Song of the Day 1/9: Peter Gabriel, “Games Without Frontiers”
Peter Gabriel’s anti-war song was released on his third self-titled album, an effort rejected by his record company as “commercial suicide.” Atlantic rued the decision when Gabriel took the album to Mercury and this became a U.K. hit as a single.
The song’s framework — the phrase “Jeux Sans Frontières,” so often misheard by Americans as “she’s so popular” — is taken from a European game show that started in the ’60s. According to Wikipedia, “Teams representing a town or city in one of the participating countries would compete in games of skill, often while dressed in bizarre costumes.” The show was licensed to several different countries; the British version was called “It’s a Knockout,” also name-checked in the lyrics.
“I just began playing in a somewhat light-hearted fashion – ‘Hans and Lottie …’ – so it looked, on the surface, as just kids, Gabriel has said. “The names themselves are meaningless, but they do have certain associations with them. So it’s almost like a little kids’ activity room. Underneath that, you have the TV programme [and the] sort of nationalism, territorialism, competitiveness that underlies all that assembly of jolly people.”
This was the original video for the song.
This now-official version was produced because the BBC wouldn’t play the original, objecting to the use of the children seated around the dinner table
Also Biko from that album. Great stuff.
The BBC thought the way he was looking at the children made him seem like a pedophile. True story, at least as he tells it.