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From one audio engineer to another...the love of Obsessive Detail

12/15/2013

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Lil,
You've made me cry tonight. Its that simple.   Incredible!

I first listened to The Lamia in an English public school chapel, on the first Sony walkman and, from then, I was an addict.

I'm an ex audio engineer that worked on some big albums in UK residential studios. 
SSL E series, Mitsubishi, a Shep Neve and triggering bass drums in an AMS.  The start of Avid. The Atari and the start of Steinberg Pro 16 on the Atari. 
Happy days. You know.

I worked on Seriously Live Hits and even did some synth sampling sampling sessions for the worlds largest synth manufacturer at Real World. I now work in the music software business but ...being honest.....thats all irrelevant. 
(however Nuendo is better than your ProTools! :P)

Kidding. 

Anyway, my point is that what you've done with your analysis simply hits every nerve in my body, spirit and soul. 
To the core. 
The hackles on my neck are alive. 
This audio is why I started engineering. I'm just tingling. 

Damn I wish people would release stems but hey.....!

Lil, thank you.  You inspired me to buy a second set of tickets to see Hackett at Hamburg next year.

Amazing job. Huge respect. 
You've re-inspired all my roots to music. 
The warmth and tones of those analogue sessions are incredible. 
They are simply no longer recognised in todays music distribution or transmission. 

I never write such mails from my personal account (NSA etc!) but, put simply, screw all that because music is more than that. You inspired me through music, analysis and your obsessive detail. 

I wish you and your loved ones a great weekend. I'm off to close my eyes and listen again to the full collection. 

Bloke in Hamburg, Germany loves what you've done! Brilliant :)

Thank you.

Pete

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Oh, Pete....

Now you made ME cry (especially with the frustrated, echoed cry  about "stems"!  LOL)!


Thank you, thank you, my dear friend.

Your lovely comment both humbles and gratifies me - especially coming from someone of your experience within the historic annals of our industry (and love of the same music & its organically-technical roots).

It is true that I seek to highlight the compositional and lyrical genius that was/is behind Gabriel, Hackett, Collins, Banks and Rutherford's work...but, it is also the attempt to illuminate the devoted fans to what an amazing set of feats it was for them to overcome, then harness, then lead on the technological innovations of the day.

Whenever I can speak personally to each of them (or the musicians/technicians who were working directly with them), as they..especially Gabriel..tried to push the envelope of what it was to create and innovate new forms of music/art. 

It is interesting to hear what Hackett, Marotta, Levin..and Belew (when speaking of his time with Robert Fripp) say to that.


I still have a great deal of raw footage which is waiting to be edited down and posted - but, "Life" keeps getting in the way to do so.

I promise to get more things posted as the months come...things which I know you, as a fellow audio engineer, will really get into.

All my best..and, again, with tremendous thanks for all your kind words and enthusiastic support for the website.

Xoxo, Lil (Leigh)


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Genesis:Revisited 2 Tour..and meeting Steve Hackett

12/15/2013

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Hi Lil,

Just found your wonderful website...
Been a fan of Genesis since they started - yeah - guess I'm a "senior"! 
Had the great opportunity to see Steve Hackett on 10/11/13 at the Keswick in Pa. 
Was my birthday gift from my brother. 
The best part was that we got to meet Steve after the show. 
What a remarkable evening!

Anyway, love your videos.   Keep up the great work!!

All the Best

Rick
xo

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Hi, Rick ~
Oh, I am so elated that you got to meet Steve..and, see the absolutely brilliant Genesis:Revisited 2 Tour - when it came to the States.
He is as much a gentleman and brilliant technician as I (and we all) remember him to be, was he not?
Granted it took 25+ years to hear these beloved pieces performed live, in their entirety...but, damn - it was SO worth the wait !!


I really appreciate that you took time to write and lend your support for my fledgling Genesis-related website.
It's a labor of love for all of us...all dedicated to keeping The Music, alive!
And, since you've been entranced by it since the early 1970's (?) - I am most gratified that it hits an authentic chord deeply embedded in your early Genesis history.
Please keep in touch (especially if you have any pics or memories you'd like to share, from those days)!


Xoxo, Lil
 

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The early-Genesis Soundtrack...for us all.

12/7/2013

0 Comments

 
Hi ~

I am so happy to have found your site here today, 
I grew up in Ny /Nj during the 70's and went to every Genesis show during those wonderful years. 
Seeing clips and footage from those shows on You Tube these days is such a great treat for me, it just brings everything right back , it's wonderful really.

And finding your analysis videos today, well , I just love them !

Very well done, I have been glued to them all day really.

It is great to find things like this, to find people who share my love of this music that has been such a huge part of my whole life ..this music is the soundtrack of my life . 

I moved from New York to Denver in 2009 and saw Peter last Sept at 
Red Rocks out here in Colorado..he sounds soooo great still. 
Well, I just wanted to say hello and let you know how much I enjoy about everything on your web site ! 
Thank for sharing these videos, Lileigh !
~ Patrick
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It is a pleasure to "meet" you , Patrick...and know that you were likely at many of the same early Genesis concerts I attended, in the NY area, as well.
WNEW-FM ruled, in those days, didn't it?   Alison Steele, Scott Muny and the rest.
If it wasn't for them bringing us all that mind-blowingly creative Prog (and AOR) Rock n Roll...I don't know where we would have ended up, I swear!  *humble guffaw*


Well, I am just glad you were able to see Peter's "So" Back-to-Front Tour when it hit the States, last year.
(After touring with the New Blood Orchestra, the year prior, I must say he was vocally READY for the 25th Anniversary of "So" live, in front of audiences! ;-)
You take care up there, in Denver...mighty cold, snowy weather hitting us all out here, in the West!  Brrr....


(Maybe it's time to crawl into our communal *cuckoo* Cocoon !)


Xoxo, Lil

P.S. - I hope you were able to take in Peter and Sting's recent combined tour, too.  It was great to see them together again! :-)




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Peter and Sting at the Hollywood Bowl ~ during their Rock Paper Scissors performance July 2016
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Lamb Movie, historical details...

12/4/2013

1 Comment

 
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Hi Lileigh,

I first want to say thank you for your amazingly insightful work on the music of Genesis and in particular "The Lamb". I had the fortune of seeing the show early in the tour (in Waterbury, Connecticut). None of us had heard the album yet so it was all new and strange but it has literally been with me almost everyday since. The top of my head flew off with that whirling circular curtain during "The Lamia". Been looking for it ever since!

In one of your commentaries you mentioned what new territory it was for the band and in particular Peter Gabriel.   You observed how Peter tried to shed some of the more "effete" styles found in their earlier work. I was a jolt for me seeing such a macho Peter Gabriel strutting around like "The Fonz" and using four letter words. It is definitely a gritty, smelly and dark world they took us all to. When Peter left the band, that world pretty much vaporized. I was expecting more "Harold Demure, from Art Literature" but instead got a totally in-your-face performance which I loved.

The reason I am writing is to ask a you a question. 
In all your discussions with band members and other technicians and musicians who knew Genesis during that Lamb period, did you ever get a hint at how much material did not make the album.   In other words, which of the following statements do you feel is most true:

1. Genesis used up virtually every idea lying around during the writing of The Lamb.   It all went into the album.

2. There were several good ideas that didn't make it onto The Lamb album but they all pretty made their way into subsequent Genesis albums or solo efforts.

3. There were many musical "Lamb" ideas that were never developed/finished.   So many in fact, that they could have done a triple rather than a double album!

It has always intrigued me to think of a reunion where Genesis revisits that world again. Everyone hopes for a reunion tour. 
Not me! I hope for a new album - a truly progressive rock effort. 

And yet, all the band members gave so much up to give us all the wonderful gifts they did so I wouldn't begrudge them wanting to lead a somewhat normal life and not work so hard. But still . . .

Well, thank you again for your efforts in keeping this incredible story alive. I saw The Musical Box perform The Lamb and it was extremely close to my memories. Please write back if you get a chance.

Best wishes,
Tom 

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Hellay, dear Tom ~

What an excellent set of comments/questions you've sent in to me, my lucky friend - (to have seen the ORIGINAL Lamb Tour)!  
*envious look, grin*

I'm glad my video work (and the extensive research that went into it) has spot-lit the contributing factors of Genesis & Gabriel's singular work...

In my opinion, any beloved artistic work (such as The Lamb)- deserves to have its admirers be aware of what led to its creation especially when it was produced within the Crucible of the recording industry, in 1970's-era England.

Hardworking touring bands like Genesis had no choice but to produce innovative work- on an annual basis - under the highly-pressurized gun of commercial, contractual agreements.

But, because of the extreme, personal circumstances which surrounded all the members of Genesis, in 1974, The Lamb deserves special note.

It's outright wild, Vonnegut-like surrealism honestly drew me to read as much historical insight as I could ~  out of sheer personal curiosity.
But as a newsperson,  it was a fascinating to piece together the story behind the story, .

I'm just hoping my videos give a linear presentation of just how large a jigsaw puzzle it turned out to be!

As for your questions ~
Through my research and my personal discussions with Steve Hackett, I can tell you my take on what "rings true", as fact:

* None of the group liked the album, until much later in time (and this, only partially), due to the difficult circumstances surrounding its inception and final delivery.  It is infused with some very tough memories, for all of them ~ especially Peter 
and Steve.

Their opinion (to this day), is that despite some areas of musical brilliance -  it is a flawed work with which they have to constantly live - especially with the re-playing & exacting replication of those flaws, as when the Lamb is performed live, by such tribute bands as The Musical Box.
You will notice that Gabriel always gives a humble disclaimer on The Lamb.
He says that it really is an "unfinished work" which needed more time to polish up than could be afforded him, by the rigorous writing, recording schedule - put forth by Charisma. 

But, there is more to it than that... a back-story which we probably will never quite get the full telling of - thanks to Peter Gabriel's documented reticence of divulging any creative insights into his works.

Here's what I think (from reading & reviewing many of his and other member's of Genesis' interviews through the years) ~

*Back in 1974, Gabriel was desperate.  He wanted OUT of "Genesis-The-Big", in the worst way.  He wanted to create something of his own, a character which would offer the possibility of a way out of the democratic group and into his original, academic love:  Film.

Although this sub-conscious thought may well have come to him, later on, during the actual Tour - 
Rael's journey of self-discovery matched 24-yr-old Peter's own frustrations (to escape a world he helped to create)...a journey which would eventually end up being made into a feature-film.

In my video series ~ Analysis:Chamber of 32 Doors ~ I go through a lot of the layered details which follow this particular trail.

You see, Rael was based on much the same type of surreal character as that featured in a Alejandro Jodorowsky movie, which entranced Gabriel, entitled: El Topo.
Jodorosky's films was also rife with personal allegory and visual christian symbolism...and Peter loved this.

I don't think we will ever know when it was that Peter started to think of "Rael" as his possible way out of Genesis - but, he DID copyright the story of the Lamb, once the Tour was complete (making it his own intellectual property - outside the democratic grouping that was Genesis).
This p.o.'d the other band members, to no end.

Did they finally Rael-ize that Gabriel might have used their musical talents to help establish his credibility as a future solo artist - in the writing of the double-album?
Not wonder they wouldn't sign off on his using their co-owned musical compositions for the Lamb movie!

I'm not sure we will ever know the true answer to this, unfortunately....but, Peter tried for YEARS to work the Lamb towards becoming a full-length feature movie (even approaching and working with Jodorowsky to develop it with him).

As for your questions on the "extra, leftover ideas" of the Lamb ~ an old interview with Mike Rutherford revealed that there was enough conceptual material from Peter's storyline "to fill 3 LP's", when he came to the group with his storyline portion of the Lamb deal.
Hackett has stated that they all really scraped hard to gather as much workable musical material (from previous writing sessions) as they could, in order to fill out the needed quota of compositions to support Peter's voluminous story.

They also spent endless hours, jamming together within the rat-infested, haunted halls of Headley Grange to come up with brand-new stuff, as a group (with Peter coming in once in a while - from another room - where he was working on the lyrics to the stuff the band had already written).
The Lamb Session tapes revealed that Peter would sometimes join them in the jamming-room to wordlessly vocalize to their compositions - to help himself nail down the cadence of the proposed lyrics.

I agree that knowing how iconic The Lamb has become, over the years, the original members would want to take advantage of that pent-up expectation, by all of us, monetarily.
They (and Peter Smith) certainly tried hard to sell Peter on the idea, back in 2004...
And, it's possible that it may come to pass...someday (before they..and we..all croak! LOL)
But, with all the legal problems of copyrights, royalties and publishing rights, etc...who can say if they could even DO it, now?

Steve (along with many other original artists) doesn't even own a fair amount of his own music, anymore...which is so sad.

Knowing how rare the Twain Shall Meet (Genesis vs Gabriel Music-Making Machines) - I'm afraid that our (yours & my) hopes for additional Lamb material would likely have only come from Peter's failed movie venture...where we could have found out the "Rest of The Rael Story" Rutherford had referred to.

Heck, I'm just very thankful that The Lamb got made, at all (with all the $#*& hitting the fan, politically/emotionally), back in 1974...and that it turned out as profound a work, as it ultimately turned out to be (despite its claimed flaws).

I'm amazed, actually ~ since I've heard that most Brits of their socio-economic background rarely confide in each other. 
(example:  most of the member's of Genesis did NOT know what "Supper's Ready" was all about - until years later when Peter told Armando Gallo the background story of his wife Jill's alleged "possession" one night, at Coxhill, Gabriel's grandfather's estate...and her return from that spooky, spiritual experience.  You know - "I've been so far from you..far from your loving arms.  It's good to feel you, again!  It's been a long, long time...")

If that remained true for the Lamb, as well:  How did Banks, Rutherford, Hackett and Collins produce such gorgeously complex compositions (with Gabriel adding one or two, himself) - without really knowing the full intricacies of the storyline of Rael?
Unbelievable!

Here are MY sincere questions, Tom.

How did 24-year-old Peter come up with such a wildly creative and multi-layered (with sophisticated allegory, word-play and double/triple-entendres) - while being yanked in (at least) 3 different impossible directions - personally, professionally, creatively?

How did the release and subsequent tour of such a "different" album forever change the trajectory of Genesis, as an entity, and Gabriel, as a future solo artist (once he finished being "One with Cabbages")...ultimately, making them all more successful beyond their wildest expectations?

Well, I am hoping that my Analysis:Lamb Lies Down series has elucidated upon the extraordinarily difficult circumstances which surrounded Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford, Phil Collins, Steve Hackett....and, especially, Peter Gabriel ... during the writing, recording, mixing and touring of The Lamb.

Much of these circumstances were from without: 
The pressure, contractually & otherwise, from the record industry and fans to have a new album - meeting the then-common expectation of an "annual new album" from a group, as well as the fact that Genesis was deeply in debt, as a collective.

...but, also from within:  
The aborted attempt, by Peter Gabriel, to leave Genesis (for an ill-interpreted opportunity with Exorcist William Friedkin), the seeking of more artistic control/contributions to the "Democratic group-writing" process (presented as a condition of him rejoining the group) and the nearly-fatal delivery/post-partem infections which almost took his wife and first child from him, during the Lamb's story/lyric writing process.
Add to that the fact that Steve Hackett was going through a contentious divorce, from his first wife...and, later, being under so much stress/duress - crushing a thin wineglass and severing a left thumb-tendon - and requiring surgical reattachment which not only delayed the start of the Lamb Tour, by many weeks, but precluded him from playing his solos at full, impressive interpretive skill during the first half of that tour.

No.  I think we'd best realize that we are pretty lucky to have gotten what we got (because, in fact, it was not really meant to be).

The unfinished quantitative quality of The Lamb certainly adds to its enduring mystique....and keeps us bound to it, for all (unanswered) eternity.



Xoxo, Lil



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    LileighWhiteLilith...she's gonna take you through the Tunnel of Night....

    LileighWhite@yahoo.com

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Analysis: Chamber of 32 Doors - Part 1
YouTube: http://youtu.be/wUYoeUeg-r8


Analysis:  Chamber of 32 Doors - Part 2
YouTube:  http://youtu.be/eJfgDEE8BQI



Analysis:  Chamber of 32 Doors -Part 3
YouTube:  http://youtu.be/piueJ_0N-Kk


Analysis: Tom Lord-Alge & the Chamber of 32 Doors  (alternate version of Part 1/Tom's intro)
YouTube:    http://youtu.be/CMOmxytrP5s


http://www.lileighwhite.com/ 
*FOR SERIOUS LAMB FANATICS ONLY !!!* 

A
n Analysis of the many allegorical layers, written by Peter Gabriel, within the pivotal song "The Chamber of 32 Doors" on the original Lamb Lies Down on Broadway album.

Jungian Archetype Theory, The Power of Myth's Hero's Journey and the Tibetan Book of the Dead provide the framework with which Gabriel wrote of his pending decision to leave Genesis.
Add onto that the visual work of "El Topo" director Alejandro Jodorowsky, as Peter's inspiration - and you have one, very serious surrealistic work of art.

WARNING/ADVISORY:   This trilogy of videos are DEEP (because these metaphysical/psychoanalytical works were what Peter Gabriel had been reading up until the uber-rushed writing of The Lamb)!
Although, he claims the lyrics are flawed - many still consider it a layered work of genius.
Part Surrealism, Part Metaphysical, Part Self Psychoanalytical. 

These videos are the result of 2 years of intense research and many contributions by many people (several, quite close to Peter Gabriel & Genesis).

As Tony Robinson wrote for the 1970-1975 Genesis Box Set: "It's a mistake to think of the narrative as only having one meaning because every listener must create their own personal story."
This trilogy's analysis is not set in concrete.  It is meant to elucidate upon the metaphysical texts by which Peter was reaching to obtain his own new pathway (out of the band and into his own solo career, away from "Genesis-the-Big")....as well as start new discussions as to what the album meant to YOU, the listener.
From all of us who collaborated on these videos....ENJOY!!
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Analysis series for the dedicated Genesis fan