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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 11 2010 at 07:37
Good work. Interesting note about Harold the Barrel and whether he actually jumps at the end of the song. I've always assumed from the long note at the end that he does literally "take a running jump" but this is not made clear.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 11 2010 at 10:28
Great work. plenty of interesting info without becoming dull or repetitive. I like reading about bands and have read quite a bit about Genesis. You summed it up all very nicely for someone like me with a short attention span.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 11 2010 at 15:08
Great blog! Looking forward for more
"Tis your birth and faith that wrong you...not I."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 12 2010 at 02:02
I've been enjoying all your work so far, Scott!
I also thought your brief presentation on psych was interesting, but you didn't mention many important bands: Quicksilver Messenger Service, Kaleidoscope, and of course the Velvet Underground, which in my opinion gave a bit of a hint to prog and Genesis.

Cheers!Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 12 2010 at 03:45
Very good read, so much depth to it. I wanted to make a Genesis blog called "Gourney with Genesis." LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2010 at 10:35

Great job! I have a question about Genesis non-album tracks such as non-album single B-sides. Maybe you plan to get to that? I know that the new remasters-box sets all included an extra disc of non-album material and that there are two Archival box sets that contain some non-album material. However, I fear that neither of these sources are exhaustive? I know of at least some B-sides that are not on any album and also not featured in any of the box sets or compilations, some of which I have never heard. I would be very interested to see a complete list of non-album tracks and also the best way to get hold of these songs on CD or download.

Anyone? Thanks
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2010 at 11:37
Thanks everybody for encouragement. will get onto next album soon on weekend. Lk fwd to it. Learning heaps too.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2010 at 12:52
Super stuff about one of my very favorite bands Clap
 
 
"WAAAAAAOOOOOUGH!    WAAAAAAAUUUUGGHHHH!!   WAAAAAOOOO!!!"

-The Great Gig in the Sky
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 24 2010 at 12:39
You forgot to put a rating in your Nursery Cryme review and in the introductory "brief story of Genesis" you made a mistake and said that Tony Banks was the bassist and Mike Rutherford was the keyboardist.

Just thought I would point that out. Other than that, I have to say, I am speechless. Your effort and devotion is amazing! I am a Genesis aficionado myself and I spent more time than what is considered to be healthy researching stuff about this band and I can't believe I am learning so much from this (and I haven't even finished!).

Your daughter began listening to Prog just now? You must be a proud father! How old is she?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2010 at 05:18
Originally posted by Snail Snail wrote:

You forgot to put a rating in your Nursery Cryme review and in the introductory "brief story of Genesis" you made a mistake and said that Tony Banks was the bassist and Mike Rutherford was the keyboardist.

Just thought I would point that out. Other than that, I have to say, I am speechless. Your effort and devotion is amazing! I am a Genesis aficionado myself and I spent more time than what is considered to be healthy researching stuff about this band and I can't believe I am learning so much from this (and I haven't even finished!).

Your daughter began listening to Prog just now? You must be a proud father! How old is she?
Ah yes fixed those errors. Thanks for that. My daughter is 12 and likes Genesis and Camel music at the moment. keep letting me know if there are errors as its a massive task and typos are bound to creep in. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2010 at 05:49
1972 Genesis do the Foxtrot and Supper's Ready 
 
 
 

 
 
A single was released before the next album.
 
 
Happy The Man
Seven Stones

UK:

Released May 1972

 
 
 
The alternative cover for the single featured a concert shot.
 
 
 
 
 
Seven Stones was from "Nursery Cryme" and the A side single was the new track. The single did not do well and the band returned to the studio to work on the next album, "Foxtrot".
 
 
Genesis Foxtrot album cover
 
 
In Italy "Foxtrot" reached position #1 in 1972. In the UK it was released in October 1972 and entered the UK Charts on 14-Oct-1972 to peak at #12 and spent 7 weeks in the charts.

 

The album was the biggest success for the band worldwide and features some of their best material. Both "Watcher of the Skies" and "Supper's Ready" are highly revered by prog fans today and at the time were ground breaking virtuoso pieces that developed into live favourites. The epic is one of the greatest prog songs in history and often sits at the top of fans best song lists. It is highly influential and there are even tribute Genesis bands named after it.

A tribute band dedicates it's live show to the entire album with members even dressing up as Gabriel. The band is ReGenesis:
 
 
 
 
 
 
The artwork for the album, along with “Trespass” and “Nursery Cryme” is the visionary genius of Paul Whitehead. His imagery has become synonymous with Genesis and indeed classic prog. The female in the red dress with a fox's head developed into one of Gabriel's earliest stage costumes.
 
 
 
 
 
 
The artwork features a number of fish dancing around the ‘foxy lady’ who is balancing on a slate of ice. The ice is bound to evaporate in the sun and the fox will either drown or be at the mercy of the hounds of the foxhunters. In the distance is the croquet lawn and players from the "Nursery Cryme" artwork. A submarine is lurking in the waters and a distinct English flavour in the costuming is prevalent.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Side one

1.

"Watcher of the Skies" 7:23

2.

"Time Table"  4:45

3.

"Get 'em out by Friday" 8:36  

4.

"Can-Utility and the Coastliners" 5:44  

Side two

5.

"Horizons" 1:41

6.

"Supper's Ready" 22:58

I. "Lover's Leap"

II. "The Guaranteed Eternal Sanctuary Man"

III. "Ikhnaton and Itsacon and Their Band of Merry Men"

IV. "How Dare I Be So Beautiful?"

V. "Willow Farm"

VI. "Apocalypse in 9/8 (Co-Starring the Delicious Talents of Gabble Ratchet)"

VII. "As Sure As Eggs Is Eggs (Aching Men's Feet)"  

 

 

 
 
 
 

 
 
 

The tracks on the album are book-ended by "Watcher of the Skies" and features a side long epic the 23-minute “Supper’s Ready”. Rutherford uses primarily bass pedals, and Banks' uses mellotron with his introduction to "Watcher of the Skies" known as one of the best examples of the instrument.

 
 
The songs were still full of imagery of the fanciful and whimsical. "Watcher of the Skies" focuses on alien invasion.
 
 
Creatures shaped this planet's soil,
Now their reign has come to an end,
Has life again destroyed life,
Do they play elsewhere, or do the know
more than their childhood games ?
Maybe the lizard's shed it's tail,
This is the end of man's union with Earth.
 
 
"Time Table" has a medieval flavour and may be based on the Round Table of King Arthur.
 
 
A carved oak table,
Tells a tale
Of times when Kings and queens sipped wine from goblets gold,
And the brave would lead their ladies from out the room
to arbours cool.
A time of valour, and legends born
A time when honour meant much more to a man than life
And the days knew only strife to tell right from wrong
Through lance and sword.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
"Get 'em out By Friday" features a host of characters and stereotypes that Gabriel mocks in various voices and tells of characters who are evicted for being too short; a mockery of prejudice.
 
 
After all this time they ask us to leave,
And I told them we could pay double the rent.
I don't know why it seemed so funny,
Seeing as how they'd take more money.
The winkler called again, he came here this morning,
With four hundred pounds, and a photograph of the place he has found.
A block of flats with central heating.
I think we're going to find it hard 
 
 
 
"Can-Utility and the Coastliners" is loosely based on the legend of King Canute who commanded the seas to retreat to taunt the smooth talk of his followers.
 
 
They told of one who tired of all singing,
Praise him, praise him.
We heed not flatters he cried,
By our command, waters retreat,
Show my power, halt at my feet,
But the cause was lost,
Now cold wings blow.
 
 
"Horizons" is a baroque passage of music based on the classical music of Bach’s Prelude of the first Cello Suite.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Then there is the epic that is not just about Supper prepared on a table, but rather features lyrical allegories to the holocaust and the tribulation told in the Bible’s book of Revelation; another allusion to Biblical themes as in previous albums.  "Supper's Ready" is a mixture of ideas and belief systems, with an infamous section called "Willow's Farm".
 
If you go down to Willow Farm,
to look for butterflies, flutterbyes, gutterflies
Open your eyes, it's full of surprise, everyone lies,
like the focks on the rocks,
and the musical box.
Oh, there's Mum & Dad, and good and bad,
and everyone's happy to be here.

There's Winston Churchill dressed in drag,
he used to be a British flag, plastic bag, what a drag.
The frog was a prince, the prince was a brick, the brick
was an egg, and the egg was a bird
Hadn't you heard?
Yes, we're happy as fish, and gorgeous as geese,
and wonderfully clean in the morning.
 
The Japanese pressing for the album.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The album became a bonafide masterpiece over the years and many fans consider it to be their best album even going so far as to claim it is the greatest album of 1972.
 
The original vinyl pressing.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

My Review:

Genesis Foxtrot album cover 

***** Hearing is believing... "Foxtrot" is an immortal treasure to unearth in the goldmine of progressive rock

Lightning in a Bottle or just a Light Bottle? 'Foxtrot' is a much hyped up Gabriel-era Genesis album unlike any other you will hear, as Gabriel sings, "taking risks oh so bold". It has been revered here in the PA receiving rave reviews with collaborator reviewers gushing over it stating: "one of the cornerstones of progressive rock music"; "obligated for every music lover"; "one of the most consistent albums the band ever produced, and will always have a special place in my heart"; "arguably the best album of all time in my mind"; "THE example of classic prog rock"; "pure genius"; "prog at its best"; "a must have"; a perfectly crafted album, with no fillers"; "without a doubt a masterpiece of symphonic prog"; "essential"; "of incontrovertible importance"; "one seriously mandatory album"; "one of the great musical works of the 20th century"; "it sits on the very top of Prog Mountain"; "one of the greatest albums I have ever heard"; "exciting, daring and bold and a deserved PA top 10 album". Whew, where do you go from there?

What is "Foxtrot"? A Genesis album that exploded on impact and all other prog bands were hit by the shrapnel. It features the essential classics of the Gabriel era 'Supper's Ready', 'Watcher of the Skies', 'Can-Utility and the Coastliners' and 'Get 'Em Out By Friday'. I heard these live on "Genesis Live" and "Seconds Out" before the studio versions and was pleasantly surprised at how they sounded on "Foxtrot", that I only got hold of in 2010. I feel like a gatecrasher to the party, but better late than never. I had heard the epic song 'Supper's Ready' from "The Platinum Collection", so I wasn't in a hurry to get "Foxtrot", but there is more to this than one mammoth epic. Much more.

The front cover is one of the definitive icons of prog; a fox in a red dress balancing on the water as a troop of foxhunters gallop onto the beach. The plaintive fox is safe in isolation on her floating iceberg and the dolphins celebrate as they skim the waves in joyful, triumphant sagacity. The beach is peaceful masking the terror of impending capture as the iceberg melts, it is inevitable, the fox will have to swim to shore and the snarling dogs prepare to devour their prey. The mood is set, on goes the music and it is headphone bliss from point A to B. It is simply galvanised to submerge yourself in.

 
 
 
OK, let's get it out of the way; this IS a masterpiece. Any way you slice it, there is no denying the incredible influence of this album and its musicianship and structure is as good as Genesis gets. The quintessential treasure of 'Supper's Ready', all 23 minutes of it, are here in all its prog glory and definitely the ultimate Genesis song, capturing the Gabriel era beautifully. It is worth getting hold of for this track alone; an astonishing epic showcasing the early brilliant, influential prog era. But the other songs are incredible too. What can I add to the hundreds of reviews here that will enhance the album's reputation? Well, no one has gone into painful details on the lyrics so perhaps it is time to do that. Allow me to elucidate and perhaps expose the greatness of this album by lyrical dissection. Let's look at these tracks in detail. 'Watcher of the Skies' has a languid, lengthy mellotron intro by Banks. Then there is an intricate time sig dominated by a driving divine bassline from Rutherford. The sharp sporadic drum beat is a portent of the chaos to come.


The lyrics are typical of Gabriel, snappy and cliché driven nonsense that fits perfectly the estranged rhythms of Hackett and Collins. The absurdist lyrics are alienating but sincerely dark and foreboding: "Creatures shaped this planet's soil, Now their reign has come to an end, has life again destroyed life, Do they play elsewhere, or do they know more than their childhood games? Maybe the lizard's shed its tail, This is the end of man's union with Earth." Questions, questions, questions... no answers but a myriad of unbridled purpose driven ruminations about life and death. The melody juxtaposes a bright tune to this darkness, and it works exceptionally well. The tale of alien invasion is perfect for the satirical nature of the music.

You can really feel the tension in the way Gabriel delivers; he must be one of the legends of prog for his contribution. Banks flies off the deep end with the keyboards and the rhythm is driving in 6/4 rhythm, and bombastic sounds dominate. Listen to it on "Genesis Live" for a real experience in instrumental genius. The mellotron is wonderfully played and adds to the surreal fantasy soundscape. The dynamics are a collision of guitar and drums with a multi layered keyboard wave of sound.

'Timetable' features Banks on nursery rhyme (or is that Cryme?) piano melodies and then Gabriel sings paradoxical sweet, nasty lyrics told from the point of view of a carved oak table the tale of ancient kings and queens: "Why, why can we never be sure till we die, Or have killed for an answer, Why, why, do we suffer each race to believe, That no race has been grander, It seems because through time and space, Though names may change each face retains the mark it wore." More unanswerable questions about time and space, or is it just an anti-war theme? It is thematic certainly and has a medieval feel to match the opening lyrics. It is not the best song on the album and a bit forgettable, but there is enough here to treat this as a spirited transition point to the masterpieces to follow.


 
 
'Get 'em out by Friday' is a masterful song that is hailed as one of the best from this lineup. The intro is infectious with guitar and keys competing to take control. There are organ staccato chords banging along with polyrhythmic metronome swinging bass and guitar shapes. Peter Gabriel's vocal performance is strained and a bit weak on this but he is a theatrical performer and this was the early period, and he would develop his acting voice to perfection by the time "Selling England By The Pound" or "The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway" reared its head. There are moments of untainted beauty including floating flute solos and Hackett's soaring guitar. Gabriel has multiple progressive disorder in his multi personality performance; Mr. Pebble (the self important owner of Styx Enterprises), Mr. Hall, the entrepreneur, and Mrs. Barrow (the lady who desires to pay double the rent in order to remain in her abode). He takes on each persona with admirable aplomb: there is the section"18/9/2012 TV FLASH ON ALL DIAL-A-PROGRAM SERVICES: This is an announcement from Genetic Control: "It is my sad duty to inform you of a 4ft. restriction on humanoid height." and this is promptly followed by the extract from a conversation of JOE ORDINARY IN LOCAL PUBORAMA: "I hear the directors of Genetic Control have been buying all the properties that have recently been sold, taking risks oh so bold. It's said now that people will be shorter in height, they can fit twice as many in the same building site... in the interest of humanity they've been told they must go-go-go-go." After this the flute chimes in beautifully before another chaotic passage of music breaks it apart in fractured rhythms. The voice of SIR JOHN DE PEBBLE OF UNITED BLACKSPRINGS INTERNATIONAL is heard "I think I've fixed a new deal, A dozen properties - we'll buy at five and sell at thirty four, Some are still inhabited...." Following this, a memo from SATIN PETER OF ROCK DEVELOPMENTS LTD. Is recitated: "With land in your hand you'll be happy on earth, Then invest in the Church for your heaven.. The religious laced theme is one of the aristocratic rich fat suits having control over the little people, who are literally the short people unfairly evicted due to their size; a biting satire on the upperclass versus the working class injustice; a stab at the idealism of working class social pressures. Or is it just a vivacious lark?
 
 
 
'Can-Utility and the Coastliners' continues the trend with Hackett's tremendous guitar and a rhythmic drum metrical pattern from Collins. The lyrics are rather harsh and remarkably ominous: "For from the north overcast ranks advance, fear of the storm accusing with rage and scorn." The mellotron rises to a crescendo with fortissimo basslines. The time sig changes are massive, completely driving the track headlong into different directions, in almost unrecognisable passages, like a different song. A very imposing sound powers the song along and it is a bonafide Genesis classic. The time shifts are so varied and complex it is as good as those 23 minute epics you hear that take up an entire side of vinyl in the glorious 70s. Genesis prove they can do as well in 6 minutes. It is vibrant and innovative; quintessential prog. Of course side two will prove their epics are awesome too.

'Horizons' is a quaint short little guitar instrumental from the incomparable Hackett, that is dreamlike and easy on the ears, and really prepares us for the onslaught of 'Supper's Ready'. He loves to play this in concert as you will see if you YouTube this, it is a nice guitar oriented piece that any guitarist would love to play.

 
 
'Supper's Ready': THE best Genesis song ever? Why not when you have a twenty three minute epic from Genesis with the legendary effervescent Peter Gabriel at his sinister best. It is quintessential to the band and indeed is a prime example of what prog is.


I would say from my prog experience that there are 7 wonders of the prog world in the way of songs: VDGG's 'Plague of Lighthouse Keepers', Yes' 'Close To The Edge', ELP's 'Karn Evil 9', King Crimson's '2ist Century Schizoid Man', Pink Floyd's 'Shine On', Rush's '2112', and Genesis' 'Supper's Ready'.

The seven wonders of the prog world in the way of albums are similar as far as I am concerned: VDGG's "Pawn Hearts", Yes' "Close To The Edge", ELP's "Brain Salad Surgery", King Crimson's "In The Court of The Crimson King", Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of The Moon", Jethro Tull's "Thick As A Brick", and Genesis' "Foxtrot".

What makes 'Supper's Ready' such a masterpiece juggernaut? There are a number of factors to take into consideration. First and foremost is the music. A tapestry of interludes, signifiers, climaxes, crescendos and majestic outros. It moves in so many directions and shifts time signatures that it is hard to keep up. There are many styles of music integrated within the structure. It is not easy to integrate songs together into one huge epic but this is a perfect example of when it works as a multi movement suite; a magnum opus of music. Other perfect examples are Caravan's 'Nine Feet Underground' and as mentioned Van der Graaf Generator's 'Plague Of Lighthouse Keepers' and of course Yes' 'Close To The Edge'. These epics are also seamless multi-movement suites where a number of songs at different tempos and styles are integrated into one huge epic, and if you know anything about prog you should know that these are the best examples of the genre. It allows the band to utilise all their talents into one package and they do this in spades in an impulsive feat of dextrous impetuosity. It is a blitzkrieg of virtuoso instrumental intensity.

Secondly, the performance of Peter Gabriel as the actor/ storyteller is incredible. His vocals are extraordinary and hammered the nail in the coffin as the master frontman of prog rock. I saw Genesis do this live in an ancient 70s filmclip kicking around YouTube in three parts and Gabriel metamorphoses into various costumes and masks, a fox, a flower?, an impish child clown, a magician, an alien Pied Piper, a Pythagoras pyramid, to tell this epic tale of the apocalypse, or whatever it is. Which brings us to the third reason why this is a masterpiece.

The lyrics. They are strange, dark, mystifying and downright intelligently written. Once heard, the lyrics have an uncanny ability to hide in the dark shadowy corners of the subconscious where your mind makes irrational connections to the real. The song begins with the impetuous weird lyrics of 'i. Lover's Leap'. Is it about suicide? Or is it about lost love? Or something more sinster? Or merely portentous twaddle? "Walking across the sitting-room, I turn the television off. Sitting beside you, I look into your eyes. As the sound of motor cars fades in the night time, I swear I saw your face change, it didn't seem quite right." It is definitely a love song, albeit a jaded romance, something is wrong and we sense it in the almost cynical, farcical manner Gabriel spits out the words. The song actually puts the reader off the scent of what is about to unfold. The Red Herring of romantic interludes "Hey my baby, don't you know our love is true" is unsettling because the song will soon detonate into some unnerving passages of music. The lyrics signify the darkness coming over the mocking sunshine music, listen to the alliteration on "Six saintly shrouded men move across the lawn slowly. The seventh walks in front with a cross held high in hand... And it's hey babe your supper's waiting for you..." hence the name of the song is mentioned, which is still a mystery to me. What is the supper, who prepared it, and who is waiting for it? We may never know, I don't think Gabriel even knew. And I don't think he cared as long as he had a chance to stalk an unprepared audience. The enigmatic lyrics are part of the progressive off kilter essence of the song. It segues seamlessly into the very bizarre 'ii. The Guaranteed Eternal Sanctuary Man'.

Here the harvest is about to begin, a biblical term for revival but what is its meaning here with contemptuous lyrics such as, "He's a supersonic scientist, He's the guaranteed eternal sanctuary man. Look, look into my mouth he cries, And all the children lost down many paths, I bet my life, you'll walk inside, Hand in hand, Gland in gland, With a spoonful of miracle, He's the guaranteed sanctuary man."

The sexualised mockery continues and transfixes, and it is daunting to hear the lyrics that will years later become the quintessence of a Queen classic, "We will rock you, rock you little snake." 'iii. Ikhnaton and Itsacon and Their Band of Merry Men' is a build up of scornful ideas that make less sense than the previous material. We hear the fabricated sound of children's voices that are chanting something rather bizarre but the music really goes pitch dark as a staccato chord clangs loud. A soft flute and guitar trade off each other as a keyboard is stroked delicately. The derisive lyrics become alienating and menacingly cold, "Killing foe for peace...bang, bang, bang. Bang, bang bang... And they're giving me a wonderful potion, 'Cos I cannot contain my emotion. And even though, I'm feeling good, Something tells me, I'd better activate my prayer capsule." So the religious overtones from the debut album, "From Genesis to Revelation", are being revisited, in fact the theme is becoming blatant at this point; "Today's a day to celebrate, the foe have met their fate. The order for rejoicing and dancing has come from warlord." It is apparent that an apocalyptic battle is about to ensue and this may be the end times as in the apocalypse in the Bible's book of Revelation, though it is unclear with the lyrics masked behind poetic metaphors, pseudonyms and psychedelic symbolism.

'iv. How Dare I Be So Beautiful?' is interesting lyrically speaking, about "Wandering in the chaos the battle has left, We climb up the mountain of human flesh, To a plateau of green grass, and green trees full of life." Do we really understand the meaning here and to be honest can we ever comprehend where this song is going? The answer is a resounding 'no', though many have attempted to interpret this and it perhaps rests on personal explanation rather than straightforward meaning explained. "We watch in reverence, as Narcissus is turned to a flower. A flower?" questions Gabriel. Perhaps we are seeing here a transformation or metamorphosis of an evil being, Narcissus the Greek mythological creature, changed into a pure being and Gabriel gets a chance to don his flower head gear and, with barefaced arrogance, prance around the stage.

 
 
During the concert performance of 'v. Willow Farm' Gabriel is a figure in black with flower head stalking the stage as sinister as he can get, leering and sneering with disdain. He marches in time to the stabs of music; 1, 2, 3, 4... The menacing figure of Gabriel is confronting and the lyrics are absolutely chilling, "If you go down to Willow Farm, to look for butterflies, flutterbies, gutterflies, Open your eyes, it's full of surprise, everyone lies, like the fox on the rocks, and the musical box." It's interesting that he mentions songs of the band to come such as 'Musical Box' and a close reference to "Foxtrot". Winston Churchill gets a mention and a frog that was a prince, that became a brick, then the brick became an egg, and the egg was a bird. It is like the world of Dr Seuss; perhaps the writers read "Fox In Socks" prior it penning this. Gabriel adopts a supercilious attitude as he muses that we are all as "happy as fish, and gorgeous as geese". It's fiendishly childish and pretentious and even precocious but undeniably ferocious in its original approach. Gabriel sounds pompously English as he babbles gobbledygook about the father in the office and the mother in her domestic role, "Dad diddley office, Dad diddley office.... Dad to dam to to dum to mum, Mum diddley washing, Mum diddley washing... Ooee-ooee-ooee-oowaa" , you get the point. The song itself is one of the most memorable pieces of the epic. But nothing comes close to the wonderful next section.
 
'vi. Apocalypse in 9/8 (featuring the delicious talents of Gabble Ratchet)' is nothing short of brilliant. The amazing time signature in 9/8 is superb with mind bending guitar and keyboards, the rhythmic bass and drums are outstanding. The audacious lyrics are as dark as Genesis gets, "With the guards of Magog, swarming around, The Pied Piper takes his children underground. The Dragon's coming out of the sea, with the shimmering silver head of wisdom looking at me. He brings down the fire from the skies, You can tell he's doing well, by the look in human eyes." There are definite references to Revelation here, shrouded in typical symbolism but nevertheless undisputable, especially the reference to "666 is no longer alone..." and "the seven trumpets blowing sweet rock and roll". A parody of Revelation in a sense, something that many heavy metal bands adopted during the great late 80s revival of metal. So as Gabriel bellows and croons with sledgehammer delivery lyrics such as "Pythagoras with the looking-glass, reflecting the full moon, In blood" , the music begins to settle down into another section and in fact bookends the opening "Hello baby" lyrics and melody, and another familiar melody is heard, and we may suspect that the song is going to end, but it is a false ending; there is one part left of this colossal beast.

'vii. As Sure as Eggs is Eggs (Aching Men's Feet)' is the disorientating finale and what a finale! The amazing ending is replenished with huge fortissimo orchestral sections, mellotron style, and Gabriel's ruthless voice soars into the stratosphere. "There's an angel standing in the sun, and he's crying with a loud voice, "This is the supper of the mighty one", Lord Of Lords, King of Kings, Has returned to lead his children home, To take them to the new Jerusalem." It sounds like a Neal Morse song here. So we end with a reference to the New Heaven and New Earth in the book of Revelation. The supper is not the last supper of Jesus, it is not an ordinary supper, it is the feast of triumph when the Lord returns to take his children home in the rapture an then as the earth burns to a cinder, God will create his New Jerusalem. Well, that's my interpretation; you will have your own that will be equally as valid. ELP returns to this theme of Jerusalem, it seems the Biblical theme was one of prog bands favourites. It is the unmitigated majesty of the music and the triumphant and glorious crescendos that lift the spirit on this; it ends on a high note and it ends on a memorable lyric, this is why it is a gargantuan masterpiece. Stop reading now and put this tour de force on.

And so at the end of this 3,611 word review, I can only conclude with 9 bold words that can be quoted; "Foxtrot" is the must have album of the century.

 

 

 



Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - March 13 2014 at 17:41
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2010 at 08:30

1973 Genesis are captured live

 

The success of “Foxtrot” catapulted Genesis to stardom and soon they were filling concert halls as they had never done before. The Foxtrot Tour took place and featured Gabriel in all his incarnations.  

 

The many incarnations of Gabriel
 
Foxy Lady
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Slipperman
 
 
 "If you go down to Willow's Farm..."
 
 
 
"A flower?"
 
 
 
 
The Pythagoras Theory - Magog
 
 
 
 
 
 
A live album was released to coincide with the tour called "Genesis Live".

 

In the UK it was released in August 1973 and entered the UK charts on 11-Aug-1973 peaking at position #9 spending 10 weeks in the charts. In the US it entered on 18-May-1974 to reach #105 in June 1974, spending 14 weeks in the charts.  

 
 
 
The band were forced to release an album by Charisma Labels but had no new material so Genesis Live” was proposed to be a budget-priced title simply to ‘count time down’ till the next album. The irony is that the album has become a milestone in live albums as a prime example of the incredible musicianship a live Genesis concert showcases and indeed is the only genuine Gabriel live performance recorded on vinyl.
 
 
 
 

The album was recorded in Leicester England at De Montfort Hall on February 25, 1973. There was one exception being  (1973-02-25) "Return of the Giant Hogweed" that had been a recording of part of a concert in Manchester at the Free Trade Hall.

A 23-minute version of “Supper’s Ready” was recorded in Leicester but left off the album as it was too long, and it was deemed a risk to release a double live album at the time.

The live material was taken from the sydicated radio show, 'The King Biscuit Flower Hour Show'. It remains a fan favourite and essential to the Genesis catalogue. 

 
Magazine photo spread.
 
 
 
Rare 1973 Tour Programme cover
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Back cover of album

 
 

Side one

  1. "Watcher of the Skies" – 8:34
  2. "Get 'Em Out by Friday" – 9:14
  3. "The Return of the Giant Hogweed" – 8:14

Side two

  1. "The Musical Box" – 10:56
  2. "The Knife"  – 9:47
 
 
Italian reissue Pressing
 
 
 
 
Alternative cover Italian Release
 

 
 
 
Italian Pressing
 
 
 
 
My Review
 
 

**** An intense dynamic performance captured on one excellent album

The year was 1973 and Genesis was required to produce an album with Charisma Labels. The problem was there was no new material so some bright spark came up with the idea of releasing a live album. It was designed to count down time until the subsequent release of the next studio album. Ironically the album would become a masterful interpretation of a live concert experience in the 70s and indeed the only legitimate vinyl release of Gabriel live with Genesis. In this regards the album is an important Genesis release, and essential at the time to contribute to the growing success of the group. The set list represented the recent "Foxtrot" as well as material from "Nursery Cryme" albums and a track from "Trespass". There was material recorded for the 'King Biscuit Flower Hour' syndicated radio show and the band agreed that this material would be sufficient and it would serve as a budget release. How wrong they were; the album is a triumph.

The sound on this album is Genesis at their best, particularly the accomplished organ and mellotron of Banks who is captured in time. Hackett's guitar flourishes are crystal clear and Rutherford is dominant on bass pedals. Collins' percussive work is incredible and consistent. The showmanship of Gabriel is compelling and enchanting, he is absolutely in his element on the live stage.

Overall the album has become a quintessential product, not a throwaway or filler between albums, moreover a highly polished testament to the complexity of the music that Genesis generated in the prog-soaked 70s. The performances on "Watcher of the Skies," "Get 'Em Out By Friday," "Return of the Giant Hogweed," "The Knife, and, "The Musical Box," are excellent compositions, remarkably similar in structure to the studio releases, but distinctly dissimilar in sound, indeed perhaps even better than the original versions.

Gabriel is a theatrical powerhouse performing many facets of his persona and spitting out the lyrics with venom and cynical grandeur. "The Musical Box" is a wonderful full blown exploration of Gabriel-fuelled whimsy and as dark as the studio release. "The Return of the Giant Hogweed," is also dark and ethereal with some amazing virtuoso guitar and keyboards embellished by an off beat percussive rhythm. "The Knife" is the only "Trespass" track and it is a killer with staccato blasts of keyboards and shimmering guitars, that absolutely buries the original version in terms of sheer intensity and dynamism.

The energy of the band is incredible, they were a force to be reckoned with in the 70s and it is all captured on this live release that fits neatly on one CD. It is an absolute tragedy that "Supper's ready" was omitted, due to length issues and the fact that it would cost too much, as this would have been the piece de resistance and may have escalated the album to masterpiece status. However, versions of this track from the 70s have surfaced on box sets so it all is not lost. Overall "Genesis Live" is a delightful rendition of all that made Genesis great in the early 70s; an historical live document of progressive excellence.

 

 

 
 

 


Edited by AtomicCrimsonRush - July 27 2012 at 17:03
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2010 at 10:15
^ Think you labeled the Slipperman "The Hogweed" there. Smile
"WAAAAAAOOOOOUGH!    WAAAAAAAUUUUGGHHHH!!   WAAAAAOOOO!!!"

-The Great Gig in the Sky
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2010 at 10:31
Originally posted by Tarquin Underspoon Tarquin Underspoon wrote:

^ Think you labeled the Slipperman "The Hogweed" there. Smile
Ah yes so i did, my bad. Fixed thxStar
 
Took me ages to do that post and I am preparing to do the next one soon. Hope all are enjoying my obsessionLOL.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2010 at 11:27
Aww man, I thought you were going to do your own drawings. LOL
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2010 at 22:20
SWEEEEEEET!
 
ClapClapClapClapClap
 
Iván
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 27 2010 at 23:03
holy bullsh*t was Gabriel weird! I mean, yeah, I know he got plenty more girls than I do dressing blandly, but HOLY BULLsh*t! Shocked!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 05 2010 at 20:35
Wow, this is quite a prolific review of an amazing band. ClapI agree with the some of the rest of you in that this is better and easier to read then Wikipedia while not losing in fact gaining on the informational side of things. I will certainly be back for the next installment.    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 05:30
excellent read, thank you for all your time and efforts, looking forward to the next posts Clap
http://mlyk.bandcamp.com/
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 20 2010 at 06:30
^^^Thank you everyone here for the encouragement.
 
Time for another installment then. I am working on it now.
 
 
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