Welcome to Hippyland
Click to Chat
Search Hippy.com

Search the Web
Main Menu
· Home
· Login
· Register
· Chat
· Event Calendar
· Reviews
· Photo Galleries
· Hip Journals/Blogs
· Check Your Email
· HipMarket.com
· HipForums.com
· HipPlanet.com
· Hip Travel Guides
· Web Links
· Privacy Policy
Sections
· A Trip Thru the '60s
· Archives
· Ask The Old Hippy
· Columns
· Famous Hippy Quotes
· Hip Profiles
· Hippie Glossary
· Hippie Havens
· Hippies From A to Z
· Hippyland Tour
· Interviews
· Letters to Hippyland
· Links
· News
· Reviews
· Skip's Corner
Topics
· Activism
· Drugs
· Freedom
· Health
· Hippiedom
· Love
· Mind Expansion
· Mother Earth
· Music
· Peace
· Politics
· Spirituality
· The Arts
· The Sixties
· Vegetarianism
New Articles
· A Real Solution to the Economic Crisis
· Creating a new culture based on tribal values
· Weather Underground Fifth Communication (1970)
· Weather Underground Frees Timothy Leary! (1970)
· Marxism and Nonviolence (1966)
· The Weathermen (1969)
· Bill Ayers: Domestic Terrorist or American Hero?
· Free John Sinclair! (1970)
· Bill Ayers and the Children's Community (1968)
· Rediscovering the Past

Genesis: Wind & Wuthering (1977)  
Reviewer: Ben Miler | See all reviews by Ben Miler
Section: Reviews | Category: Music | Area: UK | Topic: Music  
Printer Friendly Page Print this review  Send this Story to a Friend Email this review

click for more info or to purchase!Genesis was once a great prog rock band, but unfortunately, most of the songs radio stations would play from these guys are from albums like Invisible Touch (1986) and We Can't Dance (1991). You can pretty much pass up on those albums, unless your favorite album is Phil Collins' No Jacket Required (1985), of course. But from 1970-1977, Genesis created some truly interesting music that is so unlike the corporate sellout crap music they're better known for.

Wind & Wuthering is their second album without Peter Gabriel and it shows the band still sticking to progressive rock and giving us some more great classics like "Eleventh Earl of Mar", "One For the Vine" and the Mellotron heavy "Blood on the Rooftops". Two songs do point to the pop direction the band would head in the 1980s, "Your Own Special Way" and "Afterglow", but the album is stuff with enough great material not to irritate people with excellent taste in music.

Another great song on this album is Tony Banks' "All in a Mouse's Night", which is basically a story song, which proves the band was still able to give us a good story without the presence of Gabriel. There are also a couple of instrumentals, as well, like "Wot Gorilla".

I was a little hesitant giving this album a try, since Phil Collins is doing the vocal duties, after all, this is the same guy who gave us No Jacket Required in the mid 1980s, and Genesis gave us Invisible Touch one year later which sounds pretty indistinguishible from No Jacket Required, but once I heard this album, I was totally amazed. So different from the drum machines, digital synthesizers, and banal lyrics of the albums Phil Collins and Genesis did in the mid '80s. What Genesis was doing in the 1970s was everything that made prog rock so great in that decade.

Unfortunately, Wind & Wuthering marks the last album with Steve Hackett. He would depart to concentrate fully on his solo career (he already released his first solo album, Voyage of the Acolyte in 1975 while he was still with Genesis). I'm pretty sure the reason for Hackett's departure from Genesis was he was sensing the pop direction the band would follow (although I know for a fact he was getting sick of not having time to get his chance to play). This pretty much holds water when you hear Spectral Mornings (1979) and, to a lesser extent, Defector (1980), as those albums were more progressive than what Genesis were becoming, particularly with albums like Duke (1980), Abacab (1981), and all those albums after. Wind & Wuthering is a great album, and sadly, the last Genesis classic, from a progressive standpoint.

More Info

- Phil Collins: vocals, drums
- Tony Banks: piano, organ, Mellotron, synthesizers
- Steve Hackett: guitars (electric and acoustic)
- Mike Rutherford: bass
   [ Back to Reviews Index | Post Comment ]

Visitor Comments about Genesis: Wind & Wuthering (1977)
Posted by Albert Laserdiamond Jr. on 2003-11-07 17:09:51
My Score:

Comment: Put in this disc, hit play, get ready to go bonkers! A full on assault of raging synths and moog taurus bass pedals knock us into the 15th dimension. AAAHHHH!!! Phil Collins with a beard!! Everybody run!

Posted by Matt (Pressed_Rat) on 2002-10-24 15:01:29
My Score:

Comment:
This is where I lose my interest for Genesis. Compared to ''Trick of the Tail,'' this album is dud. Tony Banks totally ruins it for me. If he didn''t have to be the center of attention every second, this might have been a better album. Overall, it''s a decent album. I consider it to be the last Genesis album worth getting. It doesn''t compare to the Peter Gabriel fronted material, however.

400+ Free Speech Forums!
Related Links
 · Our Music Store!
 · Our Poster Store
 · Our Music Forum
 · Events & Festivals
 · Music with a Message
More Music Reviews by Ben Miler
· Warm Dust: And It Came to Pass (1970)
· Chicago: Chicago III (1971)
· Pulsar, French progressive rock band
· Manfred Mann's Earth Band: Solar Fire (1973)
· Organisation: Tone Float (1970)
· Jean Michel Jarre: Oxygene (1976)
· Harmonium: Si On Avait Besoin D'une Cinquième Saison (1975)
· FM: Head Room - Direct to Disc (1978)
· Brainticket: Celestial Ocean (1973)
· Quarteto 1111: Cantamos Pessoas Vivas (1975)
· Julian Jay Savarin: Waiters on the Dance (1971)
· Mad Curry: Mad Curry (1970)
· Klaus Schulze: Irrlicht (1972)
· Peter Hammill: In Camera (1974)
· Czeslaw Niemen: Niemen Vol. 2 (1972)
· Strawbs: Just a Collection of Antiques and Curios (1970)
· Peter Hammill: The Silent Corner and the Empty Stage (1974)
· Jerry Goodman & Jan Hammer: Like Children (1974)
· Canarios: Ciclos (1975)
· Machiavel: Jester (1977)
· The Pentangle: Sweet Child (1968)
· Samurai: Samurai (1971)
· Radio Massacre International: Emissaries (2005)
· Skin Alley: Skin Alley (1969)
· Nik Turner's Sphynx: Xitintoday (1978)
See all reviews
by Ben Miler
New Reviews
· Pearls Before Swine -Tom Rapp
· The Gothic Bram Stoker
· Leonard Cohen at the Master’s feet
· Tudor Lodge
· Elias Hulk
· Merrell Fankhauser & the H.M.S. Bounty
· Sharon Tandy - Five Day Rain
· T2 - England's foremost powerpack from the seventies

All content & images © 1997-2008 by Hip Inc. May not be reproduced or published in any form without permission.