Trespass (album)
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Trespass is the second studio album by the English rock band Genesis. It was released on 23 October 1970 by Charisma Records, and is their last album with original guitarist Anthony Phillips and their only album with drummer John Mayhew.
Genesis turned professional in autumn 1969, and began to rehearse intensely and play live shows. After several months of touring they secured a recording contract with Charisma Records, and entered Trident Studios in London in July 1970 to record Trespass. The music marked a departure from more pop-oriented songs, as displayed on their first album From Genesis to Revelation, towards folk-flavoured progressive rock. This ranged from light acoustic pieces with multiple twelve-string guitars such as "Dusk", to the heavier live favorite "The Knife". The sleeve, featuring a knife slash across the front, was designed by Paul Whitehead. It was the first of three covers designed by Whitehead for the band.
Shortly after recording, Phillips decided to leave the group, which almost caused Genesis to split. After discussing the situation, they agreed to continue, and replaced Mayhew with drummer and singer Phil Collins before they resumed touring. Trespass was not a major success upon release; it failed to chart in the UK and the US and it received some mixed reviews from critics, but it was commercially successful in Belgium, which helped sustain the band's career. A reissue briefly charted the UK top 100 in 1984.
Background and recording
In August 1969, Genesis decided to become a professional band. The founders – guitarist Anthony Phillips, bassist Mike Rutherford, vocalist and flautist Peter Gabriel, and keyboardist Tony Banks – had been joined by drummer John Silver.Template:Sfn They split from producer Jonathan King and decided to write more complex material than the straightforward pop on their first album From Genesis to Revelation. Gabriel recalled that the group wanted to explore and mix musical styles.<ref name=ucr/> The group bought new equipment, including a bass guitar and a Hammond organ, and recorded songs at Regent Studios for a demo, including "White Mountain" and "Family" (which became "Dusk"). Silver then left to study in the US.Template:Sfn
In November, Genesis played their first live shows as a professional band, touring the local university circuit, with new drummer John Mayhew.Template:Sfn Mayhew, the oldest and most experienced musician, came from a different background from the rest of the band. Phillips recalled that, despite their efforts to make him feel comfortable, the drummer was unsure of his playing.Template:Sfn Also in November, Genesis friend and ex-schoolmate Richard MacPhail arranged for them to take up residence in his family's abandoned weekend retreat house in Wotton, Surrey, called Christmas Cottage. Genesis remained there for six months, a period of intense songwriting in between concerts which would produce the bulk of the material for Trespass.Template:Sfn
The group wanted to branch out from their earlier pop-oriented style, and write and perform songs that were unlike any other band at the time.Template:Sfn Banks was also transitioning his main instrument from piano to Hammond organ, which was a difficult process for him.Template:Sfn Rutherford later said that gigging was "tough, but a good way of getting the music into shape".Template:Sfn Two songs that made it to the next album, "Looking for Someone" and "Stagnation", were recorded for a BBC session in February 1970.Template:Sfn That same month, growing interest from audiences drew the attention of talent scouts and led to Threshold Records inviting Genesis to record "Looking For Someone" at De Lane Lea Studios. However, their chance for a recording contract with Threshold went up in smoke when Banks started arguing with producer Mike Pinder, saying they needed to do another take because he had played a wrong note on his organ.Template:Sfn
In March 1970, they secured a six-week residency at Ronnie Scott's jazz club in Soho, London, during which they were spotted by Charisma Records producer John Anthony. He persuaded label boss Tony Stratton Smith to sign them.Template:Sfn In July 1970, they retreated to Trident Studios in London to record a new album.Template:Sfn Anthony joined them as their producer and engineer, and the songs were recorded on 16-track tape.Template:Sfn Phillips remembered that recording was "slightly more sophisticated" than on From Genesis to Revelation, with the 16-track capability allowing them to multitrack solos, "which would have been unheard of on the previous album".Template:Sfn Rutherford and Phillips thought Anthony disliked having someone "drop in" individual parts, remembering by way of example that while recording "Stagnation", Rutherford had to listen to several minutes of the track before putting down a guitar part, by which time he had become too nervous and played it incorrectly.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The group had written an abundance of material, but with very little studio time in the budget there was no real opportunity to consider which songs should go on the album, and they had to simply record the songs which they had played the most in rehearsals and concerts.Template:Sfn They worked well with Anthony, and later recalled that his contributions were important and helped shape the album.<ref name="watts">Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Songs
Rutherford said that Trespass was the only Genesis album where each track was contributed to by each band member equally; every other album contained songs that were written by one or two individuals, with only minor contributions from the remaining members.<ref>Neer, Dan (1985). Mike on Mike [interview LP], Atlantic Recording Corporation.</ref> Phillips likewise remarked that during the months at Christmas Cottage, Genesis's habit of writing songs in their pre-Genesis writing partnerships (Phillips-Rutherford and Banks-Gabriel) was broken and they all began collaborating on writing each work.Template:Sfn Banks felt that the old songwriting process was still present to an extent, with most of the songs originating from one of the two pairs before being brought to the group for further development.Template:Sfn Banks later said that "we had played live quite a bit and every song on the album had been performed on stage. We had a selection of at least twice as many songs as appeared on the album, and the versions changed rapidly."Template:Sfn Rutherford recalled that since the songs had already been composed, arranged, and refined during live performances, there was no need to work out such things in the studio the way they did for later albums.Template:Sfn
The 1969 album In the Court of the Crimson King by King Crimson was a heavy influence on Genesis, with a copy being played endlessly during their extended stay at Christmas Cottage.Template:Sfn The band also drew from Gabriel's soul influences, along with classical, pop and folk music, and made regular use of Phillips and Rutherford's twelve-string guitar playing.<ref name=ucr>Template:Cite web</ref> To break the twelve-string guitar out of its traditional role as a background instrument and allow the listener to hear its individual notes, the band ran the twelve-string guitars through an old tape recorder instead of the conventional method of putting the microphone on the sound hole, against engineer Robin Cable's objections.Template:Sfn Gabriel was particularly fond of the combined twelve-string guitars and thought they gave the group a more unique and innovative sound.Template:Sfn
The album opens with "Looking for Someone", beginning with Gabriel's vocal accompanied only by an organ, later described as being "idiosyncratic enough to set them apart from the herd within seconds".Template:Sfn Gabriel came up with the song as a soul piece, and it was then extended and developed by the group into a more folk direction.Template:Sfn The coda at the end of the song was written by the group as a whole.Template:Sfn Paul Stump wrote in 1997 that there is "the barefaced presence of a riff" from "I Am the Walrus" by the Beatles in the song.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
"White Mountain" originated with a twelve-string guitar theme composed by Rutherford and Phillips, for which Phillips has cited Mary Hopkin's rendition of "Those Were the Days" as a likely influence.Template:Sfn Banks wrote the lyrics.Template:Sfn
"Visions of Angels" was recorded for the previous album From Genesis to Revelation, but left off because the band did not think it was good enough in its present form.Template:Sfn It originated from a piano piece by Phillips at a time when his piano technique was limited, but could produce a "plodding" style similar to songs by the Beach Boys and the Beatles.Template:Sfn It has a more straightforward verse/chorus structure than some of the other songs.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Genesis subsequently reworked and expanded it with a new middle section which was written by the group as a whole.Template:Sfn Phillips commented that while he was "rather heartbroken" when the song was rejected for From Genesis to Revelation, in retrospect it was a blessing, since if they had included it on that album, it never would have been developed into its best possible form.Template:Sfn He also said that Gabriel realized sometime between the recording for From Genesis to Revelation and Genesis going on tour for the first time that Phillips had written the lyrics as a love song to Jill Moore, Gabriel's girlfriend (and later wife), and it is likely that Genesis changed the lyrics before recording Trespass.Template:Sfn
The whole group worked on the music for "Stagnation", and Gabriel added lyrics to it.Template:Sfn It was one of several Genesis songs to reuse sections of their never-recorded epic "The Movement".Template:Sfn "Stagnation" and "Dusk" showed Phillips and Rutherford's combined twelve-string sound, along with Banks taking leads on piano, organ and Mellotron.Template:Sfn The organ lead uses a surreal descending note which Banks produced by turning the organ off and then turning it back on.Template:Sfn Rutherford later recalled there were around ten acoustic guitars on part of "Stagnation", but they cancelled each other out in the final mix.Template:Sfn Gabriel described the track as a "journey song" with its lack of a more typical verse/chorus structure and the variety of mood changes it presents.Template:Sfn Sections were removed or altered, but the introduction remained unchanged.Template:Sfn The vocal effect on the section referencing "bitter minnows amongst the weeds and slimy water" was created by having Gabriel sing into a narrow tube with the intent of making it sound like he was underwater.Template:Sfn "Dusk" originated with a piece written by Phillips and Rutherford, with Phillips writing most of the lyrics.Template:Sfn
The music to the verse/chorus section of "The Knife" was written by Gabriel and Banks, the lyrics were written by Gabriel and Phillips, and the remaining sections were written by all four founding members of Genesis.Template:Sfn It was originally titled "The Nice" as a tribute to the Nice, and the organ part on the track was styled to resemble the playing of Nice keyboardist Keith Emerson.Template:Sfn As fans of that group, Genesis were inspired to put together a heavier rock song which Gabriel said was "something more dangerous" compared to their delicate acoustic numbers. He added: "It was the first peak of a darker energy that we discovered".Template:Sfn It lasted up to 19 minutes in concert, but was reduced to nine for the album.Template:Sfn Gabriel wrote the lyrics as a parody of a protest song.Template:Sfn The song's spoken word interlude, in which a group of soldiers fire on a crowd of protesters, was inspired by the Kent State shootings from the previous spring.<ref name="hare">"Tin Soldiers and Nixon Coming": Musical Framing and Kent State Template:Webarchive Chapman University Historical Review. Retrieved 20 January 2014.</ref>
Phillips later recalled that the songs "Everywhere is Here", "Grandma", "Little Leaf", "Going out to Get You", "Shepherd", "Moss", "Let Us Now Make Love" and "Pacidy" were not developed further in the studio.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Banks said that "Going out to Get You" was too long to fit on the album as well as "The Knife", and the latter song had to have a portion of it cut out to fit on the LP.Template:Sfn
Artwork
The album cover was painted by Paul Whitehead and features an engraving by Hungarian illustrator Willy Pogany. Whitehead also did the covers for the band's next two albums.Template:Sfn Wanting his work to represent the band's music, Whitehead sat in on several Genesis rehearsals to get inspiration.Template:Sfn The cover showed two people looking out of a window at mountains, which represented the pastoral themes of some of the songs.Template:Sfn Whitehead had finished the cover and then the band added "The Knife" to the running order. Feeling that the cover no longer fitted the mood of the album, they asked Whitehead to re-design it; when he was reluctant to do so, the band members inspired him to slash the canvas with an actual knife.Template:Sfn
Tony Banks has said Trespass is his favorite of the three covers Whitehead did for Genesis, feeling it eloquently captured the two different sides of Genesis.Template:Sfn
Whitehead's original illustrations for the three albums were stolen from the Charisma archives when it was sold to Virgin Records in 1983. Whitehead claimed that Charisma staff got wind of the imminent sale and proceeded to loot its office.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Release
Trespass was first released in the UK on the Charisma label in October 1970.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite AV media notes</ref> In the US, it was first issued on ABC's jazz label, Impulse!.<ref>Template:Cite AV media notes</ref> "The Knife" was released as single (split into two parts) in June 1971, but did not chart.Template:Sfn
The album was reissued by the main ABC Records label in 1974;<ref>Template:Cite AV media notes</ref> then, after MCA Records bought out ABC, it was reissued on the MCA label.<ref>Template:Cite AV media notes</ref> It was issued on CD in 1994 as a definitive edition remaster. A SACD/DVD double disc set (including new 5.1 and Stereo mixes) was released in 2008.<ref>Template:Cite AV media notes</ref>
Critical reception
Trespass sold 6,000 copies on its original release and helped the band build up a live following.Template:Sfn The album charted at Template:Thinspace in Belgium, which led to the band's first overseas concerts there in January 1971.Template:Sfn
The album had a mixed reception by the music press at the time of its release. Jerry Gilbert, writing in Sounds, gave a positive review and singled out "Visions of Angels" and "White Mountain". A review in Melody Maker said the album was "tasteful, subtle and refined",Template:Sfn and named it "Album of the Month", despite it being the same month as prestigious albums such as Led Zeppelin III, Atom Heart Mother, and Tumbleweed Connection.Template:Sfn Rolling Stone printed an extremely brief but unambiguously negative review of the 1974 reissue, saying "It's spotty, poorly defined, at times innately boring, and should be avoided by all but the most rabid Genesis fans."<ref name="RS">Template:Cite magazine</ref> AllMusic's later retrospective review was only slightly more forgiving, summarising that the album "is more interesting for what it points toward than what it actually does". They also commented that the guitars are so low in the mix that they are almost inaudible, leaving Banks's keyboard instruments far more prominent. They considered this troublesome because Banks having a noticeable role "isn't the Genesis that everyone came to know".<ref name="allmusic"/>
Following the band's growth in popularity in the 1980s, Trespass reached its peak of Template:Thinspace in the UK for one week in 1984.Template:Sfn Reflecting on the album in 2024, Phillips suggested that the record proved to be something of a blueprint for the band: "It led to the other albums Genesis did, of which I think 'Selling England By The Pound' is the best. No disrespect to John Mayhew, but the arrival of a really good drummer like Phil elevated the band even further".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Aftermath
Shortly after recording Trespass, Phillips quit the group.Template:Sfn He had confided in Rutherford (his long-time friend) that he was thinking of leaving after a concert at Kingston Polytechnic on 9 July 1970, and announced to the whole band that he was leaving at the end of a show in Hayward's Heath on 18 July.Template:Sfn According to Genesis road manager and friend Richard Macphail, the reason for Phillips's departure was the onset of acute stage fright that became so severe that Phillips began to suffer an "out of body experience on stage".<ref>Richard Macphail, My Book of Genesis, 2017 p. 81</ref> Phillips confirmed, "My leaving was nothing to do with the music; it was just due to stage fright and my health, really."Template:Sfn He initially feared that Genesis would not be able to continue without him, but with Banks gaining confidence with the organ and Rutherford having grown into a major songwriter, he ultimately recognized that the band no longer needed him.Template:Sfn While Phillips later described the Trespass recording sessions as "pleasant" and not considerably difficult,Template:Sfn Rutherford recalled that Phillips looked unwell during the recording sessions, and he worried that Phillips's departure might mean the end of Genesis. After the group drove back from the last gig in Hayward's Heath to Gabriel's house in Chobham, they decided they would carry on.Template:Sfn
In the liner notes to the Genesis box set Genesis Archive 1967–75, Banks claims "Let Us Now Make Love", one of Phillips's songs, was not recorded for the album because the group thought it had the potential of a single, but following the guitarist's sudden departure following the album's completion, it was never recorded in the studio. A live version was released on the box set, performed in February 1970.<ref>Template:Cite AV media notes</ref>
At the same time, the group decided to replace Mayhew with a more suitable drummer. He was older than the rest of the band and considered an outsider, and lacked confidence.Template:Sfn Though Mayhew often wrote poetry and even had some published in a literary magazine when he was 12, he never participated in Genesis's songwriting.Template:Sfn An urgent replacement was required to fulfil live dates to promote Trespass. Phil Collins auditioned and joined in August, and the album was released in October.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The group could not find a suitable replacement for Phillips, so they resumed gigging as a four-piece.Template:Sfn In late 1970, they appeared on the television show Disco 2 to promote the album with Phillips' replacement, Mick Barnard. The group mimed with Gabriel singing live, who recalled the performance was "disastrous". The group auditioned Steve Hackett as a replacement in December and he officially joined the band the following month.<ref name=watts/>
Track listing
All songs written by Anthony Phillips, Mike Rutherford, Peter Gabriel, and Tony Banks.
Template:Track listing Template:Track listing
Personnel
Genesis
- Peter Gabriel – lead vocals, flute, accordion, tambourine, bass drum
- Anthony Phillips – acoustic 12-string guitar, lead electric guitar, dulcimer, backing vocals
- Tony Banks – Hammond organ, grand piano, Mellotron, acoustic 12-string guitar, backing vocals
- Mike Rutherford – acoustic 12-string guitar, electric bass guitar, classical guitar, cello, backing vocals
- John Mayhew – drums, percussion, backing vocals
Production
- John Anthony – producer
- Robin Geoffrey Cable – engineer
- Paul Whitehead – layout
- Nick Davis – mixing (2008 release)
- Tony Cousins – mastering (2008 release)
Charts
| Chart (1984) | Peak position |
|---|
| Chart (2024) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Hungarian Physical Albums (MAHASZ)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 25 |
References
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