Genesis – Extras Tracks 1983-1998 (2007) [SACD / Virgin – 5099950385126]

Genesis - Extras Tracks 1983-1998 (2007)

Title: Genesis – Extras Tracks 1983-1998 (2007)
Genre: Rock
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

The long-awaited high-fidelity overhaul of the Genesis catalog began with a multi-album box set spanning 1976-1982 — the first half of Phil Collins’ reign as lead vocalist, otherwise known as the prog years of when the group was a trio. Instead of moving backward to cover the band’s early, arty years with Peter Gabriel, the next release in this series moved forward, covering 1983-1998, otherwise known as the “pop years” for the trio. To their credit, Genesis doesn’t try to write the 1998 post-Collins Calling All Stations out of their history: it’s right here, alongside 1983’s Genesis, 1986’s Invisible Touch, and 1991’s We Can’t Dance, plus a bonus disc with eight rarities. Going forward to these albums makes sense for two reasons: first of all, there’s the fact that this is the reunited lineup that was touring the world in 2007, but it’s also true that these digital-era productions are better showcases for 5.1 Surround mixes and they’re the records that have loads of video and multimedia material to fill out these DVD-As (in the U.K., this set is available as Hybrid SACDs as well). The video section of each of the albums contains all the video clips from the record, plus new interviews with the bands about the record, then there’s multimedia press kits added to the mix. It may be a more deluxe treatment than either We Can’t Dance or Calling All Stations, but it’s certainly something that will appeal to hardcore fans who will find this expertly produced set irresistible even if the music itself isn’t.

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2 min read

Genesis – Extras Tracks 1976-1982 (2007) [SACD / Virgin – 0946 388057 2 4]

Genesis - Extras Tracks 1976-1982 (2007)

Title: Genesis – Extras Tracks 1976-1982 (2007)
Genre: Rock
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

If the grouping of albums on this 2007 box set initially seems a little odd — it is neither a collection of the band’s early work, nor all of their albums after Peter Gabriel’s departure, nor is it their most popular work — it soon becomes apparent why these five albums are grouped together and reissued as remastered double-disc sets, with one disc containing a CD of the album, the other a DVD with a 5.1 mix and extra video material (in the U.K., the first disc contains hybrid SACDs of the albums, raising this question why they aren’t in this format in the U.S., especially since the bonus disc in this box is a hybrid SACD in all territories). These are the key art rock albums from the Phil Collins-fronted lineup of Genesis, the ones that the fans value, certainly more so than the pop-oriented Genesis and Invisible Touch. Collins, Tony Banks, and Mike Rutherford reunited in 2007 for a tour, so it made sense to box up their key texts as a deluxe reissue, because this is indeed the music that the fans will want to hear on the tour. If the remastered sound wasn’t enough of an incentive for hardcore fans (although it often is), the set also includes plenty of supplemental material, highlighted by a bonus disc containing 13 rarities and B-sides, including the single “Paperlate.” That’s not the end of the bonus material, though: there’s also a 48-page book, and each DVD is packed with extra material, including promotional videos, TV appearances, replications of tour programs, and new interviews with the band about the making of the albums. The only drawback to the set is that it’s not available as hybrid SACDs in all territories, but really, that’s a minor complaint because this set is executed with love and care, living up to the high expectations of Genesis’ dedicated fans.

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2 min read

Genesis – Extras Tracks 1970-1975 (2007) [SACD / Virgin – 50999 519683 2 8]

Genesis - Extras Tracks 1970-1975 (2007)

Title: Genesis – Extras Tracks 1970-1975 (2007)
Genre: Rock
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

This supplemental disc has the exceptional B-side “Twilight Alehouse,” the single-only “Happy the Man,” the demo of the terrific “Going Out to Get You,” and the BBC session that produced “Shepherd,” “Pacidy,” and “Let Us Now Make Love” — all tracks that showed up on the 1998 box set Genesis Archives, Vol. 1: 1967-1975, but the real treat is the first official release of the four songs that comprise Genesis Plays Jackson, the band’s soundtrack to a show by artist Michael Jackson. Add to this the video material — limited to interviews on Trespass and Nursery Cryme, but containing full performances on Foxtrot and Selling England, plus the original slide shows used for the stage show of Lamb — and this box turns into something extraordinary: a nearly complete portrait of a restlessly creative band at their peak, whose output only sounds more distinctive with each passing year.

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1 min read

Genesis – Duke (1980) [Remastered Reissue 2007] [SACD / Virgin – 0946 385181 2 9]

Genesis - Duke (1980) [Remastered Reissue 2007]

Title: Genesis – Duke (1980) [Remastered Reissue 2007]
Genre: Rock
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

If And Then There Were Three suggested that Genesis were moving toward pop, Duke is where they leaped into the fray. Not that it was exactly a head-first leap: the band may have peppered the album with pop songs, but there was still a heavy dose of prog, as the concluding “Duke” suite made clear. This is modernist art rock, quite dissimilar to the fragile, delicate Selling England by the Pound, and sometimes the precision of the attack can be a little bombastic. Nevertheless, this is a major leap forward in distinguishing the sound of Genesis, the band, and along with a new signature sound come pop songs, particularly in the guise of “Misunderstanding” and “Turn It on Again.” The first is a light, nearly soulful, heartache song, the latter is a thunderous arena rocker, and both showcase the new version of Genesis at its absolute best. The rest of the record comes close to matching them.

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1 min read

Genesis – Calling All Stations (1997) [Remastered Reissue 2007] [SACD / Virgin – 5099950383528]

Genesis - Calling All Stations (1997) [Remastered Reissue 2007]

Title: Genesis – Calling All Stations (1997) [Remastered Reissue 2007]
Genre: Rock
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Phil Collins left Genesis following the We Can’t Dance tour and many observers expected Tony Banks and Michael Rutherford to finally call it a day. They decided to persevere instead, hiring former Stiltskin vocalist Ray Wilson to replace Collins. Given that Stiltskin was a European neo-prog band, it isn’t a total surprise that Genesis returned to their art rock roots on Calling All Stations, their first album with Wilson. The music on Calling All Stations is long, dense, and lugubrious, but it’s given the same immaculate, pristine production that was the hallmark of their adult contemporary work with Collins. It wants to be an art rock album, but not at the expense of losing the pop audience – which makes it all the stranger that the group doesn’t really write pop songs on Calling All Stations. That may be because Wilson’s voice isn’t suited for pop, but works well with languid, synthesized prog settings. But even ponderous prog rock has to have musical themes worth exploring, and on that level, Genesis come up dry on Calling All Stations.

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1 min read

Genesis – A Trick Of The Tail (1976) [Remastered Reissue 2007] [SACD / Virgin – 0946 385964 2 4]

Genesis - A Trick Of The Tail (1976) [Remastered Reissue 2007]

Title: Genesis – A Trick Of The Tail (1976) [Remastered Reissue 2007]
Genre: Rock
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

After Peter Gabriel departed for a solo career, Genesis embarked on a long journey to find a replacement, only to wind back around to their drummer, Phil Collins, as a replacement. With Collins as their new frontman, the band decided not to pursue the stylish, jagged postmodernism of The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway – a move that Gabriel would do in his solo career – and instead returned to the English eccentricity of Selling England by the Pound for its next effort, A Trick of the Tail. In almost every respect, this feels like a truer sequel to Selling England by the Pound than Lamb; after all, that double album was obsessed with modernity and nightmare, whereas this album returns the group to the fanciful fairy tale nature of its earlier records. Also, Genesis were moving away from the barbed pop of the first LP and returning to elastic numbers that showcased their instrumental prowess, and they sounded more forceful and unified as a band than they had since Foxtrot. Not that this album is quite as memorable as Foxtrot or Selling England, largely because its songs aren’t as immediate or memorable: apart from “Dance on a Volcano,” this is about the sound of the band playing, not individual songs, and it succeeds on that level quite wildly – to the extent that it proved to longtime fans that Genesis could possibly thrive without its former leader in tow.

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2 min read

Genesis – And Then There Were Three (1978) [Remastered Reissue 2007] [SACD / Virgin – 0946 385050 2 0]

Genesis - And Then There Were Three (1978) [Remastered Reissue 2007]

Title: Genesis – And Then There Were Three (1978) [Remastered Reissue 2007]
Genre: Rock
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

And Then There Were Three, more than either of its immediate predecessors, feels like the beginning of the second phase of Genesis – in large part because the lineup had indeed dwindled down to Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford, and Phil Collins, a situation alluded to in the title. But it wasn’t just a whittling of the lineup; the group’s aesthetic was also shifting, moving away from the fantastical, literary landscapes that marked both the early Genesis LPs and the two transitional post-Gabriel outings, as the bandmembers turned their lyrical references to contemporary concerns and slowly worked pop into the mix, as heard on the closing “Follow You Follow Me,” the band’s first genuine pop hit. Its calm, insistent melody, layered with harmonies, is a perfect soft rock hook, although there’s a glassy, almost eerie quality to the production that is also heard throughout the rest of the record. These chilly surfaces are an indication that Genesis don’t quite want to abandon prog at this point, but the increasing emphasis on melody and tight song structures points the way toward the group’s ’80s work.

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2 min read

Genesis – Abacab (1981) [Remastered Reissue 2007] [SACD / Virgin – 0946 385183 2 7]

Genesis - Abacab (1981) [Remastered Reissue 2007]

Title: Genesis – Abacab (1981) [Remastered Reissue 2007]
Genre: Rock
Format: MCH SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Duke showcased a new Genesis – a sleek, hard, stylish trio that truly sounded like a different band from its first incarnation – but Abacab was where this new incarnation of the band came into its own. Working once again with producer Hugh Padgham, the group escalated the innovations of Duke, increasing the pop hooks, working them seamlessly into the artiest rock here. And even if the brash, glorious pop of “No Reply at All” – powered by the percolating horns of Earth, Wind & Fire, yet polished into a precise piece of nearly new wave pop by Padgham – suggests otherwise, this is still art rock at its core, or at least album-oriented rock, as the band works serious syncopations and instrumental forays into a sound that’s as bright, bold, and jagged as the modernist artwork on the cover. They dabble in other genres, lacing “Me and Sarah Jane” with a reggae beat, for instance, which often adds dimension to their sound, as when “Dodo” rides a hard funk beat and greasy organ synths yet doesn’t become obvious; it turns inward, requiring active listening. Truly, only “No Reply at All,” the rampaging title track (possibly their hardest-rocking song to date), and the sleek and spooky “Man on the Corner” (which hides a real melancholy heart underneath its glistening surface) are immediate and accessible – although the Mockney jokes of “Who Dunnit?” could count, it’s too much of a geeky novelty to be pop. The rest of Abacab is truly modern art rock, their last album that could bear that tag comfortably.

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2 min read