"WE DO WHAT WE'RE TOLD (MILGRAM'S 37)" PETER GABRIEL (1986)

For October, the Mental Jukebox is dialing it way back to the eighties and going deep. Deep cuts have always been an important element of music listening to me because they’re often the songs that resonate with me most. Deep cuts are usually the ones that the true fans appreciate most. I like my singles and hits, but I love my deep cuts.

While “Shock The Monkey” certainly thrusted Peter Gabriel into the mainstream spotlight, the So album is really the output that made him a permanent fixture among the masses. “Sledgehammer”, “Big Time”, “In Your Eyes”, “Don’t Give Up”, everyone knows these songs thanks to MTV, mainstream radio and a coming-of-age flick called Say Anything. But lurking in the back end of this landmark album are two prog anthems – “This Is The Picture (Excellent Birds)” and “We Do What We’re Told (Milgram’s 37)” – that prove Gabriel never lost the itch for something far more unexpected.

“We Do What We’re Told (Milgram’s 37)” is a far cry from the track that precedes it (“Big Time”) in every regard. It’s a slow, prodding track that prefers to crawl under your skin rather than whack you in the head. The synthesizer and guitar notes are sparse and haunted. Minimal. The words resemble an existential poem more than a rock song. And the impression is far less immediate. A song that may not have an immediate impact on you, but days after hearing it you might find it lurking inside your head.

“One doubt. One voice. One waR. One truth. One dream.”