Ozzy Osborne was also neighbors and good friends with Pat Boon.Alice Cooper was also friends with Pat Boone. We can make an odd connect-the-dots of Rock.
Ozzy Osborne was also neighbors and good friends with Pat Boon.Alice Cooper was also friends with Pat Boone. We can make an odd connect-the-dots of Rock.
This would have been a much more fitting swan-song to an incredible band!POD: Phil Collins doesn't leave Genesis in 1995 to focus on his solo career. However, the band remains on hiatus for some time, until around 1998. From the same universe as this album: https://www.alternatehistory.com/fo...ernate-timelines.369850/page-10#post-18280538
The band (then composed of Collins, Mike Rutherford, and Tony Banks) had convened in the studio to begin work on their first album since 1992's We Can't Dance. Collins brings in two pieces he wrote for the upcoming Disney Tarzan film (Strangers Like Me and You'll Be In My Heart) while Banks and Rutherford brought in Calling All Stations, Congo, and The Dividing Line (and given the thematic link between Collins' material and Congo, it was decided that Congo would be the working title) It was decided that the remaining material needed to fill out the album would be group compositions (at one point mulling over doing another "Duke Suite", though the band had at that point felt tired of long form compositions). Then halfway through recording, Banks would receive a phone call from an old friend.
"Hi, Tony. It's Pete. Heard you were doing something again and I was wondering if I could drop by."
As it turned out, Peter Gabriel did more than just "stopping by"... and another figure from the past would join them as well.
Now And Forevermore - Genesis
Released November 2, 1999
Tracks 6-12 credited to Peter Gabriel, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford, Phil Collins, and Steve Hackett.
1. Strangers Like Me (Collins)
2. Congo (Banks, Rutherford)
3. Calling All Stations (Banks, Rutherford)
4. The Dividing Line (Banks, Rutherford)
5. You'll Be In My Heart (Collins)
6. The Carpet Crawlers 99
7. No Way Out
8. 7/8
9. Sky Blue
10. One Man's Fool
11. More Than This
12. Firth of Fifth 99
Personnel:
Peter Gabriel - lead vocals on tracks 7-12, co-lead vocal on track 6, flute, percussion
Phil Collins - lead vocals on tracks 1-5, co-lead vocal on track 6, drums, percussion
Tony Banks - keyboards, synthesizers
Mike Rutherford - bass, guitars, bass pedals
Steve Hackett - guitars
The album derived its title from a line in Collins' You'll Be In My Heart, which the band felt suited the material moreso than the working title of Congo, as well as the fact that by mutual agreement of the band that it would be their swan song.
The resulting tour featured the signature quintet lineup of Genesis from 1971-1975, as well as touring musicians Chester Thompson (drums) and Daryl Stuermer (guitar/bass). Gabriel and Collins would perform the lead vocals on their respective material, trading off verses in The Carpet Crawlers 99. Most notably, live performances of Firth of Fifth 99 featured a guitar duet between Hackett and Stuermer, to the chagrin of many a fan. The tour was a roaring success, and though Genesis chose to effectively retire as a unit at the end of it, they did have a one-off reunion at Live 8 in 2005.
To the great jam session in the sky, man.Where did everybody go
Well, while you're here, what is an album you love that you wish was more successful? Hopefully that'll inspire more activity.To the great jam session in the sky, man.
Hmm. I only have a vague knowledge of music of the time, but if I had to say so, probably something by a Russian band called Kino.Well, while you're here, what is an album you love that you wish was more successful? Hopefully that'll inspire more activity.
what time?Hmm. I only have a vague knowledge of music of the time, but if I had to say so, probably something by a Russian band called Kino.
They were an eighties band from the Soviet Union. Their main singer died, and it didn't go well.what time?
I wish DEVO's Total DEVO album and the Hollies' comeback album What Goes Around... would have been more successful and well recieved. They are both amazing.They were an eighties band from the Soviet Union. Their main singer died, and it didn't go well.
Yeah, I can imagine. However, both bands are fairly experimental and for the most part of their careers, not terribly mainstream enough to get big.I wish DEVO's Total DEVO album and the Hollies' comeback album What Goes Around... would have been more successful and well recieved. They are both amazing.
Honestly, I'd just want the Buggles to actually be like the Beatles of the 80sI don't know if it came up yet, but the Yes album "90125" was not originally a Yes album. The band had broken up, and became a band named Cinema, brought on Trevor Horn of the Buggles for their new band and recorded a new album. They then ended up brining former Yes lead singer Jon Anderson back to record vocals, and that album became a new Yes album and almost by happenstance, Yes reformed and album became another Yes album. So for want of a nail, that album is not a Yes album. Bet you wish the Beatles had the same thing happen.
Honestly, I'd just want the Buggles to actually be like the Beatles of the 80s
ELO were the Beatles of the 70s and XTC just always did their own thingWasn't that ELO? And XTC?
I don't know if it came up yet, but the Yes album "90125" was not originally a Yes album. The band had broken up, and became a band named Cinema, brought on Trevor Horn of the Buggles for their new band and recorded a new album. They then ended up brining former Yes lead singer Jon Anderson back to record vocals, and that album became a new Yes album and almost by happenstance, Yes reformed and album became another Yes album. So for want of a nail, that album is not a Yes album. Bet you wish the Beatles had the same thing happen. "Oh, Ringo is doing a new album and Paul's in town. Ok, we'll all pop in for a song. Oh hell, we just reformed the Beatles, didn't we?"