What a fantastic historical document !!! It is wonderful to listen to a very young Phil about his musical adventure with Genesis at the time, his instrumentation, his drum references, his musical tastes. He was such a technical, sophisticated, and brilliant drummer at the time. And he was also humble. It is easy to understand how his references were in fusion. He cites Cobham and Gadd several times. A great pleasure to listen to him.
Absolutely love this. The whole conversation was so relaxed, and Phil sounds completely at ease as he talks freely about his contemporaries. Very interesting to hear him say back then that he thought Bruford was not "adaptable as a drummer" two years before asking him to tour with Genesis. I agree with his assessment of Bruford and have thought it for decades.
I was on a night out in Manchester decades ago, went in a club called Band On The Wall on Swan Street. It was basically a live music venue for up and coming bands and unknowns etc, different theme each week. Went in with a mate as we did after a few pints and a band was playing with Bruford on drums ! I didn’t expect that.
This is amazing! i think of 1974-75 Phil Collins drumming as his artistic peak -- he had the ideas, the technique, the rich variety of "The Lamb" music, and the expanded drum kit/percussion to play at his most artful and musical. (The first Brand X album also represents "peak Phil" for me.) That peak saw Phil at the zenith of his playing less as a time-keeper and more as a percussive melody-maker -- an approach that implies the beat instead of stomping it, providing a less martial, more lyrical feel. So, to hear this world class drummer, who can make a drum set dance and sing like few others, just chatting with with another musician in such an intimate and open way about his views on music, drumming, fellow musicians, and the like -- it's a dream come true. Thanks so much for posting this
I'm kind of stunned at how casual Phil is when discussing the music of Genesis. Sounds like he was thinking of leaving but since Peter had announced that HE was leaving, the rest of the guys looked at is as a musical challenge. Phil actually stating (in the book) that they could do a whole instrumental album. That shows where his mind was musically. He wanted to open things up a bit on the drums. Los Endos was his baby and of course Brand X started up soon after.
This entire conversation with Phil is riveting. The interviewer did a superb job. I have enhanced respect for Phil hearing his openness, his clear-spoken vision. No surprise that he knows his stuff, but I'm really impressed by his eloquence. I started my journey with _A Trick of the Tail_ and worked backwards. Was never much a fan of the post-Gabriel-Hackett lineup (a cliche, I realize). But one cannot deny the artistic triumph of each Genesis member. Not that anyone here is. It seems Phil is going through rough times lately. I really wish him well.
Great interview, Back in the seventies I used to play with a band (16 years olds) in Ealing , where Phil lived with his family, I used to bump into him after he'd been shopping with his wife Andy (their kids went to the same nursery school as my nephew) I asked Phil if he'd like to come along for a jam, He said yeah where do your jam, Oxford road Ealing (on Saturday afternoon) where he parked his car while shopping, we were standing in Oxford rd at the time, Weeks went by and Phil didn't show, Oh well never mind maybe he forgot. But NO months later I saw him again and he said he came down the following Saturday couldn't remember the house number so walked up and down the road listening if he could hear music coming from any of the house's, we rehearsed in a friends house, (most of the neighbours liked our music luckily) but that Saturday my friends mum had a party that afternoon and we rehearsed on Sunday ! Guess it was never to be.
Early Genesis used to hang out with everybody at the time, you see here Phil spending time with aspiring musicians, In Italy they played soccer with the Kids before the concert, After the concert you could go in their dressing room having a chat and wouldnt be strange that Tony would put down some of his chords or stuff on musical sheet if you asked him; bruford once said that he was surprised to see that they are really down to earth without any snobbery at all, at least before the big success.
That's fcking sensational! I've been a huge Genesis super fan since forever and this was probably THE most honest and unguarded interview I've ever heard him give. As a musician myself, I found it fascinating to hear him discuss the back stories to all these great Genesis songs, the time signatures etc. Bravo!!!
Love these interviews, thank you. I get the real scoop on things, instead of internet rumors and falsehoods. And speaking of just that (but it's 100% true), Phil once called the Lamb Tour his "grass tour' - and he wasn't talking about the front lawn.
Just wanted to say a massive thanks for posting this really interesting, behind the scenes interview from Collins. From a fans point of view it’s always great to come across stuff you’ve never heard before... great insight. Thanks once again...
This is an AMAZING interview! In no small part because it's more of a casual conversation than an official interview. Phil is being a lot more candid about his opinions of people (Bruford, White, ELP, etc.) than I think he would be if he knew it was going into print. Great stuff.
Great to hear him talk about Herbie Hancock's influence. Talking about restraint....Phil was the best at that. Playing just what was needed to enhance the music but not overpower it. Then wailing away when it was appropriate. Strong yet sophisticated. Supremely confident. Just what you would want in a drummer. He reminds me of Billy Cobham often. Genesis was an incredible combination of musicians with the 5 of them all together. Magical.
If Phil had left for Yes, and Gabriel went solo, Genesis would have likely ended up a casualty like many other bands of their era (Caravan, Capability Brown, Focus, etc)
This is amazing. I knew from his book that he wanted to join the Who after Keith Moon died in 78.....but to have thoughts that far back is surprising. Strange what you find out in unofficial interviews.
@@GenesisMuseum Yes. I can see that happening with Genesis. Fun to think what would have become with Yes as well. That said, having run an organization or two, it usually helps to have a mix of extroverts and introverts, alphas and betas or chiefs and indians in any creative Team. "Yes" may have imploded as well with such strong personalities such as Collins, Anderson, Wakeman, Squire and Howe. Fun ,however, to think about what might have been given that Yes' quality output fell off markedly after Going for the One.
This is fucking great!! Thanks for sharing this! I was fortunate enough to see The Lamb in January of 1975 at The Shrine in LA. That one experience forever changed my whole approach to music.
Fascinating &insightful interview. I enjoy all prog rock(even some of the more guilty pleasure bands like Camel, Quasar, &a lot of the lesser known Italian/E. Euro/N. Euro prog bands Phil referenced). This talk makes me very glad the core trio of Banks/Rutherford/Collins stayed together(even w/notable alterations w/Phil singing, Chester drumming &Daryl doubling bass/guitar w/Mike live). We know what Bruford sounded like playing w/Genesis from the '76 tour. But it's rather hard to imagine post-Bruford Yes playing w/Collins. Collins playing w/Crimson even moreso. Not because he couldn't. But because Bank's/Rutherford's dedication to writing varied, lush &musically sound material then recording it exceptionally &commensurate to the themes of the particular LP, was something Phil would have found a lot less of, in Yes or Crimson. Tony focusing on being a pure writer &less concerned w/being a "lead keyboardist" &Mike being a multi-instrumentalist w/the rare ability to write/record guitar/bass near-flawlessly &w/true aptitude &creativity, really gave Phil more of an open &less tolerantly tight canvas to further explore &grow as a drummer, singer &eventual writer by the time Duke came around. This dynamic imo, cannot be overstated or any less yielding of truly great music Genesis made, that transcended the entire genre of prog; while bands like Crimson, Yes &ELP, stayed much more requisitely tethered to it. ELP/Crimson were obviously the first &foundational to the genre. But because of their dedication to virtuoso perfection &earlier germination, the through line of consistency, integrity to the music & sonic thematic consistency in recording it, could sometimes suffer. At the end of the day, we as prog fans like, love &get inspiration from all of the more known prog acts. But Genesis somehow intrinsically rose above all of them because in my estimation they survived their earlier changes of losing Gabriel/Hackett, then stayed true to the aims of writing/performing some if not the the most diverse &interesting music in existence, not just prog music.
Steve Gadd is so good. Glad Phil liked Gadd. lol Love him bringing up 'Hot Rats'. I think Phil was impressed (as anyone should be) that Thompson played with Zappa. Oh, and KC 'Red' IS a great album.
I'm a huge Yes fan but I have to agree with Phil here. He was the right guy for Yes. Alan developed with Squire into a great unit though, and also Alan made Roundabout rock. I think they could speed up things because Alan kept it simple.
Thanks for this gem of an interview with one of my favourite drummers ever... I mean EVER! Don't quite agree with Phil's assessment of Alan White though - but I take it that in 1974, possibly pre "Gates of Delirium", no-one would've anticipated what a kick-ass rhythm section Alan would form with Chris Squire in the years to come. Creative, yet incredibly powerful and tight! Alan's more down-to-earth style was *the* anchor point for all the fiddly bits that were happening on top of that. Had he been even a tiny bit more "busy" player, it probably wouldn't have worked out the way it did.
Alan did great on relayer. I cloned that and CTTE in full alone. But I do agree with phil and Alan, and Carl Palmer. But Alan has actual musical taste and doesn't ruin things. But yes got boring mostly due to simple drumming.
It's as though Phil didn't quite realize at the time how Fucking Amazing he was as a Drummer! From "The Fountain of Salmacis" through "Cinema Show" to "What Gorilla?" - the 2 Brand X albums, and his drumming for Eno on "Another Green World", and "Before and After Science" - Phil Collins pretty much set the benchmark...as did Bill Bruford - with King Crimson, in the incarnation with John Wetton. The thing with Bruford, though - He always knew that he was a great drummer... a bit "Cocky" about it too! But Phil - pleasantly Humble, while also working on polishing his Vocals. What a GIFT Phil Collins brough to the Music!
Reminds me of something i know to be true: a lot of working musicians rarely listen to their contemporaries. Phil couldnt name a song or album from another peer group cause hes too busy in his own world.. He just had some early freebee cassette or something. The fans were well more educated on what was going down. Interesting to hear his comments on CP as well - ive always found his playing a but ponderous but cant put my finger on it. I saw him once and he seemed perpetually behind the beat. . .
He did mention many albums and songs such as Herbie Hancock's Head Hunters album and song Chameleon, but your point is valid. I think artists can be afraid to be unintentionally influenced by others in their field.
@@GenesisMuseum And Zappa too. I guess he listened to quite a bit of Zappa as that's how he heard Chester Thompson on Live At Roxy and decided to hire him for Genesis live gigs.
Phil: "Will you take us to the hotel rather than the gig?" Steve: "Actually we were going to drive you to a warehouse on the outskirts of town and hold you for ransom at gun point." Phil: "Yeah, alright."
Small correction at 12:47. I think he says "Ian Wallace" (not "Ian Weiss"). Ian Wallace was King Crimson's drummer 1971-1972. He played with Jon Anderson in "The Warriors" (before Yes) I believe. At any rate, great interview!
Just want to note there's a spelling error in the transcription at 12:46. Phil says "Ian Wallace" not "Ian Weiss". Ian Wallace was a drummer for King Crimson.
+1 for me, too (ie. Thanks for posting this!); just wish he'd mentioned his session work with John Cale...though now that I think of it, it might have been a year or two later than this (Helen of Troy)...
Great listening...It’s a real insight into Phils true opinions at the time. I think you can hear his single mindedness and drive in the way he speaks about stuff. It’s clear he had his own ideas about how things should sound etc...and it’s not surprising he went on to dominate the world solo for a good solid ten years. His drumming development suffered for it though, too much focus on being a songwriter once the success kicked off. I think his chops stayed pretty much the same from ‘79 onwards...I’m his biggest fan but he could have become a monster drummer if he’d kept his focus there...
what a peice of gold. Did you get this from a tin box you dug up at the end of a rainbow? My Genesis experience and knowledge dissected once again. I couldnt agree more with Phil about ELP. I have the identical view. Clearly, Bruford never heard this tape before he joined them live.
Here's where I disagree with Phil completely, I love ELP almost as much as I love Genesis. I mean, Phil probably hasn't heard ELP's "Tarkus", because if you listen to Tarkus and don't get totally amazed and blown away, then you're just not human lol, it's such an incredible album
Love the pronunciation of "Brufford" - back then he'd probably not heard Bill Bruford's surname spoken and only read it on the albums and in the music press, and thought it must have the same vowel sound as "Rutherford".
Agree with Phil 100% about Palmer. All speed, no feel. Spot on about Bruford being non-versatile as well. His playing was no where near as “right” for Genesis as Thompson’s was
@Bookhouse Boy You're missing the point. Bruford always sounds like Bruford no matter how many different people he plays with. He brings his own style to everything and seems incapable of playing 'for the song' which shows a real lack of adaptability. I love his playing btw but for Genesis he was totally the wrong drummer.
@@halodust1304 Phil was more versatile,and in my opinion in A Trick tour(same period of first two Brand X albums 76/77) Phil was technically unsurpassed, even by Bruford
I always felt that Thompson, a technical marvel with Zappa, was just too stiff (I dare say "plodding" at times) for Genesis. If you listen toThompson on a Genesis song and then Phil's recording of the same track, Phil's swing and imaginative rhythmic sense just lifts the song to another level where Thompson can't get to. BB was more "square" to my ears, less swing, playing in Genesis, but the music was changed as a great drummer will do. Whether one likes that change is another thing...
Carl was a boring over playing high school big band drummer..no better. Just boring, and rudiments, no thinking, nothing new. And... he could not hold good meter. Sorry, other than being fit today, and still hitting well, Carl is below average. Most drummers including phil never really cared for him. He was B O R I N G
You are absolutely right - 23 year old Phil, super gifted drummer, talks about things from high-ranking musicians, and great technique, mentions jazz drummers, crazy fusion like Cobham, Tony Williams, Steve Gadd, Bruford himself ... incredibly sophisticated.He liked incredibly sophisticated things like the Mahavisnu Orchestra ... reading this interview it seems impossible that 10 years later he could (sadly) become the king of pop and easy listening singers
What a fantastic historical document !!! It is wonderful to listen to a very young Phil about his musical adventure with Genesis at the time, his instrumentation, his drum references, his musical tastes. He was such a technical, sophisticated, and brilliant drummer at the time. And he was also humble. It is easy to understand how his references were in fusion. He cites Cobham and Gadd several times. A great pleasure to listen to him.
Phil has a great ear for music and drumming. Very subtle and clever. 'The Lamb' has some of his best drumming, imho.
Phil was a lot of things at the time, but humble was not one of them....
Absolutely love this. The whole conversation was so relaxed, and Phil sounds completely at ease as he talks freely about his contemporaries. Very interesting to hear him say back then that he thought Bruford was not "adaptable as a drummer" two years before asking him to tour with Genesis. I agree with his assessment of Bruford and have thought it for decades.
I was on a night out in Manchester decades ago, went in a club called Band On The Wall on Swan Street. It was basically a live music venue for up and coming bands and unknowns etc, different theme each week. Went in with a mate as we did after a few pints and a band was playing with Bruford on drums ! I didn’t expect that.
Wow, what an amazing document, priceless. Phil's real views at an unofficial interview. Thanks so much and for the subtitles too!
This priceless gem right here is one of the things that makes the internet great.
Thanks so much for not only uploading this interview, but also taking the time to transcribe it and add the photos-great job!
This makes life complete.
This is amazing! i think of 1974-75 Phil Collins drumming as his artistic peak -- he had the ideas, the technique, the rich variety of "The Lamb" music, and the expanded drum kit/percussion to play at his most artful and musical. (The first Brand X album also represents "peak Phil" for me.) That peak saw Phil at the zenith of his playing less as a time-keeper and more as a percussive melody-maker -- an approach that implies the beat instead of stomping it, providing a less martial, more lyrical feel. So, to hear this world class drummer, who can make a drum set dance and sing like few others, just chatting with with another musician in such an intimate and open way about his views on music, drumming, fellow musicians, and the like -- it's a dream come true. Thanks so much for posting this
I'm kind of stunned at how casual Phil is when discussing the music of Genesis. Sounds like he was thinking of leaving but since Peter had announced that HE was leaving, the rest of the guys looked at is as a musical challenge. Phil actually stating (in the book) that they could do a whole instrumental album. That shows where his mind was musically. He wanted to open things up a bit on the drums. Los Endos was his baby and of course Brand X started up soon after.
Agree with your observation!
It’s amazing how events can change your outlook.
I think Tony Banks claimed that he was worried Phil was going to leave round about this time.
This entire conversation with Phil is riveting. The interviewer did a superb job.
I have enhanced respect for Phil hearing his openness, his clear-spoken vision. No surprise that he knows his stuff, but I'm really impressed by his eloquence.
I started my journey with _A Trick of the Tail_ and worked backwards. Was never much a fan of the post-Gabriel-Hackett lineup (a cliche, I realize). But one cannot deny the artistic triumph of each Genesis member. Not that anyone here is.
It seems Phil is going through rough times lately. I really wish him well.
Phil got his "Fill" with Brand-X.
He actually was writing his 70s solo album which disappeared later into void. He mentions it at 33:42
I thoroughly enjoyed listening to that. Thanks!
Great interview, Back in the seventies I used to play with a band (16 years olds) in Ealing , where Phil lived with his family, I used to bump into him after he'd been shopping with his wife Andy (their kids went to the same nursery school as my nephew) I asked Phil if he'd like to come along for a jam, He said yeah where do your jam, Oxford road Ealing (on Saturday afternoon) where he parked his car while shopping, we were standing in Oxford rd at the time, Weeks went by and Phil didn't show, Oh well never mind maybe he forgot. But NO months later I saw him again and he said he came down the following Saturday couldn't remember the house number so walked up and down the road listening if he could hear music coming from any of the house's, we rehearsed in a friends house, (most of the neighbours liked our music luckily) but that Saturday my friends mum had a party that afternoon and we rehearsed on Sunday ! Guess it was never to be.
Early Genesis used to hang out with everybody at the time, you see here Phil spending time with aspiring musicians, In Italy they played soccer with the Kids before the concert, After the concert you could go in their dressing room having a chat and wouldnt be strange that Tony would put down some of his chords or stuff on musical sheet if you asked him; bruford once said that he was surprised to see that they are really down to earth without any snobbery at all, at least before the big success.
Holy cow this is amazing
I love that Phill mentioned "Peaches and Regalia". That's my favourite Frank Zappa instrumental.
Fascinating interview with Phil backstage in Cleveland 1974. Really amazing.
This is quite possibly the most interesting " thing", I have ever heard...
Thank you..
Thank you. We have several other exclusive interviews on our channel you may enjoy.
@GenesisMuseum I will definitely go check it out. Thank you
That's fcking sensational! I've been a huge Genesis super fan since forever and this was probably THE most honest and unguarded interview I've ever heard him give. As a musician myself, I found it fascinating to hear him discuss the back stories to all these great Genesis songs, the time signatures etc. Bravo!!!
If I remember correctly from Phil’s book and Mike’s book, it was in Cleveland where Peter finally informed the band he was leaving.
Massive "thank you!" for sharing this amazing historical record. Awesome we can all get back in time and enjoy these jewels 🙂
recordings can be a sort of time machine
This is fascinating. Thanks for posting this!
Love these interviews, thank you. I get the real scoop on things, instead of internet rumors and falsehoods. And speaking of just that (but it's 100% true), Phil once called the Lamb Tour his "grass tour' - and he wasn't talking about the front lawn.
This is great. Lots of information. I didn’t know that Mike Giles was in Yes’ short list after Bruford left!
Once again you guys give us absolute gold! Thank you so much!
Just wanted to say a massive thanks for posting this really interesting, behind the scenes interview from Collins. From a fans point of view it’s always great to come across stuff you’ve never heard before... great insight. Thanks once again...
This is incredible, astonishing. Pure History. Thanks!.
This is an AMAZING interview! In no small part because it's more of a casual conversation than an official interview. Phil is being a lot more candid about his opinions of people (Bruford, White, ELP, etc.) than I think he would be if he knew it was going into print. Great stuff.
I can only Say thanks. This Is a source of Life for all Seventies Lovers. Not Just a Genesis essential
Great to hear him talk about Herbie Hancock's influence. Talking about restraint....Phil was the best at that. Playing just what was needed to enhance the music but not overpower it. Then wailing away when it was appropriate. Strong yet sophisticated. Supremely confident. Just what you would want in a drummer. He reminds me of Billy Cobham often. Genesis was an incredible combination of musicians with the 5 of them all together. Magical.
Incredible insight into a young Phil Collins, his likes/dislikes, his ambitions. Amazing this is almost 50 years ago.
What an amazing bit of history!
What a piece of history.
Facinating interview......Fills in a lot of gaps....great history.....seems he would have left for Yes in a heartbeat....
If Phil had left for Yes, and Gabriel went solo, Genesis would have likely ended up a casualty like many other bands of their era (Caravan, Capability Brown, Focus, etc)
This is amazing. I knew from his book that he wanted to join the Who after Keith Moon died in 78.....but to have thoughts that far back is surprising.
Strange what you find out in unofficial interviews.
@@GenesisMuseum Yes. I can see that happening with Genesis. Fun to think what would have become with Yes as well. That said, having run an organization or two, it usually helps to have a mix of extroverts and introverts, alphas and betas or chiefs and indians in any creative Team. "Yes" may have imploded as well with such strong personalities such as Collins, Anderson, Wakeman, Squire and Howe. Fun ,however, to think about what might have been given that Yes' quality output fell off markedly after Going for the One.
@@7stones590 In Pete Townsend's book he talks about Phil insisting he be the replacement, and Townsend didn't want to break up Genesis.
This is fucking great!!
Thanks for sharing this!
I was fortunate enough to see The Lamb in January of 1975 at The Shrine in LA. That one experience forever changed my whole approach to music.
Fascinating &insightful interview. I enjoy all prog rock(even some of the more guilty pleasure bands like Camel, Quasar, &a lot of the lesser known Italian/E. Euro/N. Euro prog bands Phil referenced). This talk makes me very glad the core trio of Banks/Rutherford/Collins stayed together(even w/notable alterations w/Phil singing, Chester drumming &Daryl doubling bass/guitar w/Mike live).
We know what Bruford sounded like playing w/Genesis from the '76 tour. But it's rather hard to imagine post-Bruford Yes playing w/Collins. Collins playing w/Crimson even moreso. Not because he couldn't. But because Bank's/Rutherford's dedication to writing varied, lush &musically sound material then recording it exceptionally &commensurate to the themes of the particular LP, was something Phil would have found a lot less of, in Yes or Crimson.
Tony focusing on being a pure writer &less concerned w/being a "lead keyboardist" &Mike being a multi-instrumentalist w/the rare ability to write/record guitar/bass near-flawlessly &w/true aptitude &creativity, really gave Phil more of an open &less tolerantly tight canvas to further explore &grow as a drummer, singer &eventual writer by the time Duke came around.
This dynamic imo, cannot be overstated or any less yielding of truly great music Genesis made, that transcended the entire genre of prog; while bands like Crimson, Yes &ELP, stayed much more requisitely tethered to it. ELP/Crimson were obviously the first &foundational to the genre. But because of their dedication to virtuoso perfection &earlier germination, the through line of consistency, integrity to the music & sonic thematic consistency in recording it, could sometimes suffer.
At the end of the day, we as prog fans like, love &get inspiration from all of the more known prog acts. But Genesis somehow intrinsically rose above all of them because in my estimation they survived their earlier changes of losing Gabriel/Hackett, then stayed true to the aims of writing/performing some if not the the most diverse &interesting music in existence, not just prog music.
Wow this is phenomenal, thanks for posting!
Thanks for sharing!
Really enjoyed this interview.
I love the style with which you present these interviews. Thank you so much :)
Thanks. We try to give as much background detail as possible.
great job man, this is so interesting
Man. This is the coolest dang thing. Thank you for sharing.
This is amazing. Thanks for sharing it!
Amazing !
Thanks a lot it’s really informative and the quality is top notch! :)
Steve Gadd is so good. Glad Phil liked Gadd. lol Love him bringing up 'Hot Rats'. I think Phil was impressed (as anyone should be) that Thompson played with Zappa. Oh, and KC 'Red' IS a great album.
I'm a huge Yes fan but I have to agree with Phil here. He was the right guy for Yes. Alan developed with Squire into a great unit though, and also Alan made Roundabout rock. I think they could speed up things because Alan kept it simple.
Very precious ! Thanks !
Thanks for this gem of an interview with one of my favourite drummers ever... I mean EVER!
Don't quite agree with Phil's assessment of Alan White though - but I take it that in 1974, possibly pre "Gates of Delirium", no-one would've anticipated what a kick-ass rhythm section Alan would form with Chris Squire in the years to come. Creative, yet incredibly powerful and tight!
Alan's more down-to-earth style was *the* anchor point for all the fiddly bits that were happening on top of that. Had he been even a tiny bit more "busy" player, it probably wouldn't have worked out the way it did.
Alan did great on relayer. I cloned that and CTTE in full alone. But I do agree with phil and Alan, and Carl Palmer. But Alan has actual musical taste and doesn't ruin things. But yes got boring mostly due to simple drumming.
Thanks for this gem
This is pure gold.
Thank you so much for sharing this. Really interesting!!
Wow!! That was fantastic
Very cool to hear.
Thanks for sharing this! What an incredible listen!
It's as though Phil didn't quite realize at the time how Fucking Amazing he was as a Drummer! From "The Fountain of Salmacis" through "Cinema Show" to "What Gorilla?" - the 2 Brand X albums, and his drumming for Eno on "Another Green World", and "Before and After Science" - Phil Collins pretty much set the benchmark...as did Bill Bruford - with King Crimson, in the incarnation with John Wetton. The thing with Bruford, though - He always knew that he was a great drummer... a bit "Cocky" about it too! But Phil - pleasantly Humble, while also working on polishing his Vocals. What a GIFT Phil Collins brough to the Music!
Fountain was Rush..John Rutsey
@@bobabooey8367 Wrong
@@bobabooey8367 Fountain of Salmacis Is Genesis by Nursery Cryme(1971)
@@massimolombardi1367 I hear ya Massimo..just playin..Genesis is awesome
This is a revelation. Amazing insight into this era.
Thanks for posting.. Really enjoyed it!
Phill was such a brillant drummer
Reminds me of something i know to be true: a lot of working musicians rarely listen to their contemporaries. Phil couldnt name a song or album from another peer group cause hes too busy in his own world.. He just had some early freebee cassette or something. The fans were well more educated on what was going down. Interesting to hear his comments on CP as well - ive always found his playing a but ponderous but cant put my finger on it. I saw him once and he seemed perpetually behind the beat. . .
He did mention many albums and songs such as Herbie Hancock's Head Hunters album and song Chameleon, but your point is valid. I think artists can be afraid to be unintentionally influenced by others in their field.
@@GenesisMuseum And Zappa too. I guess he listened to quite a bit of Zappa as that's how he heard Chester Thompson on Live At Roxy and decided to hire him for Genesis live gigs.
Phil: "Will you take us to the hotel rather than the gig?"
Steve: "Actually we were going to drive you to a warehouse on the outskirts of town and hold you for ransom at gun point."
Phil: "Yeah, alright."
Small correction at 12:47. I think he says "Ian Wallace" (not "Ian Weiss"). Ian Wallace was King Crimson's drummer 1971-1972. He played with Jon Anderson in "The Warriors" (before Yes) I believe.
At any rate, great interview!
thanks, there are still a few typos here and there
@@GenesisMuseum This is a gem, so this is really minor.
He's so candid that I wonder if he was aware he was being taped. Thanks again!
Thanks 😍
For what i understand, they kept playng alive with Peter, for more than half a year, after he announce leaving.
Fly on the wall, indeed! Thanks!
Just want to note there's a spelling error in the transcription at 12:46. Phil says "Ian Wallace" not "Ian Weiss". Ian Wallace was a drummer for King Crimson.
yah, there are a few typos I missed
Thanks!
+1 for me, too (ie. Thanks for posting this!); just wish he'd mentioned his session work with John Cale...though now that I think of it, it might have been a year or two later than this (Helen of Troy)...
Damn ! Phil talking shit about ELP and Carl Palmers drumming. Savage !
It's ok, Bono and Roger Waters talk shit about Phil so it all works out in the end...LOL
That was so interesting. I'd love to hear more of what Phil thought of the band members and their music. Have you got anymore?
Priceless bravo 👏
Amazing! What’s amazing as well is that a lot of stuf sees daylight now. Did you see the polished Bataclan footage with Phil playing like a God.
We produced that Bataclan footage
This is great!!!
This is great thanks !!
Great listening...It’s a real insight into Phils true opinions at the time. I think you can hear his single mindedness and drive in the way he speaks about stuff. It’s clear he had his own ideas about how things should sound etc...and it’s not surprising he went on to dominate the world solo for a good solid ten years. His drumming development suffered for it though, too much focus on being a songwriter once the success kicked off. I think his chops stayed pretty much the same from ‘79 onwards...I’m his biggest fan but he could have become a monster drummer if he’d kept his focus there...
what a peice of gold. Did you get this from a tin box you dug up at the end of a rainbow?
My Genesis experience and knowledge dissected once again.
I couldnt agree more with Phil about ELP. I have the identical view.
Clearly, Bruford never heard this tape before he joined them live.
more of a tin box 🤷
Here's where I disagree with Phil completely, I love ELP almost as much as I love Genesis. I mean, Phil probably hasn't heard ELP's "Tarkus", because if you listen to Tarkus and don't get totally amazed and blown away, then you're just not human lol, it's such an incredible album
@@VasilyMusic in all fairness, he said he never really listened to their music but he didn't like them as people (other than Emerson)
Love the pronunciation of "Brufford" - back then he'd probably not heard Bill Bruford's surname spoken and only read it on the albums and in the music press, and thought it must have the same vowel sound as "Rutherford".
Yeah, during the transcription I wasn't even sure who he was referring to.
Great piece of history !
Fantastique!##
Now I'm gonna think about Peaches every time I hear the tambourine rolls on Lillywhite Lillith
This was great by the way, thanks for this.
LOL!! I totally get what he says about ELP and Carl Palmer's "neurotic" drumming.... Fascinating stuff!
Me too. One of my biggest musical issues is palmer. He is kinda horrible. ..fast singles though... at 80
Man that's crazy
Love that he liked Herbie hancock's headhunters album. love that album.
Didn't everybody? Also Black Market by Weather Report, Jeff Beck's Wired and loads more.
christ, I was born that night down in Texas lmao!
I like ELP very much‼️
Fascinating, historical interview! Quite surprising how he pronounces Bruford as “Bruh-ford” more than once!
It took a long time to transcribe. His pronunciation is very difficult to understand at times, and some pieces we never figured out.
Shows Phil’s influences, doesn’t match up well with other interviews he gave, I trust his private conversations. Bruford, Gadd, Cobham, nuff said!
When Steve says studio I heard Sussidio!!
yessssssssssssss
6:00 "He shows such restraint, the drummer" CRASH BANG CRASH BOOM CRASH
“How could you leave Yes, man?” Yes really was the New York Yankees of prog.
Agree with Phil 100% about Palmer. All speed, no feel. Spot on about Bruford being non-versatile as well. His playing was no where near as “right” for Genesis as Thompson’s was
Thompson played with Zappa and Weather Report. Premier League.
@Bookhouse Boy You're missing the point. Bruford always sounds like Bruford no matter how many different people he plays with. He brings his own style to everything and seems incapable of playing 'for the song' which shows a real lack of adaptability. I love his playing btw but for Genesis he was totally the wrong drummer.
@@halodust1304 Phil was more versatile,and in my opinion in A Trick tour(same period of first two Brand X albums 76/77) Phil was technically unsurpassed, even by Bruford
@Bookhouse Boy I agree with you on BB but over the upcoming years well after this interview.
I always felt that Thompson, a technical marvel with Zappa, was just too stiff (I dare say "plodding" at times) for Genesis. If you listen toThompson on a Genesis song and then Phil's recording of the same track, Phil's swing and imaginative rhythmic sense just lifts the song to another level where Thompson can't get to. BB was more "square" to my ears, less swing, playing in Genesis, but the music was changed as a great drummer will do. Whether one likes that change is another thing...
Superb. Don’t let Carl P hear it tho🤣
And Bruford
And Alan White
@@marguskiis7711 Hes good pals with BB. Wasn’t really critical of him, quite complimentary indeed. I get the disdain for CP tho.
Carl Palmer was and still is a powerhouse!
Carl was a boring over playing high school big band drummer..no better. Just boring, and rudiments, no thinking, nothing new. And... he could not hold good meter. Sorry, other than being fit today, and still hitting well, Carl is below average. Most drummers including phil never really cared for him. He was B O R I N G
@@morbidmanmusiclol what have you ever done? that dude is in the history of drumming and you clean my shoes for a living lol
33:45 he mentions writing for his solo album (!)
Funny thing is that after this gig Peter told the band he was leaving after the tour.
wow he was already thinking of writing his own stuff back then
12:48 Ian Wallace, drummer on King Crimson’s Islands LP, not ‘Ian Weiss’.
Thanks. I had so much trouble understanding him :)
You’ve done a great job overall, I must say! This is really interesting.
Fascinating. I am glued to it right now. But, who is Steve and Ken?
They are fans/friends of the band, and I am friends with Ken
@@eagleeye1280 Alright, cool. I got the impression that he was a musician of some sort.
Great interview,but just to clarify,Phil is talking about using 'Premier' drums,an English drum brand,not 'Premiere'
apologies. the transcription was very long and i made several typos.
Still hard to believe this is the same guy that wrote Sussudio....LOL
You are absolutely right - 23 year old Phil, super gifted drummer, talks about things from high-ranking musicians, and great technique, mentions jazz drummers, crazy fusion like Cobham, Tony Williams, Steve Gadd, Bruford himself ... incredibly sophisticated.He liked incredibly sophisticated things like the Mahavisnu Orchestra ... reading this interview it seems impossible that 10 years later he could (sadly) become the king of pop and easy listening singers
Thought that was Prince 😮
@@herbertvonzinderneuf8547 LOL...so true
I was thinking the same thing! It’s almost impossible to believe!
Success makes you dependant
Does anybody know what kind of Paiste Cymbals is he referring ? 602, Giant Beats?
This was apparently before Phil started jamming with Brand-X.
Right, supposedly 1 month before Phil started with Brand-X
Alan White was GREAT..
Relayer