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Genesis - Phil Collins proved how great a drummer and singer he is when he stepped up to fill the vocal role vacated by Gabriel, and he did it admirably, so much so that "A trick of the tail " was very well received. Fans of Brand X will remember Collins' work with that great fusion/rock outfit very well. Visit their website.
Genesis
Genesis - Abacab, taken off the album of the same name, their 13th, released in 1981.Genesis, as we probably all know by now, were one of the pioneers of the progressive rock scene as we know it today. We've featured the band on numerous occasions on the show and on these pages, so we'll skip their earlier history and come in around the early to mid seventies when vocalist and co-founder Peter Gabriel left the band to embark on a solo career, leaving Tony Banks (keyboards/vocals), Mike Rutherford (bass/guitar/vocals), Phil Collins (drums/vocals) and Steve Hackett (guitars) to their own devises. Many people felt that Genesis were dead and buried without Gabriel, whereas others felt that his leaving was the best thing that could happen to them, especially since Collins, apart from being one of the world's best drummers, was also a phenomenal vocalist, as his successful solo career has proved. Anyway, by the time Abacab came around, the line-up had dwindled to just Collins, Rutherford and Banks (in fact, this had happened way back in about 1978, but, surprisingly the band's popularity didn't seem to wane). Abacab, following hot on the heels of the wonderful "Duke" album, charted very successfully in many countries in the world, with both single and album reaching the top ten in the UK. It was around about this time that Collins left to release his debut solo album (he'd also featured with Brand X in the mid to late seventies) and superstardom. Banks and Rutherford took on young Scotsman Ray Wilson, who'd previously been with Stiltskin. Both Banks and Rutherford embarked on solo and other projects as well, Rutherford's one being Mike and The Mechanics. Genesis' 1997 album, "Calling all Stations", featured the above line-up and it was, to all intents and purposes, a pretty good effort that deserved more mention than it seemed to have had at the time.
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Biography by Bruce Eder
One of the most successful rock
acts of the 1970s, 1980s, and
1990s, Genesis enjoyed a
longevity exceeded only by the
likes of the Rolling Stones and
the Kinks, in the process
providing a launching pad for
the superstardom of members
Peter Gabriel and Phil Collins.
The group had its roots in the
Garden Wall, a band founded by
15 year olds Peter Gabriel and
Tony Banks in 1965 at
Charterhouse School in
Godalming, Surrey, where fellow
students Michael Rutherford and
Anthony Phillips were members of
another group called Anon. The
two groups initially merged out
of expediency as the older
members of each graduated;
Gabriel, Banks, Rutherford,
Phillips, and drummer Chris
Stewart soon joined together as
the New Anon, and recorded a
six-song demo featuring songs
primarily written by Rutherford
and Phillips.
The Charterhouse connection
worked in their favor when
ex-student, recording artist,
and producer Jonathan King heard
the tape and arranged for the
group to continue working in the
studio, developing their sound.
It was also King who renamed the
band Genesis. In December of
1967 the group had its first
formal recording sessions. Their
debut single, "The Silent Sun,"
was released in February of 1968
without attracting much notice
from the public. A second
single, "A Winter's Tale,"
followed just about the time
that Chris Stewart quit — his
replacement, John Silver, joined
just in time to participate in
the group's first LP sessions
that summer. King later added
orchestral accompaniment to the
band's tracks, in order to make
them sound even more like the
Moody Blues, and the resulting
album, entitled From Genesis to
Revelation, was released in
March of 1969.
Music seemed to be shaping up as
a brief digression in the lives
of the members as they graduated
from Charterhouse that summer.
The group felt strongly enough
about their work, however, that
they decided to try it as a
professional band; it was around
this time that Silver exited,
replaced by John Mayhew. They
got their first paying gig in
September of 1969, and spent the
next several months working out
new material. Genesis soon
became one of the first groups
signed to the fledgling Charisma
label, and they recorded their
second album, Trespass, that
spring. Following its
completion, the unit went
through major personnel changes
as Phillips, who had developed
crippling stage fright, was
forced to leave the lineup in
July of 1970, followed by
Mayhew.
Enter Phil Collins, a onetime
child actor turned drummer and
former member of Hickory and
Flaming Youth. The group's
lineup was completed with the
addition of guitarist Steve
Hackett, a former member of
Quiet World; his presence and
that of Collins toughened up the
group's sound, which became
apparent immediately upon the
release of their next album,
Nursery Cryme. The theatrical
attributes of Gabriel's singing
fit in well with the group's
live performances during this
period as he began to make ever
more extensive use of masks,
makeup, and props in concert,
telling framing stories in order
to set up their increasingly
complicated songs. When
presented amid the group's very
strong playing, this aspect of
Gabriel's work turned Genesis'
performances into multimedia
events.
Foxtrot, issued in the fall of
1972, was the flash point in
Genesis' history, and not just
on commercial terms. The
writing, especially on "Supper's
Ready," was as sophisticated as
anything in progressive rock,
and the lyrics were complex,
serious, and clever, a far cry
from the usual overblown words
attached to most prog rock.
Genesis' live performances by
now were practically legend, and
in response to the demand, in
August of 1973 Charisma released
Genesis Live, an album assembled
from shows in Leicester and
Manchester originally taped for
an American radio broadcast.
1973 also saw the release of
Selling England by the Pound,
the group's most sophisticated
album to date.
The release of the ambitious
double LP The Lamb Lies Down on
Broadway in late 1974 marked the
culmination of the group's early
history; in May of 1975,
following a show in France,
Gabriel announced that he was
leaving Genesis, owing to
personal reasons. The group
tried auditioning potential
replacements, but it became
clear that the remaining members
all preferred that drummer
Collins take over the role of
lead singer. The band returned
to the studio as an official
quartet in October of 1975 to
begin work on their new album:
the resulting Trick of the Tail
made number three in England and
number 31 in America, the best
chart showing up to that time
for a Genesis album. Its success
completely confounded critics
and fans who'd been unable to
conceive of Genesis without
Peter Gabriel.
The group seemed to be on its
way to bigger success than it
ever had during Gabriel's
tenure, as 1977's Wind and
Wuthering became another smash.
But then Hackett announced that
he was leaving on the eve of the
release of a new double live
album, Seconds Out; he was
replaced on the subsequent
American and European tours by
Daryl Steurmor, but there was no
permanent replacement in the
studio. In 1978, Genesis
released And Then There Were
Three, which abandoned any
efforts at progressive rock in
favor of a softer, much more
accessible, and less ambitious
pop sound. After a flurry of
solo projects, the group
reconvened for 1980's Duke,
which became their first
chart-topper in England while
rising to number 11 in America.
The continued changes in their
sound helped turn Genesis into
an arena-scale act: Abacab,
released in late 1981, was
another smash, and 1983's
self-titled Genesis furthered
the group's record of British
chart-toppers and American Top
Ten hits, becoming their second
million-selling U.S. album while
also yielding their first
American Top Ten single, "That's
All." Two years later, the group
outdid themselves with the
release of their most
commercially successful album to
date, Invisible Touch, which
went platinum several times over
in America. Its release
coincided with the biggest tour
in their history, a string of
sold-out arena shows that cast
the group in the same league as
concert stalwarts like the
Rolling Stones and the Grateful
Dead. Their 1991 album We Can't
Dance debuted at number one in
England and got to number four
in America; it was Collins' last
album with the group, and with
new vocalist Ray Wilson,
formerly of the group Stiltskin,
Genesis resurfaced in 1997 with
Calling All Stations, which
recalled their art rock roots.
Neither the critics nor the fans
warmed to the album — it sold
poorly and the tour was equally
unsuccessful. Coming on the
heels of the disappointing
Calling All Stations, the
long-awaited box-set
retrospective Genesis Archives,
Vol. 1: 1967-1975 was even more
welcome. Containing nothing but
unreleased material and rarities
from previously unavailable on
CD, the set was released to
surprisingly strong reviews in
the summer of 1998. A second
volume, containing unreleased
material from the Phil Collins
era, Genesis Archives, Vol. 2:
1976-1992, followed in 2000.

Phil
Collins
Peter Gabriel
Steve Hackett
Anthony Phillips
Tony Banks
John Mayhew
Mike Rutherford
Chris Stewart
John Silver
Ray Wilson

IQ
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Yes
The Alan Parsons Project
Marillion
King Crimson
Jethro Tull
Giles, Giles & Fripp
Gentle Giant
Emerson, Lake & Powell
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Camel
Asia
Soft Machine
Family
Van Der Graaf Generator
The Strawbs
Renaissance
Procol Harum
Focus
Alan Parsons

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