Showing posts with label phil collins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label phil collins. Show all posts

25 November 2025: "Hydrology" (DiN94) by Loula Yorke; Reprise - Steve Hackett "The Lamb Stands Up at the Royal Albert hall"

Be sure to follow KMXT FreeForm Radio on Facebook and Bandcamp and Spotify.  

You can now listen to the livestream of the show through the KMXT app; it's available through the Mac App Store or Google Play. The stream is also available at www.kmxt.org

Please support FreeForm Radio and KMXT by going to www.KMXT.org and pledging your support.

The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below) 

We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio

I am also hosting Rural Electric (Mostly) Country Music from 7-9 pm right after the Island Messenger.  I'll be spotlighting tracks from Mel Parsons' 2024 release, "Sabatoge"

             Hydrology (DiN94)

by Loula Yorke


Loula Yorke is a UK-based modular synthesist and educator. Her career took off in 2020 when her synth-building workshop Atari Punk Girls was recognised with a coveted Oram Award. Since then, she's released several albums, both via her own label Truxalis and also from ambient electronic specialists such as Quiet Details and Castles in Space. Yorke's hypnotically looping album Volta (2024) was chosen as The Quietus' Album of the Week and Electronic Sound's #2 Album of the Year, as well as earning acclaim from The Wire and BBC6 Music. She's played live in churches, warehouses, and arts centres from Cafe Oto to Tabakalera.

Yorke has a very unique style of playing her modular synthesiser instruments, which relies on both emotional, introspective moments balanced against technical flair and evolving, cyclical patterns. For this, her debut DiN solo release, she has explored the world of water in all its myriad forms. The six separate tracks form a cohesive whole that lives and breathes, growing from beautiful ambient sections through to pulsing oscillations that shimmer and shine. Never staying still at any moment, the music takes on the elusive quality of that most precious of liquids to create an album immersed in Loula’s unique sound world.

This new release from Loula Yorke is another fine addition to the DiN canon and provides a showcase for an electronic musician with a unique, musical vision.

credits

released November 21, 2025

All music composed, recorded and produced by Loula Yorke.
Mastered by Ian Boddy August 2025.


Instrumentation:
Verbos Harmonic Oscillator
Instruo CSL
Nano Ona
Erica Synths Black Sequencer 
Basilimus Iteras Alter 
ALM Squid Salmple
Music Thing Radio Music
System 80 Jove
Doepfer SEM 
Make Noise Mimeophon
Strymon Bluesky

This album is made from water and electricity. An impossible crossing place of surges, currents and gyres; myriad synchronous lifecycles in states of ebb and flow. You might catch a glimpse of a crease or a ripple, a jink or a gleam here or there. Something oscillates, jostles and flares in and out of existence. Savour the sparks.




For me, The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway is Genesis's Magnum Opus.  I saw the original tour in Columbus, Ohio, on November 27, 1974, and it was outstanding!  Last week I saw this show in Seattle and met Steve Hackett briefly before the show; I took the opportunity to gift Steve and the band (and the tour manager, Adrian) with some Alaskan smoked salmon.  It was fish I caught in Kodiak and had smoked at a local small business.  
Tonight I am indulging myself and playing the "Lamb" portion from the live show recorded in London.




RELEASE DATE: 11 July 2025


Steve Hackett proudly presents 'The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall', a stunning audio/visual document of his show at the iconic London venue in October 2024, set for release on the 11th July 2025. Watch the band performing 'The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway' HERE

Steve and his live band celebrate the 50th anniversary of the legendary Genesis concept album 'The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway', with a selection of his favourite tracks from that album including 'Fly On A Windshield' & 'Lilywhite Lilith'. The live set also includes other Genesis & solo classics, including music from his most recent acclaimed album 'The Circus And The Nightwhale'. This special evening saw the band joined by guests including Ray Wilson, Steve Rothery, Amanda Lehmann & John Hackett.

Steve comments: "I was so happy to revisit the Lamb on tour. The Royal Albert Hall evening was particularly memorable. It is my favourite London venue and the atmosphere there that night was absolutely electric... I was really pleased that everyone in the band and the performing guests pulled it off with flying colours!"

Expertly mixed by Grammy-award winning engineer Chris Lord-Alge, and mastered by Ted Jensen at Sterling Sound, the night was filmed by longtime collaborator Paul M Green, and is presented as Special Edition 2CD+Blu-ray Digipak which includes 5.1 Surround Sound & bonus interview content. The vinyl arrives as a deluxe 4LP 180g boxset, including 12-page LP-size booklet featuring photos from the evening.

Due to time constraints we will be broadcasting a truncated version of the concert, omitting some tracks from the first half spotlighting Steve's solo work.

 

STEVE HACKETT
THE LAMB STANDS UP LIVE AT THE ROYAL ALBERT HALL
CENTURY MEDIA RECORDS

Steve Hackett continues his journey through classic Genesis albums with a recording of his favourite songs from the album The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway. The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall also was also an opportunity for Hackett to promote his then current album, The Circus and The Nightwhale. Other solo and Genesis classics are performed as well. Once again, Hackett is surrounded by an excellent band, and some special guests including Ray Wilson (Genesis), Steve Rothery (Marillion), vocalist Amanda Lehmann and John Hackett (guitarist).

The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall opens the show with the brilliant “People of The Smoke” (from Hackett’s 2024 album The Circus and The Nightwhale). While it is very close to the studio version, there is the live energy that can only be caught in front of a live audience. It is a great way to open the concert and this album. He continues with more songs from that album, which come off remarkably well live. “These Passing Clouds” sounds particularly brilliant in concert. He also tackles songs from his 2021 album, Surrender Of Silence (“The Devil’s Cathedral”) and 1975’s classic Voyage of the Acolyte (“Hands Of The Priestess” and “A Tower Struck Down” sound fantastic live, with a few twists and turns from Hackett.

Then he is off into Genesis land. Nad Sylvan’s vocals throughout are spot on, and a great deal of credit must go to his band, Roger King (keyboards), Craig Blundell (drums), Rob Townsend (saxophone, woodwind, percussion, vocals, keyboards, bass pedals) and Jonas Reingold (bass, variax, twelve string, vocals). Not only do they do justice to his solo material, but they bring Genesis to life, live on the stage. This is not an easy task, but they succeed. Hackett is not trying to better Genesis or replace the original. He does, however, do some extremely good versions of some of the songs.

While the songs are faithfully replicated on stage, it is still exciting to hear songs like “Lilywhite”, with Hackett’s melodic solo and Sylvan’s great vocals. The title track, “The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway” explodes with this performance. While “Fly On A Windshield” and “Carpet Crawlers” are faithful to the originals. Hackett also adds a couple of other Genesis favourites, such as “Fifth Of Firth” (from Selling English By The Pound) and “Los Endos” (from Trick Of The Tail). Both of these songs are concert staples for Hackett and his band.

Some fans may argue that Hackett should have done more songs from The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, but Hackett’s choice of material, from his solo albums and Genesis complement each other and form a pretty perfect concert and live recording. The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall is a well performed, well recorded live recording. Live recordings are tricky, and some have worked, and some live albums just do not make sense. Not only does The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall make sense, but it is an album well worth your time. Hackett and his band are a treat to see live, but this serves as a taste of the Hackett live experience. The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall stands up well alongside Hackett’s catalogue, both with and without Genesis.









licenseLoula Yorke is a UK-based modular synthesist and educator. Her career took off in 2020 when her synth-building workshop Atari Punk Girls was recognised with a coveted Oram Award. Since then, she's released several albums, both via her own label Truxalis and also from ambient electronic specialists such as Quiet Details and Castles in Space. Yorke's hypnotically looping album Volta (2024) was chosen as The Quietus' Album of the Week and Electronic Sound's #2 Album of the Year, as well as earning acclaim from The Wire and BBC6 Music. She's played live in churches, warehouses, and arts centres from Cafe Oto to Tabakalera.



04 November 2025: Genesis "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway". 50th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition

 

Be sure to follow KMXT FreeForm Radio on Facebook and Bandcamp and Spotify.  

You can now listen to the livestream of the show through the KMXT app; it's available through the Mac App Store or Google Play. The stream is also available at www.kmxt.org

Please support FreeForm Radio and KMXT by going to www.KMXT.org and pledging your support.

The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below) 

We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio

I am also hosting Rural Electric (Mostly) Country Music from 7-9 pm right after the Island Messenger.  I'll be spotlighting tracks from Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska 


 The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (50th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition) will provide a deep dive into the music and visual elements around this seminal album and pivotal period of time for the band. The album was the pinnacle of the band’s early success and is regarded as one of the most important progressive rock records of all time.   The Genesis band members have been involved in the oversight and approvals around this new Super Deluxe Edition of the album, including new liner notes. The album will celebrate its 50th  Anniversary in 2024.

Genesis – The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (50th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition): A Detailed Analysis with Insights from Collins, Hackett, and Banks

By Nick Tate

This review includes excerpts from interviews by the author with Steve Hackett (July 2025), Phil Collins (phone interview in 2007).

It’s the Genesis album that has divided progressive rock fans and critics for five decades: “The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway” has been both revered and reviled as the most experimental album featuring the classic lineup of Peter Gabriel, Steve Hackett, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford and Phil Collins. The 1974 double album (Gabriel’s last with Genesis) marked a huge departure from the band’s prior five studio recordings. While those earlier Genesis works centered on mythical themes and characters (carnivorous weeds, woodland hermaphrodites and watchful space aliens), “The Lamb” chronicled the story of a Puerto Rican street punk named Rael and his surrealistic journey of self-discovery on (and below) the streets of New York City. Even the music veered sharply from the pastoral Victorian Englishness that defined early Genesis to embrace an edgy contemporary urbanity.

Early reviews were mixed, with some critics praising the album’s ambitious reach and others deriding it as the epitome of prog-rock excess (“an unfocused mess,” as one put it). While the years have softened some of the initial criticism, even the band members recall that the album’s release was hardly the watershed moment Genesis hoped it might be back in the day.

“When ‘The Lamb’ came out, people hated it!” Collins told me once in a candid interview that was never published (until now). “What makes me laugh about this actually is that people talk about the Gabriel days in revered terms today — the golden age of Genesis. We had our hardcore fans, of course, and some of them are still hanging on. But the farther away it gets from when it happened, the more glowing the memories become.” Banks has echoed Collins on the early response to “The Lamb” and made no secret that he feels the band’s prior two albums —“Selling England by the Pound” and “Foxtrot” — were superior efforts (Ultimate Classic Rock).

And even Hackett, who is reprising selections from “The Lamb” on his current Genesis Revisited tour, called the record an outlier in the band’s catalog. “I think it’s a one-off,” he said in an interview during a break in his new tour. “I don’t think there are any other Genesis albums that are quite like it. It has its fans, its adherents, and it has its critics. So, you cannot say that this is Genesis’s ‘Sgt. Pepper.’ But time is a great healer and I do think that some things sound sweeter with the passing of time.”

Hackett also told me that “The Lamb” recording sessions were fraught, revealing deep divisions in the band that would lead to Gabriel’s departure and a sea change in Genesis’s sound and approach. The concept album was primarily Gabriel’s brainchild, and he insisted on writing all of the lyrics himself, leaving the musical composition largely to the others. This approach broke from the collaborative songwriting approach the band had taken on previous albums and it didn’t sit well with everyone, Hackett said.

“It was almost as if this was Pete’s solo album within the band context; you could see that Pete was heading towards a solo career,” he noted. “It is a concept album, it is a story, and it’s driven by one person’s need to describe that narrative and have that control over it — and that was Peter Gabriel.”

Another complicating factor: Gabriel’s wife, Jill, was pregnant with their first child, and both the pregnancy and birth were difficult, so he was frequently absent from the sessions. On top of that, Gabriel had been approached by Hollywood director William Friedkin (of “Exorcist” fame) to write an ill-fated screenplay, which prompted him to quit the band for a time. He eventually returned to complete work on “The Lamb,” but the groundwork was laid for his departure from Genesis long before the album hit record store shelves, Hackett said.

“This was his swan-song with Genesis, and he made it conditional — he insisted on writing all the lyrics — so there was a division and the tensions ran high. Unfortunately, all of that was just too much, and the string just had to break at the end of the day.” That said, those troubled sessions would end up producing the most groundbreaking Genesis album. Love it or not, “The Lamb” was a landmark that helped define first-wave progressive rock. Released in November 1974, it cracked the Top 10 on the UK Albums Chart and reached No. 41 on the U.S. Billboard 200, despite the mixed reviews.

Now, 50 years on, the album is being reissued in a five-disc boxed set containing the original studio recordings, a gussied-up concert from 1975 and a few rare demos, remixed and remastered in stereo and 5.1 surround sound. “The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (50th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition)” arrives just as several new album tributes are also hitting the shelves, inviting fans and critics alike to revisit and reassess the most audacious of the Gabriel-era Genesis albums.

Of course, there’s little point in discussing the finer points of what made “The Lamb” such a high-water mark for the band. The real appeal of the new deluxe edition is the superior quality of the high-gloss remixes of these studio and live tracks, in addition to a few previously unreleased rarities. If you’re on the fence about whether those extras are enough to warrant owning this release, the answer is an unqualified: Yes.

These new mixes carve out each member’s individual contributions with gemstone clarity, revealing how the distinct musical personalities of Genesis combined to create the band’s signature sound. Finer details and textures, barely audible in prior releases of “The Lamb,” are crystal clear — giving the mixes a sparkling new sheen so fresh it’s almost like hearing these classic tracks for the first time. Among them:

• Gabriel’s tour-de-force vocals pop from the speakers with 3D-like depth, as he summons every trick in his vocal bag and moves seamlessly from romantic balladry (“The Carpet Crawlers”) to blue-eyed soul (“The Chamber of 32 Doors”), punk-Pavarotti theatricality (“Back in New York City”), social commentary (“The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging”) and bizarro histrionics (“The Colony of Slippermen”).
• Banks’ keyboard wizardry is high in these new mixes, emerging as a defining feature of the best tracks here — including the trilling electric piano lines on the title track, “The Carpet Crawlers” and “The Lamia,” and dazzling synth runs on “Back in New York City” and “In the Cage.”
• Hackett’s master-of-darkness fretwork lends an otherworldly quality to “Fly on a Windshield,” “Broadway Melody of 1974,” and “The Waiting Room.” But he also taps a deep vein of soul on “The Chamber of 32 Doors” and “Here Comes the Supernatural Anaesthetist,” reflecting his mastery of multiple genres of acoustic and electric guitar
• Rutherford’s contrapuntal basslines pop and snap, driving the band forward with every measure, notably on the opening track and the booming “Lilywhite Lilith,” which pulses like a beating heart.
• Collins delivers the most inspired drumming of his career, bridging rock, jazz and even tribal percussion to thunderous effect on “Back in New York City” and “In the Cage.”
• In many places, the band cooks with orchestrated ensemble jams that showcase some of the best prog-rock collaborations ever recorded (“Riding the Scree,” “Broadway Melody of 1974”). They’re so strong, in fact, a few instrumental-only extras would have been welcome.

In addition to the studio recordings, the deluxe edition features a complete live show, taped at the Shrine Auditorium in L.A. on January 24, 1975 (the only one of the tour’s 102 dates recorded in multi-track). It includes “The Lamb” in full, as well as the show’s previously unreleased encore — “Watcher of the Skies” and “The Musical Box.”

It is a fine musical time capsule of Genesis in concert back in the day, with a few caveats. First of all, this is not an entirely live performance from 50 years ago. Gabriel re-recorded some of his vocals in the mid-1990s for the original release of the Shrine show on the 1998 “Genesis Archive 1967–75” boxed set because the elaborate stage costumes he wore sometimes muffled his voice. (The closing track, “It,” is an entirely re-worked studio version from the 1990s because the original concert tape ran out.)

Secondly, Hackett also opted to redo some of his parts in the studio in the 1990s because an injury to his left hand, sustained just before the start of the “Lamb” tour, affected his playing ability. The injury, from a broken wine glass, forced him to modify his technique and undergo physical therapy (including shock treatments to his hand) on the road.

“I had to fix a couple things on the Shrine live version because my thumb was literally hanging off my hand at the time it was originally recorded,” Hackett explained. “I severed a tendon and a nerve, and I had a shirt button sewn on the end of my thumb in order to keep things straight!”

While both artists’ overdubs are seamlessly merged with the (unretouched) live performances of Banks, Collins and Rutherford — a bit of studio magic that is truly amazing — Gabriel’s do-overs are more noticeable and obtrusive than Hackett’s because his voice had deepened over time. It’s easy to distinguish between Gabriel’s 1975 and 1995 vocals, which are sometimes presented side by side in the same song. The new vocals differ not only in quality and timbre, but also in new phrasings Gabriel gives them. As a result, some tracks are stripped of the urgency of the originals — such as “Back in New York City” (as close as Genesis ever came to punk-rock) and “Counting Out Time” (an ode to adolescent sexuality).

It’s almost as if Gabriel elected to step out of the role of Rael (delivering his protagonist’s first-person story in the moment) to assume the role of an older narrator recounting the story of his long-lost youth. This must have been a deliberate choice that clearly improved on the quality of the show’s original vocals, which can be heard in bootlegs that have circulated among fans for years. But Gabriel’s overdubs won’t be everyone’s cup of Earl Grey.

Even so, this is a minor, very-inside-baseball quibble that is easily forgiven with a package as rich as this one. And, as others have suggested, Gabriel’s involvement with anything Genesis-related after 1975 is a cause for celebration. But it does beg the question: If two-fifths of the band elected to re-record some of their parts in the 1990s — and “It” —why didn’t all five redo the whole thing or regroup for a “Lamb” tour? After all, this lineup recorded a new version of “The Carpet Crawlers” issued as a single in 1998.

Was that ever even a possibility that was discussed?
For the record, Hackett said the answer is, yes — the band did indeed discuss reforming for a series of “Lamb” shows years before Collins, Banks and Rutherford regrouped for two reunion tours in 2007 and 2021-22. “Pete wanted to do something based on the Cream model — maybe we’ll do two shows in London and two shows in New York,” he said. “Then there was a bit of banter that maybe there could be a month’s worth of shows.”

Hackett said he was open to it and, at one point, it seemed like it was going to happen. “When I was approached about it, I said, ‘yeah, great.’ I knew what would happen if we had toured with that lineup,” he said. “Whether it had been with all the costumes, with the avatars, in full technicolor and all the rest, or had been much more stripped down and more bare, I think would have been extraordinary.”

Collins agreed, suggesting a Genesis reunion tour would have been a watershed event for the classic five-man lineup. But he acknowledged even getting the band together for the new recording of “The Carpet Crawlers” in the late 1990s was “like pulling teeth — I don’t think everyone was ever in the room at the same time!”

Still, Collins said he would have welcomed it. “Personally, I would have preferred to go back to the original Genesis and be sitting there playing the drums,” he told me. “For me, the fun of it would be to get together, rehearse ‘The Lamb’ for a couple of weeks and just take out a well-lit show and play the music.”

Hackett added that the band had discussed other possibilities in the 1990s.“There were other things on the table,” he said. “There was the idea that maybe ‘The Lamb’ could be a film or maybe a stage musical.” But, of course, none of those things materialized — something Hackett regards today as a missed opportunity. “Then again, Genesis was full of missed opportunities,” he said. “But at the same time, it was a highly productive band in all of its various incarnations. Life is full of what ifs.”

About that time — perhaps in response to those uneventful band conversations? — Hackett launched his own Genesis Revisited project, reprising most tracks from the albums he made with the band between 1971 and 1977. Since 1996, the long-running juggernaut has been performing and recording live shows virtually nonstop and is currently playing nine tracks from “The Lamb” on its current tour.

“With Genesis, I’ve always said, ‘Yeah, OK, fine, include me in or include me out — whatever.’ ”Hackett said. “Meanwhile, I will go out and celebrate it myself, because with band politics, the wheels can move very very slowly, and it doesn’t always come to a thrilling conclusion. So, to protect and take the heritage forward, I have now celebrated ‘Selling England By the Pound,’ ‘Foxtrot,’ ‘Seconds Out’ in their entirety, and ‘The Lamb’ partially.”

For the record, Hackett suggested “The Lamb” wasn’t his clear favorite of the early Genesis albums, partly because of the divisions within the band when it was recorded. “When I look back on ‘Foxtrot’ and ‘Selling England,’ I think of that as a golden period for Genesis,” he said.

He added, however, that the new mixes of “The Lamb” are perhaps the best representation of the band’s sound and progress in 1974 — marking the end of one era and the start of another for Genesis.

Worth noting: In addition to the remixed studio and live “Lamb” recordings, the deluxe edition features a few extras to sweeten the pot for uber bans. There’s a 60-page booklet, replicas of the 1975 tour program, ticket and promo poster, and several early demo takes of “The Lamb Lies Down on Broad/Fly on a Windshield,” “The Chamber of 32 Doors/The Lamia,” and “In the Cage.” These few works-in-progress demos (available via download) are rough and raw low-fi takes. But they offer glimpses of the band in the early stages of capturing lightning in a bottle with what would become one of the most celebrated (if controversial) progressive rock albums ever made.

The bottom line: This richly expanded boxed set captures the classic Genesis lineup at the very top of its game — a cohesive masterwork that reveals the whole was far greater than the sum of its parts, live and in the studio. It is the definitive edition of one of prog’s most striking concept albums. You’ll want to make room for this one on your top music shelf, alongside Yes’s “Close to the Edge,” ELP’s “Tarkus,” Jethro Tull’s “A Passion Play,” Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side of the Moon” and King Crimson’s debut album.

Post-script: For “Lamb” fans wanting more, three additional tributes to the album are out or soon to be available:
• Steve Hackett’s latest album, “The Lamb Stands Up Live at the Royal Albert Hall” — recorded during his current tour — features highlights from “The Lamb,” along with other Genesis fan favorites and his own solo works. Check out the review here: https://progreport.com/steve-hackett-the-lamb-stands-up-live-at-the-royal-albert-hall-album-review/
• Dave Kerzner’s Sonic Elements has released “IT — A 50th Anniversary Celebration of The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway by Genesis” — which reimagines the album as a film soundtrack of sorts, featuring a Who’s Who of contemporary prog artists. Read more here: https://progreport.com/it-a-50th-anniversary-celebration-of-the-lamb-lies-down-on-broadway-by-genesis-album-review/
• In November, Nick D’Virgilio is releasing a remastered version of “Rewiring Genesis: A Tribute to the Lamb Lies Down on Broadway,” his 2008 reworking of the album with co-producer Mark Honsby, featuring Nashville studio musicians, some of whom had never heard the original. Here’s a promo video from the album: https://progreport.com/nick-dvirgilio-shares-fly-on-a-windshield-broadway-melody-of-1974-with-steve-hackett-on-guitar/


 



29 July 2025: Steve Hackett "The Lamb Stands Up - Live at the Royal Albert Hall"

Be sure to follow KMXT FreeForm Radio on Facebook and Bandcamp and Spotify.  

You can now listen to the livestream of the show through the KMXT app; it's available through the Mac App Store or Google Play. The stream is also available at www.kmxt.org

Please support FreeForm Radio and KMXT by going to www.KMXT.org and pledging your support.

The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below) 

We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio. 

 I'll also be hosting Rural Electric right after the Island Messenger at  7 pm until 9 pm

 

For me, The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway is Genesis's Magnum Opus.  I saw the original tour in Columbus, Ohio, on November 27, 1974, and it was outstanding!  I am looking forward to seeing this show and meeting Steve Hackett in Seattle in November.  This week's program is devoted to Steve Hackett's new release.

RELEASE DATE: 11 July 2025

Steve Hackett proudly presents 'The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall', a stunning audio/visual document of his show at the iconic London venue in October 2024, set for release on the 11th July 2025. Watch the band performing 'The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway' HERE

Steve and his live band celebrate the 50th anniversary of the legendary Genesis concept album 'The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway', with a selection of his favourite tracks from that album including 'Fly On A Windshield' & 'Lilywhite Lilith'. The live set also includes other Genesis & solo classics, including music from his most recent acclaimed album 'The Circus And The Nightwhale'. This special evening saw the band joined by guests including Ray Wilson, Steve Rothery, Amanda Lehmann & John Hackett.

Steve comments: "I was so happy to revisit the Lamb on tour. The Royal Albert Hall evening was particularly memorable. It is my favourite London venue and the atmosphere there that night was absolutely electric... I was really pleased that everyone in the band and the performing guests pulled it off with flying colours!"

Expertly mixed by Grammy-award winning engineer Chris Lord-Alge, and mastered by Ted Jensen at Sterling Sound, the night was filmed by longtime collaborator Paul M Green, and is presented as Special Edition 2CD+Blu-ray Digipak which includes 5.1 Surround Sound & bonus interview content. The vinyl arrives as a deluxe 4LP 180g boxset, including 12-page LP-size booklet featuring photos from the evening.

Due to time constraints we will be broadcasting a truncated version of the concert, omitting some tracks from the first half spotlighting Steve's solo work.

 

STEVE HACKETT
THE LAMB STANDS UP LIVE AT THE ROYAL ALBERT HALL
CENTURY MEDIA RECORDS

Steve Hackett continues his journey through classic Genesis albums with a recording of his favourite songs from the album The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway. The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall also was also an opportunity for Hackett to promote his then current album, The Circus and The Nightwhale. Other solo and Genesis classics are performed as well. Once again, Hackett is surrounded by an excellent band, and some special guests including Ray Wilson (Genesis), Steve Rothery (Marillion), vocalist Amanda Lehmann and John Hackett (guitarist).

The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall opens the show with the brilliant “People of The Smoke” (from Hackett’s 2024 album The Circus and The Nightwhale). While it is very close to the studio version, there is the live energy that can only be caught in front of a live audience. It is a great way to open the concert and this album. He continues with more songs from that album, which come off remarkably well live. “These Passing Clouds” sounds particularly brilliant in concert. He also tackles songs from his 2021 album, Surrender Of Silence (“The Devil’s Cathedral”) and 1975’s classic Voyage of the Acolyte (“Hands Of The Priestess” and “A Tower Struck Down” sound fantastic live, with a few twists and turns from Hackett.

Then he is off into Genesis land. Nad Sylvan’s vocals throughout are spot on, and a great deal of credit must go to his band, Roger King (keyboards), Craig Blundell (drums), Rob Townsend (saxophone, woodwind, percussion, vocals, keyboards, bass pedals) and Jonas Reingold (bass, variax, twelve string, vocals). Not only do they do justice to his solo material, but they bring Genesis to life, live on the stage. This is not an easy task, but they succeed. Hackett is not trying to better Genesis or replace the original. He does, however, do some extremely good versions of some of the songs.

While the songs are faithfully replicated on stage, it is still exciting to hear songs like “Lilywhite”, with Hackett’s melodic solo and Sylvan’s great vocals. The title track, “The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway” explodes with this performance. While “Fly On A Windshield” and “Carpet Crawlers” are faithful to the originals. Hackett also adds a couple of other Genesis favourites, such as “Fifth Of Firth” (from Selling English By The Pound) and “Los Endos” (from Trick Of The Tail). Both of these songs are concert staples for Hackett and his band.

Some fans may argue that Hackett should have done more songs from The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, but Hackett’s choice of material, from his solo albums and Genesis complement each other and form a pretty perfect concert and live recording. The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall is a well performed, well recorded live recording. Live recordings are tricky, and some have worked, and some live albums just do not make sense. Not only does The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall make sense, but it is an album well worth your time. Hackett and his band are a treat to see live, but this serves as a taste of the Hackett live experience. The Lamb Stands Up Live At The Royal Albert Hall stands up well alongside Hackett’s catalogue, both with and without Genesis.

 

 

 

28 November 2023: Steve Hackett, "Foxtrot at 50"

 KMXT is live broadcasting the Kodiak City Council work session which may run past 9 pm.  

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I had the privilege of seeing this show at the Moore Theatre in Seattle; it was one of the best concerts I have attended.  The band was having a great time and feeding off the crowd's energy.

Review of the new Steve Hackett live set ‘Foxtrot at Fifty + Hackett Highlights: Live in Brighton’

By Nick Tate

You might think Steve Hackett’s Genesis Revisited juggernaut has run its course, after more than a decade of reprising the band’s 1970s heyday. But you’d be wrong. Hackett’s latest live retrospective album, “Foxtrot at 50 + Hackett Highlights: Live in Brighton,” confirms there is much yet the former Genesis guitarist can bring to this satisfying project.

Like the prior eight live Genesis Revisited releases, “Foxtrot at 50” transcends nostalgia and sentimentality. It captures Hackett and his talented band of musicians delivering a crackling-good performance that updates 1972’s classic “Foxtrot” album — the band’s fourth and the first to chart in the U.K. (No. 12). It also showcases a handful of well-chosen solo works the multitalented guitarist/composer/bandleader has produced since leaving the band in 1977.

As usual, these performances are the next best thing to seeing Genesis live back in the day. But what’s most striking is the degree to which each band member brings a new sheen and shine to these timeless prog masterworks. The combined result takes these well-known pieces in surprising new directions, while remaining loyal to the originals. Perhaps more than any other Genesis Revisited release, this double-disc set demonstrates how well Hackett’s individual works hold up against the older Genesis material. As if to emphasize the point, this rich collection ends with an inspired mashup of the jazzy Genesis instrumental “Los Endos” and Hackett’s own “Slogan’s” from his 1980 “Defector” solo album — perfectly marrying the two halves of this live release. The upshot: This is a satisfying 50-year overview of one of prog’s most prolific and engaging elder statesmen that honors his past yet also confirms he is still breaking new ground at age 73.

The first half of album showcases a best-of collection of Hackett’s solo works, dating to his 1975 debut, “Voyage of the Acolyte,” recorded while he was still in Genesis and the same year Peter Gabriel departed the band. This set includes three tracks from that brilliant debut —the wildly eclectic prog-fusion instrumental “Ace of Wands,” the haunting “A Tower Struck Down” and “Shadow of the Heirophant,” featuring vocalist Amanda Lehman (an epic suite initially proposed to, but rejected by, his Genesis bandmates for inclusion on 1976’s “Trick of the Tail”). Hearing these tracks side-by-side with the “Foxtrot” material, a strong argument can be made that “Acolyte” just might be the best Genesis album that Genesis never made.

The first set also features more recent material, including “The Devi’s Cathedral,” a gothic story-song from his 2021 album “Surrender of Silence” that plays like a soundtrack from a Wes Craven horror film. Roger King’s churchy organ backdrop and Hackett’s ghosty fretwork provide the perfect backdrop for Nad Sylvan’s chilling baritone vocal. In addition, the setlist includes the jazzy title track from Hackett’s third solo album, 1979’s “Spectral Mornings,” the sprightly “Every Day” (from the same record) and the driving “Camino Royale” from 1982’s “Highly Strung.”

The second half of the release features Hackett and Friends’ replication of the groundbreaking “Foxtrot.” There’s no point in analyzing why this was the transitional album that brought Genesis international acclaim. It’s probably enough to simply say that the music here stands on its own merits and still manages to sound fresh and original after all these years. But it’s worth noting that classic tracks like “Watcher of the Skies,” “Get ‘Em Out by Friday” and the 23-minute seven-part suite “Supper’s Ready” can still raise gooseflesh in these new live versions.

A close listen reveals new textures and liberties the band takes that gives these tightly orchestrated pieces a new freshness. In particular, Sylvan stands out, channeling both Peter Gabriel’s quirky ancient-mariner croon and Phil Collins’ elfin tenor, yet somehow bringing something uniquely his own to his vocal delivery. His dramatic interpretation of Gabriel’s shape-shifting vocals on “Supper’s Ready” approaches Broadway-like theatricality and the result is nothing short of remarkable; it’s a true tour-de-force. Roger King also shines on keyboards throughout. He masterfully reworks Tony Banks’ symphonic intro to “Watcher of the Skies” (matching the original, which was performed on a mellotron famously bought from King Crimson). His classical-piano turns on “Time Table” (this being the first Genesis Revisited take on this track) and the rarely performed “Can-Utility and the Coastliners” bring a new luster to these high-water marks in the early Genesis cannon. And noteworthy performances are delivered by reedman Rob Townsend — whose sax and flute lines add new depth and tonal color to the proceedings — and the thunderous rhythm section of bassist Jonas Reingold and drummer Craig Blundell. (Reingold even gets his own solo bass spot and Blundell unleashes wildly unhinged melodic drum fills in the closing coda of “Hierophant” and during the “Apocalypse 9/8” interlude of “Supper’s Ready.”

Throughout, of course, Hackett’s searing and emotive fretwork cut like a foghorn through the darkly turbulent storm of sound that defined “Foxtrot” and some his best post-Genesis efforts, both anchoring and pushing the band to new heights. Highpoints include his resplendent Bach-like acoustic etude, “Horizons,” a staple of his live shows and fan favorite, and the jawdropping electric-guitar solo he unleashes on the classical-prog-rock “Firth of Fifth.” Worth noting: If you’re a Genesis fan who feels you just don’t need to hear yet another version of “Supper’s Ready,” you should reconsider — if only to take in the wildly unhinged solo Hackett unspools at the triumphal conclusion of this transcendent epic: This new version is a keeper and worth your time.

For audiophiles, the sound production throughout is crystalline, featuring gem-like clarity. Mixed by Chris Lord-Alge and mastered by Ted Jensen, it is available in various formats, including a four-LP edition and two-CD/Blu-ray and two-CD/two-DVD sets, all loaded with bonus extras and 5.1 surround sound mixes.

With “Foxtrot at 50,” Hackett has reached a bit of a milestone — producing live Genesis Revisited recordings of half of the eight albums he originally recorded with the band from 1971 to 1977. Which begs the question: Might Hackett tackle next the one album many fans and critics regard as Genesis’s finest hour (plus 34 minutes) — 1974’s “The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway,” which has not received the full start-to-finish Genesis Revisited treatment? What say ye, Mr. Hackett?

Released on Sept. 15th, 2023

Tracklist:

1. Intro / Ace of Wands
2. The Devil’s Cathedral
3. Spectral Mornings
4. Every Day
5. A Tower Struck Down
6. Basic Instincts
7. Camino Royale
8. Shadow of the Hierophant
9. Watcher of the Skies
10. Time Table
11. Get ‘Em Out by Friday
12. Can Utility and the Coastliners
13. Horizons
14. Supper’s Ready
15. Firth of Fifth
16. Los Endos/Slogans

Personnel:

Steve Hackett — guitars
Roger King — keyboards
Jonas Reingold — bass
Rob Townsend — saxophones, flutes
Craig Blundell / drums & percussion
Nad Sylvan — vocals
With: Amanda Lehmann — guitar, vocals

 

04 October 2022: Steve Hackett: Genesis Revisited Live: Seconds Out & More

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Please support FreeForm Radio and KMXT by going to KMXT.org and pledging your support.

The music you hear on tonight's show is available on the artists' Bandcamp pages and websites. (links below) 

We urge you to support the musicians you hear on FreeForm Radio.

 


On May 19, 2022, I attended the Steve Hackett show at the Moore Theatre in Seattle.  He played some solo tracks, took a break, and then returned to the stage to play the complete Seconds Out album.  It was the last show of the US leg of the tour and the band was on fire.  It was one of the best concerts I have attended.  

Tonight we'll feature the Seconds Out set from the O2 Apollo Theatre show recorded in Manchester, UK on September 24, 2021.  This recording has the added dimension of Amanda Lehman singing on some of the solo tracks.

  1. Set 2 (Seconds Out):
  2. (Genesis song)
    Play Video
  3. (Genesis song)
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  4. (Genesis song)
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  5. (Genesis song)
    Play Video
  6. (Genesis song)
    Play Video
  7. (Genesis song) (with saxophone & bass duet)
    Play Video
  8. (Genesis song)
    Play Video
  9. (Genesis song) (snippet starting from the "more )
    Play Video
  10. (Genesis song)
    Play Video
  11. (Genesis song)
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  12. (Genesis song)
    Play Video
  13. Encore:
  14. (Genesis song)
    Play Video
  15. (introduction by Craig's drum solo)
    Play Video
  16. (Genesis song)

 

10 December 2019: Steve Hackett - Genesis Revisited Band & Orchestra: Live At The Festival Hall

Following a sensational 2018 UK tour, legendary guitarist Steve Hackett has announced the release of a 2CD + Blu-Ray digipak titled 'Genesis Revisited Band & Orchestra: Live at the Royal Festival Hall' on 25th October 2019 via InsideOutMusic.
The album was recorded on 5th October 2018 at The Royal Festival Hall, London, during the 2018 Genesis Revisited Tour which fulfilled a long held ambition of Steve's: to perform the music of Genesis with a live orchestra. The concert featured Steve's regular touring band of Roger King (keyboards), Gary O'Toole (drums/percussion), Rob Townsend (saxes) with Nad Sylvan on vocals and Jonas Reingold (The Flower Kings) on bass, together with special guests John Hackett and Amanda Lehmann, and augmented by the 41-piece Heart Of England Orchestra conducted by Bradley Thachuk.
Steve commented - "It was a fantastic experience for both the band and myself to play alongside an orchestra and to feel the power of the sound this extraordinary combo created. It sounds equally compelling on both film and audio. I'm proud to release this exciting product."
The 2CD set includes tracks from Steve's time with Genesis and also from his extensive solo career.
* Please note that:
Blu-Ray has concert (stereo + 5.1 audio), documentary, promo videos
DVD only has the concert (stereo + 5.1 audio), no extras.
The full track-listing is:
2CD & Blu-Ray Digipak Tracklisting
CD 1:
1. Dance On A Volcano
2. Out Of The Body
3. The Steppes
4. Firth of Fifth
5. Dancing With The Moonlit Knight
6. Blood On The Rooftops
8. Shadow of the Hierophant

CD 2:
1. In That Quiet Earth
2. Afterglow
3. Serpentine Song
4. El Nino
5. Supper's Ready
Encore:
10. The Musical Box

The Blu-Ray digipak also includes a behind the scenes documentary plus promotional videos for Under The Eye Of The Sun, Beasts In Our Time and Peace.

07 June 2016: California Guitar Trio w/ Tony Levin and Brand X

In celebration of Tony Levin's 70th birthday, tonight we begin our show with this live recording of his collaboration with the California Guitar Trio from the year 2000. 
California Guitar Trio (CGT) is a band of three guitar players founded in 1991. The three—Paul Richards of Salt Lake City, Utah, Bert Lams of Affligem, Belgium, and Hideyo Moriya of Tokyo, Japan—met at a 1987 Guitar Craft course, in which Robert Fripp instructed them in the New Standard Tuning (NST). After completing several of Fripp's Guitar Craft courses, the three toured as part of Robert Fripp and The League of Crafty Guitarists.[1]
Continuing their collaboration then in Los Angeles, they founded The California Guitar Trio in 1991. They continue to play in the New Standard Tuning.[1] Their performances and recordings include original compositions, surf covers, and classical re-workings of classical music. Their influences include European classical music, rock, blues, jazz, world music, and surf music.
Anthony Frederick "Tony" Levin, (born June 6, 1946), is an American musician and composer, specializing in electric bass, Chapman Stick and upright bass. He also sings and plays synthesizer.
Levin is best known[1] for his work with progressive rock pioneers King Crimson and Peter Gabriel. He was also a member of instrumental-prog rock/jazz fusion group Liquid Tension Experiment; the King Crimson-related bands Bruford Levin Upper Extremities, ProjeKct One and ProjeKct Four; and currently leads his own band, Stick Men.

Tracklist

1 Scramble
2 Pathways
3 Discipline
4 Waters Of Eden
5 Dance Of Maya
6 Improvisation
7 Belle
8 Venezualean Waltz No.4
9 Caravan
10 Symphony No 9 (Beethoven)
11 Rukodan
12 Bohemian Rhapsody
13 Elephant Talk
14 Eve
15 Unplugged Scramble (Unscrambled)


Brand X was a jazz fusion band active between 1975–1980 and 1992–1999. Noted members included John Goodsall (guitar),[1] Percy Jones (bass), Robin Lumley (keyboards), Kenwood Dennard (drums) and Phil Collins (drums). Goodsall and Jones were the sole constant members throughout the band's existence.