I actually began a Genesis project over here at little ol' Dog Star Omnibus - the biggest little Omnibus in the Union, to paraphrase Rhode Island's old state slogan - last year or the year before. I sank a good amount of time into it but got sidetracked by something or other and never finished. But Political Beats recently wrapped up a fantastic seven hour overview of Genesis, and (as their overviews of bands I like usually do) it got me going through their discography again.
Here's a brief bio of me and Genesis:
- I don't know the first time I heard Phil Collins - in the 80s his hits were just part of the ether, even in West Deutschland, where I was for the first half of the decade, and where things popular in the States often took five or six months to make their way to us - but it was around 1985, I think, when I became aware of Miami Vice. That led to "In the Air Tonight" which led to No Jacket Required.
- My family moved back to the States in August '86, a couple of months after Invisible Touch came out Genesis released , one of the most popular (radio, sales, and video-wise) records of the decade. The title track was played everywhere, and constantly, as were all the other singles. "Tonight, Tonight, Tonight," a harrowing song about a junkie in the throes of withdrawal, was even used for a Michelob commercial.
- Sometime over the next few years I started getting into prog rock, and everyone kept telling me to check out the band's 70s stuff. This led me to make several pilgrimages to Luke's Record Exchange in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, commemorated elsewhere in these pages. One time I walked out of there with Foxtrot, Nursery Crime, and The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway. (For less than $10, probably). And I liked them so much that when I finally got a CD player one of the first CDs I ever purchased was Trick of the Tail. An album I love so much that I almost made this post a 1976 to 1986 deal, just so I could cover it.
None of these just-mentioned albums are on the docket for today, though. Genesis broke big at the end of the 70s thanks to the success of "Follow You, Follow Me". (Not a particular fave of mine.) What would the 80s hold? First up:
(1980) |
I mentioned up there that at least part of the “80s sound” is co-authored by Genesis. I’d love to truly map out what I consider the 80s sound (how many parts the Fairlight CMI? How many parts Eddie Van Halen? How many the Human League?) but what I meant by that is the gated reverb effect on Collins’ drums. Mic-ing the drums that way forced Tony to alter the way he played keyboards. It all leads inevitably to "Tonight, Tonight, Tonight" and everything else on Invisible Touch. That is the eventual waterfall we hang-glide over, Moonraker-style, and you can see it ever so small in the distance when you listen to this album.
The title track was a bold choice for a single (although the radio version lops off the best part, which is all the weird stuff at the end) but an even odder choice for album opener, if you ask me. Great tune, though; there really aren’t any bad ones on this record. The two that I like least are the album’s best-known tracks (“No Reply at All” and “Man on the Corner.”) And I like those just fine, just not as much as the title track of “Me and Sarah Jane” or my two favorites: “Dodo/Lurker” (the keys are fierce as hell in that one) and “Keep It Dark.”
Here's Simon Collins covering it.
The albums’ most infamous track is probably “Who Dunnit”. I like it and its audacity, but it drives me a little crazy. I only learned from the Political Beats episodes that it’s basically a fart joke. Good for Genesis wrapping a fart joke in what could otherwise be a shop demonstration of the Prophet-5 synthesizer.
Those Political Beats guys pointed out something else interesting, as well. Abacab is as true a blend of new wave, prog rock, post-punk as any of the other albums often nominated for such (Songs for the Big Chair from Tears for Fears, Synchronicity by the Police, or even Moving Pictures by Rush). I might nominate Genesis (1983) myself, but both it and Abacab, certainly.
(1982) |
Very good live album. Their best? Probably. The later ones are hampered by We Can’t Dance-era stuff (spoiler alert: not a fan of We Can’t Dance; happily for me it came out in ’91 so I didn’t have to dive back into it for this here blog) and the earlier ones by poorer production. Maybe the Last Domino tour planned for 2021 will result in their definitive live album. It’d be a nice swan song for the band.
All the songs here from the band’s most recent material is fine, but the real treats are the 70s-revisit stuff (“In the Cage” and “It/ Watcher of the Skies” especially) and the b-sides. Which are left off the CD but comprised the unmentioned fourth side of the title.
“Paperlate,” though, I hadn’t heard that in thirty-odd years. It was a short-lived joy to rediscover. That style of call-and-response with the horns doesn’t really land with me. Sing “Chick-fil-A, chick-fil-A” to the melody, though, and wham, instant jingle.
Let's do a song-by-song take on this one.
“Mama” A few years back I watched all seven seasons of Magnum, PI without even really meaning to. I was going to do a Top Ten post for it but never did (more here). One of the episodes that would’ve been on that list, though, was "Death and Taxes" which is basically a forty-odd minute music video for this song/ Miami Vice "homage". The lyrics apparently reference The Moon’s a Baboon, made into a film with David Niven. (Never saw it.)
Here’s an excerpt from an old Keyboard Magazine about the production of this song.
“The Linn LM-1 rhythm was programmed by Mike Rutherford, rather than drummer Collins. It was fed through a reverb unit and then into a Fender amplifier with a large amount of distortion. Tony Banks used a Synclavier, ARP Quadra, E-mu Emulator, and Sequential Circuits Prophet-10 in the recording. The Quadra's rhythmic pulses were triggered by the 16th note hi-hat pattern coming from the Linn drum machine. A low E drone was recorded on the Prophet-10 through most of the song. A koto, which happened to be in the studio one day, was sampled into the Emulator and used in the song because it was felt that no other sound worked in the section.”
I understand every third or fourth word of that. Sounds awesome, though.
“That’s All” What can you say? Craftmanship supreme.
“Home By the Sea” Here’s another of those double-whammies I mention. I must’ve heard this a hundred times before I ever looked it up what it was about, and I only ever did so because I joked to a friend once that if I ever got a home by the sea it wouldn’t be the one from that Genesis song. I was only responding to the tortured mood of the song, not its lyrical content, which do happen to be about a haunted house. And that’s where the secondary realization kicks in, i.e. “wow, that song’s about a burglar who breaks into a haunted house and then the ghosts just sit him down (“Sit ow-owwwn-n-n!”) and tell him stories of who they used to be and how they came to be haunting there. And you know what? That’s exactly what it sounds like, now that I know that.” Remarkable.
“Second Home By the Sea” Because the first wasn’t enough! Absolutely not. An artsy sequel, like the sophisticated city cousin to the haunted country mouse of the previous. I’ll work on it.
“Illegal Alien” Okay, well, they can’t all be first round picks. This is a good-hearted silly song that is anachronistic and a little weird-sounding now. I’d say “offensive” but it’s practically banal these days to point out perfectly inoffensive things that are treated like Lord Haw Haw. It goes on way too long, mostly.
I never liked “Taking It All Too Hard” on previous listens but Old Man Bryan likes it just fine and kindly reminds you of the boundaries and border-hedge of his personal exteriors.
“Just A Job To Do” Is this Genesis’ most overlooked big hit? As in people forget both that it exists or that Genesis did it? In all fairness, it’s easy for the casual listener to get Phil’s 80s work mixed up with Genesis’. Mike and the Mechanics don’t have that problem. (Nor Tony, I guess, if anyone even recognized them. Poor guy released four or five non-Genesis projects in the 80s that sold a total of four copies. I’m told, unreliably. I’ve heard none of them. That’ll change one of these days. I love Tony, don't send me hate mail.) Anyway this is a fun tune. I wouldn’t say Phil is underrated as a vocalist, but one particular aspect of his fronting Genesis – that of “selling” all of these different POVs, here an assassin with (see title) – may be. That’s a whole different skill set than just hitting the notes.
(“I’m coming hard on you!” might have been re-thought as the bridge, but it was a simpler time. )
“Silver Rainbow” Some great (and weird keys) on this one. Apparently the silver rainbow is the zipper to a girl’s jeans. A trivial little tune, perhaps, but a great example of just how effortlessly these guys can construct a song. Is there a note wasted here? I think not. Despite the subject matter, it reminds me of a Wiggles tune.
“It’s Gonna Get Better” Criticized on release as “cosmic Elgar” (as in Sir Edward William Elgar, the dude whose “Elegy” graces many a montage in film and television) it actually lifts a cello part from a different composer, Aram Khachaturian. A lovely song that has only grown on me over the years and dozens of listens. The ending goes for broke and succeeds. It points squarely to where the band will land next.
Before we get there, the b-sides for the singles on this one include “Nanimani” and “Submarine.” Both are great. The latter could be the theme of an entire film, actually. Not necessarily a navy (or delicatessen) film, just a nice slice of atmosphere.
And finally:
(1986) |
“Land of Confusion” Great track. I remember when everyone went nuts for the metal remake. Not bad, I guess, but for me the remake just underscores how perfect the original is. Ditto for the metal remakes of “Blue Monday” and “Smooth Criminal” come to think of it. Remember when there was a metal remake of everything? And then a techno remake, and then a punk/hardcore remake? Simpler times, my friends, simpler times.
(1) One of the cool things about blogs like these is the way they allow you to play catch-up. Genesis is a band I've caught on the off-ramp here and there (if that metaphor makes an sense).
ReplyDeleteThey were never high on my list, yet they were also never something I was willing to just dismiss. I think a lot of it is the way they kept me interested, for the most part.
(2) "Turn it on" strikes me as what I consider another example of the classic sound of the band. The phenomena it describes is interesting inasmuch as it seems to have become something people try to fight against, especially in the relation between opposite attractions. I can understand why that should be the case, I'm just hoping that all the best intentions are real, I guess.
(3) Is it wrong to say the word that a song like "Duchess" plants in my mind is Spielbergian? I don't know, I can't recall many era centric synth tracks on any of his films. And yet, there's just something about the sound that puts me in mind of the typical suburban setting in some of his best work from the 80s. It's easy to imagine E.T. roaming the neighborhood streets to this song at night.
(4) "House by the Sea" just puts me in mind of Neil Gaiman, for some reason. I think it's down to the way the ghosts behave in the song. It's a lot more introspective in a way that matches with a vignette you expect to find in "Sandman". I could easily imagine Dave Mckean constructing a music video to this song.
(5) You mention trying to grasp the advent of the 80s sound. It's one of those things where I have to say I know just what you mean, and still can't put a finger on it. When I try to sum up the sound of that era, what sticks out the most is the streamlining of most guitar chords, and, of course, the synth keyboard. That's probably the closest I can get to a starting definition in this case.
The best I can do is offer some good samples of what I think typified that era's sound. The first is ZZ Top's "Stages":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=75cr6TMhPuM
The second is a mashup of two music legends, the Kings of Pop and Hard Rock, respectively:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YGiedTSUmHw
The third is an example of the synth heavy style. It's a piece I stumbled on by accident, and I think this one may be informative as it is meant as a capsule for what the 80s seemed like as a whole:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z0eflYLkI4A
Hope this helps.
ChrisC
(4) Yeah I can see / hear that.
Delete(5) If I was going to choose a ZZ Top song to try and encapsulate the 80s sound, I could do worse than "Stages," that's for sure. I might go with something more like "Legs" or "Sleeping Bag."
That "Waiting for a Star to Fall" video is wonderful. That's a lot of great 80s right there. That song works, too, because it sounds like it was the Fairlight CMI. The one I supplied in-blog (HUman League tune) is as well. I suppose any one Fairlight CMI song would do the trick, though.
(5) For whatever it's worth, the band playing "Star to Fall" is called Boy meets Girl. I don't know whatever else they've done. However they sound a lot like the kind of band that could only have ever flourished during the Reagan years.
DeleteI just remembered one more sample of the classic 80s sound. It's a brief collaboration between Christopher Cross and one of the Allman brothers:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJMtzAiaeBQ
Good or bad, it's got to be as prototypical of the decade as you can get.
ChrisC
(1) Both Genesis in general and its various members (especially Phil Collins) were inescapable in the eighties. I always liked them, but I never owned anything they made. Looking back on it, I wonder why that is. Except I don't have to wonder; it was because I didn't have the money to buy more than maybe a record or two per year, and though the always-popular option of asking for them for birthdays and Christmases was still there, those slots got filled quickly. I am about to veer into old-man-tells-story mode here, but it really cannot be stressed enough how different the world was back then for a music lover on a budget. Nowadays, if you're into music, you can find just about any song by any artist at any time, and pay $0.00 for it. (Whoever is footing your internet bill might dispute that, but hey.) Hear a song by someone you like, you can have found and explored their entire discography within days. I suspect that if such a powerful tool of exploration had existed for me circa 1986, I'd have listened to a lot more Genesis than I did in reality.
ReplyDelete(2) I don't think I'd ever seen that Michelob commercial; didn't ring any bells. Man, now THAT is a relic of a different era.
(3) "Duke's Travels/Duke's End" -- I can't honestly say I loved this, but it was pretty cool, and whoever's drumming (Phil, I assume) is on freaking fire.
(4) "Keep It Dark" -- Never heard this one before, and what a shame! Good stuff.
(5) A former boss of mine once invited me over for dinner along with a female co-worker, and after dinner he made us watch a Phil Collins concert video on DVD. I just remembered this. It was a weird night. I remember being unsure if he was trying to hook up with the girl or was trying to hook me up with her. All I know for sure is that nobody hooked up with anybody in this trio. Phil was blameless in the entire ordeal.
(6) The Chick-fil-A company really is missing out not ganking "Paperlate" and replacing the lyrics. There's one of those across the street from where I work, and there's almost never not a line wrapped around the building. So maybe they have no urgent need to splurge on Genesis licensing. They still ought to. And they need to send you a commission check for having the idea!
(7) "A koto, which happened to be in the studio one day, was sampled into the Emulator and used in the song because it was felt that no other sound worked in the section." -- Cue Roger Moore punning about it being a YAPHET Kotto, eyebrow raised.
(8) "Mama" -- If I ever heard this one, I forgot about it, and I wonder if young me might not have been highly creeped out by this one and run away. I can almost guarantee he would have. Current me thinks it's pretty rad, though.
(9) "That's All" -- Almost certainly my introduction to the band. I can remember hearing it on the radio in my parents' car on a road trip to my grandparents' house and thinking it was awesome. I wasn't wrong.
(10) “She seems to have an invisible tool shed!” -- Priceless.
(1) You said it. I think 'Invisible Touch' was one I got through Columbia House or BMG (the same batch of records had David Lee Roth's 'East 'Em and Smile' and 'Fore' by Huey Lewis). I always say hell, I remember when (x album) was one of like 20 records / albums I owned. I still feel intense loyalty to almost all of those. Does Random Millenial Guy who hears Neil YOung is pretty good and downloads the discography overnight going to feel any sense of loyalty? But in a way that's not bad. It should be about appreciating the music and not, perhaps, the context of how it came into your life. And yet, I find myself blogging 40/60 on any music project along that axis. Maybe it's just having collected music, once, long ago, on such a budget, with a non-internet wellspring. (Somewhere is someone who only listens to Glenn MIller if it's on 20-odd 78 rpm records and "everything else is just a fad.")
Delete(5) That does sound weird! I can almost picture Phil looking at y'all awkwardly from the screen. In my imagination he's trying his best to extract you from the situation.
(6) Right?? There's a Chick-fil-A downtown I'd eat at once a week when I worked down there. I miss it.
(7) ha! "Balls, Q?" "Where did you hear balls in what I wrote, 007?" "I... well."
(10) I still sing it along with the song, like some idiot. If I were an FF writer this joke would appear in every issue.
(1) I agree, I don't think it's bad. It's just different. I'd certainly have voted yes to being able to download entire discographies back in the day. So I don't look down my nose at people who grew up with that ability; I just marvel at how some of the specifics of how I myself consumed media and developed fandom for things is almost wholly a thing of the past. Like the aforementioned Columbia House and BMG -- I almost can;t imagine even trying to describe services like that to a fifteen year old today, they'd think I'd come from another planet.
Delete(5) He did what he could!
(6) It's a great fast-food joint, no question about it. Maybe the single best one I know of, certainly in terms of having reliably good service.
Regarding "Paperlate," this morning I finally put together that Owen was singing his desire for a Zebra Cake to the melody of "Paper Late." Which I'm pretty sure he has ONLY heard me singing - and not even that often - as "Chick fil-a" as mentioned above.
DeleteOwen is a-ok in my book.
Delete(11) There's a metal remake of "Land of Confusion"? Boy do I not need to hear that. I'm sure it's fine, but I'll pass. The video to the original scares me even to this day. I'm thinking about it right now and ooging a little.
ReplyDelete(12) "In Too Deep" -- I like this one pretty well. Am I crazy or is it almost a template for the coming wave of love ballads from hair-metal bands?
(13) "Do the Neurotic" -- This is pretty goddamn great, right here.
(14) "I'd Rather Be You" -- This reminds me of "You Can't Hurry Love" more than anything else. Solid tune, though.
(15) Not mentioned here, but contained in the playlist -- "Silent Running," which is one of those songs that so effortlessly transports me back to the time when I heard it on the radio that I actually have a difficult time listening to it and not just breaking down a bit.
I recommend not reading the comments on YouTube for the video.
(12) That's not crazy at all, good call. I think the template was basically "When I'm With You" by Sheriff but that was an unknown song until it was re-released for proms everywhere later in the decade. Songs like "In Too Deep" probably hit more balladeers' ears than that one.
Delete(13) Yeah! I guess they felt they had the instrumental rocker covered with "The Brazilian" so they left that off, but it's a great one. (So's "the Brazilian" - it and "Keep it Dark" and "Throwing it all Away" are probably my all-time Genesis faves.)
(14) Good call, yes definitely can hear that.
(15) I meant to call more attention to that song (and video, in particular) and Mike and the Mechanics. It's kind of cool that Phil, Mike, and Peter Gabriel all achieved such massive success in the 80s. As mentioned in those PB episodes, Genesis is the underdog story you can root for. There was probably one week (or more) in the 80s where the top spots of the Billboard traded off between Phil, Mike and the Mechanics, and Peter Gabriel, and probably back to Genesis. Good for those guys.
(15) I was pretty old before it came to my attention that Peter Gabriel had once been in Genesis, and (I think) even older before I knew that Mike + the Mechanics had any connection to them. Genesis and its various members really did kind of rule the eighties, or at least a certain period of it. And, to some degree, have stayed vital ever since; so it seems, at least, I'm not knowledgeable enough to be certain of it.
DeleteGah...! I really need to get into Political Beats. At this point, I think I'm willfully ignoring it lest it open up entire new avenues of things for me to wish I could make time for. It certainly sounds like it's a hell of a podcast.
(11) Yeah, trust me, when it comes to the metal remake, you're not missing much.
DeleteChrisC