| Genesis |
.jpg)
Genesis
performing "The Carpet Crawlers" in Herning, June 2007
|
| Background information |
| Origin |
Godalming, Surrey, England |
| Genre(s) |
Progressive
rock, Rock,
Pop |
| Years active |
1967 – 1999, 2006 - present |
| Label(s) |
Virgin
Charisma
Atlantic
Atco
Decca
ABC
Rhino |
Associated
acts |
GTR
Mike + The Mechanics
Brand
X
Stiltskin |
| Website |
www.genesis-music.com |
| Members |
Phil
Collins (Vocals, Drums)
Mike Rutherford (Guitars,
Bass, Backing Vocals)
Tony Banks
(Keyboards, Backing Vocals)
Chester Thompson (Drums - Touring
Member)
Daryl Stuermer (Guitars - Touring
Member) |
| Former members |
Peter
Gabriel (vocals, flute, oboe)
Steve Hackett (guitars)
Anthony Phillips (guitars)
John
Mayhew (drums)
John
Silver (drums)
Chris Stewart
(drums)
Ray Wilson (vocals)
Nir
Z (Drums)
Nick D'Virgilio (Drums)
Bill
Bruford (Drums - Touring 1976)
Anthony Drennan (Guitars - Touring
1998) |
 |
This
article includes inline links to audio files. If you have trouble
playing the files, see Wikipedia Media help. |
Genesis are an English rock band
formed in 1967. With approximately 150 million albums sold worldwide,
Genesis are among the top 30 highest-selling recording artists of all
time.
In 1988 the band won a Grammy Award for Best
Concept Music Video. Genesis' members have included Peter
Gabriel, Mike Rutherford, Tony Banks, Steve
Hackett and Phil Collins, all of whom
have achieved success as solo artists.
Genesis began as a 1960s pop band playing moody, simple
guitar-driven melodies. During the 1970s they evolved into a progressive
rock band and began to incorporate complex song structures and
elaborate instrumentation, while their concerts took on a more
theatrical tone. This second phase was characterised by lengthy
performances such as the twenty-three minute "Supper's
Ready" and, in 1974, the concept album The Lamb Lies Down on
Broadway. The 1980s saw the band produce more
accessible pop music based on melodic hooks;
this change of direction gave them their first number one album in the
United Kingdom, Duke, and their
only number one single in the United States, "Invisible Touch".
Genesis have changed personnel several times. Collins,
previously the band's drummer, replaced Gabriel as lead singer in 1975,
and was replaced by former Stiltskin singer Ray
Wilson for the 1997 album Calling
All Stations. Due to the commercial failure of
that album, the band announced an indefinite hiatus. In October 2006,
Collins, Rutherford and Banks reunited for a world tour.
|
Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 1967–1969
- 1.2 1970–1975
- 1.3 1976–1978
- 1.4 1978–1979
- 1.5 1980–1986
- 1.6 1986–1992
- 1.7 1997–2000
- 1.8 2006–present
- 1.9 Inspiration
and influences
- 2 Album
cover art
- 3 Criticism
- 4 Discography
- 5 References
- 6 See
also
- 7 External
links
|
History
1967–1969
The band's origin lies in the late 1960s when founding members
Peter Gabriel and Tony Banks were students at Charterhouse
School in Godalming.
Formed out of school bands "the Garden Wall" and "the anon", the
original line-up consisted of Gabriel (vocals), Anthony
Phillips (guitar),
Banks (keyboards), Rutherford (bass
& guitar) and Chris Stewart (drums).
Genesis recorded their first album in 1969, From Genesis to
Revelation, after being discovered by Jonathan
King, a Charterhouse School alumnus. King was a songwriter
and record producer who had a hit single at the time, "Everyone's Gone
to the Moon." King named the band "Genesis", recalling that he had
"thought it was a good name... it suggested the beginning of a new
sound and a new feeling".
Genesis
Timeline
| |
1967 |
Gabriel, Phillips,
Rutherford, Banks, Stewart |
| |
1968 |
Gabriel, Phillips,
Rutherford, Banks, Silver |
| |
1969 |
Gabriel, Phillips,
Rutherford, Banks, Mayhew 1 |
| |
1970 |
Gabriel, Hackett,
Rutherford, Banks, Collins 2 |
| |
1975 |
Hackett, Rutherford,
Banks, Collins 3 |
| |
1977 |
Rutherford, Banks,
Collins 4 |
| |
1997 |
Wilson, Rutherford,
Banks 5 |
| |
1999 |
Band on hiatus |
| |
2006 |
Rutherford,
Banks, Collins 4 |
ADDITIONAL
PERSONNEL
1 David Thomas
2 Mick Barnard
3Bill Bruford
4 Chester Thompson, Daryl
Streumer
5 Nick D'Virgillio, Nir
Zidhyaku, Ant Drennan
|
The album was released on Decca Records. During the sessions,
Stewart left and was replaced by John Silver. The band recorded a series
of songs influenced by the light pop style of the Bee
Gees, one of King's favourite bands, and The Beatles. King
assembled the tracks as a concept album, and added string
arrangements during the production. Their first single, "The Silent
Sun" (sample (help·
To this day, King claims the credit for the band's success. He
introduced them to eventual label boss Tony Stratton Smith. King still
holds the rights to the songs on the From Genesis to
Revelation album and has re-released it many times under a
variety of names, including In the Beginning, Where
the Sour Turns to Sweet, Rock Roots: Genesis,
...And the Word Was and, most recently, The
Genesis of Genesis.
Silver was replaced by John
Mayhew before the recording of Trespass.
However, during a show alongside the band Smile,
Gabriel had offered the job to Roger Taylor, later
of Queen.
The band played occasional concerts before securing a new recording
contract with Charisma Records.
The band built a following through live performances and became known
for hypnotic melodies that were often dark and haunting.
Trespass was the template for
Genesis albums in the 1970s: it consists of lengthy, sometimes
operatic, pieces and occasional short, humorous numbers resembling the
style of such progressive rock acts as King
Crimson, Yes and Gentle
Giant. Trespass includes traditional progressive
rock elements, such as elaborate arrangements and time
signature changes, which became key elements in subsequent albums. A
significant factor in their songwriting was that they would not write pentatonically,
as most bands of their time were doing. This decision was continued by
the band for years to come. Trespass features the
nine-minute "The Knife", which Gabriel, a believer in nonviolence
having been influenced by a book on Mahatma
Gandhi, wrote. According to Gabriel, the song shows "how all violent
revolutions inevitably end up with a dictator in power".
Ill health and recurring stage fright caused
Phillips to leave the band in 1970.
Phillips went on to record several medieval influenced albums and his
solo album The Geese and the Ghost
contains solo vocal by Phil Collins. The departure of Phillips
traumatised Banks and Rutherford, as Phillips had been a founding
member and a primary force behind the band turning professional. There
were doubts over whether Genesis could continue without him,
but the remaining members renewed their commitment to the band, while
deciding to release drummer John Mayhew.
Phil Collins joined Genesis on 4 August 1970 after impressing
the band with his drumming skills during an audition held at Gabriel's
parents' house. The band continued as a four-piece before playing a
number of concerts with the guitarist Mick
Barnard. Because the members felt Barnard was not up to their calibre
of musicianship they sought a more suitable replacement for Phillips.
Late in 1970 Steve Hackett, formerly of Quiet
World, placed an advertisement for a band in Melody
Maker. Hackett attended a Genesis concert and
was impressed by the style of music they played. The band liked the
tone of the advertisement and, after a meeting at his parents'
apartment, hired Hackett.
1970–1975
Collins and Hackett made their studio debut in
1971 on Nursery Cryme.
The album features the epic "The Musical Box" and Collins'
first lead vocal performance in "For Absent Friends". Foxtrot
was released in October 1972 and contains what has been described as
"one of the group's most accomplished works",
the 23-minute "Supper's Ready" (sample
(
Genesis
Live, recorded on the Foxtrot tour, followed in
1973.
Genesis, circa 1973. Clockwise from left: Banks, Collins, Hackett,
Rutherford, Gabriel
Selling England by the
Pound followed in November 1973 and was well
received by critics and fans.
According to one commentator, Gabriel was conscious of over-using
lyrics or references which might suggest a bias towards an American
audience. He was keen to avoid this and insisted that the album was
titled Selling England by the Pound,
a reference to a Labour Party slogan at the time.
The album contains "Firth of Fifth" (sample
(
These techniques were incorporated in the song "Dancing with the
Moonlit Knight".
In 1974 Genesis undertook
a more ambitious project with the double disc concept
album The Lamb Lies Down on
Broadway (sample
(
During his adventure, Rael encounters several bizarre characters
including the Slippermen and The Lamia,
the latter being borrowed from Greek mythology. The album is set in
satirically twisted circumstances and accounts of its recording
indicate that it was rushed and that Gabriel did not have time to
finish his lyrics. Gabriel added narration in his traditional
storytelling during live performances. The band embarked on a world
tour to promote the album, and, since it was a concept album, performed
it in its entirety. At one point during the performance Gabriel
appeared across the stage from a mannequin double, apparently
illustrating the split personality concept.
The
Lamb Lies Down on Broadway placed strain on intra-band
relations, particularly between Banks and Gabriel.
Gabriel alone focused on the lyrics, while the other band members wrote
the music without his input, the exceptions being "Counting Out Time"
and "The Carpet Crawlers". "The Light Dies Down on Broadway" was
co-authored by Banks and Rutherford.
In August
1975, following the Lamb tour, Gabriel announced
that he was leaving the band.
He felt estranged from the other members, and his marriage and birth of
his first child added to his personal strain. In a letter to fans,
entitled Out, Angels Out, Gabriel explained his
reasons, "The vehicle we had built as a co-op to serve our songwriting
became our master and had cooped us up inside the success we had
wanted. It affected the attitudes and the spirit of the whole band. The
music had not dried up and I still respect the other musicians, but our
roles had set in hard".
Collins later remarked that the other members "were not stunned by
Peter's departure because we had known about it for quite a while.
We're going to carry on...this hasn't hit us suddenly, we've been
talking about it for some time, and I think there will be room for both
Genesis and Peter on his own. No - there were no musical differences."
Gabriel's first solo album,Peter
Gabriel 1977, features the hit single "Solsbury
Hill", an allegory
on his departure from the band.
During
their live performances, Genesis pioneered the use of lasers and other
light effects, most of which were built by Dutchman Theo Botschuijver.
A customised handheld unit was used to channel laser light, which
allowed Gabriel to sweep the audience with various light effects.
1976–1978
The group
began to audition lead singers without a clear idea of the style of
vocalist they were looking for. However, they knew that they did not
want a voice too dissimilar to Gabriel's. Collins had provided backing
vocals on previous occasions, and was given the job of coaching
prospective replacements. In a later interview, he admitted he "really
wanted to have a crack at it...[b]ut I wasn't about to ask. I wanted
someone to ask me". "Initially the thought of being a lead singer,
going out and shaking his bum mortified me, but it was my first wife's
idea, and after thinking about it, I thought that it might work."
The band, somewhat reluctantly, decided to give Collins a shot, and
Phil was given the new lead singer spot for the Trick of the Tail
album. He was not named as the permanent lead singer right away.
1976's A
Trick of the Tail was well received by critics,
and outsold all previous albums combined. The album features a markedly
clearer production than earlier recordings, courtesy of new producer David
Hentschel, who had served as engineer on Nursery Cryme.
An influential factor in the record's success was that Collins sounded
"more like Gabriel than Gabriel did".
Despite the success of the album, the group remained concerned with
their live shows, which now lacked Gabriel's elaborate performances.
While Collins felt confident that he could handle live vocal duties, he
required the assistance of a second drummer while he sang. Bill
Bruford, drummer for Yes and King Crimson, offered his services,
and drummed on their 1976 tour. Genesis' first live performance without
Peter Gabriel would be on March 26, 1976, in London,
Ontario Canada.
The tour was captured on film, and released as Genesis:
In Concert.
Later that
year, Genesis recorded Wind & Wuthering,
the first of two albums recorded at the Relight Studios in Hilvarenbeek,
the Netherlands.
Released in December 1976, the album took its name from Emily
Brontë's novel Wuthering Heights,
whose last lines—"how anyone could ever imagine unquiet slumbers for
the sleepers in that quiet earth"—inspired the titles of the seventh
and eighth tracks.
Wind & Wuthering features the songs "Blood
on the Rooftops" and "Afterglow", as well as the complex multi-part
suite "One for the Vine". The animated film B.C. Rock
features sections of "Afterglow". The band signed with new manager Tony
Smith, who published all subsequent Genesis songs through his company Hit & Run Music
Publishing.
For the
1977 Genesis tour, the jazz fusion-trained Chester
Thompson—a veteran of Weather Report and Frank
Zappa—took on live drumming duties. Collins's approach to Genesis shows
differed from the theatrical performances of Gabriel, and his
interpretations of older songs were lighter and more subtle. At the
1982 Milton
Keynes reunion show, Gabriel admitted to Collins that he (Collins) sang
the songs "better", though never "quite like" him.
1978–1979
Guitarist
Steve Hackett had become increasingly disenchanted with the band by the
time of Wind & Wuthering's release.
The freedom he had experienced during the recording of Voyage
of the Acolyte led him to feel confined within
Genesis. Hackett felt that too few of his songs were being used on
Genesis albums, and sought for a quarter of Wind &
Wuthering to be given over to his material; a move described
by Collins as "a dumb way to work in a band context".
The other members attempted to placate him by granting songwriting
credits on the two instrumental tracks "Unquiet Slumbers for the
Sleepers..."/"...In That Quiet Earth" However, the Hackett-composed
"Blood on the Rooftops" was never performed live, while his composition
"Please Don't Touch" was rejected for inclusion on the LP; and was
replaced by the three-minute instrumental "Wot Gorilla?". Following the
release of the 1977 Spot the Pigeon
E.P., Hackett left the band.
The Seconds
Out live album was recorded during the 1977
tour, and was to be Hackett's final release with Genesis. Rutherford
took on guitar duties in the studio, and during live performances
alternated guitar and bass with the session musician Daryl
Stuermer. The group continued as a trio, a fact they acknowledged in
the title of the 1978 album ...And Then There
Were Three.... The album was a further move
away from lengthy progressive epics, and yielded their first American
radio hit, "Follow You, Follow Me", whose
popularity lead to ...And Then There Were Three...
being the band's first U.S. Gold-certified album.
1980–1986
In 1979,
Genesis came close to losing Collins when he moved to Vancouver,
Canada, in an attempt to save his first marriage. However, two months
and one divorce later, Collins returned to the UK, and immersed himself
in the recording of Duke. He later
admitted that his marriage breakup accelerated his growth as a
songwriter, and Duke became the first Genesis album
in which he had equal songwriting weight with Banks and Rutherford.
While And Then There Were Three was a first effort
by the band to write shorter and more concise songs, Duke
began the real transition from their 1970s sound, to the 1980s mega-hit
pop era.
The use of a drum machine became a consistent element on subsequent
Genesis albums, as well as on Collins's solo releases. The first
Genesis song to feature a drum machine was the Duke
track "Duchess". The more commercial Duke was well
received by the mainstream media, and was the band's first UK number
one album, while the tracks "Misunderstanding" (sample
(
In
1982, the band released the live double album Three
Sides Live. The U.S. version contains three
sides of live material—hence the album's title—in addition to a side of
studio material. The studio material includes the song "Paperlate",
which again features an Earth, Wind and Fire horn section. In the UK,
the three songs on the "Paperlate" side of the album had previously
been released on the EP 3 X 3. This left more
room on the UK version for further live material, albeit it was taken
from earlier tours. 1982 closed with a once-off performance alongside
Gabriel and Hackett at the Milton Keynes Bowl, under the name Six
of the Best. The concert was hastily put
together to help raise money for Gabriel's WOMAD project, which
at the time was suffering from considerable financial hardship.
1983s
eponymous Genesis
album—sometimes referred to as "Shapes" because of
the geometric shapes featured on its cover, or alternatively, as the "Mama"
album—became their third consecutive number one album in the UK. The
album includes the radio friendly tracks "Mama"
and "That's All", and
re-introduced the band's flair for lengthy pieces in "Home by the Sea".
The track "Just a Job to Do" was later used as the theme song for the
1985s ABC detective
drama The Insiders.
1986–1992
Cover of the "Land of Confusion" single. The
cover is inspired by the Beatles' album With
the Beatles. The guitar riff accompanying the
song owes a debt to The Who's Pete
Townshend — subtly acknowledged in the line "my generation will put
it right".
Genesis's
highest-selling album, Invisible Touch,
was released in 1986, at the height of Collins's popularity as a solo
artist. The album yielded five U.S. Top 5 singles: "Throwing It All
Away", "In Too Deep", "Tonight, Tonight,
Tonight", "Land of Confusion" (sample
(
Genesis were the first band to use Vari*Lite technology,
and the Prism sound system, all of which are now standard features of
arena rock concerts.
Genesis performing "Land of Confusion" in Knebworth, England (2 August 1992)
Earlier
that year, Collins viewed a spoof of himself on Spitting
Image, a satirical British television show
which used puppets to lampoon politicians and celebrities. He was
impressed with the representation, and commissioned the show's
creators, Peter
Fluck and Roger
Law, to work on the video for the "Land of Confusion" single. The video
was formed as an ironic commentary on the Cold War, and
played on the perception that the coalition's leaders were "trigger
happy" with the nuclear "button". In addition to
puppet representations of Banks, Collins and Rutherford, the video
showed Ronald Reagan dressed as Superman. It
was nominated for the MTV
Video of the Year, losing to Gabriel's "Sledgehammer".
"Tonight,
Tonight, Tonight" was used in a Michelob commercial—as was Collins's "In
the Air Tonight"—while "In Too Deep" was featured in the film Mona
Lisa.
The instrumental "The Brazilian", appreared in the animated
movie When the Wind Blows,
alongside a score written by Roger Waters. At the 1988 Prince's
Trust concert held in the Royal Albert Hall, Collins and
Gabriel performed together for the first time since 1982. Collins was
drummer for the house band, while Gabriel performed his hit single
"Sledgehammer". It was to be the last time the two Genesis frontmen
publicly played together.
After
a hiatus of five years, Genesis reconvened for the 1991 release of We
Can't Dance, which was to be Collins's last
studio album with the group. The album features the hit singles "Jesus
He Knows Me", "I Can't Dance", "No
Son of Mine", "Hold on My Heart", "Tell Me
Why" and "Never a Time" (a U.S. release only), as well as lengthy
pieces such as "Driving the Last Spike" and "Fading Lights". The album
which was produced by Nick Davis includes "Since I Lost You",
which Collins wrote in memory of Eric
Clapton's son Conor.
Collins
left in March 1996, having served in Genesis for over 25 years. He
later admitted that he "felt it time to change direction in my musical
life. For me now, it will be music for movies, some jazz projects, and
of course my solo career. I wish the guys in Genesis all the very best
in their future. We remain the best of friends."
1997–2000
The Calling All Stations
album was Genesis's first without Phil Collins in 26 years.
Rutherford
and Banks decided to continue as Genesis. However, they required more
than one new member, because the band had lost not only Collins, but
also the live musicians Daryl Stuermer and Chester
Thompson. Stuermer was approached, but was touring with Collins at the
time; Thompson inquired regarding the vacant drum stool, but after he
was refused full-band membership, he ended his 19-year association with
the band. Eventually, drumming duties were shared between Nir
Zidkyahu, an Israeli session drummer who had played with Hidden Persuaders, and Nick
D'Virgilio, from the progressive rock band Spock's
Beard.
The difference in their playing styles was marked; D'Virgilio played
softer, more subtle rhythms in comparison to Zidkyahu's bombastic
technique.
Ex-Stiltskin
singer Ray Wilson was appointed as
the new lead singer of Genesis. Other candidates had included Paul
Carrack from Rutherford's Mike and the Mechanics, Francis
Dunnery (ex-It Bites) and ex-Marillion
vocalist—and two-time Banks collaborator—Fish.
Kevin
Gilbert was offered an audition just before his death in 1996.
According to producer Nick Davis, the only other serious
candidate was David Langdon, though he had never sung with a band
before; and hence Wilson was given the job. On the band's criteria in
the search for a singer, Banks noted: "We needed someone who fits as
many of the things you require as possible—being able to improvise with
the kind of music we write and also someone capable of jumping in at
the deep end and fronting a band." Wilson was immediately incorporated
into the songwriting process, being given "half-a-dozen" songs to work
on and ending up with three co-writing credits on the final album.
1997's
Calling All Stations
sold well in Europe, while the track "Congo" (sample
(
He also said he regretted his time spent with the band, feeling
uncomfortable as a self-described "working class" man with the
wealthier likes of Banks and Rutherford, and also revealed one of Phil
Collins's assistants told him Collins "wasn't happy that they had
continued".
In
1999, the 1971–75 lineup of Banks, Collins, Gabriel, Hackett and
Rutherford recorded a new version of "The Carpet Crawlers" for the Turn It On Again: The Hits
compilation. In 2000, Collins, Banks, and Rutherford performed an acoustic
rendition of "I Can't Dance" at the Music Managers
Forum, in honor of their manager Tony Smith.
Most of the original members were involved in compiling the two Archive
boxed-sets.
2006–present
After
much speculation regarding a reunion, Banks, Collins and Rutherford
announced Turn It On Again: The Tour
on 7
November 2006;
nearly 40 years after the band first formed. The tour would take place
during Summer 2007, and play twelve countries across Europe, followed
by a second leg in North America. The trio had wanted to reunite as a
five-piece with Gabriel and Hackett for a live performance of The Lamb Lies Down on
Broadway. While Gabriel reportedly agreed in
principle to perform, he was unable to commit to a date. Collins later
observed that "Peter is a little over-cautious about going back to
something which fundamentally is fun".
Hackett agreed to participation, but without Peter joining in on the
tour, Phil, Tony and Mike thought that it would be more appropriate to
bring back Chester Thompson and Daryl Stuermer. Hackett, however still
maintains good relations with the rest of the band. A short note
expressing his good wishes for the reunion tour currently appears on
his Web site.
In their stead, both Stuermer and Thompson returned as backing
musicians.
The
band and long-time producer, Nick Davis, are due to re-release their
back catalogue in three batches over the course of 2007, each
comprising a third of the band's albums (from Trespass
to Calling All Stations)
in a boxset-style release. Each will comprise a double-disc set
containing a multi-channel hybrid Super Audio CD, as well as a DVD-Video
with DTS 96/24, and Dolby
Digital 5.1 tracks. The DVD will include extras such as promo videos
and new interviews in which the band discuss the period surrounding
each album release. The Hybrid SACDs will be standard CDs for the U.S.
and Canada, and are to be issued as box sets, starting with Genesis
1976-1982 on May 15.
On
12 May 2007, the band were
honourees at the second annual VH1 Rock Honors, along with Ozzy
Osbourne, Heart and ZZ Top. The setlist was, "Turn It On Again",
"No Son of Mine" and "Los Endos" the performance aired on VH-1 in the
US on 24
May 2007.
On 11
June 2007
Genesis officially kicked off their 2007 Turn It On Again World Tour in
Helsinki, Finland. The band will perform over 50 shows in 2007 as they
make stops in several countries including Denmark, Belgium, Germany,
France, Italy, Great Britain, the United States and Canada. The German
show was broadcast live to several cinemas across the UK and Europe. On
7 July 2007, Genesis
participated at Live Earth, a series of
concerts to promote action to confront global climate
change at the new Wembley Stadium in London, along with
other artists including Madonna, Duran
Duran and Red Hot Chili Peppers.
Inspiration and influences
Genesis
has taken influence from a wide range of music, ranging from classical music to
mainstream rock and jazz.
Banks drew influence from Alan Price of The
Animals, whom he regarded as "[t]he first person who made me
aware of the organ in a rock context".
Other organists cited included Procol Harum's Matthew
Fisher, and Keith Emerson of The
Nice and later Emerson, Lake and Palmer.
Classical influences include Rachmaninov, Ravel,
Mahler,
and Shostakovich. Many of their
contemporaries and immediate predecessors, including The
Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Simon
and Garfunkel, have affected the band's music. Collins has cited Buddy Rich
and the jazz outfit The Mahavishnu Orchestra,
while Gabriel's early career with Genesis took influence from Nina
Simone and King Crimson.
Musical arrangements on the band's first album From Genesis
to Revelation drew on the works of The
Moody Blues, Family, and the Bee
Gees—Jonathan King was a self-professed admirer of their
music. Though Gabriel and David Bowie similarly relied
on on-stage theatrical performances, neither claimed to be influenced
by the other.
As
a group that influenced the growth of the progressive rock genre,
Genesis has been cited by a number of progressive rock groups,
including Dream Theater, Camel
and Kansas.
Several Genesis tribute bands, including Re-Genesis,
The Musical Box, and In the
Cage, routinely perform material from the Peter Gabriel era.
Collins
became the first artist to cover a Genesis song—"Behind the
Lines"—which he included on Face
Value one year after the original's release.
Other former members subsequently performed the band's material live
during their solo shows—Gabriel played "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway"
and "Back in NYC", while Hackett has performed "In That Quiet Earth",
"Los Endos", "Horizons",
"Firth of Fifth" and "Blood on the Rooftops", among others. Hackett has
performed "I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)" on his own solo
tours, and on a 1986 tour with his short lived supergroup GTR.
Rutherford has performed "I Can't Dance" during his tours with
the Mechanics. Collins
also later formed The Phil Collins Big Band,
which played jazz arrangements of Genesis songs, which were "That's
All", "Invisible Touch", "Hold On My Heart" and "Los Endos" (renamed
"The Los Endos Suite"), during its 1998 world tour. Ray Wilson has
covered the most Genesis songs during his solo concerts. His two solo
live albums, Live and Life and Acoustic,
feature the Genesis songs "The Carpet Crawlers", "Follow You Follow
Me", "I Can't Dance", "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway", "No
Son of Mine", "Shipwrecked", and "Mama".
He has interpreted two songs from the solo careers of his two
predecessors—"In the Air Tonight" (Collins) and
"Biko"
(Gabriel).
Jeff
Buckley reworked "Back in NYC" for the posthumously released 1998 Sketches for My
Sweetheart the Drunk. The Swedish death
metal band In
Flames covered "Land of Confusion" on Trigger,
as did Disturbed
on their 2005 album Ten Thousand Fists.
Disco-pop band Alcazar, also from Sweden, has covered parts of "Land of
Confusion" on their song "This is the World We Live In". Dream
Theater covered Turn It On Again as part of their
song "The Big Medley". In 2007 Simon Collins recorded his
own version of "Keep It Dark" as a tribute to the 40th anniversary of
his father's band.
Beyond
purely musical ventures, the theatrical style of Genesis's 1970s
concerts with Gabriel have provided inspiration for Cirque
du Soleil's productions: the 2004 anniversary show Midnight
Sun and the arena-based touring show Delirium
trace their musical and multimedia elements back to these concerts.
According to Victor Pilon, co-creator and co-director of both shows,
"We're not inventing anything. Genesis did it years ago. We're just
using new technology."
Album cover art
The Foxtrot
cover was designed by Paul Whitehead.
Genesis's
album covers incorporate complex and intricate art intended to reflect
the themes explored in the song lyrics. Their first album, From
Genesis to Revelation, used a plain black sleeve with Genesis
written in a green gothic typeface on the top left. The cover of this
album has changed with its numerous re-releases. Genesis's three
subsequent album covers were developed by the popular Charisma
Records graphic artist Paul Whitehead, who had developed the
Charisma "Mad
Hatter" logo. The Foxtrot sleeve is popular among
Genesis fans; the front image depicts a feminine figure in a red dress
with the head of a fox. Whitehead has said in an interview that Jimi
Hendrix's "Foxy
Lady" was an inspiration for the character.
After Whitehead moved to Los Angeles, Genesis signed
with the reputed Hipgnosis, whose artists had created high
profile album covers for Pink Floyd's Dark
Side of the Moon and Led Zeppelin's Houses
of the Holy. Hipgnosis's first Genesis album
cover was for The Lamb, which for the first time in
Genesis's history featured a male model. The model, credited simply as
"Omar" on the album sleeve, portrayed the The Lamb's
protagonist "Rael".
Through
the 1970s, various Hipgnosis artists—among whom Colin Elgie contributed
heavily—designed all Genesis studio albums. The Trick of the
Tail cover is representative of many of the characters in the
album, including the robber from "Robbery, Assault and Battery", the
beast from the title track, and a metaphoric image of old age reminiscing
youth from the song "Ripples". Beginning with Duke,
Genesis albums have featured caricatures designed by Bill Smith
Studios. The bands highest-selling album Invisible Touch,
features the artwork of Assorted Images, which had previously designed
sleeves for Duran Duran and Culture
Club. The We Can't Dance cover art
features the work of Felicity Bowers, and is reminiscent of Wind
& Wuthering, now presented in hazy watercolour.
The Calling All Stations and the compilation Turn
It On Again: The Hits sleeves were designed by Wherefore
Art?.
Criticism
Genesis'
progressive rock roots set them apart from contemporaries Led
Zeppelin and Black Sabbath. An article in Q Magazine
describes a 1977 Ray Lowry cartoon which depicted an arena
of "either asleep, moribund, [or] comatose" fans watching a live
Genesis performance, with the band's name emblazoned on a banner above
the stage reading "GENESNOOZE".
Much of the criticism surrounding the band in the 1970s centered on
progressive rock in general, which many dismissed as intellectual and
pretentious. Gabriel's theatrics were unpalatable to a mainstream rock
audience, as well as to many Genesis fans.
This was exemplified during live performances of Gabriel's last Genesis
album, The Lamb, during which he appeared on stage
as various characters in the album lyrics. The elaborate storyline for The
Lamb proved difficult to understand and accept, and caused
friction within the band.
Collins later recalled that "he'd be in a Slipperman costume trying to
get a mike anywhere near his throat, and be out of breath - all twisted
up. Towards the end I felt the singing wasn't really being heard; the
songs weren't really being heard".
Genesis's
transition from lengthy, complex songs to more compact, radio friendly
material was not welcomed by some critics; one particular review of ...And
Then There Were Three... read: "[i]n short, this contemptible
opus is but the palest shadow of the group's earlier accomplishments.
Not only is the damage irreversible, it's been widely endorsed: ...And
Then There Were Three... is Genesis's first U.S. gold record".
Collins himself has often been blamed for Genesis's transformation, in
part as he plays much the same type of music as a solo artist. "I don't
feel we've bastardised the way we were", Collins remarked in an
interview with Music Express:
"on a generous day I'll blame me for the change, but I just think it is
us growing up, listening to different things".
Discography
-
Main
article: Genesis discography
References
-
"Phil Collins".
atlanticrecords.com. Retrieved on 15 March 2007.
-
"Rockers Genesis plan reunion tour".
bbc.co.uk, 18
October 2006.
Retrieved on 15
March 2007.
-
Tracy, John. "And
The Word Was ... GENESIS" genesis-path.net. Retrieved on 15 March 2007.
-
King, Jonathan. "In the Beginning". From Genesis to Revelation
(sleeve notes). 1993 release
-
Cargill Erin, Cargill Pieter. "1975-03-XX - Circus - Review of Queen's Sheer
Heart Attack". queenarchives.com. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Cromelin, Richard. "Genesis: Short on Hair, Long on Gimmicks". Rolling
Stone, 28 March 1974.
-
Welch (1995), p. 21
-
"Some
New York Times Reviews '72-'74". genesis-path.net. Retrieved
on 23
March 2007.
-
Malamut, Bruce. "Selling England by the Pound". Crawdaddy,
March 1974. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Bowler, Dray. "Genesis: A Biography". London: Sidwick &
Jackson, 1992
-
Alspach, Steve. "Interview with Steve Hackett".
Music Street Journal, 2002. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Welch, Chris. "Genesis: The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway ". Melody
Maker, 23 November. 1974.
-
"Gabriel, Peter. "Out, Angels Out - an investigation"
genesis-path.net, August 1975. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Welch, Chris. "Peter Gabriel Quits Genesis". Melody Maker,
23
August 1975.
-
"Genesis Archive #2". Gelring Limited. Atlantic Recording Corporation,
2000.
-
"Phil Collins". Golden Slumbers,
2005. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
"An interview with Bill Bruford".
World of Genesis.com. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Genesis. Inside Genesis 1975–1980. "Classic Rock Legends", 2004
-
"Wind & Wuthering 1977 - Genesis
Remember". g2online.co.uk. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Flans, Robyn. "Classic Tracks: Phil Collins's In the Air
Tonight". Mix, 1 May 2005. Retrieved on 25 March 2007.
-
"The
1982 Reunion Show Program Book".genesis-path.net. Retrieved
on 23
March 2007.
-
Turner, Frederick. "Assorted
pieces of insight into Genesis from assorted sources.
Genesis: A Biography, 1992. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
"The
Waiting Room Online". The Waiting Room,
2005. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
"About Vari-Lite". vari-lite.com.
Retrieved on 23
March 2007.
-
Darling, Linda; Silberstein, Scott. "Phil
Quits Genesis!". Entertainment Wire, 28 March 1996. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Popke, Michael. "Ray Wilson: 'I find George Bush quite
frightening and capable of scary things'".
SeaOfTranquility.org, 24 October 2004. Retrieved on 25 March 2007.
-
Sine, Richard. "All Rocked Out". Metro,
1–7 August, 1996. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Heatley, Michael. "Dotmusic Talent: GENESIS"
(retrieved from the Internet Archive). Dotmusic, 1997.
Retrieved on 30
April 2007.
-
"Press conference, 7th November 2006, Mayfair
hotel, London". genesis-news.com. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
"Steve Hackett's website".
stevehackett.com. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Genesis in Las Vegas last night (VH-1 Rock
Honors).
-
"Genesis
to participate in Live Earth". Liveearth.org. Retrieved on 25 March 2007.
-
"Genesis's Banks — A Current Account".
Beat Instrumental, April 1976. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
"The Genesis File". Melody Maker, 16
December 1972.
Retrieved on March
25, 2007.
-
"Cartoons, Costumes, and the Myths of Genesis".
Circus, December 1974. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Vlessing, Etan
(March 2006), "Cirque du Soleil's 'Delirium'", Amusement
Business 118 (5): 38, ISSN
0003-2344
-
Christopulos, Jim. "Paul Whitehead interview".
vandergraafgenerator.co.uk. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Maconie, Stuart. ""Genesis:
The Loathed and Loved"". Q Magazine,
December 1994. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
Welch (1995), p. 37
-
Bloom, Michael. "And Then There Were Three". Rolling
Stone, 10 August 1978. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
-
"Phil Collins Interviews". Music
Express, 1990. Retrieved on 23 March 2007.
See also
- Genesis
discography
- List
of Genesis's awards
External links
Genesis (band) noquotend
-->