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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote HackettFan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 13 2019 at 22:33
Originally posted by Frenetic Zetetic Frenetic Zetetic wrote:

Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

It's the greatest album ever. Six stars out of five. Side three ensures that sixth star. The Waiting Room to me is core of the weird sheet I conceive of as Progressive Rock. The musical continuity went beyond song and elevated to whole album in a way that was never successfully accomplished before.





6/5 stars, ha! Tongue

So you're one of the rare few whom prefer Lamb to SEBT?

Yes. I even like Nursery Cryme better than SEBTP. When I was in school I didn't like SEBTP much because it was wimpy. It didn't hold up well against Hard Rock, while the Lamb did. Everyone I knew in school who knew of Old Genesis hailed the Lamb as a classic and were sometimes unaware of what came before it. It was the first Genesis album I ever heard (it belonged to a friend). I'm some number of years younger than most of the elders on here (53 y.o. in one half hour), and the interest for the time with me and my peers was with heavier music. But so there's no mistake though, I have indeed come to appreciate the merits of SEBTP since those youthful days.


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote HackettFan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 13 2019 at 22:48
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

Originally posted by Frenetic Zetetic Frenetic Zetetic wrote:

Originally posted by The Anders The Anders wrote:

I prefer Lamb to SEBTP too.

I just listened to SEBTP yesterday, and to be frank I don't think it is quite the masterpiece it is often hailed as. I really like tracks such as "Firth of Fifth", but tbh. they kind of lose me on side 2.

On Lamb I think the compositions are more focused and much more tense, plus sonically I find it much more elaborate.


"More Fool Me" has always kept it from a perfect 10/10 score for me. It's still a 9.9/10; the other parts more than make up for it for me. Something about Gabriel's delivery and timing on Lamb really stands out to me.


More Fool Me hasn't ever really been too much of a problem for me on Selling England... too short and inoffensive to really do much harm to the overall greatness of the album... it's Battle of Epping Forest the one that really ruins the album for me... too annoying and long to allow me to consider the album a true 5 star masterpiece.

It wasn't until about when I turned 40 when More Fool Me quit making me wince. I kind of appreciate it now. I love Battle of Epping Forest. I'm not always in the mood for it, but when I am I really get into it. Battle of Epping Forest is a problem for a lot of people on here. I know you (Dellinger) don't like Gabriel's voice much to begin with. For others who do, I can't really understand not liking it. I don't like Firth of Fifth much, not as an entire piece. Oh yes, I like the the opening piano and the guitar solo, but the rest of it drags.


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote The Anders Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 14 2019 at 09:41
Originally posted by Frenetic Zetetic Frenetic Zetetic wrote:

Originally posted by The Anders The Anders wrote:

I prefer Lamb to SEBTP too.

I just listened to SEBTP yesterday, and to be frank I don't think it is quite the masterpiece it is often hailed as. I really like tracks such as "Firth of Fifth", but tbh. they kind of lose me on side 2.

On Lamb I think the compositions are more focused and much more tense, plus sonically I find it much more elaborate.

"More Fool Me" has always kept it from a perfect 10/10 score for me. It's still a 9.9/10; the other parts more than make up for it for me. Something about Gabriel's delivery and timing on Lamb really stands out to me.


I quite like "More Fool Me" for what it is. A sweet little song that counterpoints the most proggy elements on the album. Not so much more than that though.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Rednight Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 14 2019 at 11:22
Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:

The Lamb is hardly my fave Genesis album, but it's still up there in the top tiers of the band's whole catalogue.

It's a dreary, rainy SoCal morning, but seeing your color-coded list of 'Lamb' songs was a real laugh riot. Thanks for the pick-me-up!!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Frenetic Zetetic Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 14 2019 at 17:24
I think Foxtrot is Genesis' best offering in this era. That album is perfect to me. SEBT is almost perfect. The parts that are good are some of the best, but the album overall from start to finish isn't as perfect as Foxtrot for me. Same with Lamb. The parts that are killer are really killer. It's not as consistent as Foxtrot all the way through.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Dellinger Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 14 2019 at 21:37
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

Originally posted by Frenetic Zetetic Frenetic Zetetic wrote:

Originally posted by The Anders The Anders wrote:

I prefer Lamb to SEBTP too.

I just listened to SEBTP yesterday, and to be frank I don't think it is quite the masterpiece it is often hailed as. I really like tracks such as "Firth of Fifth", but tbh. they kind of lose me on side 2.

On Lamb I think the compositions are more focused and much more tense, plus sonically I find it much more elaborate.


"More Fool Me" has always kept it from a perfect 10/10 score for me. It's still a 9.9/10; the other parts more than make up for it for me. Something about Gabriel's delivery and timing on Lamb really stands out to me.


More Fool Me hasn't ever really been too much of a problem for me on Selling England... too short and inoffensive to really do much harm to the overall greatness of the album... it's Battle of Epping Forest the one that really ruins the album for me... too annoying and long to allow me to consider the album a true 5 star masterpiece.

It wasn't until about when I turned 40 when More Fool Me quit making me wince. I kind of appreciate it now. I love Battle of Epping Forest. I'm not always in the mood for it, but when I am I really get into it. Battle of Epping Forest is a problem for a lot of people on here. I know you (Dellinger) don't like Gabriel's voice much to begin with. For others who do, I can't really understand not liking it. I don't like Firth of Fifth much, not as an entire piece. Oh yes, I like the the opening piano and the guitar solo, but the rest of it drags.




Firth of Fifth was the first song I loved from this album, actually. For me it's just one gorgeous passage after another, just perfect. Now I'm not really sure which I prefer, if this one or Dancing with the Moonlit Knight (specially the live version). Cinema show is very close too (also the live version).
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Frenetic Zetetic Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 15 2019 at 09:51
I can't lie, friends; for some reason the entirety of SEBT just doesn't hold up to me as a "10/10" record compared to Foxtrot.

I think I've come to articulate my stance on Gabriel-era Genesis:

Trespass is stellar. Nursery Crime is even better. Foxtrot is absolutely perfect. SEBT has very strong material but the whole isn't as solid as Foxtrot, track-for-track for me. Lamb has some of the best music, some of it's even better than the music on all of the previous albums - but it's so diluted and drawn out that if it were condensed it'd truly give the previous records a true run for their money.

It's like they peaked with Foxtrot (IMHO), then continued to write better songs but those better songs never gelled to create an entire big picture that was as solid-gold (IMHO) as Foxtrot. 

Supper's Ready is the apex Genesis prog piece IMHO. Battle of Epping Forest and Cinema show are fantastic extended pieces with some of the best music Genesis has ever written, but they still fall short of the total package on Foxtrot for me.

Tracks like Fly, Back in NYC, Slippermen, The Cage, etc. are also some of the best music Genesis has ever composed...but the total of the album is too diluted as I stated above. Lots of fat on that album.

I find it very interesting that most people's least fave track is Epping Forest, when that's the one that captures the most essence of what made Gabriel-era Genesis great, lol. How can you sit through a 22 minute epic in Supper's Ready, but not an 8.5 mini? I never got that lol.

To each their own! *dodges tomatoes* :P

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote cstack3 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 15 2019 at 18:49
Originally posted by Frenetic Zetetic Frenetic Zetetic wrote:

I can't lie, friends; for some reason the entirety of SEBT just doesn't hold up to me as a "10/10" record compared to Foxtrot.

I think I've come to articulate my stance on Gabriel-era Genesis:

Trespass is stellar. Nursery Crime is even better. Foxtrot is absolutely perfect. SEBT has very strong material but the whole isn't as solid as Foxtrot, track-for-track for me. Lamb has some of the best music, some of it's even better than the music on all of the previous albums - but it's so diluted and drawn out that if it were condensed it'd truly give the previous records a true run for their money.

It's like they peaked with Foxtrot (IMHO), then continued to write better songs but those better songs never gelled to create an entire big picture that was as solid-gold (IMHO) as Foxtrot. 

Supper's Ready is the apex Genesis prog piece IMHO. Battle of Epping Forest and Cinema show are fantastic extended pieces with some of the best music Genesis has ever written, but they still fall short of the total package on Foxtrot for me.

Tracks like Fly, Back in NYC, Slippermen, The Cage, etc. are also some of the best music Genesis has ever composed...but the total of the album is too diluted as I stated above. Lots of fat on that album.

I find it very interesting that most people's least fave track is Epping Forest, when that's the one that captures the most essence of what made Gabriel-era Genesis great, lol. How can you sit through a 22 minute epic in Supper's Ready, but not an 8.5 mini? I never got that lol.

To each their own! *dodges tomatoes* :P

No tomatoes from this Yank, I agree with basically everything you said!  Foxtrot had an amazing wealth of gems, including the under-appreciated (IMHO) "Can and the Utility Coastliners" and "Time Table."   SEBTP had some fantastic stuff, but not as consistently as Foxtrot, and "Lamb" was very inconsistent overall.  

Amazing how we continue to discuss and analyze these works from over 40 years ago!  Clap
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Frenetic Zetetic Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 16 2019 at 01:58
Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

No tomatoes from this Yank, I agree with basically everything you said!  Foxtrot had an amazing wealth of gems, including the under-appreciated (IMHO) "Can and the Utility Coastliners" and "Time Table."   SEBTP had some fantastic stuff, but not as consistently as Foxtrot, and "Lamb" was very inconsistent overall.  

Amazing how we continue to discuss and analyze these works from over 40 years ago!  Clap

LOL Clap I was totally ready to get outed from the community! Good to know I'm not the only one holding said perspective. As I said, I absolutely LOVE SEBT. The songs on it are beyond amazing. Just as a whole (especially compared to Foxtrot), it's not as "solid".

Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:


Yes. I even like Nursery Cryme better than SEBTP. When I was in school I didn't like SEBTP much because it was wimpy. It didn't hold up well against Hard Rock, while the Lamb did. Everyone I knew in school who knew of Old Genesis hailed the Lamb as a classic and were sometimes unaware of what came before it. It was the first Genesis album I ever heard (it belonged to a friend). I'm some number of years younger than most of the elders on here (53 y.o. in one half hour), and the interest for the time with me and my peers was with heavier music. But so there's no mistake though, I have indeed come to appreciate the merits of SEBTP since those youthful days.

Wow - now that's interesting!


Edited by Frenetic Zetetic - January 16 2019 at 02:00

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 16 2019 at 06:01
Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

...
No tomatoes from this Yank, I agree with basically everything you said!  Foxtrot had an amazing wealth of gems, including the under-appreciated (IMHO) "Can and the Utility Coastliners" and "Time Table."   SEBTP had some fantastic stuff, but not as consistently as Foxtrot, and "Lamb" was very inconsistent overall.  

Amazing how we continue to discuss and analyze these works from over 40 years ago!  Clap
 

My take is that TLLDOB was not as well thought out as it was intended and that there was already a conflict in the band about its "story" and what the material meant. 

SEBTP, is not exactly a concept album and fits their previous work better as a bunch of songs, some of them with neatly interwoven meanings and such, that are perhaps too subtle for many of us, unless you knew, or understood the English thing around that time, and some of the comments made. 

The previous GENESIS albums were NOT that direct, although one could think that there were some of this and that on the history and what not … the cover of one of the albums, well, two of them … are not exactly kid stuff comments on some things. And the word pun on Nursery Rhymes, says a lot more about the desire to get more into it, and to the point, and this might be a signal of PG getting better as a writer.

For my tastes, I have several feelings about TLLDOB …
1. There is more material that is missing, which would help make the story more complete and not so broken up, and accidently hijacked by a song that really popped in our ears.
2. Presumably some of this material might have clarified a lot of the Side 3 of this album, and there might have been some poetry or songs in the middle there, that were lost in the translation, specially at the time, when GENESIS was definitely aware that the press was trashing long cuts and making fun of a lot of bands, and just about only PF survived that!
3. The band, somewhere along the process decided that they did not want to do a concert/symphony and started cutting up things, which likely got PG upset … it's like a portion of your painting just got erased, as if it meant nothing. The cruelty of … reality, sometimes!
4. PG, more than likely, without thinking, really wanted to take this into the area of theater in full, not just a minute bit with 5 lines in one costume. The more modern idea/concept helped that as less costumes that were so weird and extravagant would not be necessary. It's not, English Theater at the time, was not adventurous and were doing a lot of visual things, and a REAL, ROCK THEATER AND SHOW, had never been really done, and something like this could have made it to the National Theater or Royal Shakespeare Company, if it had been placed in the hands of Sir Peter Hall, or Sir Peter Brook, people that had strong affinities for music and SHOW, that blew up the "visual" in English theater at the time with the same kind of color and explosive content that Ken Russell used to give us.
5. Some of the material in Side 4 was done to satisfy "fans" and try to "reconnect" with fans … the "it's Rock'n'roll" thing does not fit the story and its concept. It was likely, a way to tell everyone, that we still make music that folks like … and guess which song at our station got played the most by the folks that had no taste in music?

For me, I would like to see PG go back in time, and finish putting it together as a complete stage show, leaving behind all the stuff related to "rock band" and fulfill the ability to write something much more and better than just a rock song. The sad thing for me, is that in this respect, despite some nice material, he has regressed in his writing … it all became a fun pop song, disguised in some fancy technology because he could afford it.

PG for the past 10 years, has been "empty" … I think his tank was depleted during TLLDOB, and while he made do with some nice stuff and he has done very well as a solo artist, I seriously doubt that he is as happy with his work as a writer … I'm sure he is as far as success is concerned, but as far as taken seriously, and "advanced" to even become a film writer, or director … it didn't happen, and that suggests that what he wanted to do got cut off in its entirety and it broke him … so he took the easy way out.

Lastly … your "vision", is the only love you will ever have and find. Nothing else matters, when you are a serious artist in your heart … it doesn't mean you can not love a person, but the work itself, is the most important part of it all … and while PG has gone mostly quiet, not silent, the music he is coming up with is really about a sad, unsatisfied and unfulfilled man … in his dreams!

And life, without those dreams, has a tendency to seem quite empty! Despite all the riches, I'm sure!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Frenetic Zetetic Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 16 2019 at 11:32
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

...
No tomatoes from this Yank, I agree with basically everything you said!  Foxtrot had an amazing wealth of gems, including the under-appreciated (IMHO) "Can and the Utility Coastliners" and "Time Table."   SEBTP had some fantastic stuff, but not as consistently as Foxtrot, and "Lamb" was very inconsistent overall.  

Amazing how we continue to discuss and analyze these works from over 40 years ago!  Clap
 

My take is that TLLDOB was not as well thought out as it was intended and that there was already a conflict in the band about its "story" and what the material meant. 

SEBTP, is not exactly a concept album and fits their previous work better as a bunch of songs, some of them with neatly interwoven meanings and such, that are perhaps too subtle for many of us, unless you knew, or understood the English thing around that time, and some of the comments made. 

The previous GENESIS albums were NOT that direct, although one could think that there were some of this and that on the history and what not … the cover of one of the albums, well, two of them … are not exactly kid stuff comments on some things. And the word pun on Nursery Rhymes, says a lot more about the desire to get more into it, and to the point, and this might be a signal of PG getting better as a writer.

For my tastes, I have several feelings about TLLDOB …
1. There is more material that is missing, which would help make the story more complete and not so broken up, and accidently hijacked by a song that really popped in our ears.
2. Presumably some of this material might have clarified a lot of the Side 3 of this album, and there might have been some poetry or songs in the middle there, that were lost in the translation, specially at the time, when GENESIS was definitely aware that the press was trashing long cuts and making fun of a lot of bands, and just about only PF survived that!
3. The band, somewhere along the process decided that they did not want to do a concert/symphony and started cutting up things, which likely got PG upset … it's like a portion of your painting just got erased, as if it meant nothing. The cruelty of … reality, sometimes!
4. PG, more than likely, without thinking, really wanted to take this into the area of theater in full, not just a minute bit with 5 lines in one costume. The more modern idea/concept helped that as less costumes that were so weird and extravagant would not be necessary. It's not, English Theater at the time, was not adventurous and were doing a lot of visual things, and a REAL, ROCK THEATER AND SHOW, had never been really done, and something like this could have made it to the National Theater or Royal Shakespeare Company, if it had been placed in the hands of Sir Peter Hall, or Sir Peter Brook, people that had strong affinities for music and SHOW, that blew up the "visual" in English theater at the time with the same kind of color and explosive content that Ken Russell used to give us.
5. Some of the material in Side 4 was done to satisfy "fans" and try to "reconnect" with fans … the "it's Rock'n'roll" thing does not fit the story and its concept. It was likely, a way to tell everyone, that we still make music that folks like … and guess which song at our station got played the most by the folks that had no taste in music?

For me, I would like to see PG go back in time, and finish putting it together as a complete stage show, leaving behind all the stuff related to "rock band" and fulfill the ability to write something much more and better than just a rock song. The sad thing for me, is that in this respect, despite some nice material, he has regressed in his writing … it all became a fun pop song, disguised in some fancy technology because he could afford it.

PG for the past 10 years, has been "empty" … I think his tank was depleted during TLLDOB, and while he made do with some nice stuff and he has done very well as a solo artist, I seriously doubt that he is as happy with his work as a writer … I'm sure he is as far as success is concerned, but as far as taken seriously, and "advanced" to even become a film writer, or director … it didn't happen, and that suggests that what he wanted to do got cut off in its entirety and it broke him … so he took the easy way out.

Lastly … your "vision", is the only love you will ever have and find. Nothing else matters, when you are a serious artist in your heart … it doesn't mean you can not love a person, but the work itself, is the most important part of it all … and while PG has gone mostly quiet, not silent, the music he is coming up with is really about a sad, unsatisfied and unfulfilled man … in his dreams!

And life, without those dreams, has a tendency to seem quite empty! Despite all the riches, I'm sure!

Very deep and interesting perspective on Lamb; I applaud your level of observation of said record. I find myself becoming more critical of the "classics", as deemed such by the group consensus of the prog rock community. The only album I truly feel deserves its standing is Yes CTTE. Absolute grandslam of an album. Foxtrot comes in just behind it for similar reasons. Interesting both were released in the fall of '72 (I was -16 years old LOL).

I have to agree that it feels like a lot of content was either cut and/or heavily edited. I'm honestly still amazed that they'd play this album more or less in its entirety night in and night out on the '74/'75 tour. Then they might have played another epic from a previous album (Supper's Ready, or Musical Box, for example!). Talk about firing on all cylinders.

I'd also imagine Gabriel wanting to take things in a more full-on theatre direction. From what I've read/understand, some of the costumes (like the one in my sig, from Slippermen, for example) were becoming so cumbersome on stage that he was having trouble reaching the microphone adequately. You can even hear him running short of breath a bit on some of the YouTube videos from this era.

Either way, I still really enjoy Lamb.


Edited by Frenetic Zetetic - January 16 2019 at 11:34

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 17 2019 at 07:10
Originally posted by Frenetic Zetetic Frenetic Zetetic wrote:

...
I'd also imagine Gabriel wanting to take things in a more full-on theatre direction. From what I've read/understand, some of the costumes (like the one in my sig, from Slippermen, for example) were becoming so cumbersome on stage that he was having trouble reaching the microphone adequately. You can even hear him running short of breath a bit on some of the YouTube videos from this era.
...

The weird thing, is that by that time a lot of "theatrical" material was already being show differently and the costumes would not (might not ... who knows?), have been necessary.

PF was telling stories with speakers around your head in the concert venue ... the sound effects had a little story to tell and it was like there was a room back there and someone walked from here to there ... it was fabulous, and you did not need a visual for it. A year later, they used FILM, which I find it strange that GENESIS did not consider. As an example, Steven Wilson made friends with a film maker right from day one of his work ... is someone going to tell me that no one in GENESIS met a film maker, or that perhaps they were more interested in their rock'n'roll than anything else ... now, it becomes another story.

Big bands, are usually a tough touch for film makers ... but I didn't see Mick getting worried about his image, and pull off some very good material in that area, and getting amazing comments about at least one film about his ability to know/study lines and be ready for a scene! Is someone going to tell me that PG didn't know his lines and couldn't act, and had to hide behind a costume?

Something happened at the time, that got them stuck on the costumes that weren't necessary, and the only way to get rid of the costumes was for PG to go. For my tastes, GENESIS could have turned out all the lights in the show and played in the dark, and I would still love it ... is someone telling me that a stupid looking funny costume is better, or more important than the band?

The answer for it, would have been film, and probably taken on what PF had done, and have something that would be even stronger, if they had believed in it ... but it looks like some of the members of the band did not believe in it ... plain and simple.

To me, it made what would likely be a great piece and album, and they (possibly even the record company, btw!!!) made it pedestrian ... and that's one of the last songs ... make it even more pedestrian! Like that is supposed to be what the street is about, and the story?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote The Anders Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 17 2019 at 12:17
Favourite tracks (I think):

"The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging"
"Carpet Crawlers"
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote cstack3 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 17 2019 at 19:18
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:


 I'm some number of years younger than most of the elders on here (53 y.o. in one half hour)...

LOLLOLLOL You make me feel like Gandalf!!  I am 63 years old, which confers advantages... I saw the CTTE tour, LTIA tour (sans Jamie Miur) and so forth!  

Prog hath no regard for age....we are all the same!  Happy Birthday by the way!  Cheers, Charles Clap
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Frenetic Zetetic Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2019 at 02:32
Originally posted by cstack3 cstack3 wrote:

Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:


 I'm some number of years younger than most of the elders on here (53 y.o. in one half hour)...

LOLLOLLOL You make me feel like Gandalf!!  I am 63 years old, which confers advantages... I saw the CTTE tour, LTIA tour (sans Jamie Miur) and so forth!  

Prog hath no regard for age....we are all the same!  Happy Birthday by the way!  Cheers, Charles Clap

I turn 31 on Monday, so you're all ahead of me! My father saw Yes live in Boston somewhere between '72-'74, and I constantly remind him of how envious I am of that fact LOL.

"I am so prog, I listen to concept albums on shuffle." -KMac2021
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Frenetic Zetetic Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 20 2019 at 01:57
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Frenetic Zetetic Frenetic Zetetic wrote:

...
I'd also imagine Gabriel wanting to take things in a more full-on theatre direction. From what I've read/understand, some of the costumes (like the one in my sig, from Slippermen, for example) were becoming so cumbersome on stage that he was having trouble reaching the microphone adequately. You can even hear him running short of breath a bit on some of the YouTube videos from this era.
...

The weird thing, is that by that time a lot of "theatrical" material was already being show differently and the costumes would not (might not ... who knows?), have been necessary.

PF was telling stories with speakers around your head in the concert venue ... the sound effects had a little story to tell and it was like there was a room back there and someone walked from here to there ... it was fabulous, and you did not need a visual for it. A year later, they used FILM, which I find it strange that GENESIS did not consider. As an example, Steven Wilson made friends with a film maker right from day one of his work ... is someone going to tell me that no one in GENESIS met a film maker, or that perhaps they were more interested in their rock'n'roll than anything else ... now, it becomes another story.

Big bands, are usually a tough touch for film makers ... but I didn't see Mick getting worried about his image, and pull off some very good material in that area, and getting amazing comments about at least one film about his ability to know/study lines and be ready for a scene! Is someone going to tell me that PG didn't know his lines and couldn't act, and had to hide behind a costume?

Something happened at the time, that got them stuck on the costumes that weren't necessary, and the only way to get rid of the costumes was for PG to go. For my tastes, GENESIS could have turned out all the lights in the show and played in the dark, and I would still love it ... is someone telling me that a stupid looking funny costume is better, or more important than the band?

The answer for it, would have been film, and probably taken on what PF had done, and have something that would be even stronger, if they had believed in it ... but it looks like some of the members of the band did not believe in it ... plain and simple.

To me, it made what would likely be a great piece and album, and they (possibly even the record company, btw!!!) made it pedestrian ... and that's one of the last songs ... make it even more pedestrian! Like that is supposed to be what the street is about, and the story?

Great posts in this thread from you, moshkito Clap.

Thank you for taking the time to type this up!

"I am so prog, I listen to concept albums on shuffle." -KMac2021
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guldbamsen Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 20 2019 at 03:25
I listened to this all the way through last night..and it was the first thing I put on this morning. Still as monumentally beautiful and cleverly put-together as the first time I heard it...only now the lyrics make far more “sense” to me in that they invoke clear connotations to biblical tales yet at the same time dumps them into the Gabrielesque sanitarium funhouse so as to take on so many other hidden meanings and open analogies.
Matched together with Genesis at their most playful and labyrinthian it all comes together in, granted, shorther tunes but in a sharp and feverish manner that suits the band immensely imho.
Collins never sounded so ferocious as he did on this album - at least not with Genesis...yet still maintaining that brilliant and melodic sense of tomwork. One of my faves from the olden days.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Sean Trane Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 20 2019 at 05:11
Originally posted by The.Crimson.King The.Crimson.King wrote:

Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:

Disc1
1. The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (4:50)
2. Fly on a Windshield (4:23)
3. Broadway Melody of 1974 (0:33)

4. Cuckoo Cocoon (2:11)
5. In the Cage (8:15)
6. The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging (2:45)

7. Back in N.Y.C. (5:42)
8. Hairless Heart (2:13)
9. Counting Out Time (3:42)
10. The Carpet Crawlers (5:15)
11. The Chamber of 32 Doors (5:40)


Disc 2
1. Lillywhite Lilith (2:42)
2. The Waiting Room (5:24)
3. Anyway (3:07)
4. The Supernatural Anaesthetist (2:59)
5. The Lamia (6:57)
6. Silent Sorrow in Empty Boats (3:07)

7. Colony of Slippermen (8:13)
8. Ravine (2:04)
9. The Light Dies Down on Broadway (3:32)
10. Riding the Scree (3:57)
11. In the Rapids (2:26)
12. It (4:15)

I couldn't imagine The Lamb any different than it is as every song is required to advance the written story, with the exception of one:  Silent Sorrow in Empty Boats.  I always considered it filler, but as I looked at the running order listed above it finally hit me that Silent Sorrow fulfills a vital function as well.  PG needed that 3:07 to change into his Slipperman costume Wink


Sorry, hadn't seen this reaction
But the story is relatively inconsistent, incoherent ... and of no interest because of that

As for SS, it's always been obvious on stage (and on the record), but he also needs time to slip out of Slipperman (but probably not as much)



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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Gerinski Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 20 2019 at 05:51
The Lamb can not be reviewed as simply a songs album like Nursery, Foxtrot or SEBTP were. In an album like The Lamb the whole is more than the sum of its parts. You need to include the concept and how it becomes developed along all the album, you need to consider the several recurring themes and how they are treated in different ways.
For example if they had wanted to, they could have made a macro-suite with 'The Lamia', 'Slippermen', 'Ravine' and 'The Light Dies Down on Broadway'. 'The Light Dies Down' returns to the themes of 'The Lamb Lies Down' and of 'The Lamia' and would have been a majestic super-suite and we might be discussing here about 'the best song Genesis ever made, even bigger than 'Supper's Ready'.

I do not consider the concept inconsistent or incoherent, all the contrary, it is a very strong storyline full of intense esoteric and allegorical imagery, which nevertheless leaves enough room to allow you to adjust your personal interpretation. In fact it is one of my favourite concepts among Prog.

And I agree that Collins drumming is probably at his best. Although it would get more upfront in A Trick of the Tail and Wind and Wuthering and Duke, in The Lamb it retained that difficult balance between subtlety and strong genius. Also one of the best albums of Rutherford.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Icarium Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 20 2019 at 06:47
Anyway is Tony Banks best piano preformance in Genesis, so short yet he playes the same pattern within the same pace and the sudden burst of tempo is quite astonishing. And they lyrics speak to me ob a personal level, Anyway is a superb track

Edited by Icarium - January 20 2019 at 06:48
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