4merper4mer Posted Monday at 11:00 PM Posted Monday at 11:00 PM (edited) Edited Monday at 11:02 PM by 4merper4mer Quote
Ralonzo Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago So I found myself thinking as is wont, "what were the boys from peak Genesis up to maybe 45 years ago?" Peter Gabriel was trending toward shorter, radio-friendly songs. He had come up with an idea to do an album without cymbals and see if anyone would notice. During this process, he incorporated Tony Levin's stick and Phil Collins accidentally discovered the drum sound of the 80's - the gated reverb effect. Some of the songs even became minor hits, and laid the groundwork for an ascension to superstardom by 1986. Genesis were trending toward shorter, radio-friendly songs. Still, they released an album in "Duke" which was an artistic progression and underrated in their catalog. Some of the songs even became minor hits, and laid the groundwork for an ascension to superstardom by 1986. Steve Hackett was trending toward shorter, radio-friendly songs. He released perhaps his most accomplished solo album "Defector." He didn't have any songs become even minor hits, and laid the groundwork for continued obscurity by 1986 which he remedied by joining a band called GTR. Quote
SinceThe70s Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 49 minutes ago, Ralonzo said: So I found myself thinking as is wont, "what were the boys from peak Genesis up to maybe 45 years ago?" Peter Gabriel was trending toward shorter, radio-friendly songs. He had come up with an idea to do an album without cymbals and see if anyone would notice. During this process, he incorporated Tony Levin's stick and Phil Collins accidentally discovered the drum sound of the 80's - the gated reverb effect. Some of the songs even became minor hits, and laid the groundwork for an ascension to superstardom by 1986. Genesis were trending toward shorter, radio-friendly songs. Still, they released an album in "Duke" which was an artistic progression and underrated in their catalog. Some of the songs even became minor hits, and laid the groundwork for an ascension to superstardom by 1986. Steve Hackett was trending toward shorter, radio-friendly songs. He released perhaps his most accomplished solo album "Defector." He didn't have any songs become even minor hits, and laid the groundwork for continued obscurity by 1986 which he remedied by joining a band called GTR. That was the year before my freshman year when I first listened to Genesis - my roommate was a big fan. Liked that Gabriel solo album from the jump. 1 Quote
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