Genesis
Trespass

Charisma Records    50999 265698 2 6  (1970)

Rock/Pop
Files, 6   Tracks, 42:38  Length
01 Looking For Someone Tony Banks; Peter Gabriel; Anthony Phillips; Mike Rutherford; John Mayhew 07:07
02 White Mountain Tony Banks; Peter Gabriel; Anthony Phillips; Mike Rutherford; John Mayhew 06:43
03 Visions Of Angels Tony Banks; Peter Gabriel; Anthony Phillips; Mike Rutherford; John Mayhew 06:51
04 Stagnation Tony Banks; Peter Gabriel; Anthony Phillips; Mike Rutherford; John Mayhew 08:48
05 Dusk Tony Banks; Peter Gabriel; Anthony Phillips; Mike Rutherford; John Mayhew 04:13
06 The Knife Tony Banks; Peter Gabriel; Anthony Phillips; Mike Rutherford; John Mayhew 08:56
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging FLAC
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Bass Mike Rutherford
Guitar Anthony Phillips
Drums John Mayhew
Vocals Peter Gabriel
Keyboards Tony Banks
Musician Genesis
Producer John Anthony
Engineer Robin Cable
Cover by Paul Whitehead
Personal Details
Index # 5522
User Defined
Purchased Download
Notes
Genesis' first truly progressive album, and their first record for the Charisma label (although Trespass was released in America by ABC, which is how MCA came to have it), is important mostly as a formative effort. Peter Gabriel, Tony Banks, and Michael Rutherford are here, but the guitarist is Anthony Phillips and the drummer is John Mayhew. Gabriel, Banks, Phillips, and Rutherford are responsible for the compositions, which are far more ambitious than the group's earlier efforts ("Silent Sun," etc.). Unfortunately, much of what is here is more interesting for what it points toward than what it actually does -- the group reflects a peculiarly dramatic brand of progressive rock, very theatrical as music, but not very successful. The lyrics are complex enough but lack the unity and clarity that would make Genesis' subsequent albums among the most interesting of prog rock efforts to analyze. Gabriel's voice is very expressive but generally lacks power and confidence, while the conventional backup vocalizing by the others is wimpy, and Phillips' playing is muted. Tony Banks' keyboards are the dominant instruments, which isn't that bad, but it isn't the Genesis that everyone came to know. The soft, lyrical "Visions of Angels" and "Stagnation" are typical, gentle works by a band that later learned how to rock much harder. Only one of the songs here, "The Knife" -- which rocks harder than anything else on Trespass and is easily the best track on the album -- lasted in the group's concert repertory past the next album. -- Bruce Eder (allmusic.com)

(Definitive Edition Remaster)