"It's a bit sad that [people] say, 'This is the old Genesis, which I like' or 'the new Genesis,'" Mike Rutherford mused in 1986, while promoting the band's divisive LP from that year, Invisible Touch.
Back in their '60s public school days, the founding members of Genesis fancied themselves as pop songwriters — aiming to operate in the shadows, penning hits for others to sing. They wound up ...
It's hard to overstate how uncool it was to be a Genesis fan in 1986. They’d always been uncool, of course, but in the past, most of their non-coolness had come from their associations with prog-rock, ...
‘We knew each other well and weren’t afraid to make lousy noises. There was a good percentage of crap’ Invisible Touch is my favourite Genesis song and it came more or less out of nowhere. We would ...
The 1986 Genesis album Invisible Touch is the closest thing the band ever had to a Thriller. Not only did it sell by the millions to a wide demographic of fans, but it produced five huge singles ...
While Phil Collins might get unfairly ridiculed for his work in the latter half of Genesis, he didn't want everything he did to end up on record.
When the lights dimmed at Birmingham, England’s Utilita Arena on Monday evening and Genesis walked onstage to kick off their long-awaited The Last Domino? reunion tour, it was hard not to feel just a ...