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Genesis on track
Genesis on track
Genesis on track
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Genesis on track

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From schoolboy band to sold-out stadium tours and worldwide album sales of over 100 million, Genesis were one of the defining progressive rock bands of the seventies, playing a huge part in shaping the genre. Over a career spanning fifty-five years from formation to the Last Domino? tour of 2021, they developed and adapted through many changes, some of which polarised their existing fans but attracted countless new ones. While Foxtrot and The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway helped define progressive rock, it was the three-piece line up of Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford and Phil Collins that became the real hit-makers, with  albums like Invisible Touch and We Can't Dance and massive hit singles like 'No Son of Mine' and 'Land of Confusion'.


This book takes the reader on a journey through their entire catalogue, which includes fifteen studio and six live albums, including five consecutive number ones in the UK and five consecutive top tens in the USA, visiting each album in turn and examining every track. It is compiled from the viewpoint of a lifelong fan, and it is hoped that the book stirs many old memories, as it has done for the author, as well as providing some insight for more recent fans of the band.


 


Stuart Macfarlane was a teenager during the seventies, the heyday of classic rock. He quickly developed a love of progressive music, listening to as many bands as he could find and was regularly in the audience at the famous Glasgow Apollo. His previous writing experience includes many technical conference papers and publications as well as reviews and interviews for Rock Society Magazine. He is also a musician, having written and performed original music through the 80s with Dunfermline band StraiTTalk. He lives in Dunfermline, Scotland.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 3, 2022
ISBN9781789520682
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    Genesis on track - Stuart Macfarlane

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    Sonicbond Publishing Limited

    www.sonicbondpublishing.co.uk

    Email: [email protected]

    First Published in the United Kingdom 2019

    First Published in the United States 2019

    This edition 2022.

    British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data:

    A Catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

    Copyright Stuart Macfarlane 2019-2022

    ISBN 978-1-78952-005-7

    The rights of Stuart Macfarlane to be identified

    as the authors of this work have been asserted by him

    in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and patents Act 1988.

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission in writing from Sonicbond Publishing Limited

    Typeset in ITC Garamond & ITC Avant Garde

    Printed and bound in England

    Graphic design and typesetting: Full Moon Media

    Dedication

    This book is dedicated to my father, Donald Macfarlane, a quiet, hard-working family man who introduced me to music at an early age and was the best role model anyone could wish for.

    Acknowledgements

    Love and thanks to my wife Caroline for her enthusiasm and encouragement, but mostly her patience and understanding during the long hours spent writing this book. Who knew it would take so much time to write a wee book?

    To Iain Brown, John Wootton and Graeme McNaught, my Genesis gig buddies over the years, thanks for helping create great and lasting memories.

    Thanks to the many Genesis internet fan sites who continue to provide a wealth of information online and have been invaluable in validating details.

    To Stephen Lambe at Sonicbond Publishing, a friend for many years who helped push me in the nicest possible way into writing this. Thanks for the opportunity, encouragement and the help throughout the process of creating this book.

    Thanks to Catherine Smith, the archivist at Charterhouse for providing access to the school’s online archive.

    Finally, thanks to Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford, Phil Collins, Steve Hackett, Peter Gabriel, Anthony Phillips, Ray Wilson, John Mayhew, John Silver and Chris Stewart for the wonderful legacy of music you created, without which my teenage years would have been missing something special, and this book would not exist.

    Contents

    Band Members

    Introduction and a brief history

    From Genesis to Revelation (1969)

    Trespass (1970)

    Nursery Cryme (1971)

    Foxtrot (1972)

    Selling England by the Pound (1973)

    The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (1974)

    A Trick of the Tail (1976)

    Wind & Wuthering (1976)

    Spot the Pigeon EP (1977)

    …and then there were three… (1978)

    Duke (1980)

    Abacab (1981)

    3x3 EP

    Genesis (1983)

    Invisible Touch (1986)

    We Can’t Dance (1991)

    Calling All Stations (1997)

    Live Albums

    Genesis Live (1973)

    Seconds Out (1977)

    Three Sides Live (1982)

    The Way We Walk

    Live Over Europe 2007 (2007)

    Six Of The Best (1982)

    Box Set Releases

    Genesis Archive 1967-1975 (1998)

    Genesis Archive 2: 1976-1992 (2000)

    The Platinum Collection (2004)

    Genesis 1976-1982 (2007)

    Genesis 1983-1998 (2007)

    Genesis 1970-1975 (2008)

    Genesis Live 1973-2007 (2009)

    R-Kive (2014)

    Compilations

    Turn It On Again – Best of ‘81-83’ (1991)

    Turn It On Again – The Hits (1999)

    Turn It On Again – The Hits – The Tour Edition (2007)

    50 Years Ago (2017)

    The Last Domino? – The Hits (2021)

    Video Releases

    Bibliography

    Band Members

    Tony Banks (born 27 March 1950)

    Keyboards, guitars, backing vocals

    1967-Present

    Anthony George Banks was born in East Sussex, the youngest of five children. He started learning the piano at the age of eight. He met Peter Gabriel when they both started at Charterhouse, became best friends and formed their early band The Garden Wall together. Once described by manager Tony Smith as ‘the only irreplaceable member of Genesis’, he has performed on every Genesis release. His classical training has helped his playing and writing, but it is his distinctive melodic style and in particular, his piano skills for which he is most noted. Banks has released solo material under his own name and using the band name Bankstatement. He has scored movie soundtracks and written classical music but has enjoyed limited success compared with the other members of the band. Since the 2007 world tour, he has recorded two more orchestral releases, Six Pieces for Orchestra in 2012 and the excellent Five in 2018.

    Mike Rutherford (born 2 October 1950)

    Bass, guitars, backing vocals

    1967-Present

    Born Michael John Cloete Crawford Rutherford in Portsmouth, England, Mike was given his first guitar at the age of eight and appeared in his first band, The Chesters, the following year. An original member of Genesis, he has played on every Genesis album, taking over lead guitar duties when Steve Hackett left the band in 1977. Best known for his custom Rickenbacker and Shergold double neck guitars, and for his use of bass pedals, Rutherford has also had a successful solo career with his other band Mike and The Mechanics, topping the charts in 1988 with the single ‘Living Years’.

    Peter Gabriel (born 13 February 1950)

    Vocals, Flute

    1967-1975

    Born Peter Brian Gabriel in Chobham, Surrey, Genesis’ shy and enigmatic vocalist and frontman met Banks as they entered Charterhouse school in 1963, becoming best friends with the pianist. Through their early musical experiments, they formed the group The Garden Wall which would later expand into Genesis. Often seen as flamboyant – though much of this was to help deal with his extreme shyness – his unique vocal style, between-song story-telling and ‘dressing up’ in the band’s early days attracted strong media attention, helping to promote and build an audience for the group. After leaving in 1975, Gabriel built a successful solo career, his album So achieving triple platinum in the UK and quintuple platinum in the US. His love of both new technology and world musical styles are groundbreaking, while the video for ‘Sledgehammer’ has been shown more than any other on rock video station MTV. He was asked to write the music for the show OVO which was performed multiple times per day in the centre of the Millennium Dome in London throughout the year 2000. Like Phil Collins, he has received a string of awards and accolades during his career, including three Brit awards, six Grammys, thirteen MTV awards and the Ivor Novello award for Lifetime Achievement. Having been inducted into the Rock and Roll hall of fame with Genesis in 2010, he was also inducted for his solo work in 2014. An active and outspoken human rights champion, he has worked closely with Amnesty International, helped set up organisations such as WITNESS and ‘The Elders’ and is described as one of Rock’s most political musicians by AllMusic. His ‘Real World’ studios in Box, Wiltshire has become something of a mecca for musicians and fans, used by artists of all genres, as diverse as Tom Jones, Robert Plant, Amy Winehouse and Kanye West.

    Anthony Phillips (born 23 December 1951)

    Guitars

    1967-1970

    Born Anthony Edwin Phillips in Roehampton, London, he was the youngest, but most experienced and accomplished of the early Genesis members, writing his first song at age thirteen on his newly acquired Fender Stratocaster. He first met Rutherford, then later Gabriel and Banks, while at Charterhouse school. His contribution to the early band was considerable, and his influence on the twelve-string guitar style of the band was felt for many years after his departure. Philips featured on From Genesis To Revelation and Trespass and played his last gig with Genesis at Haywards Heath in Sussex on 18 July 1970. After leaving the band, it would be seven years before he would release his first solo album The Geese And The Ghost. Phillips has played keyboards and guitar on several projects, including early demos for Peter Gabriel, Rutherford’s 1980 solo project Smallcreep’s Day and Camel’s 1982 release The Single Factor. Since 1977 he has been the most prolific of any member of Genesis, releasing 33 fully-fledged albums and twelve collections of pieces.

    Phil Collins (born 30 January 1951)

    Drums, Vocals

    August 1970 – March 1996, 2007

    Philip David Charles Collins was born in London and started playing the drums from the age of five, going to drama school at fourteen. On joining Genesis, he immediately lifted and tightened the sound, forging a solid rhythmic backbone with Rutherford. His skills as an arranger were used regularly to absorb the ideas of others and build on them. His reluctant decision to sing on A Trick of the Tail after Gabriel’s departure would also prove to be a catalyst for a very successful solo career. As a solo artist, he generated even more hits than he did with Genesis, with seven US number one singles and six UK number one albums. Solo and as a part of Genesis, he has also sold over 150 million albums making him one of only three musicians who has sold over 100 million records as a band and as a solo artist, the others being Michael Jackson and Paul McCartney. Given how the purchasing patterns of music have changed, it is unlikely anyone else will achieve this feat. During the 1980s, he had more US top 40 hits than any other artist. The list of credits and awards are long; indeed, it is sometimes hard to believe they were all achieved by one person. He has won eight Grammy awards, six Brits, two Golden Globes, an Oscar, and six Ivor Novello’s. A Phil Collins ‘star’ was added on the Hollywood Walk of fame in 1999, and he was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2003, the Rock and Roll hall of fame with Genesis in 2010, the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame in 2012 and the Classic Drummer Hall of Fame in 2013. Collins undertook his Not Dead Yet world tour of his solo material in 2018-2019 with his son Nicholas on drums. At the time of writing, he is no longer able to play the drums for any length of time, and after back surgery, must walk with a stick due to the loss of feeling in one foot.

    Steve Hackett (born 12 February 1950)

    Guitars

    January 1971 – October 1977

    Born Steven Richard Hackett in Pimlico, London, Steve didn’t start playing the guitar until he was twelve years old. Though he has never had any formal tuition, his unique style of playing, particularly his use of the volume pedal, is a trademark of early Genesis and would continue to influence the sound of the band after his departure. Of all the members of the band except Phillips, Hackett has been the most prolific, releasing 25 studio albums, including At The Edge Of Light in 2019. In 1996 he released Genesis Revisited, a set of reworkings of classic Genesis songs, and added another collection in 2012. Following these two albums, he has toured extensively playing Genesis-orientated sets. 2019 saw him touring North America and Europe playing all of Selling England by the Pound and celebrating 40 years since the release of his 1979 solo album Spectral Mornings.

    Ray Wilson (born 8 September 1968)

    Vocals

    1996-1998

    Raymond Wilson from Dumfries, Scotland was lead singer with Stiltskin, who’s single ‘Inside’ reached number one in the UK charts in 1994. Wilson took over vocal duties from Collins in 1996 and recorded one album with the band, Calling All Stations. Since the band went on indefinite hiatus, Wilson has carried on with his solo career, releasing six studio and nine live albums. He has recorded and appeared live with Hackett performing Genesis material.

    John Silver (born 1950)

    Drums

    1968 – August 1969

    Jonathan Silver played on From Genesis To Revelation apart from ‘Silent Sun’, then left shortly after the release to study leisure management at Cornell University in the US.

    John Mayhew (born 27 March 1947, died 26 March 2009)

    Drums

    August 1969 – August 1970

    Having played on Trespass, little is known of Mayhew’s whereabouts until 2006 when he turned up at a Genesis convention. He died in Glasgow in 2009, where he was working as a carpenter for a manufacturer of furniture.

    Chris Stewart (born 1950)

    Drums

    1967-1968

    Stewart joined Gabriel and Banks in The Garden Wall in 1967. He played on the first two singles ‘Silent Sun’ and ‘Winter’s Tale’ and is credited on From Genesis To Revelation for ‘Silent Sun’. Having left the band at the request of Jonathan King, he later moved to Spain to be a sheep shearer on a farm. Stewart is also a successful writer, publishing a trilogy of books about his exploits. Driving Over Lemons: An Optimist in Andalucia, the first book, sold over one million copies and has been translated into nine languages.

    Mick Barnard

    Guitar

    October 1970 – January 1971

    Barnard joined Genesis several months after Philips left, and played with the band for only three months before Hackett joined. During that time he played 30 gigs with the band and helped develop the guitar parts for the Nursery Cryme album. He went on to have a successful career in Audio Engineering, founding the Bel Digital Audio company.

    Introduction and a brief history

    The first Genesis album From Genesis to Revelation was released on 7 March 1969. During this time the band have undergone several changes in personnel and musical direction and have released fifteen studio and six live albums. They have achieved album sales of more than 150 million, played one of the world’s largest gigs in front of over half a million fans at the Circus Maximus in Rome in 2007 and were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2010. There is no doubt that albums such as The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, Foxtrot and Selling England By The Pound played a huge part in helping to define progressive rock and are considered classics of the genre. The band are even more widely recognised for the later period of their career as a hugely successful rock and pop band with a string of top ten hits on both sides of the Atlantic, including five number one albums in a row in the UK. While the band enjoyed some limited earlier success with ‘Your Own Special Way’ and ‘Follow You Follow Me’, in the 1970s, it was singles like ‘I Can’t Dance’, ‘Land Of Confusion’ and the US number one ‘Invisible Touch’, that made the band a household name throughout the world.

    The original four members of Genesis met while they were at Charterhouse, a boys-only boarding school near Godalming, Surrey, England where Lord Baden-Powell, the founder of the scout movement, had attended almost 100 years earlier. Peter Gabriel and Tony Banks were already good friends, having met when they entered the school in 1963. As a duo, they played the pop music hits of the time, including songs by the Beatles and soul singers like Otis Redding, who was a favourite of Gabriel. With Banks on Piano and Gabriel on vocals and flute, they formed a band, calling themselves The Garden Wall. Both were friends with Anthony Phillips who was playing in a band called ‘Anon’ with Michael Rutherford. The Garden Wall played their first gig at Charterhouse one afternoon in July 1966 at an event organised by Richard MacPhail, then the singer with Anon. MacPhail would later take up a role as a roadie, sound engineer and tour manager for Genesis and, later, with Peter Gabriel. That particular show had The Garden Wall playing second, with The Anon headlining, but having no drummer other than Gabriel, who couldn’t sing and play at the same time, The Garden Wall brought in Chris Stewart on drums and convinced Rivers Job and Phillips from Anon to join them on bass and guitar respectively.

    To fully understand the significance of this gig, we need to recognise that single-sex boarding schools were no easy rich boys’ playground, and like many of the public schools in England, Charterhouse created a strict environment intended to focus minds on learning and personal development in traditional directions. The atmosphere was, by design, oppressive with little flexibility or tolerance for anything that deviated from the curriculum or could in the slightest way appear to discredit the school. Modern music was thus considered pretty much the work of the devil, with pop stars such as Mick Jagger viewed as if they were the antichrist. Rutherford was banned from golf to focus more on team sports and later prevented from playing the guitar as it was seen as ‘the instrument of the revolution’, though he firmly believes it just made him more determined to play. It was, therefore, with some trepidation that music master Geoffrey Ford agreed to allow the concert to take place at the school. It was arranged for the last afternoon of the term, leaving the whole of the long summer holiday period to diffuse any dissent or disruptive behaviour it might create. A further indication of the sensitivity of such an event was that Ford had specified that no announcements should be made from the stage. During Anon’s set, MacPhail spoke to fill in during a technical issue, and Ford stopped the gig after their next song, saying that MacPhail had ‘defied him’. The school magazine, The Carthusian, is a quarterly publication, covering every sporting encounter, school leaver and classical concert at the school, but fails to mention the event. However, one article does appear in the November 1966 edition, titled ‘Why Not Pop’ and covers the bands that had formed at the school, including Anon, The Garden Wall, The Scarlet and Black and The Climax, which also featured Rutherford on rhythm guitar.

    Banks and Gabriel were starting to write some of their own songs when they heard that Phillips and Rutherford were looking to make a tape. Banks offered to help if his band could record a song too. During the Easter holidays of 1967, the four recorded one song from Banks and Gabriel and five songs from Phillips and Rutherford. Two tracks from that tape would feature on the first album in different forms. ‘She Is Beautiful’ by Gabriel and Banks would receive new lyrics and be renamed ‘The Serpent’, and the instrumental ‘Patricia’ from Phillips and Rutherford would have lyrics added and become ‘In Hiding’. A friend of the band passed a copy of the tape to Jonathan King with a note saying, ‘these are Charterhouse boys, have a listen’. King, who had a hit single in 1965 with his own composition, ‘Everyone’s Gone To The Moon’, reaching four in the UK charts and seventeen in the USA was an old boy of Charterhouse and was visiting for a former pupil’s event. King was impressed enough, particularly by Gabriel’s interesting voice, to fund a series of recording sessions for the band producing their first single, ‘Silent Sun’, which was released on 22 February 1968 on the Decca label. It was just before the release of the single that King gave the

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