Monday 21 March 2011

In the beginning...

As a new discovery (to me at least) I'd been listening to a lot of Big Big Train at the start of the year, and they're not afraid to wear their influences on their sleeves, and a big influence on them is obviously early Genesis (and especially Anthony Phillips) - and just lately they've inspired me to re-listen to the originals, and I've been soundtracking my short drive into work and the working day itself with the substantial Genesis back catalogue.

Although Marillion have their claims, Genesis must be the strongest contender for My First Prog Love. True, I heard Marillion first, but I didn't know they were prog at the time (to be fair, I didn't know what prog was) and I didn't get into them quite so deeply until a little later. To start from the beginning...

It was the summer of 1984, aged 16, and a friend and I had decided we liked Marillion, after seeing Garden Party on Top of the Pops, and hearing another friend's copy of the album Fugazi (still remember this as being more or less at the same time, but can't have been as Fugazi was a year after Garden Party!). They were different from any of the pop around at the time, and we fancied ourselves as poets (didn't all sixth fomers, as we were about to become?). The intricacy and, lets be honest, pretentiousness of their music and lyrics appealed to us. We hadn't heard much but we liked what we had.

My friend's uncle was a full blown 70s vintage prog-fan, and hearing that we liked Marillion suggested we should listen to Genesis, and lent us a couple of albums - Selling England By The Pound, and Trick Of The Tail, and thinking about it these remain my favourites. Is that just because they were the first I heard, or because the uncle had chosen wisely? I like to think it's the latter.


We did also have access to more, as at the time I was a saturday boy at the library in town, which had a record section, where loans were free to members of staff. In addition to the two LPs from Uncle, I borrowed Trespass (because I liked the cover) and what I now know to be a compilation called "Rock Theatre", which included one track from Selling England (I Know What I Like), three from Nursery Cryme (Harlequin, Harold The Barrel, and Fountain of Salmacis, and two from Foxtrot (Watcher of the Skies and the mighty Supper's Ready). Although by this time I was "into" Mike Oldfield and my first LP of his, Crises (from 1983) had shown you could have a piece of music that took up the whole of one side of an LP, Supper's Ready was the first exposure to a proper prog 20-minuter. Epic stuff, quite mind expanding for a teenage
 boy brought up on glam rock singles, the New Romantics and 80's electro-pop.

Of course, these were the days (God I sound old) before internet file sharing, when you bought vinyl LPs and cassettes (CDs were new and rare) and home taping was "killing music". It's true, I did my share of taping, but you had to find someone with the original to lend you, or hope it was in the record library before you could tape it, so it took a good couple of years before I'd heard everything by Genesis. Nowadays a few mouse clicks and you could hear just about everything they'd done in a few days, or download it (legally or not) to listen to later. Back then, I couldn't afford to buy all their albums, if they were even in the shops, and the record library didn't have them all either. I think I was half way through university when I'd finally heard everything they'd released (up to that point, at least), and had at least a cassett copy of them all. I should stress that although I was a home-taper, I've since bought at least one copy of everything Genesis released, in some cases two or more copies as they release re-mastered versions every few years!

Nothing quite touches the magic that surrounded those early explorations into their music, there was (and is) something special, very English, very folk-tale (in a slightly sinister wasy) about their earlier work, up to the point where Steve Hackett left. They made good pop and rock music after that, some of it like "Home By The Sea" has a special charm of its own, but never quite as other-worldly as those first albums. Eventually, thanks to a Genesis discography book (again, remember these were pre-internet days) I discovered the previously unknown pre-Trespass debut in a German record shop (before it was massively re-released in the UK in many forms) and the existence of solo albums by mysterious original guitarist Anthony Phillips...

...but that's another story.

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