Barnes & Noble
Although he sticks to his standard two-letter titling practice, Peter Gabriel might well have titled this much-anticipated disc "Around the World in Three Thousand and Eighty Days." Nearly ten years in the making, Up captures moments recorded in -- and accompanied by indigenous musicians of -- Senegal, Singapore, the Amazon rainforest, and the American South. Despite its title, Up is an often fearsome sonic force: The foreboding "Darkness" matches its subject matter (the harrowing fear one can find inside one's own psyche) with a stark, discordant blanket of tone. Similarly, the surprisingly bitter "The Barry Williams Show" outfits its indictment of modern popular culture with an acerbic, yet still contagious, melody. Elsewhere, however, Gabriel calls upon his guests to spice the gumbo with distinctive touches that he integrates into his singular recording style. "Signal to Noise" -- which features one of the last recorded performances by the late vocalist Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan -- soars on orchestral wings, while the sunny "Sky Blue" layers a wide variety of pan-ethnic percussion. Unlike lesser artists, or at least those with less patience, Gabriel never tosses such elements in simply for the sake of doing so. On the ragged but resolute "I Grieve," the ambient coloring takes on the sepia tinge of distant memory; the careening "My Head Sounds like That," on the other hand, burns in a hue reminiscent of burnished steel. Up's expansive scope makes it difficult to absorb in one listening, but immersion in its grooves proves it to be one Gabriel's most rewarding discs. David Sprague
All Music Guide
Ten years is a long time, especially in pop music, but waiting ten years to deliver an album is a clear sign that you're not all that interested in the pop game anyway. Such is the case with Peter Gabriel, who delivered Up in 2002, a decade after Us and four years after he announced its title (in the same year that R.E.M. delivered their own Up and, as fate would have it, Shania Twain delivered her long-awaited follow-up to Come on Over a mere two months after Gabriel's Up, calling her record Up! -- who says great minds don't think alike!). Perhaps appropriately, Up sounds like an album that was ten years in the making, revealing not just its pleasures but its intent very, very slowly. This is not an accessible record, nor is it easy to warm up to, which means that many may dismiss it upon a single listen or two, never giving it the time it demands in order to be understood (it does not help matters that the one attempt at a single is the ham-fisted, wrong-headed trash-TV "satire" "The Barry Williams Show," which feels utterly forced and out of place here, as if Geffen was pleading for anything resembling a single to add to the album). Really, there is no other choice for an artist as somber and ambitious as Gabriel to craft an album as dense as Up; those who have waited diligently for ten years would be disappointed with anything less and, frankly, they're the only audience that matters after a decade. And they're not likely to be disappointed, since this album grows stronger, revealing more with each listen. Initially, it seems to simply carry on the calmer, darker recesses of Us, but this is an uncompromising affair, which is to its advantage, since Gabriel delves deeper into darkness, grief, and meditation. It may take a while for him to emerge from the darkness -- there is little of the comfort of a "Come Talk to Me" or "Blood of Eden," which are immediately soothing on Us -- but there are glimmers of hope throughout the album, even in its darkest moments. Again, it takes awhile to sort all this out -- to unlock the form of the songs, then their meanings -- and it's such a somber, hushed, insular affair that some dedicated listeners may not bother to spin it the appropriate number of times. But those serious fans who want to spend time with this will find that it does pay back many rewards. Stephen Thomas Erlewine
New York Times
"Up" may well be the most texture-obsessed album since Nine Inch Nails' "Fragile." It's packed with exquisite moments. Jon Pareles