
“At one point that there was a spare lion roaming around”: Steve Hackett on the bizarre recording of Genesis’ A Trick Of The Tail album
Steve Hackett has revealed that Genesis were accompanied by a rather strange companion in the studio while recording their A Trick Of The Tail album – a lion cub.
Released in 1976, A Trick of the Tail marked the band’s seventh studio album, and was their first record featuring drummer Phil Collins as lead vocalist following the departure of Peter Gabriel. The album celebrates its 50th anniversary this year, and early work began in a peculiar basement rehearsal studio in Acton, London.
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Speaking to Prog Magazine, Hackett recalls of the studio, “I seem to remember at one point that there was a spare lion roaming around. Well, a lion cub: it was like a pussy cat, rolling over, being playful. It did have a very rough tongue, and a big head.
“It was like a cross between a large cat and a medium-sized dog. It had no teeth at that point, but you could feel the strength of the little thing. That said, growing up in the 1950s I went with my dad to a market in Peckham and you could buy baby alligators in fish tanks. I stuck my finger in a monkey’s cage and got it bitten. Of course, I now sympathise with the monkey.”
Speaking of the band’s shifted lineup at the time, he also adds: “I will always miss Pete, but I was very glad to work with the other guys and see that we were all coming up with extraordinary things that were not solely dependent on one guy. Songwriting was very much at the heart of Genesis, which is why people still listen. It can’t be for the hairstyles or the strides!”
Hackett discussed the “imperfections” in classic Genesis albums in an interview last year, and though he feels such flaws do come to sound “sweeter” over time, he’s not opposed to polishing them up when revisiting these records in the present day.
“I think old material sounds sweeter with the passing of time. I think you forgive its imperfections and try and change those things when you go to it again. So things that might have been recorded in haste with aspects of timing and tuning, there’s no excuse for that these days. If you’re going to do a revisit, you might as well straighten out those things,” he said.
The post “At one point that there was a spare lion roaming around”: Steve Hackett on the bizarre recording of Genesis’ A Trick Of The Tail album appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
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