12.850
20/05/23

VeronaArena 13.000
21/05/23

MilanMediolanum Arena 9.300
23/05/23

ParisAccorHotels Arena 12.900
24/05/23

LilleStade Piere Mauroy 10.000
26/05/23

BerlinWaldbühne 21.600
28/05/23

MunichKönigsplatz 11.200
30/05/23

CopenhagenRoyal Arena 7.600
31/05/23

StockholmAvicii Arena 8.600
02/06/23

BergenKoengen 7.700
05/06/23

AmsterdamZiggo Dome 10.800
06/06/23

AntwerpSportpalais 12.200
08/06/23

ZürichHallenstadion 9.150
10/06/23

CologneLanxess Arena 14.200
12/06/23

HamburgBarclays Arena 11.000
13/06/23

FrankfurtFesthalle 9.750
15/06/23

BordeauxArkea Arena 7.500
17/06/23

BirminghamUtilita Arena 10.500
19/06/23

LondonThe O2 13.850
22/06/23

GlasgowOVO Hydro 7.300
23/06/23

ManchesterAO Arena 9.650
25/06/23

Dublin3Arena 7.900
08/09/23

Quebec, QCVideotron Centre 12.400
09/09/23

Ottawa, ONCanadian Tire Centre 10.700
11/09/23

Toronto, ONScottiabank Arena 11.900
13/09/23

Montreal, QC, Bell Centre 13.600
14/09/23

Boston, MATD Garden 10.800
16/09/23

Philadelphia, PAWells Fargo Center 13.000
18/09/23

New York City, NYMadison Square Garden 13.100
20/09/23

Washington, DCCapitol One Arena 7.700
22/09/23

Buffalo, NYKeyBank Center 10.600
23/09/23

Pittsburgh, PAPPG Paints Arena 7.150
25/09/23

Columbus, OHNationwide Arena 7.200
27/09/23

Cleveland, OHRocket Mortgage Fieldhouse 7.800
29/09/23

Detroit, MILittle Caesars Arena 7.300
30/09/23

Chicago, ILUnited Center 13.400
02/10/23

Milwaukee, WIFiserv Forum 7.100
03/10/23

St. Paul, MNXcel Energy Center 7.500
07/10/23

Vancouver, BCRogers Arena 11.200
08/10/23

Seattle, WAClimate Pledge Arena 11.750
11/10/23

San Francisco, CAChase Center 10.000
13/10/23

Los Angeles, CAKIA Forum 11.500
14/10/23

Palm Springs, CAAcrisure Arena 8.000
16/10/23

Denver, COBall Arena 8.200
18/10/23

Austin, TXMoody Center 7.240
19/10/23

Dallas, TXAmerican Airlines Center 7.750
21/10/23

Houston, TXToyota Center 5.550


Special thanks to Julien Duchêne for the data of the individual shows!