Puneet Varma (Editor)

Abacab

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Released
  
14 September 1981

Length
  
47:10

Artist
  
Genesis

Producer
  
Genesis

Recorded
  
May–June 1981

Abacab (1981)
  
3X3 (1982)

Release date
  
14 September 1981

Label
  
Atlantic Records

Abacab httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesI3

Studio
  
The Farm, Chiddingfold, Surrey, England

Genres
  
Rock music, Progressive rock, Pop rock, Art rock

Similar
  
Genesis albums, Progressive rock albums

Abacab is the eleventh studio album by English rock band Genesis, released in September 1981 on Charisma Records. After their 1980 tour in support of their previous album Duke, the band took a break before they reconvened in 1981 to write and record a new album. Abacab is the first Genesis album recorded at The Farm, a recording studio bought by the group in Chiddingfold, Surrey. It marked the band's development from their progressive roots into more accessible and pop-oriented songs, and their conscious decision to write songs unlike their previous albums.

Contents

Abacab received a mostly positive reception from critics and was a commercial success for the band, reaching number one on the UK Albums Chart and number 7 on the US Billboard 200. Genesis released four singles from the album, the most successful being "Abacab" and "No Reply at All". The album continued to sell, and was certified double platinum in 1988 by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for two million copies sold in the US. Genesis supported the album with their tour of North America and Europe in 1981 which formed most of their second live album, Three Sides Live.

Genesis abacab


Background and recording

At the end of their 1980 tour in support of their previous album Duke, the line-up of singer and drummer Phil Collins, keyboardist Tony Banks, and guitarist Mike Rutherford took a break from touring and recording. In November 1980, the band purchased Fisher Lane Farm, a farmhouse with an adjoining cowshed near Chiddingfold, Surrey, as their new rehearsal and recording facility. The building was remodelled into a studio, and the trio settled in March 1981 to write and record new material for Abacab, the first Genesis album recorded in England since A Trick of the Tail.

The new environment had a productive effect on the writing process and the band had written enough for a double album, but they discarded one hour's worth of songs because it sounded too similar to their past albums. Banks said a conscious effort was made by the group to keep melodies as simple as possible, which signalled further changes in their direction. Rutherford pointed out that the clearing of familiar sounding tracks was done in order to avoid Genesis becoming "a caricature of ourselves", so a change in direction was therefore necessary. The shift was also underlined in their production with the departure of David Hentschel, their producer and engineer since 1975, and the arrival of his replacement Hugh Padgham, who was chosen following his work on Collins solo album Face Value, and former Genesis singer Peter Gabriel's third solo album. The band marked Abacab as a departure from their previous albums as it is closer to their natural live sound. For the first time in their history, the production duties were solely credited as Genesis; Padgham is credited as the album's engineer.

Songs

Abacab features mostly group-written songs, with only three of its nine tracks written solely by each of the three members; Banks wrote "Me and Sarah Jane", Collins wrote "Man on the Corner", and Rutherford wrote "Like It or Not". "No Reply at All" features the Phenix Horns, the horn section of American band Earth, Wind & Fire.

The album is named after its title track, "Abacab". Rutherford said "there were three bits of music in 'Abacab', and we referred to them as 'section a', 'section b', and 'section c'... and at different times, they were in different order. We'd start with 'section a' and then have 'section c' ... and at one point in time, it spelled Abacab. On the final version, it's not that at all, it's like 'Accaabbaac'."

The keyboard sound on "Who Dunnit?" is the result of Banks changing the presets on his Prophet synthesizer as he plays. Live performances of this song featured the novelty of Rutherford playing drums alongside Chester Thompson (although Collins played drums on the studio version).

Genesis recorded additional songs that were left off the album, including "Paperlate", "You Might Recall", and "Me & Virgil". These were released in the UK as the band's second extended play 3×3 and the North American edition of their third live album Three Sides Live, both released in 1982. Two other songs, "Naminanu" and "Submarine", originally part of a four-song suite with "Dodo/Lurker", were instead released as B-sides on the album's singles.

Release

The album was released with four different embossed covers simultaneously across the country, all depicting the same collage but with the paper shapes in different colours. The four different cover variants are usually identified by the colour of the largest upper shape adjacent to the title lettering; this shape being coloured navy blue, red, peach, and yellow.

Critical reception

In a review for Melody Maker, reporter Paul Colbert thought the album was the band's least consistent and therefore, least predictable in three years. He recognised a "heavy PC [Phil Collins] twist to the sound" on "Man on the Corner" and "No Reply At All", but "he does not have it all his own way". Colbert, however, thought Genesis had produced "a couple of Frankensteins" such as the latter half of "Abacab" which he deemed "unstructured" and "uninspired" compared to their past instrumentals. He named "Keep It Dark" and "Who Dunnit?" as "the most exciting and innovative music" the band had produced for several years, and concluded with the album is "by far more promising" than Duke or ...And Then There Were Three.... Ken Kubernik of the Los Angeles Times wondered if the success of Collins' solo album Face Value was an influence on the group, to which he replied, "Yes and no". He praised the album for its "thick, resonant instrumental passages, quaint imagery in the lyrics, and superb production", but "beneath the surface are some new wrinkles in the trademark Genesis sound", noting a reduction in harmonies for more simple vocals and Collins' drum sound replacing Banks's keyboards as their "vortex". Kubernik did however, praise Collins' vocals.

David Fricke of Rolling Stone praised the album for shedding the "ivory-tower artistry" of their previous albums, turning to sparse arrangements and "highly rhythmic interplay" and drawing inspiration from popular contemporaries such as XTC and The Police. In his retrospective review for AllMusic, critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine echoed this sentiment with greater emphasis, declaring "Duke showcased a new Genesis... but Abacab was where this new incarnation of the band came into its own." He also argued that although the album is far richer in pop hooks and accessibility than the band's previous works, at its heart Abacab "is truly modern art rock, their last album that could bear that tag comfortably."

Tour

Genesis toured in support of Abacab during September–December 1981, covering Europe and North America. Shows in New York City and Birmingham, England comprised the Three Sides Live album released the following year. The tour also marked the first appearance of the Vari-Lite automated lighting system, in which Genesis invested.

2007 reissue

A new version of Abacab was released in the UK and Japan on 2 April 2007. It was released in the U.S. and Canada as part of the Genesis 1976–1982 box set on 15 May 2007. This includes the album in remixed stereo and surround sound, plus related video tracks.

Track listing

All songs arranged and performed by Genesis.

Personnel

Credits are adapted from the album's sleeve notes.

Genesis

  • Tony Banks – keyboards
  • Phil Collins – drums, vocals
  • Mike Rutherford – basses, guitars
  • Additional musicians

  • EWF Horns – horns on "No Reply at All"
  • Production

  • Genesis – producers
  • Hugh Padgham – engineer
  • Bill Smith – album cover
  • Chris Peyton – sleeve adaptation (for The Redroom)
  • Carol Willis – project co-ordination
  • Tony Smith – manager
  • Songs

    1Abacab6:58
    2No Reply at All4:39
    3Me and Sarah Jane6:00

    References

    Abacab Wikipedia