Written by Thomas Schrage


Genesis‘ first album was not called Trespass but From Genesis To Revelation. Many fans tend to count it as their zeroeth album. It shows no or at best only the most minuscule traces of the style that would make them well-known later, and therefore frequently meets with a refusal and lack of affection. Justly so?

The band did not have the line-up they got known with yet. One could say they did not even exist. They came together to record demo-tapes in the first place. All of them knew each other from Charterhouse public school. The songwriter team Rutherford and Anthony Phillips asked Tony Banks to play the piano for them; Banks only agreed if he could bring his songwriting partner Peter Gabriel to record a song. Soon they were convinced that Gabriel’s voice sounded better than Phillips’ so he ended up singing on all the songs.

When he did not sing, Phillips played the guitar, a position he would retain up to Trespass. Initially, the drums were played by one Chris Stewart, though the drumming on the album would be done by John Silver. The drummer’s stool would not be filled permanently until Phil Collins joined Genesis. Only with him did the band find someone who was accepted as a full member and could incorporate himself.

These boys (most of them were around 17 at the time) managed to land a record contract with Jonjo Music in August 1967. That only meant that a single would be released. King was an alumnus of Charterhouse and had had quite a successful hit with Everyone’s Gone To The Moon. A shallow pop song though that may have been, he nevertheless seemed to be a person of success and influence, and they found it very promising that they could have him produce them.

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The year was 1969. Among the many discoveries made that year was something called "the import record" - albums from England that were either different from those released here, or just plain never released in Athens.

I remember pulling together a stack of domestic promotional albums and heading to a downtown rendezvous, near Acropolis to a place called Plaka, where in a small records shop they were traded for a decidedly smaller stack of imports. One of them was a little item that had a black cover with gold lettering proclaiming FROM GENESIS TO REVELATION. It was the first effort of a British group that couldn't decide on their name, although the music was much more decisive - I immediately vowed to become a fan once they figured out what to call themselves....


Genesis Group Members
Peter Brian Gabriel Gemesis 1970 - 1975
BORN: February 13, 1950, London, England
As the leader of Genesis in the early '70s, Peter Gabriel helped move progressive rock to new levels of theatricality. In his solo career, Gabriel was no less ambitious, but he was more subtle in his methods.
Anthony George Banks Gemesis 1970 - 1975
BORN: March 27th, 1950, East Sussex, England
Tony Banks started his career with Genesis in 1967 as the pianist/keyboardist, after the emergence of the Charterhouse School Bands The Garden Wall, which Tony was a member,..
Michael John Rutherford Gemesis 1970 - 1975
BORN: October 2nd, 1950, Guildford, Surrey, England
A founding member of the long-running art-rock band Genesis, Mike Rutherford also made the occasional excursion into solo projects, most notably the pop combo Mike + the Mechanics.
Phillip David Charles Collins Gemesis 1970 - 1975
BORN: January 31, 1951, Chiswick, London, England
Phil Collins' ascent to the status of one of the most successful pop and adult-contemporary singers of the '80s and beyond was probably as much of a surprise to him as it was to many others.
Steven Richard Hackett Gemesis 1970 - 1975
BORN: February 12th, 1951, England
Formerly a member of various minor bands, including Canterbury Glass, Heel Pier, Sarabande and Quiet World, the latter releasing a solitary album on Dawn Records in 1970, Hackett joined Genesis as guitarist in early 1971.


March 16th, 2015 By Jim Laugelli

I could have very easily chosen a number of other Genesis albums but I decided on this one simply because it features what is perhaps the most significant song in all of progressive rock: “Supper’s Ready.” My introduction to Genesis occurred 41 years ago and had one of the most profound impacts on my personal musical journey. On that night, in May of 1974, a friend asked if I wanted to see a concert. He had a few extra tickets for a Genesis show and no one to join him. I never heard of the band and for some reason thought they were probably some sort of acoustic act. As far as I recall, my friend knew little about the band as well. I believe someone just gave him the tickets. With nothing better to do I decided to check it out. When we arrived at the venue and had taken our seats I remember my curiosity ratcheting up when the pre-concert music over the P.A. was Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells. This signaled to me that I was probably going to hear something unexpected. Sure enough, when the lights went down and the crowd quieted, the opening chords to “Watcher Of The Skies” begins. I immediately leaned forward in my seat totally consumed by the sound of the mellotron.

As that instrument eases, the staccato rhythm of the bass begins and in the darkness a pair eyes appear, they seem to be searching, radiating, only to reveal a figure in a cape with bat wings wrapped around his head. The vocals then begin and until the end of the show I remain completely and utterly captivated. My mind was officially blown. It was a revelation. I left that show a changed person. This was music that went beyond my imagination. It was presented like theater, it told stories. In fact, before many songs, Gabriel told surreal little tales as a way of introducing the tunes. The next day I bought Foxtrot, and then Selling England By The Pound, Nursery Cryme and Trespass all in short order. I immersed myself in their music.

Foxtrot begins the band’s high point of three consecutive outstanding albums. It was released in 1972, a banner year for progressive rock that also saw the release of Close To The Edge by Yes, Thick As A Brick from Jethro Tull, Trilogy by ELP, Three Friends from Gentle Giant and a slew of other incredible records. For Genesis, Foxtrot saw them tackle ideas they started with their two previous releases, Trespass and Nursery Cryme. The level of complexity in song structure, the emphasis on theatricality and drama, storytelling and extended song form all reached a new level of sophistication on Foxtrot.

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1967 - 1975
Discography Comments Compiled by Ikon Designing
Aside from a portion of the box set, this is the only commercially available live document of vintage Gabriel-era Genesis.
Official Album Releases Compiled by Ikon Designing
That's it. Genesis' most ambitious work to date that ultimately led to the shock departure of their much loved singer Peter Gabriel.
Genesis Album Artwork Compiled by Ikon Designing
The painterly texture of the album art is a very nuanced addition to the artwork., but with a plain light yellow-tan border, the artwork itself can feel a bit drab.
Jonathan King and the Name Compiled by Ikon Designing
In 1963 Peter Gabriel and Tony Banks met at Charterhouse, a boarding-school, that layed in the English county Surrey in the middle 1960s.
Before Phil Compiled by Ikon Designing
Once upon a time, in a land far, far away. . . England, I think it was called. . . There lived four young men. . Their names were Ant Phillips, Michael Rutherford, Tony Banks and Peter Gabriel.
The Glory Years Compiled by Ikon Designing
While recovering from this, he began writing Genesis' most ambitious project to date, "Supper's Ready," a 23-minute masterpiece
Touch of the Jaggers Compiled by Ikon Designing
On every level the band transcend any kind of expected performance standard. Musically they are so proficient they make that part of the job look like a secondary exercise.
Man behind the Mask Compiled by Ikon Designing
Genesis obviously differ from the dressed-up 12-bar that most bands unravel. And because of these very differences, the band have been slated over over their motives.
Hall of Mutant King Compiled by Ikon Designing
Lifeless was the performance of leader Peter Gabriel; the protagonist's name is Rael so it's surely no accident that Gabriel is a Roger Daltry sound alike.

Why Genesis wouldn't chop up 'The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway''
Article from Circus Magazine No. 106; March 1975; pp 66 - 70

For years Genesis had dreamed of cooking up their most powerful of surreal visuals and mesmerizing music. Yet they feared their ambitious new double album might prove too intense for in-concert consumption.
by Ron Ross 


Peter Gabriel stared at himself in his dressing room mirror and methodically began to wipe off the layers of dusky make-up that only a few hours before had transformed him into a young Puerto Rican New Yorker named Rael. In the course of Genesis' startling two hour performance, Peter had further mutated from a leather-jacketed street punk to the hideously deformed Slipperman, finally becoming an eerie silhouette of Death Himself. But now, as he washed the last of the tan paint from his distinctively British features, Gabriel began to look once again very much like the private school student he was when Genesis was first formed - not at all like the all-powerful Watcher of the Skies whose bat-wings seemed smoky gray from hell-fire.

Dressed more like an unstylish fan than a rock star on the ascendant, Peter wrapped a plain wool muffler around his neck and stepped out the stage door into the chilly New Jersey night air. There a strange sight greeted him. Outside a corral of previously prepared police barricades were dozens of believers in the magic that is Genesis. At their first glimpse of Gabriel, the throng began to cry "Peter! Peter!" and strained toward their favorite fantasy-monger. As he hurried into the waiting limousine, the habitually reserved musical sorcerer began to smile broadly; the long black auto-coach pulled away from the crowd, and still the hands beat upon its roof and eager faces peered curiously in the windows for a look at what their hero was really like. Peter settled back, began to peel a refreshing orange, and sighed. Despite his well-hidden anxiety, Genesis' newest and most ambitious stage presentation had worked.

Blue denim deliquent: American rock audiences at first had been inclined to heckle Peter's subtly atmospheric monologues, chattering during the quieter mood-building instrumental passages. After three carefully planned tours, however, even the most skeptical concert-goers were entranced by Genesis' dramatic representation of "The Musical Box" and Peter's breath-taking flight through the air at the climax of "Supper's Ready." Now The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway (on Atco) had replaced those old favorites, and even Peter's image had changed drastically. He had cropped his long locks and combed them over his bald streak. His sleak black jumpsuit had given way to sneakers and blue-jeans. Though the band had given their all to provide a totally entertaining re-enactment of some of their most imaginative songs ever, the insistent question remained. Aside from the success of their first few concerts with The Lamb , could Genesis convince the world's largest rock audience to take an extended trip into an unfamiliar fantasy world?

Back in his Manhattan hotel room, Peter admitted to Circus Magazine that Genesis had had their doubts about presenting the entirety of their recent double album as the basis for the most important tour of their career. "We were quite worried about introducing the whole of The Lamb to audiences all at once. This new show is very experimental for us," Gabriel acknowledged, biting into a banana. "In the past we've tried to introduce new material in twenty-five minute segments, phasing it in with the better known songs gradually. It's also been difficult achieving a balance between the musical performance and the triple-screen slide presentation that helps the listener to visualize Rael's story more easily. The slides are much stronger than ever before, and to a certain extent, they're an additional risk. They shift attention away from my performance somewhat, although now that I've worked with them onstage, I think they do provide an interest-point when the going gets a little heavier lyrically."

Vividly fantastic visuals: The almost eighty-minute long Lamb show with its 3000 slides arranged by artist Geoffrey Shaw is an important step towards one of Gabriel's most cherished goals for Genesis. Last year he told an interviewer, "I like to keep visuals in mind at the same time as lyrics and music. In the near future, I expect to see groups and artists work more closely together. I think the time is nearly ripe for the first visual artist to become a pop star. There will be situations in which the band itself becomes much less of an ego thing. If one can build the visual image stronger, one can make the fantasy situation more real and involve an audience more deeply."

But slide shows and the eventual film Peter hopes to make are expensive for a group not yet financially endowed by superstardom, so for their earlier theatrical offerings, Gabriel was forced to rely on his considerable assets as a story-teller and pantomimist. His now famous humorous monologues, of which the Lamb innersleeve story might be viewed as an extension, developed for purely functional reasons. "I didn't feel very at home on the stage to begin with," the mysterious multi-talent has allowed. "Audiences shocked us by not being very interested in the music at first. I started to wiggle about trying to personify the lyrics, and then we started to use the monolgues when we brought twelve-string guitars into the act. There were long embarrassed silences while the guitars were tuned. The monologues gave me another outlet by which to express the fantasy."

And all of Genesis' succeeding stage shows have been literally fantastic. When Genesis first came to America to perform such bizarre Victorian epics from Nursery Cryme as "The Return of the Giant Hogweed," Peter appeared in pure white satin with the pancake make-up of a mime. Although he looked like a mischevious young 19th century lad, the prominent streak of baldness down the center of his skull suggested he'd found a book of black magic in a dusty attic.

Foxy Head Trip: Then came the Foxtrot spectacle, during which Peter prattled even stranger prefaces dressed in a woman's ball gown topped by a fox's head. When he sang "Get 'Em Out By Friday," he changed personalities as easily as he doffed one hat and put on another. Come their Selling England By The Pound tour, Genesis had firmly established themselves as the most important new self-admittedly theatrical group since the Who. Peter's impersonations of a lawn-mower and the senile degenerate of "The Musical Box" were frightening and unforgettable. It was in this show that Genesis' use of slides, combined with their very sophisticated lighting, began to take them into areas no band had ever really fully explored. The slides, of course, paralleled the concept of Selling England but it was the sense of animation they conveyed that was strikingly unique.

Genesis has never been less than superb musically for all the lack of ostentation the musicians displayed. No one could deny that guitarist Steve Hackett, keyboardist Tony Banks, drummer/vocalist Phil Collins, and multi-instrumentalist Mike Rutherford were superior musical craftsmen. Yet with Selling England and its slide show, Genesis had achieved an aim close to Steve Hackett's heart. "I think eventually there will be more anonymity amongst musicians in a group, without so many people trying so desperately to find star images." Tony Banks set his sights even more specifically: "The most important thing to us is the songs, then the playing, and only then the presentation. We're not as concerned with flaunting musicianship; Yes and ELP are more dependent on solos. I'm not a soloist as such. I think of myself more as an accompanist who colors the sound."

Crutched-up music?: Shortly before launching the challenging Lamb tour, Gabriel was aware that with such an awesome visual exposition as Genesis was now prepared to project, they might have even more trouble being taken seriously as musicians. "There are people who believe that the costumes, props, and slides we use are crutches to hold up crippled music," Peter told an English interviewer objectively. "But if the visual images are conceived at the time of writing, and you don't use those visuals, then you're not allowing the audience to listen to the song in the full strength of which it was created. And that's what we're after, to give the listener as much in a song as we get from it. Visuals are only rubbish unless they are integrated with the continuity of the music," he emphasized without ambiguity.

Never has a rock theatrical presentation hypnotized an audience on so many sensory levels as The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway. Where groups from the Who to ELP impress their fans visually with walls of amplified thunder-machinery, Genesis' set is virtually bare of electric equipment. Steve Hackett and Mike Rutherford's amps are so well hidden that their music often appears to emanate from the air itself. No mountains of synthesizer technology surround Tony Banks. Aside from the panoramic three-part slide screen and an odd little rock formation at the center of the stage, the most striking "prop" is Phil Collins' beautifully complete and well-ordered drum kit. It is almost a sculpture in itself, but, of course, its function is strictly musical.

Into the twilight zone: So there is nothing onstage to get in the way of the songs themselves, which are among the most moving Genesis has yet composed. For the first time, they link the band's phantasmagoric visions to today's urban street scene. While Genesis play through their most extended built-in jam ever on "Fly On A Windshield," Shaw's slides super-realistically smash a greatly magnified and grotesque insect against a stolid fifties Ford. The plot, the music, and the visuals become even more disturbingly surreal once Rael is sucked body and soul into Genesis' harrowing half-world. As the band plays "The Hairless Heart" Shaw's slides show a snowy white feathered heart nestled in crimson satin drapery. A rubber-gloved hand begins to shave the heart with cruel precision; the combined impact of the music and the visuals makes for one of the show's strongest emotional moments.

Peter's innersleeve story reads: "That night Rael pictured the removal of his hairy heart and to the accompaniment of very romantic music he watched it being shaved smooth by an anonymous stainless steel razor. The palpitating cherry-red organ was returned to its rightful place and began to beat faster as it led our hero, counting out time, through his first romantic encounter." That "romantic encounter" is described graphically in the song, "Counting Out Time," which Peter explained to Circus is a "light-hearted look at the insertion of male organs into female organs."

Wild in the streets: Although the slides, the lyrics, or the story would seem bewildering by themselves, together they have great imaginative coherency. "The album seems clearer in my head than a lot of what we've done before," Peter insists. "We look upon it as being comprised of much shorter units than before. I would like best to see The Lamb as a film, because that would clarify the imagery further than a performance or the record. A film is the easiest medium by which to build another reality." Yet Peter hopes audiences will be able to identify with Rael, as portrayed by Gabriel himself, following the story through his eyes, ears, and feelings. "The point of Rael being earthy and aggressive," according to Gabriel, "is that he provides an accessible response to these fantasy situations. Rael seemed a good starting point because he's surrounded by all this speed and aggression which New York has more of than any other city." Belonging to no real community save that of the streets, Rael is more susceptible to the changes Peter's plot puts him through.

Musically, Steve Hackett is pleased with the added room for improvisation that The Lamb has given the instrumentalists. "With this new stage show, we've left a lot of things looser than we ever have before. We're taking a chance that our spontaneous improvisations will create something we haven't had much of as yet. I think we're playing The Lamb even better live now than we did on record." Steve also takes issue with those critics who have felt that The Lamb is beyond the limit of tolerable obscurity. "There are, of course, some quite obscure parts," he concedes, "but I think that especially as regards New York City and America there are more direct statements than we've ever been willing to make before about a subject in the present time. Previously, we'd preferred to work with the past or the future."

"At any rate," as Mike Rutherford is fond of saying, audiences seem far more satisfied with The Lamb than Genesis could have anticipated. "I'm glad we took the risk; I think it's paid off," Peter was able to say after the first performances had garnered nothing but rave reviews. "Audiences have a way of voicing their confusion and complaints crudely during a concert, but I like the feeling of being close to a rowdy audience. I'd rather have an active audience than a stoned and passive one, even if that includes some hostility."

Genesis now seems poised on the brink of financial as well as artistic triumph. The hard core of their loyal fans is growing with each tour and every concert. Peter Gabriel feels fortunate that the band has never had to compromise for success. "Looking at the Who and Yes, it seems they weren't able to play easily entire works like Tommy or Topographic Oceans ," Peter pointed out, relaxing a little now as he gazed out his hotel room window at the twinkling skyline over New York's Central Park. "So far we've been very lucky; our audiences initially tolerated The Lamb and now are actually positive toward it. Tonight was one of the first gigs ever in America when I felt we'd really gotten across."