- Source: Olive Tree (song)
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Artikel: Olive Tree (song) GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi
"Olive Tree" is a song by English musician Peter Gabriel, released in August 2023 as the eighth single in promotion of his tenth studio album I/O. Since August has a blue moon, this was the first of two tracks that was released in August, the other being "Love Can Heal". The track has been described by Louder as "uptempo" and "jaunty". Gabriel said of the song, "I wanted it to have some speed to it but I also wanted some mystery, too. I think it is a celebration in a way and there's a real sense of being alive." "Olive Tree" is "also part of a separate brain-related project" that Gabriel was working on at the time.
Background
Similar to the title track, "i/o", Olive Tree is about being "plugged into nature and other minds". Gabriel said that the song's message is about being "connected". He said that people "only want to see and listen to the things that seem important and relevant to us and shut out the noise of everything else." The narrative of the song is about being attuned to others' thoughts, which is expressed in Gabriel's hope that "we're no longer these islands that have our own private thoughts."
The basic tracks for "Olive Tree" were recorded at Gabriel's Real World Studios around 2018, with additional overdubs taking place at The Beehive and the British Grove Studios in London. Josh Shpak recorded his trumpet parts at his home studio in Los Angeles. Gabriel began the song with some chord ideas built around an MPC groove, which yielded the song's pre-chorus. He said that the MPC added some "muscle" to the track, which augmented a shaker and various percussion instruments recorded by Ged Lynch, who overdubbed his parts early on in the recording process.
The cover artwork was created by Barthélémy Toguo and titled Chroniques avec la Nature. Unlike most of the other artwork for i/o, this cover art is an original piece, created specifically for this track. Gabriel had first met Toguo in 2015 at WOMAD, where he was serving as an artist-in-residence. Toguo's Chroniques avec la Nature was also showcased onstage for Gabriel's live performances promoting the album.
In 2025, a music video created by Oranguerillatan was released to coincide with the launch of Gabriel's 50:50 platform, which was meant to facilitate engagement with visual artists by showcasing their work. Gabriel had hosted a competition around the release of i/o enlisting other artists to create a music video for one of his songs using artificial intelligence, with Oranguerillatan being one of the winners of that competition.
Critical reception
"Olive Tree" has received mostly positive reviews, with some critics taking note of the brass arrangement found on the song's chorus. In his review for The Guardian, Alexis Petridis highlighted the song's "hint of 80s brashness" in the horn orchestration.. Steve Erikson of Slant Magazine felt that the song "recycle[d] similar sounds from 'Sledgehammer' and 'Big Time'", particularly with the horns. Helen Brown of The Independent characterised the song as a "bombastic banger" that "peaks with a fanfare of brass parping out the glory of it all."
Personnel
Peter Gabriel – lead vocals, backing vocals, piano, synths, rhythm programming
David Rhodes – electric, acoustic, and twelve-string guitars, backing vocals
Tony Levin – bass
Manu Katché – drums
Ged Lynch – percussion
Richard Evans – mandolin
Evan Smith – saxophone
Josh Shpak – trumpet
John Metcalfe – orchestral conductor
Richard Chappell – rhythm programming
Oli Jacobs – engineering
Katie May – engineering
Orchestra
Orchestral arrangement: John Metcalfe
Violins: Everton Nelson, Ian Humphries, Louisa Fuller, Charles Mutter, Cathy Thompson, Natalia Bonner, Richard George, Marianne Haynes, Martin Burgess, Clare Hayes, Debbie Widdup, and Odile Ollagnon
Violas: Bruce White, Fiona Bonds, Peter Lale, and Rachel Roberts
Cellos: Ian Burdge, Chris Worsey, Caroline Dale, William Schofield, Tony Woollard, and Chris Allan
Double bass: Chris Laurence, Stacy Watton, and Lucy Shaw
Orchestra conductor: John Metcalfe
Orchestra leader: Everton Nelson
Sheet music supervisor: Dave Foster
Orchestra contractor: Lucy Whalley and Susie Gillis