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*Free UK Delivery over £75 -- Or Collect Free from your nearest Assai Records Store*
*Free UK Delivery over £75 -- Or Collect from your nearest Assai Records Store*

Peter Gabriel Live at WOMAD 1982 Vinyl LP Due Out 08/05/26

Original price £33.99 - Original price £33.99
Original price
£33.99
£33.99 - £33.99
Current price £33.99
Cat no. PGLP23

Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 8th May, 2026

Tracklist:

LP 1

1. San Jacinto
2. The Family and the Fishing Net
3. I Have the Touch
4. Lay Your Hands on Me
5. Shock the Monkey
6. I Go Swimming

LP 2

1. The Rhythm of the Heat
2. Kiss of Life
3. Biko
4. Etching, no music

It was a simple idea; to create a festival out of all the brilliant music and art made all over the world, stuff made outside of the mainstream – music that wasn’t getting on the radio and was even harder to find in record stores… the very first WOMAD Festival took place at the 240-acre Bath and West Showground, Somerset, UK over the weekend of 16–18 July, 1982. With the dream ‘not to sprinkle world music around a rock festival, but to prove that these great artists could be headliners in their own right’.

Across the three days ‘an evening concert series’ took place in the Showering Pavilion on the festival site. On the Friday night that concert featured Tian Jin (a song and dance troupe from China), Simple Minds and, with a ‘special festival set of non-album material’, Peter Gabriel.

Live at WOMAD 1982 is a recording of that Friday night concert. The non-album material in question are seven of the eight songs that would make up the album Peter Gabriel 4 (Security). An album that wouldn’t be released for a further two months.

On-stage, Peter is joined by David Rhodes (guitar), John Giblin (bass), Larry Fast (synthesisers). Jerry Marotta (drums), Peter Hammill (vocals) and “the wonderful Bristol-based drum and dance group,” Ekomé (drums, percussion). “I remember this gig well. We played a mix of old and brand-new material. I would normally be very nervous about playing some of this stuff for the first time, however my mind was very preoccupied with the running of our very first WOMAD festival and the potential financial disaster that it was heading towards.

Because WOMAD was unique in its focus on music and art from around the world, and mixing it with up with rock and
jazz, no-one knew how many people might turn up and we had seriously overestimated our appeal. But those that had
decided to check out WOMAD and its weird and wonderful lineup were open-minded, bold and curious - a great audience.
It was a landmark and edgy gig for me both personally and musically and brings back lots of memories.”- pg