Genesis were an English progressive rock band from Godalming, Surrey. Formed in January 1967, the group originally consisted of lead vocalist and flautist Peter Gabriel, guitarist Anthony Phillips, bassist and guitarist Mike Rutherford, keyboardist Tony Banks and drummer Chris Stewart. The band's most recent lineup featured constant members Rutherford and Banks, alongside drummer and vocalist Phil Collins (who first joined in 1970), augmented for live shows by touring musicians, bassist and guitarist Daryl Stuermer, drummer Nic Collins and backing vocalists Daniel Pearce and Patrick Smyth.
Following the breakup of earlier groups Garden Wall and Anon, Genesis were formed in January 1967 by Peter Gabriel, Tony Banks, Chris Stewart (all from Garden Wall), Anthony Phillips and Mike Rutherford (both from Anon). [1] The group recorded their first single "The Silent Sun" in December, which was released the following February. [2] "A Winter's Tale" followed three months later. [3] Shortly after the release of the second single, Stewart had to leave when his parents refused to let him leave school to focus on the band. [4] He was soon replaced by fellow student John Silver. [5]
Over a ten-day period during the school summer holidays in August 1968, Genesis recorded their debut album From Genesis to Revelation , which was released in March 1969. [6] [7] By August, John Mayhew had replaced Silver, [8] who had moved to the United States to study at Cornell University. [9] Between June and July 1970, the group recorded their second album Trespass , although before its release Phillips announced that he would be departing due to stage fright and other health issues. [10] The remaining members decided to continue, although without Mayhew who was fired. [11]
After advertising for the vacant positions in Melody Maker magazine, Genesis hired Phil Collins as Mayhew's replacement in August 1970. [12] Before bringing in a replacement for Phillips, the group performed for a couple of months as a four-piece without a guitarist. [13] The position was eventually filled temporarily by Mick Barnard starting in November. [14] By January 1971, Barnard had been replaced by former Quiet World guitarist Steve Hackett. [14]
The lineup of Peter Gabriel, Steve Hackett, Mike Rutherford, Tony Banks and Phil Collins remained stable for four years, issuing the albums Nursery Cryme in 1971, Foxtrot in 1972, Genesis Live and Selling England by the Pound in 1973, and The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway in 1974. [15] Gabriel left at the end of the Lamb Lies Down on Broadway Tour in May 1975, although his departure was not officially announced until 15 August 1975. [16]
Genesis auditioned several potential replacements for Gabriel and even briefly considered continuing as an instrumental group, before Collins eventually started performing lead vocals for their next album A Trick of the Tail and took on the role full-time. [17] To allow him to focus on performing vocals, drums on the Trick of the Tail Tour were performed by Bill Bruford. [18] In December 1976, it was announced that Bruford had been replaced by Chester Thompson. [19] However, Collins continued to play the drums on all of the band's studio recordings and he continued to play drums in concert for certain songs, including extended instrumental sections, and he often played percussion onstage while singing. The band's second live album Seconds Out , released in late 1977, mostly includes recordings from the 1977 tour with Thompson on drums, the exception being "The Cinema Show" which is from the 1976 tour with Bruford on drums.
Following the Wind & Wuthering Tour, it was announced in October 1977 that Hackett had left Genesis to pursue a solo career. [20] Prior to the announcement, Collins, Rutherford and Banks had already recorded the group's next album ...And Then There Were Three... , which was issued in March 1978. [21] After Hackett's departure, Daryl Stuermer joined Thompson as a member of the Genesis touring band, performing guitars, bass and backing vocals. [22]
The Banks/Collins/Rutherford (with Stuermer/Thompson) lineup of Genesis remained constant for almost 20 years, releasing six studio albums and three live albums. [15] The We Can't Dance Tour of 1992 was the final run to feature this setup, as the band took a break thereafter. [23] [24] On 18 September 1993, the trio of Collins, Rutherford and Banks performed at a fundraising event with Tim Renwick on bass, and Gary Wallis and Roger Taylor on drums. [25] Genesis spent the next couple of years on hiatus, before it was announced on 28 March 1996 that Collins had left the band, although Rutherford and Banks assured that they would continue after hiring a new vocalist. [26]
By November 1996, Ray Wilson had been appointed as the replacement for Collins in time for the recording of Calling All Stations , although his addition was not announced until the following June. [27] For the subsequent touring cycle, the new trio were joined by guitarist Anthony Drennan and drummer Nir Zidkyahu. [28] The tour ended in 1998, and by 2000 the group had disbanded. [29]
Six years later, Collins, Rutherford and Banks announced at a press conference in November 2006 that Genesis were reforming for a European tour the following year. [30] The tour, dubbed Turn It On Again, was subsequently expanded to include a North American run of concerts. [31] Alongside the main trio, it also saw the return of touring guitarist/bassist Daryl Stuermer and drummer Chester Thompson. [32] The 2007 concert tour spawned the live album Live over Europe 2007 and the live DVD When in Rome 2007 . [33] [34] Turn It On Again: The Tour ended with a show in Hollywood, California on 13 October 2007. [35]
A second reformation, the Last Domino? Tour, was announced on 4 March 2020, 13 years after the previous tour. [36] Stuermer returned, alongside Collins's son Nic on drums. [37] The band have since ended due to Collins' bad health. [38] [39]
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tony Banks |
|
| all Genesis releases | |
Mike Rutherford |
| |||
Phil Collins |
|
| all Genesis releases from Nursery Cryme (1971) onwards, except Calling All Stations (1997) |
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Peter Gabriel | 1967–1975 |
| all Genesis releases from "The Silent Sun" (1968) to The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (1974) | |
Anthony Phillips | 1967–1970 |
|
| |
Chris Stewart | 1967–1968 |
|
| |
John Silver | 1968–1969 | From Genesis to Revelation (1969) | ||
John Mayhew | 1969–1970 (died 2009) |
| Trespass (1970) | |
Mick Barnard | 1970–1971 | electric and acoustic guitars | none – live performances only | |
Steve Hackett | 1971–1977 |
|
| |
Ray Wilson | 1996–2000 | lead vocals | Calling All Stations (1997) |
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ronnie Caryl | 1971 (one off) [40] [41] | guitars | none – one live performance only | |
Bill Bruford | 1976 |
|
| |
Chester Thompson |
| all Genesis live releases from Seconds Out (1977) onwards | ||
Daryl Stuermer |
|
| all Genesis live releases from Three Sides Live (1982) onwards | |
Tim Renwick | 1993 (one-off) | electric guitar | none – one live performance only | |
Gary Wallis | drums | |||
Roger Taylor | ||||
Nir Zidkyahu | 1997–1998 |
| Calling All Stations (1997) | |
Anthony Drennan |
| none – live performances only | ||
Nic Collins |
|
| ||
Daniel Pearce [42] |
| |||
Patrick Smyth [42] |
Period | Members | Releases |
---|---|---|
January 1967 – June 1968 |
|
|
June 1968 – August 1969 |
|
|
August 1969 – August 1970 |
|
|
August – November 1970 |
| none |
November 1970 – January 1971 |
| |
January 1971 – August 1975 (temporary reunions for one-off show in October 1982 and in studio during 1995) |
|
|
August 1975 – October 1977 |
with
|
|
October 1977 – March 1996 |
with
|
|
March 1996 – September 2000 |
with
|
|
September – December 2000 (one-off show in September and live performances filmed in studio for documentary) |
with
|
|
Band inactive 2001 – November 2006 | ||
November 2006 – October 2007 |
with
|
|
Band inactive October 2007 – March 2020 | ||
March 2020 – March 2022 |
with
| none |
Genesis were an English rock band formed at Charterhouse School, Godalming, Surrey, in 1967. The band's longest-existing and most commercially successful line-up consisted of keyboardist Tony Banks, bassist/guitarist Mike Rutherford and drummer/singer Phil Collins. In the 1970s, during which the band also included singer Peter Gabriel and guitarist Steve Hackett, Genesis were among the pioneers of progressive rock.
Stephen Richard Hackett is an English guitarist who gained prominence as the lead guitarist of the progressive rock band Genesis from 1971 to 1977. Hackett contributed to six Genesis studio albums, three live albums, seven singles and one EP before he left to pursue a solo career. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Genesis in 2010.
Nursery Cryme is the third studio album by the English rock band Genesis, released on 12 November 1971 on Charisma Records. It was their first to feature drummer/vocalist Phil Collins and guitarist Steve Hackett. The album received a mixed response from critics and was not initially a commercial success; it did not enter the UK chart until 1974, when it reached its peak at No. 39. However, the album was successful in continental Europe, particularly Italy.
Foxtrot is the fourth studio album by the English progressive rock band Genesis, released on 15 September 1972 on Charisma Records. It features their longest recorded song, the 23-minute track "Supper's Ready".
Selling England by the Pound is the fifth studio album by the English progressive rock band Genesis, released on 5 October 1973 on Charisma Records. It reached No. 3 in the United Kingdom and No. 70 in the United States. A single from the album, "I Know What I Like ", was released in February 1974 and became the band's first top 30 hit in the UK.
Seconds Out is the second live album by English progressive rock band Genesis. It was released as a double album on 14 October 1977 on Charisma Records, and was their first with touring drummer Chester Thompson and their last with guitarist Steve Hackett. The majority was recorded in June 1977 at the Palais des Sports in Paris during the Wind & Wuthering Tour. One track, "The Cinema Show", was recorded in 1976 at the Apollo in Glasgow during their A Trick of the Tail Tour.
Six of the Best was a reunion concert between the English rock band Genesis and their original frontman Peter Gabriel, with former guitarist Steve Hackett joining the band for the two encores. The one-off event took place on 2 October 1982 at the Milton Keynes Bowl, England, and staged as a benefit to raise funds for Gabriel who faced considerable financial debts after the first WOMAD festival. It was the only time Gabriel and Hackett have performed with the band since their departures in 1975 and 1977, respectively.
...And Then There Were Three... is the ninth studio album by the English rock band Genesis. It was released on 31 March 1978 by Charisma Records and is their first recorded as a trio of singer/drummer Phil Collins, keyboardist Tony Banks, and bassist/guitarist Mike Rutherford, following the departure of guitarist Steve Hackett. The album marked a shift in the band's sound, mixing elements of their progressive rock roots with more accessible material, and Collins contributing to more of the group's songwriting.
Daryl Mark Stuermer is an American musician, songwriter, singer, and record producer best known for playing the guitar and bass for Genesis during live shows, and lead guitar for Phil Collins during most solo tours and albums. He has also released nine solo albums, and tours with his Daryl Stuermer Band.
John Mayhew was an English musician, best known for his brief tenure as the drummer of the progressive rock band Genesis. He replaced the band's previous drummer, John Silver, in August 1969, and was himself replaced in August 1970 by Phil Collins. Mayhew appears on the album Trespass, as well as the Genesis Archive 1967-75 and Genesis 1970–1975 box sets, and was the first drummer to perform with Genesis in concert.
Genesis Archive 1967–75 is a box set by the English progressive rock band Genesis, released on 22 June 1998 on Virgin Records in the United Kingdom and by Atlantic Records in the United States. After the release of their studio album Calling All Stations in 1997, the band assembled recordings from their history for release which involved the participation of former members Peter Gabriel, Anthony Phillips, Steve Hackett, Phil Collins, John Mayhew, and John Silver. The set includes previously unreleased studio, live, and demo tracks, some of which include re-recorded vocal and guitar parts from Gabriel and Hackett, respectively.
Genesis Archive #2: 1976–1992 is the second box set by English rock band Genesis. It was released on 6 November 2000 on Virgin and Atlantic Records as the follow-up to their previous retrospective box set, Genesis Archive 1967–75 (1998). This set covers the band's history post 1975, when drummer Phil Collins replaced original lead singer Peter Gabriel.
Mick Barnard is a guitarist in the UK rock band The Farm. He was also the guitarist of the band Genesis for a brief time, following the departure of founding member Anthony Phillips, just before Steve Hackett came in and replaced him. Barnard does not appear on any released Genesis recordings.
The Musical Box are a Canadian tribute band formed in Montreal, Quebec in 1993 who recreate performances by the English rock band Genesis during the 1970s. The current line-up is formed of singer and performer Denis Gagné, guitarist François Gagnon, bassist Sébastien Lamothe, keyboardist Ian Benhamou, and drummer Marc Laflamme.
"Firth of Fifth" is a song by the British progressive rock band Genesis. It first appeared as the third track on the 1973 album Selling England by the Pound, and was performed as a live piece either in whole or in part throughout the band's career.
"The Knife" is a song by progressive rock band Genesis from their second album, Trespass (1970). The first half of the song was released as a single in May 1971 with the second half as the B-side, but it did not chart. The heavy, progressive rock style of the song was a marked change from previous Genesis songs; it showed the band pioneering a new direction.
Turn It On Again: The Tour was a 2007 concert tour of Europe and North America by the English rock band Genesis. The tour was notable for the return of drummer and vocalist Phil Collins, who had fronted the band during their most commercially successful period before leaving in 1996, rejoining founder members Tony Banks and Mike Rutherford, with their traditional on-stage musicians, Chester Thompson on drums and Daryl Stuermer on guitar/bass.
"The Musical Box" is a song by English progressive rock band Genesis, which was originally released on their third studio album Nursery Cryme in 1971. The song is written in the key of F# major. This song is the longest song on the album at ten and a half minutes.
The Last Domino? Tour was a concert tour by English rock band Genesis, staged following the announcement of their reunion after a 13-year hiatus. It featured the core trio of keyboardist Tony Banks, drummer/singer Phil Collins, and bassist/guitarist Mike Rutherford, the most commercially successful line-up in the band's history, with Daryl Stuermer on guitars and bass, and Collins's son Nic on drums.
BBC Broadcasts is a box set by the English rock band Genesis. It was released on 3 March 2023 by EMI Records.