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Topic ClosedWhat if Hackett and Gabriel stayed ?

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Thyme Traveler View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: What if Hackett and Gabriel stayed ?
    Posted: March 31 2006 at 16:15

Would we still have had "Invisible Touch" or "Whodunnit" ?

Obviously, the band would have had to change in the 80's- probably nothing along the lines of "Supper's Ready" or "Firth of Fifth." Could they have been as big or bigger than the Pop Genesis of the 80's ?

My alternative universe:

Gabriel leaves after TLLDOB, Hacket leaves after WAW, the band continues on with ATTWT and Duke, but then it diverges from our universe... Phil Collins solo album flops. Discouraged, he decides he doesn't want to sing anymore, he'll stick to drums. Meanwhile, Peter Gabriel isn't doing well with his solo career, and when the band asks him back, he says yes. Steve Hackett is eager to get back into a band and when asked by Steve Howe to form a new band, decides instead to go back to Genesis. Even so, the reformed Genesis releases a few so-so albums until they release the critically acclaimed theatrical double album "Invisible Touch" in 1986. The band becomes the band of the 80's and breaks up on the top of their game...

 

Fire up the flux capacitor ! We're taking this Delorean through all four dimensions.

What is the future of prog ? Genesis reunion ? I'm not telling!That could upset the thyme/space continuum.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 31 2006 at 16:17
Hmmmmmm!!!!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 31 2006 at 16:20
I think if Hackett and Gabriel stayed instead of leaving the band, Genesis would sound like a mix between SH's 70's solo albums, 76-77 era Genesis and earlier Genesis with a touch of PG's solo albums!
RIO/AVANT/ZEUHL - The best thing you can get with yer pants on!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 31 2006 at 16:35

There certainly wouldn't be A Trick Of The Tail ! Gabriel wouldn't let that happen: too retrogressive. No Wind And Wuthering either, for the same reason.

I think more experimental stuff, because Gabriel and Hackett were more adventurous. Maybe some help from Robert Fripp, because on the Lamb they started with Eno. More single albums instead of double albums, I'm sure. Melodic, but adventurous. Also soundwise.

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 05:52
Just listen to THE WATCH.They sound exactly as if Peter and Steve stayed in the band - complicated,sometimes CRIMSON/ANGLAGARD-related music...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 06:33

Originally posted by Paulieg Paulieg wrote:

Hmmmmmm!!!!!!

I second that.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 09:30
Ok...and your smoking what now?¿?
"You want me to play what, Robert?"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 09:53
I'm glad they left to be honest. Cos what we have now is a bonaaa fiiidee treasure untarnished by later tamperings of the record companies as they gained more power over the high profile artist..
Duke being a good example of that...phew....
shouldn't get too annoyed itz saturday & i'm listenin to mike oldfield.....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 10:31

Got me!    Oh, but if it were true... 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 10:32
The world would have been a much more proggier place.

The sound would have evolved SOOOOOOOOO much, I mean just see the leap from Nursery Cryme to Foxtrot to Selling England to the Lamb. They sounded so much different by the Lamb. Just imagine the sound should they have continued.

www.myspace.com/hail_peter
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 10:39
Originally posted by Moogtron III Moogtron III wrote:

There certainly wouldn't be A Trick Of The Tail ! Gabriel wouldn't let that happen: too retrogressive. No Wind And Wuthering either, for the same reason.

I think more experimental stuff, because Gabriel and Hackett were more adventurous. Maybe some help from Robert Fripp, because on the Lamb they started with Eno. More single albums instead of double albums, I'm sure. Melodic, but adventurous. Also soundwise.

 

I disagree!!!! I think Wind and Wuthering would have been the direction they would have taken. Certainly the best would have been yet to come! I think Gabriel left at least two albums too soon! They left unfinnished buisness & never made a true masterpiece IMO but they certainly had the capability to do so, it just might have taken them another couple of albums to achieve it!



Edited by Progger
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 10:48

Assuming that Gabriel would still have discovered "world music", they probably would have gone in that direction.

(Isn't "world music" kind of a half-assed term?)

 

"Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard." -- H.L. Mencken
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 10:54
Originally posted by Progger Progger wrote:

Originally posted by Moogtron III Moogtron III wrote:

There certainly wouldn't be A Trick Of The Tail ! Gabriel wouldn't let that happen: too retrogressive. No Wind And Wuthering either, for the same reason.

I think more experimental stuff, because Gabriel and Hackett were more adventurous. Maybe some help from Robert Fripp, because on the Lamb they started with Eno. More single albums instead of double albums, I'm sure. Melodic, but adventurous. Also soundwise.

 

I disagree!!!! I think Wind and Wuthering would have been the direction they would have taken. Certainly the best would have been yet to come! I think Gabriel left at least two albums too soon! They left unfinnished buisness & never made a true masterpiece IMO but they certainly had the capability to do so, it just might have taken them another couple of albums to achieve it!

 

Who in the classic prog era made a true masterpiece? Most of the albums have strong points and weak points, added songs or elongated passages. Supper's Ready comes the closest to anything in classic prog being a masterpiece.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 11:03

Originally posted by Paulieg Paulieg wrote:

Hmmmmmm!!!!!!

Hmmm, indeed. Perhaps they would have sounded more like Marillion!!!



Edited by necromancing777

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But it was mine in the first place, so I'll burn it to ash."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 11:33
Originally posted by ken4musiq ken4musiq wrote:

Originally posted by Progger Progger wrote:

Originally posted by Moogtron III Moogtron III wrote:

There certainly wouldn't be A Trick Of The Tail ! Gabriel wouldn't let that happen: too retrogressive. No Wind And Wuthering either, for the same reason.

I think more experimental stuff, because Gabriel and Hackett were more adventurous. Maybe some help from Robert Fripp, because on the Lamb they started with Eno. More single albums instead of double albums, I'm sure. Melodic, but adventurous. Also soundwise.

 

I disagree!!!! I think Wind and Wuthering would have been the direction they would have taken. Certainly the best would have been yet to come! I think Gabriel left at least two albums too soon! They left unfinnished buisness & never made a true masterpiece IMO but they certainly had the capability to do so, it just might have taken them another couple of albums to achieve it!

 

Who in the classic prog era made a true masterpiece? Most of the albums have strong points and weak points, added songs or elongated passages. Supper's Ready comes the closest to anything in classic prog being a masterpiece.

I hear what your saying and there is only one album that I can think of that has no weak points & is the only true masterpiece of the prog rock genre.....CLOSE TO THE EDGE!



Edited by Progger
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 01 2006 at 17:25

 

  I doubt even with Hackett and Gabriel they would have sustained the strength of their earlier albums. ELP Floyd and Yes all struggled with the 80s I think a five man Genesis would have been the same. They may not have gone so bad since Gabriel and Hackett have more integrity than the other 3. However the general public seem to like tracks like Misunderstanding so the temptation to add them would have still been there.

BTW Close to the Edge has the annoying I get up I get down and only has 3 tracks and the first two are overly extended.

 There is only one prog album i am aware of which consists only of epic tracks , nothing is overextended, it is varied, it is creative , it is atmospheric ,has intrigueing lyrics and is thourouhly enjoyable  and that is  Foxtrot.

How wonderful to be so profound
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 02 2006 at 00:01

I have to agree with BIGJOEAGOGO.  They would eventually run out of ideas and you would have wished that they had quit while they were ahead.  Perhaps you would have ended up resenting 5 people instead of 3 for the inevitable downhill slide.

As far as the big comeback record, sometimes it is too l;ate and the audience has moved on.  Album may not even get noticed depending on how lackluster the previous ones had been.   

Of course w/ Hackett and Gabriel they would have been better.  Imagine ATTWT songs with better (some) guitar work.  No offense Mike, but why are you so far down in the mix?

Would they even have released a song like Ripples?  Would Gabriel sing it as well as Collins.? (Don't crucify me, Peter was the best but Collins really had his moments.) 

Gosh, I would give my eye teeth for a Gabriel/ Hackett record.  Keyboard and Drummer guns for hire would fist-fight to be part of that project!  

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 02 2006 at 04:06
Originally posted by Progger Progger wrote:

Originally posted by ken4musiq ken4musiq wrote:

Originally posted by Progger Progger wrote:

Originally posted by Moogtron III Moogtron III wrote:

There certainly wouldn't be A Trick Of The Tail ! Gabriel wouldn't let that happen: too retrogressive. No Wind And Wuthering either, for the same reason.

I think more experimental stuff, because Gabriel and Hackett were more adventurous. Maybe some help from Robert Fripp, because on the Lamb they started with Eno. More single albums instead of double albums, I'm sure. Melodic, but adventurous. Also soundwise.

 

I disagree!!!! I think Wind and Wuthering would have been the direction they would have taken. Certainly the best would have been yet to come! I think Gabriel left at least two albums too soon! They left unfinnished buisness & never made a true masterpiece IMO but they certainly had the capability to do so, it just might have taken them another couple of albums to achieve it!

 

Who in the classic prog era made a true masterpiece? Most of the albums have strong points and weak points, added songs or elongated passages. Supper's Ready comes the closest to anything in classic prog being a masterpiece.

I hear what your saying and there is only one album that I can think of that has no weak points & is the only true masterpiece of the prog rock genre.....CLOSE TO THE EDGE!

 

Honestly, I love Yes.  My first prog album was The Yes Album and of course Fragile.  I don't like Close to the Edge that much, the title track that is.  The opening use of the Moog came right off an album that Moog put out in the early '70s, a this is how you use a Moog manual. I would put Going for the One ahead of it. It hit number one, as well. Close to the Edge is hearalded as a landmark but Ian Anderson had already done Thick as a Brick, which would probably be my vote for the "perfect album" if such a thing exists.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 02 2006 at 09:42
Originally posted by ken4musiq ken4musiq wrote:

Originally posted by Progger Progger wrote:

Originally posted by ken4musiq ken4musiq wrote:

Originally posted by Progger Progger wrote:

Originally posted by Moogtron III Moogtron III wrote:

There certainly wouldn't be A Trick Of The Tail ! Gabriel wouldn't let that happen: too retrogressive. No Wind And Wuthering either, for the same reason.

I think more experimental stuff, because Gabriel and Hackett were more adventurous. Maybe some help from Robert Fripp, because on the Lamb they started with Eno. More single albums instead of double albums, I'm sure. Melodic, but adventurous. Also soundwise.

 

I disagree!!!! I think Wind and Wuthering would have been the direction they would have taken. Certainly the best would have been yet to come! I think Gabriel left at least two albums too soon! They left unfinnished buisness & never made a true masterpiece IMO but they certainly had the capability to do so, it just might have taken them another couple of albums to achieve it!

 

Who in the classic prog era made a true masterpiece? Most of the albums have strong points and weak points, added songs or elongated passages. Supper's Ready comes the closest to anything in classic prog being a masterpiece.

I hear what your saying and there is only one album that I can think of that has no weak points & is the only true masterpiece of the prog rock genre.....CLOSE TO THE EDGE!

 

Honestly, I love Yes.  My first prog album was The Yes Album and of course Fragile.  I don't like Close to the Edge that much, the title track that is.  The opening use of the Moog came right off an album that Moog put out in the early '70s, a this is how you use a Moog manual. I would put Going for the One ahead of it. It hit number one, as well. Close to the Edge is hearalded as a landmark but Ian Anderson had already done Thick as a Brick, which would probably be my vote for the "perfect album" if such a thing exists.


Difficult concept finest prog. Prog whatever that means is a massive term with many subgenres etc.. And surely some imperfections on albums make them more....human....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 02 2006 at 10:08
Would we have Marillion if Peter and Steve stayed?...





" "...So here I am once more" - sings Peter,and the crowd bursts out an loan of astonishment.As usual,GENESIS end their show with "Jester's Soliloquay", Gabriel's masterpiece,written by him with a little help from other groupmates.Released in 80 on "Illusion of Serenity" LP,it was one of the main weapons of prog-rock in those sour "new-wave" times...Then expected encore ("The Knife"/"In the Cage"/"Apocalypse in 9/8",a 13-minutes medley) and GENESIS leave the stage.Shall they return in the next year?FINGERS CROSSED!!! "
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