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"Panopticom"
Single by Peter Gabriel
from the album I/O
Released
  • 6 January 2023 (bright-side mix)
  • 21 January 2023 (dark-side)
  • 28 January 2023 (in-side mix)
Studio
Genre
Length5:13
Label
SongwriterPeter Gabriel
ProducerPeter Gabriel
Peter Gabriel singles chronology
"Here It Is"
(2022)
"Panopticom"
(2023)
"The Court"
(2023)

"Panopticom" is a song by English musician Peter Gabriel, released in January 2023 as the first single in promotion of his tenth studio album I/O, his first album of original material since 2002's Up. Three versions of the song have been released: the "Bright Side Mix" (mixed by Mark "Spike" Stent) on 6 January 2023, the "Dark Side Mix" (mixed by Tchad Blake) on 21 January, and an "In-Side Mix" (mixed by Hans-Martin Buff) on 28 January. The cover (for both versions) features David Spriggs' Red Gravity as the cover art.[3][4] The single was released on the first full moon of the year.

Additional tracks from the album were also released on full moons and received "bright side", "dark side", and "in-side" mixes by Stent, Blake, and Buff respectively.[5] Gabriel also performed the song during his I/O The Tour in 2023.[6]

Background

[edit]

On the origin of "Panopticom", Gabriel said that the song was centered around the idea of an "infinitely expandable accessible data globe: the Panopticom", where the intention was to "connect a like-minded group of people who might be able to bring this to life, to allow the world to see itself better and understand more of what's really going on."[7] Additionally, Gabriel cited research group Forensic Architecture, investigative journalism group Bellingcat, and the non-profit human rights organization WITNESS (co-founded by Gabriel) as inspirations.[3]

The song's title references the panopticon, a prison structure designed by Jeremy Bentham that enabled prison guards to observe the actions of all of prisoners without being detected. Gabriel's concept of the panopticom was to invert this model by enabling "ordinary people" to observe the actions of authority figures. The "com" in the panopticom refers to the ability for people to "communicate both to the globe and what's going on in the globe. It's turning surveillance on its head."[8]: 3:30–4:46 

Musically, the song began with the sound of a bouzouki, over which some improvised vocals were overdubbed. Following the addition of a rhythmic pattern, Gabriel worked with Oli Jacobs to develop the track further.[9] A band session was arranged in September 2021, which featured David Rhodes on guitar, Tony Levin on bass, Manu Katché on drums, Jacobs on programming, and Gabriel on synths and vocals.[9] Gabriel then asked Brian Eno assist him on the album, who contributed some electronic elements to "Panopticom", credited as "bells and haunting synths".[9][10]

Near the end of the recording process, Ríoghnach Connolly sang some backing vocals, although Gabriel said that her parts were "not very audible" in the mix.[9] The song's Bright-Side Mix features more prominent acoustic guitars than the Dark-Side mix, created by Mark "Spike" Stent and Tchad Blake respectively.[9][11]

In-Side mix

[edit]

Hans-Martin Buff handled the In-Side mix for "Panopticom" using Dolby Atmos.[4] "Panopticom" was the first mix that Buff worked on for Gabriel's I/O album; he worked on the album's first three tracks in sequential order. On the In-Side mix of "Panopticom", Buff wanted to add new instruments to capitalize on the capabilities offered by Dolby Atmos. Buff believed that the two guitars found on the stereo mixes of "Panopticom" were insufficient for the In-Side mix, so with Gabriel's approval, Buff brought Stuart McCaullum into the recording studio to overdub additional guitars.[9][12] McCaullum and Connolly had previously played together in The Breath, a band signed to Real World Records.[13] Buff viewed his role as ensuring that Gabriel's musical intentions were fully realised with the In-Side mixes and cited his mix of "Panopticom" as an example of this being achieved.

The easiest example of this I can think of is in the first song that was released, "Panopticom." It starts with these spacey moving bursts, which work nicely in Atmos because you have the expanded environment and the ability to create spaces. Then, it all of a sudden comes into focus with this pre-chorus of his vocal and some acoustic guitars.

— Hans-Martin Buff[12]

On 28 January 2023, the In-Side mix of "Panopticom" was released on Apple Music and Amazon Music. These platforms required a link to a stereo version, but since the In-Side mix was not recorded in stereo, the Dark-Side mix was linked to the song instead.[4]

Artwork

[edit]

The cover artwork features Red Gravity by David Spriggs, who created the piece in 2021 with acrylic paint on layered plexiglass with dimensions of 84 × 61 × 20 cm.[14] The artwork consists of a red vortex with a black hole in the center.[9] Gabriel commented that the artwork reflected "Panopticom's" lyrical themes of surveillance, which prompted him to reach out to Spriggs for permission to use Red Gravity for the cover art. Red Gravity was also used as a backdrop for live performances of "Panopticom" during Gabriel's i/o tour.[3][14]

Music videos

[edit]

Several official music videos were released for "Panopticom", all of which were made with artificial intelligence. In April 2023, Gabriel and Stability AI launched the #DiffuseTogether competition for people to create music videos with artificial intelligence to accompany the music of one of Gabriel's songs from his I/O album. One of the joint-winners from the competition was Lamson, an engineer from Vietnam who used Stable Diffusion for their music video, which used the audio from the Dark-Side Mix of "Panopticom".[15][16] A different music video using the same mix was created by Stephen Grzanowski under the alias Vnderworld with the Stable Diffusion with the Deforum plug-in over the course of one week. Their music video placed second in the #DiffuseTogether competition.[17] Another music video was created by Dominic DeJoseph using the audio from the song's Bright-Side Mix.[18]

Critical reception

[edit]

Steve Erickson of Slant Magazine characterised "Panopticom" as a song that "confronts our surveillance culture, its title referring to the ability to observe a world where facts are difficult to determine." He also indicated his preference for the Bright-Side mix over the Dark-Side mix, calling the former a "more potent version of the song."[11] In his review of i/o, Chris Roberts highlighted the song's themes of surveillance and Gabriel's "hushed but crystal-clear diction.[19] Writing for Uncut, John Lewis compared the song's production to some of Gabriel's earlier work, including on "Intruder" and "No Self Control".[20] Helen Brown of The Independent highlighted the song's "rolling bass lines" that she said that recalled Gabriel's 1992 song "Digging in the Dirt".[21]

Personnel

[edit]
  • Peter Gabriel – lead and backing vocals, synthesizers, rhythm programming, production
  • Tony Levin – bass guitar
  • David Rhodes – electric guitar, backing vocals
  • Manu Katché – drums
  • Brian Eno – haunting synths, bells
  • Katie May – acoustic guitar
  • Richard Chappell – rhythm programming
  • Oli Jacobs – rhythm programming, synthesizers
  • Ríoghnach Connolly – backing vocals[22]

Charts

[edit]
Chart performance for "Panopticom"
Chart (2023) Peak
position
Canadian Digital Song Sales (Billboard)[23] 45
UK Singles Downloads (OCC)[24] 19
US Rock Digital Songs (Billboard)[25] 12

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Panopticom is a song by English musician Peter Gabriel, released on January 6, 2023, as the lead single from his tenth studio album i/o, featuring distinct "Bright-Side" and "Dark-Side" mixes produced by Mark "Spike" Stent and Tchad Blake, respectively. The track draws its name and thematic inspiration from Gabriel's conceptual project of the same title, described as an "infinitely expandable accessible data globe" intended to enable real-time monitoring of global phenomena such as climate and biosphere changes through user-uploaded data rendered in "digital ink" on a satellite-fed, interactive surface. This vision reimagines the historical panopticon architectural principle—originally conceived by Jeremy Bentham for centralized observation—into a collaborative tool for data aggregation and visualization, emphasizing empirical tracking over surveillance. As part of i/o's unconventional release strategy aligned with lunar phases, Panopticom marked the album's debut track, accompanied by fan-contributed videos and artwork explorations like "Red Gravity" by David Spriggs, highlighting its role in fostering community-driven interpretations of complex informational flows.

Background and Development

Context Within Peter Gabriel's Discography

"Panopticom" marks the commencement of Peter Gabriel's i/o era, serving as the lead single and opening track for his studio album i/o, released on December 1, 2023. This album constitutes Gabriel's first collection of original compositions in 21 years, following Up in 2002, during which time he issued reinterpretations such as the covers album Scratch My Back (2010) and the orchestral rework New Blood (2011). The single's Bright-Side Mix debuted on January 6, 2023, coinciding with a full moon, aligning with Gabriel's practice of timing releases to lunar cycles for i/o tracks. Within Gabriel's broader solo discography, which began with his self-titled debut in 1977 after departing Genesis, "Panopticom" exemplifies a continuation of his experimental ethos amid extended creative intervals. His early eponymous albums (1977–1982) fused with emerging elements, achieving mainstream breakthrough via So (1986), which sold over 5 million copies worldwide. Later works like Us (1992) and Up delved into introspective and ambient soundscapes, but the two-decade hiatus before i/o reflected Gabriel's pursuits in multimedia projects, activism, and technological innovations, including his Real World label founded in 1989. The release of "Panopticom" preceded i/o's full rollout, where each song features dual Bright-Side and Dark-Side mixes, a novel approach emphasizing perceptual variance in production. This structural builds on Gabriel's of sonic experimentation, seen in the of his hits and orchestral expansions of the 2010s, positioning i/o—and thus "Panopticom"—as a synthesis of his career-spanning interest in audio duality and thematic depth.

Inspiration from Surveillance Concepts

Peter Gabriel has identified the panopticon—a conceptual design by philosopher —as a primary influence on "Panopticom," describing it as a structure where a single central guard could observe all inmates without their knowledge of being watched, fostering self-discipline through perpetual uncertainty. This 18th-century idea, originally proposed around 1787 for institutions like and workhouses to maximize efficiency and control with minimal oversight, resonated with Gabriel as a metaphor for contemporary societies, evoking an " feel" amid rising digital monitoring. He connected the theme explicitly to modern , likening the song's "Panopticom" to a vast, globe-like aggregator of information that blurs lines between observation and control. Gabriel further drew from real-world applications of surveillance technology by activist groups, citing research collective , open-source investigators , and the video advocacy organization —which he co-founded in 1992—as lyrical inspirations. These entities repurpose ubiquitous surveillance tools, such as public footage and , to document abuses and hold powerful actors accountable, inverting the panopticon's one-way gaze into a tool for transparency and . In Gabriel's view, this reflects a dual potential in surveillance: dystopian overreach by authorities versus empowering counter-surveillance by citizens, a tension amplified in the digital era where data proliferation enables both oppression and exposure. The song's visual accompaniment reinforces these concepts, pairing with David Spriggs' installation "Red Gravity," which Gabriel selected for its evocation of pervasive, invisible oversight akin to panoptic principles. Released on January 6, 2023, "Panopticom" thus synthesizes Bentham's utilitarian vision with 21st-century realities, critiquing unchecked monitoring while highlighting resistive uses of the same technologies.

Writing and Initial Recording

Peter Gabriel composed "Panopticom" as the inaugural track for his tenth studio album, i/o, with the song's development reflecting his long-term exploration of themes related to observation and data in the digital era. The lyrics originated from Gabriel's reflections on investigative methodologies employed by groups including , , and —a human rights video archive he co-founded—emphasizing the transformative potential of aggregated visual evidence to expose truths amid . This conceptual foundation drew from real-world applications of and video analysis, rather than abstract philosophy, positioning the song as a commentary on an "all-seeing" digital infrastructure capable of infinite expansion. The musical genesis of "Panopticom" stemmed from Gabriel's experimentation with a bouzouki-inspired , which he described as initiating the composition process alongside parallel lyrical ideation. Gabriel handled the writing and production independently, integrating elements that would evolve through subsequent studio refinement. Initial recording sessions occurred at in , utilizing the expansive "Big Room" for its acoustic properties suited to layered instrumentation, with additional work at The Beehive in to capture core performances including guitar, bass, drums, and backing vocals from session contributors. These early captures laid the groundwork for the track's dual-mix variants—Bright-Side and Dark-Side—prioritizing organic sonic textures over electronic augmentation at this stage.

Production Details

Studio Sessions and Engineering

"Panopticom" was recorded primarily at in the Big Room in , , with additional sessions at The Beehive in . The track's production, overseen by , involved initial band tracking sessions in September 2021, including a documented session on September 24 during which the core ensemble laid down foundational takes. These early recordings captured live band performances, engineered by Oli Jacobs, reflecting Gabriel's approach of building from group dynamics before extensive overdubs. Engineering duties were handled by Oli Jacobs and Katie May, both key figures at Real World Studios, with pre-production engineering by Richard Chappell and assistant engineering by Faye Dolle. This team contributed to the song's polished sound, part of the broader i/o album sessions that emphasized meticulous layering and spatial audio techniques, ultimately earning Grammy Awards for Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical, and Best Immersive Audio Album in 2025. Gabriel's process incorporated substantial post-tracking refinements, aligning with his described method of "archaeology" in sifting through layered recordings to sculpt the final arrangement. The engineering focused on integrating diverse instrumentation, including guitar, bass, drums, and backing vocals from session musicians, while preserving the track's atmospheric quality derived from Gabriel's initial bouzouki-like explorations. Real World Studios' facilities, known for advanced sound dampening and reflection control, supported these sessions by minimizing acoustic interference, particularly in vocal and ensemble captures.

Audio Mixes and Variations

"Panopticom" was initially released as the Bright-Side Mix on January 6, 2023, engineered by , which emphasizes a polished production with brighter highs and a modern stereo presentation suitable for broad streaming compatibility. This version aligns with the full album's Bright-Side approach, prioritizing clarity and forward-sounding elements in the instrumentation and vocals. A Dark-Side Mix, produced by , followed shortly after on January 21, 2023, featuring a warmer, more organic tone with subdued high frequencies, enhanced low-end presence in bass and drums, and a less compressed to highlight textural details in the synths and percussion. Blake's approach draws from his history of crafting immersive, analog-inspired mixes, contrasting Stent's digital polish by evoking a sense of depth akin to listening in a dimly lit . The In-Side Mix, handled by Hans-Martin Buff, provides an immersive spatial audio experience, expanding the track into a three-dimensional soundfield with overhead elements and precise placement of instruments around the listener; it became available exclusively on platforms like and HD starting in late January 2023. This variation utilizes object-based audio to reposition elements such as Gabriel's vocals and the rhythmic backbone, offering a distinct listening perspective not feasible in formats. These mixes reflect Peter Gabriel's intent to explore multiple production philosophies for the i/o project, enabling comparisons that reveal how engineering choices affect perceived emotional and sonic impact without altering the core composition or lyrics. Additional variants, including raw band tracking sessions and a Grey-Side Remix, have appeared in limited contexts like YouTube playlists, but the primary releases remain the Bright-Side, Dark-Side, and In-Side versions integrated into the album's December 1, 2023, rollout.

Key Personnel Involved

Peter Gabriel produced "Panopticom," contributing lead and backing vocals, synthesizers, and rhythm programming. The track's core rhythm section comprises longtime collaborators Tony Levin on bass guitar, David Rhodes on electric guitar and backing vocals, and Manu Katché on drums, providing the foundational drive. Additional instrumentation includes synthesizers from and acoustic guitar from , with backing vocals also featuring Ríoghnach Connolly. Pre-production engineering was overseen by Richard Chappell, assisted by Faye Dolle, while the Bright-Side mix was handled by Mark 'Spike' Stent and the Dark-Side mix by , reflecting Gabriel's approach of dual mixing for the i/o project. Mastering for releases was completed by .

Musical Composition and Lyrics

Structure, Instrumentation, and Style

"Panopticom" adheres to a augmented by an introduction, pre-choruses, an break, and an outro. The song opens with an intro establishing a tonal foundation, followed by Verse 1, a pre-chorus invoking the title phrase, and the main chorus emphasizing observational urgency. This pattern repeats with Verse 2, another pre-chorus, chorus, and concludes with a repetitive outro fading on ambient echoes. The chorus divides into two parts, the second accelerating into double-time for heightened energy. Instrumentation features a core rhythm section of on bass and , David Rhodes on , and on drums and percussion, providing a propulsive groove. contributes lead and backing vocals, synthesizers, , and rhythm programming, while adds bells and synthesizers for electronic texture. Supporting elements include by Katie May and additional backing vocals from Rhodes, Gabriel, and Ríoghnach Connolly. This blend of live and programmed elements creates layered depth, with Levin's bass anchoring the drive and Eno's contributions infusing atmospheric electronics. Stylistically, the track operates in , contrasting harmonic simplicity in the intro and chorus—relying on strong, diatonic progressions for —with chromatic tensions and inverted chords in the verses for . Melodies in verses incorporate wide leaps, enhancing emotional range, while choruses favor straightforward phrasing to underscore lyrical calls to action. The overall style merges art rock's experimental edge with pop concision, evident in the 144 beats-per-minute and rhythmic shifts that propel the narrative without overwhelming listener engagement. Available in Bright-Side and Dark-Side mixes, the former emphasizes brighter guitar tones and fuller percussion, while the latter highlights punchier drums and prominent synths, allowing varied interpretive emphases on the song's surveillance-inspired momentum.

Lyrical Themes and Interpretations

The lyrics of "Panopticom" explore themes of pervasive enabled by modern technology, portraying a world where ubiquitous —via smartphones and networked devices—facilitates a collective quest to uncover hidden truths. Lines such as "In the air the smoke cloud takes its form / All the phones take pictures while it's warm / Panopticom, let's find out " evoke immediate, real-time documentation of events, blending apocalyptic imagery like smoke clouds with contemporary tools of observation. This reflects a shift from Jeremy Bentham's original prison design, which centralized oversight for control, to a democratized "Panopticom" where decentralized empowers of power structures and environmental threats. Peter Gabriel has described the song's core as inspired by his initiative for an "infinitely expandable accessible data globe," a conceptual repository aggregating global data streams to enable transparent analysis of planetary issues, such as humanity's capacity for self-destruction. He connects this to organizations like , , and —groups he has supported or co-founded—that leverage and citizen footage to investigate conflicts, human rights abuses, and ecological damage, positioning not as dystopian but as a tool for . Biblical allusions, including references to the "road to Damascus" for sudden and the "four horsemen" signaling catastrophe, underscore a redemptive potential in data-driven enlightenment amid existential risks. Interpretations diverge on whether the song endorses optimistic transparency or warns of erosion in the era. emphasizes proactive uses, as in his notes linking the track to post-WWII reconstruction themes of rebuilding through verifiable evidence, countering denialism in areas like . Critics and fans, however, often highlight inherent tensions, viewing the "Panopticom" as an evolution where mutual observation by the masses replaces top-down control, yet risks normalizing constant visibility without consent—echoing broader debates on social media's role in both exposing atrocities and enabling . 's firsthand involvement in lends weight to the constructive reading, prioritizing empirical verification over abstract fears of overreach.

Release and Promotion

Release Timeline and Formats

"Panopticom" was first released as a digital single on January 6, 2023, coinciding with the , in the form of the Bright-Side Mix produced by Mark 'Spike' Stent. This version was made available for streaming and download in high-resolution formats, including FLAC at 96 kHz / 24-bit. On January 21, 2023, aligning with the new moon, the Dark-Side Mix, mixed by , followed as a digital release in similar formats. An immersive In-Side Mix in , created by Hans-Martin Buff, was issued digitally on January 28, 2023. The song appeared as the opening track on Peter Gabriel's tenth studio album i/o, released digitally and in physical formats on December 1, 2023. Album editions included both Bright-Side and Dark-Side mixes, available on , vinyl, and streaming platforms. A deluxe edition, featuring expanded content with the mixes, was released on April 26, 2024. No standalone physical single formats were issued for "Panopticom".

Associated Artwork and Visuals

The artwork accompanying the release of "Panopticom" features Red Gravity, a multidimensional acrylic painting by Canadian artist David Spriggs, depicting layered translucent sheets forming a dynamic red vortex spiraling into a central black void, evoking themes of infinite data convergence and observation. Spriggs, originally from Manchester and based in Vancouver, employs techniques of stacked acrylic forms to create illusory depth and motion, aligning with the song's conceptual "Panopticom" – Gabriel's envisioned satellite-fed, expandable data globe for global information monitoring. Peter Gabriel commissioned this piece to visually represent the track's exploration of surveillance and connectivity, stating that each i/o song pairs with bespoke art to reflect its emotional and thematic essence. Promotional visuals for "Panopticom" include audio-focused releases for the Bright-Side Mix on January 6, 2023, emphasizing the artwork over dynamic video, while the Dark-Side Mix, released later, features an AI-generated video by artist Stephen Schappler under the moniker Vnderworld. This video, debuted on August 22, 2023, portrays fragmented human figures in surveillance-laden environments, using glitchy, dreamlike animations to illustrate erosion and interconnected data flows, generated via Stability AI tools to mirror the song's panoptic themes. Gabriel endorsed the AI approach as a fitting evolution for visualizing abstract concepts like the Panopticom globe. Additional visuals emerged from fan contests and live performances; for instance, a winning AI-assisted video by artist Lamson, selected by , integrates emotional narratives of isolation and oversight through surreal digital compositions synced to the track. During the i/o tour starting in September 2023, Spriggs' Red Gravity was projected onstage, with immersive lighting and projections enhancing the song's performance to simulate data streams enveloping the audience. These elements collectively underscore Gabriel's intent to fuse visual art with music for multidimensional storytelling, avoiding conventional tropes in favor of conceptual depth.

Promotional Strategies and Performances

"Panopticom" was released on January 6, 2023, coinciding with the first full moon of the year, as the lead single from Peter Gabriel's album i/o, initiating a deliberate strategy of unveiling tracks monthly in alignment with lunar cycles to foster gradual listener engagement rather than conventional rapid-fire promotion. This approach, which Gabriel maintained for the entire album rollout, prioritized extended focus on each song over traditional marketing campaigns, allowing time for mixes, visuals, and fan interaction without overwhelming saturation. The track featured multiple audio variants, including the initial Bright-Side Mix, followed by Dark-Side and In-Side Mixes, each released to highlight different production perspectives and encourage repeated listens. Visual promotion emphasized artistic collaborations, with the single's cover artwork created by David Spriggs, and later AI-generated music videos for the Dark-Side Mix produced by artists like Vnderworld (released August 22, 2023) and Lamson (September 12, 2023), leveraging emerging technologies such as to visualize the song's themes of and perception. These elements tied into i/o's broader thematic exploration, with sharing the track via his official channels and select media outlets to build anticipation for the long-gestating album, first teased over two decades prior. The song received its live debut on May 18, 2023, at Tauron Arena in , , during the European leg of the i/o Tour, where it became a staple early in setlists alongside classics and other new material. Performances continued through the tour's North American dates from September to October 2023, including shows at Wells Fargo Center in on September 16, Madison Square Garden on September 18, and in on October 21, adapting the studio arrangement with live band dynamics featuring longtime collaborators , David Rhodes, and . This touring phase served as a key promotional vehicle, integrating "Panopticom" into immersive sets that previewed the album's sound and visuals, sustaining momentum amid the staggered single releases.

Reception and Impact

Critical Reviews and Analyses

Critics have lauded "Panopticom" for its expansive, atmospheric , which builds gradually from ominous synth layers to a propulsive chorus driven by rhythmic drums and deep bass. The track's production, featuring contributions from on and bells, evokes Gabriel's signature blend of innovation and emotional depth, with reviewers noting its hypnotic quality and earworm-like catchiness despite underlying darkness. American Songwriter described it as "bright [and] spacey" yet infused with tension, marking a strong return for Gabriel after years of anticipation for new material. Musical analyses highlight the song's structural sophistication in C# minor, starting with a harmonically simple intro that contrasts with more complex verse progressions, effectively combining accessibility with progressive elements. The Bright-Side Mix emphasizes airy transparency, while the Dark-Side Mix introduces greater distortion and punch, allowing for varied listening experiences that underscore Gabriel's experimental approach to mixing. Vulture characterized the electronics as "data tentacles" that envelop the listener, aligning with the track's thematic core of interconnected global information. Lyrically, "Panopticom" draws from Jeremy Bentham's prison concept—a structure enabling constant —but reimagines it as an optimistic "infinitely expandable accessible globe" for collaborative knowledge-sharing, countering dystopian fears of overload with a vision of enlightenment. himself positioned the song as initiating this Panopticom idea, critiquing modern while advocating for transparent, user-driven ecosystems. Some analyses interpret the ' references to "everybody's watching" and overwhelming streams as a prescient commentary on digital panopticism, blending caution with hope for human agency in an era of . called it a "towering track" that reaffirms Gabriel's relevance, though broader album reviews sometimes noted it as solid but not the standout amid i/o's conceptual heft.

Commercial Chart Performance

"Panopticom" was released as a digital single on January 6, 2023, and achieved modest commercial success primarily through download sales in the . On the UK Official Singles Downloads Chart, compiled by the , the track debuted and peaked at number 19 on the chart dated January 19, 2023, representing Peter Gabriel's first appearance on this specific chart since "" in 1986. It spent a total of two weeks on the chart, falling out after the February 2, 2023, edition. Similarly, on the UK Official Singles Sales Chart, it mirrored this performance with a peak of number 19 and two weeks total. The song also registered initial digital sales peaks on charts upon release. The "Bright Side Mix" debuted at number 5 on the German Songs Chart on January 6, 2023, and charted in eight countries overall, though it experienced rapid declines, reaching number 88 after ten days in some tracked markets. In the United States, it peaked at number 24 on the chart the same week.
Chart (2023)Peak PositionSource
UK Singles Downloads (OCC)19
UK Singles Sales (OCC)19
German iTunes Songs5
iTunes24
No significant airplay or streaming chart entries were reported for the single, with its performance overshadowed by the subsequent release and strong album sales of i/o, which debuted at number 1 on the in December 2023.

Broader Cultural and Thematic Influence

"Panopticom" reinterprets the surveillance paradigm through a lens of communal insight, proposing an "infinitely expandable accessible data globe" to probe the intricacies of human cognition and foster , as articulated by in conceptualizing the track. This vision counters traditional panoptic structures of unilateral control by emphasizing shared communication—"com" suffix denoting connectivity—amid digital-era , where query the veracity of data streams: "Panopticom, so how much is real?" Thematically, the song draws from real-world applications of open-source verification, inspired by entities like , , and — the latter co-founded by in 1992 to leverage video evidence for accountability—highlighting technology's potential to expose concealed realities in conflicts and abuses. This aligns with broader cultural reckonings on dataveillance, where pervasive monitoring via social platforms and algorithms shapes public discourse, yet advocates repurposing such tools for collective truth-seeking rather than domination. Its 2023 release intersects with escalating debates on ethics and , exemplified by the track's Dark-Side Mix video generated via Stability AI, which visually manifests swirling data vortices to evoke perceptual expansion while underscoring risks of algorithmic opacity. In this context, "Panopticom" contributes to artistic critiques of techno-optimism, urging ethical frameworks for that prioritize human agency over corporate or state hegemony, resonating in circles and tech-adjacent advocacy.

References

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