The song is the penultimate track before full album’s release

The full moon on Saturday, October 28th sees the release of the penultimate track of Peter Gabriel’s new album i/o. This month the song is “And Still” and the first version to be heard is the Dark-Side Mix, by Tchad Blake. Written and produced by Gabriel, the song is arguably one of the most skin-pricking personal songs that the pop star has ever written. It is not just an elegy, it’s also an exploration of the nature of memory: how it tethers and secures us.

“I wrote a song for my dad a number of years back, which I was actually able to play him, which was ‘Father, Son’. When my mum died, I wanted to do something for her, but it’s taken a while before I felt comfortable and distant enough to be able to write something,” Gabriel shares.

“I was also trying to write a little bit in the style of the music that my parents responded to, so I think there is some music from the 40s probably that had an influence on the song. In the middle, I wanted to write my mum a beautiful melody. She loved classical music, so we have a beautiful cello playing there. It took a while to get that right, it can’t be too emotional or too underplayed, but I think we got there in the end.”

“And Still” has been a stand-out moment in the recent i/o tour, with the cello part played by Ayanna Witter-Johnson, but in the studio recording the solo cello comes courtesy of the New Blood Orchestra’s Ian Burdge.

This October full moon release comes with artwork from the artist Megan Rooney and one of her trademark large-scale paintings And Still (Time).

“The art this month is from one of my favorites, an artist called Megan Rooney,” he shares.

“I first came across her when she was doing these very fast faces. She’d do one a day and they had so much character, I fell in love with those. Megan was the first person that was approached about this project and she showed me some of the abstract work that she’d been doing, which I thought was beautiful.

“There was one piece that I think we both thought felt right for the song, for the mood. Then, in fact, Megan said, “I really want to create something new for this,” and she started it, but just like with my creative process she got to a point where she didn’t think she had quite nailed it. I know from my own work that sometimes I have to leave it and come back to it to find the right path.

“In the end Megan suggested, ‘Maybe we should use this existing one, instead,’ which is what we have done. I’m still hoping that we’ll get to the end with the other one, but this is a beautiful piece.”

“And Still” comes with differing mix approaches from Tchad Blake (Dark-Side Mix), and also Mark “Spike” Stent (Bright-Side Mix) and Hans-Martin Buff’s Atmos mix (In-Side Mix), released in mid-November on the next new moon.

Since the last full moon, further details for Peter Gabriel’s highly-anticipated album i/o, which will be released on December 1st, have been revealed. Not simply a collection of a dozen songs, all of the project’s 12 tracks are subject to two stereo mixes: the Bright-Side Mix, handled by Mark ‘Spike’ Stent, and the Dark-Side Mix, as reshaped by Tchad Blake. Both versions are included on the double CD package and are also available separately as double vinyl albums. A third version – the In-Side Mix, in Dolby Atmos, comes courtesy of Hans-Martin Buff and is included in a three-disc set, including Blu-ray, along with a box set version.

i/o is 12 tracks of grace, gravity and great beauty that provide welcome confirmation of not only Peter’s ongoing ability to write stop-you-in-your-tracks songs but also of that thrilling voice, still perfectly, delightfully intact. Throughout the album the intelligent and thoughtful – often thought-provoking – songs tackle life and the universe. Our connection to the world around us – ‘I’m just a part of everything’ – is a recurring motif, but so too the passing of time, mortality and grief, alongside such themes as injustice, surveillance and the roots of terrorism. While reflective, the mood is never despondent; i/o is musically adventurous, often joyous and ultimately full of hope, topped off as it is, by the rousingly optimistic closing song, “Live and Let Live,” next month’s full moon song.