Tuesday, April 10, 2007

The Book on Genesis

My memories of Genesis fans – the real, hardcore Genesis fans, circa Nursery Cryme, Selling England by the Pound and The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway – are that they were more likely to be found in a dank basement playing Dungeons and Dragons and reading books about elves and dwarves than pursuing normal adolescent activities. This was Peter Gabriel’s Genesis – he of the winged Flying Nun headgear and the crazed, theatrical vocals – and his band followed suit, playing bizarre 20-minute prog rock suites about the apocalypse, spinning out impossibly knotty music even as the lyrics hearkened back to the glory days of Arthurian legends or made oblique references to T.S. Eliot’s “The Wasteland.” The people who ate this stuff up were not likely to play air guitar and pump their fists and jump off the couch.

I remember those fans. Okay, I was one of those fans. And I also remember the sinking feeling I experienced when I read that Peter Gabriel had left the band to pursue a solo career. I wondered what would happen, and I had an ominous feeling that it wouldn’t be good. What happened is summed up in a nifty little package the mailman dropped off yesterday, the new 6 CD/6 DVD box set Genesis 1976 – 1982. And you know what? It turned out just fine.

What happened was a paunchy, balding little dude named Phil Collins, who stepped out from behind the drum kit and took over some of the songwriting and all of the vocal duties from Gabriel. There are five albums here – A Trick of the Tail, Wind & Wuthering, … And Then There Were Three, Duke, and Abacab. A sixth disc contains B-sides and previously unreleased tracks that span that six-year period. And that arc traces the progression (or regression, as some would have it) from the geekyest of prog rock bands to one of the biggest rock bands on the planet. For the completists, I’ll note that the albums have been remastered, that they sound wonderful, that the 48-page booklet and the unreleased tracks are a nice bonus, and that the wealth of video/concert material on the DVDs is mind-bogglingly great. For the rest of you, I’ll simply note that this was a great band in a transitional period, and that they simply moved from strength to strength. Genesis was a very different band in 1982 than they were when Peter Gabriel left in 1975. But you’ll never convince this elf/dwarf fan that those four-minute hit singles were worse than the 20-minute suites. Those four-minute singles make me want to play air guitar and jump off the couch.

A Trick of the Tail and Wind & Wuthering, from 1976 and 1977 respectively, represent the last of the prog rock albums. Collins sounds so much like Peter Gabriel here that it is frightening. And if he hadn’t found his true voice yet, he was certainly channeling a great old voice, and the tricky time signatures and synth/mellotron workouts were every bit as bracing as they were on the early albums. … And Then There Were Three is the true transitional album, and the weakest of the bunch, as the band can’t quite decide whether to hold on to the old formula or branch out in a new direction. Duke and Abacab feature the monster hits – “Misunderstanding,” “Turn It On Again,” “Abacab,” “No Reply At All” -- that were both Top 40 blockbusters and FM rock radio staples. It all sounds marvellous – the prog rock material dense but accessible, the hits surprisingly complex and multi-layered.

And that’s the wonder of Genesis, circa 1976 – 1982. Let’s hear it for the paunchy, balding little dudes. They’re fabulous. The geeks became rock stars, and made certified hits featuring 13/8 time signatures. There is hope for all of us, and, while we’re waiting, plenty of great music.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

mmm...i'm thinking of better things to play air guitar to...:)

jackscrow said...

Help me out here....

What was the band that played Genisis and Peter Gabriel covers on the regional bar circuit years ago?

I remember the lead singer doing all the visual tricks and dressing like Gabriel.

Come on Andy.

Andy Whitman said...

jackscrow, that could be The Musical Box, or it could be Re-Genesis. Both fit the bill, although I believe The Musical Box actually has the blessing of the original Genesis lineup, and has been known to use the videos the old guys used back in the '70s.

jackscrow said...

My memory says something like "Fahrenheit", only maybe spelled different? Used to play at the Agora???? Early-mid 80's? I dunno, 'cause I was under the influence a lot back then.

I just remember the singer being pretty impressive, if you can call a cover artist that....

Anonymous said...

Hey Andy,

Wow, completely forgot about Genesis but thanks. I have been enjoying Duke again for probably over a decade. I wonder if they plan on doing that with the remainder of the catalog (post '82). I have to say besides the self-titled Genesis and some of Invisible Touch I lost interest in this band fast.

Gar

Andy Whitman said...

Gar, the entire catalogue is being reissued this year on Rhino Records. I didn't really keep track of the band after "Abacab" (the prog rock/pop mix was still fairly bracing to me; the pure-pop Genesis not so much), so I can't comment on the post-'82 albums other than to say that I know they're going to be reissued. But you'll be able to buy the individual albums, or buy them packaged as part of three box sets ('69 - '75, '76 - '82, '83 - whenever). The middle years ('76 - '82) have just been released as the first box set. The earlier and later releases are coming later this year.

Living the Biblios said...

Count me as another fan. I loved the Gabriel-Genesis, but also enjoyed the Collins-Genesis in this era, especially Wind & Wuthering. Gosh, haven't heard that in years.