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Abacab

 
Album Review: Abacab

  • Artist: Genesis
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: September 14, 1981
  • Total Time: 47:04
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Duke showcased a new Genesis -- a sleek, hard, stylish trio that truly sounded like a different band from its first incarnation -- but Abacab was where this new incarnation of the band came into its own. Working once again with producer Hugh Padgham, the group escalated the innovations of Duke, increasing the pop hooks, working them seamlessly into the artiest rock here. And even if the brash, glorious pop of "No Reply at All" -- powered by the percolating horns of Earth, Wind & Fire, yet polished into a precise piece of nearly new wave pop by Padgham -- suggests otherwise, this is still art rock at its core, or at least album-oriented rock, as the band works serious syncopations and instrumental forays into a sound that's as bright, bold, and jagged as the modernist artwork on the cover. They dabble in other genres, lacing "Me and Sarah Jane" with a reggae beat, for instance, which often adds dimension to their sound, as when "Dodo" rides a hard funk beat and greasy organ synths yet doesn't become obvious; it turns inward, requiring active listening. Truly, only "No Reply at All," the rampaging title track (possibly their hardest-rocking song to date), and the sleek and spooky "Man on the Corner" (which hides a real melancholy heart underneath its glistening surface) are immediate and accessible -- although the Mockney jokes of "Who Dunnit?" could count, it's too much of a geeky novelty to be pop. The rest of Abacab is truly modern art rock, their last album that could bear that tag comfortably. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Abacab (Lyrics) Phil Collins, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford Genesis (7:02)
No Reply at All (Lyrics) Phil Collins, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford Genesis (4:41)
Me and Sarah Jane (Lyrics) Tony Banks Genesis (6:00)
Keep It Dark (Lyrics) Phil Collins, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford Genesis (4:34)
Dodo/Lurker (Lyrics) Phil Collins, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford Genesis (7:30)
Who Dunnit? (Lyrics) Phil Collins, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford Genesis (3:22)
Man on the Corner (Lyrics) Phil Collins Genesis (4:27)
Like It or Not (Lyrics) Mike Rutherford Genesis (4:58)
Another Record Phil Collins, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford Genesis (4:30)

Credits

Phil Collins (Percussion), Phil Collins (Drums), Phil Collins (Vocals), Earth, Wind & Fire (Horn), Genesis (Producer), Genesis (Main Performer), Tony Banks (Keyboards), Tony Banks (Vocals), Hugh Padgham (Engineer), Mike Rutherford (Bass), Mike Rutherford (Guitar), Tom Tom 84 (Arranger), Bill Smith (Artwork)
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Wikipedia: Abacab
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Abacab
Studio album by Genesis
Released 18 September 1981
Recorded May - June 1981 at The Farm, Surrey
Genre Rock, progressive rock
Length 47:10
Label Charisma (original UK release)
Virgin (UK re-release)
Atlantic (USA)
Vertigo (South America)
Producer Genesis
Professional reviews
Genesis chronology
Duke
(1980)
Abacab
(1981)
Three Sides Live
(1982)

Abacab, released in 1981, is the 11th studio album by British band Genesis. It reached #1 in the UK, where it remained in the charts for 27 weeks.

Contents

Overview

The album marks a sharp stylistic jump, begun by the band on its preceding album Duke, away from their progressive rock style of the 1970s and toward a radio-friendly pop music sound. As such, Abacab is still viewed today with mixed opinions from both fans and critics. But the bandmembers say that the change in musical direction, beginning with 1980's Duke and continued with Abacab, was necessary for the band's survival in the changing musical climate they found themselves in. Despite the change, songs like the title track, "No Reply At All," "Keep It Dark" and "Man on the Corner" were all respectable hit singles. And while Abacab may have cost Genesis some fans, they earned many others, with the album hitting UK #1 and US #7, selling several million copies worldwide and becoming the band's first Platinum selling album in the US.

Another element of Abacab is drummer Phil Collins's more '80s approach of his drum sound, involving reverberation, noise gates and compression in order to achieve a loud and authoritative percussive effect. This continued a trend Collins developed along with engineer Hugh Padgham on his solo hit single "In the Air Tonight", as well as the piece "Intruder" from former bandmate Peter Gabriel's third album.

In addition to pounding rock, Abacab incorporates upbeat, accessible music - an increasingly important element in Genesis's style at the time. "No Reply At All" features the Earth, Wind & Fire horn section (as did Collins' solo album Face Value earlier in 1981), and even "Dodo/Lurker," whose adventurous lyrics recall traditional Genesis, features a funky rhythm, propelled by Tony Banks's keyboards.

After years of using outside record producers, Genesis produced Abacab solely by themselves, while limiting further than before the number of solo compositions in favor of the group-written pieces. They also had the expertise of engineer Hugh Padgham, who assisted Collins on Face Value and would continue to work on Genesis and Collins recordings through the end of the decade.

The album takes its name from an early arrangement of the musical parts that make up the title track. Guitarist Mike Rutherford said on the US radio show In the Studio with Redbeard (which spotlighted Duke and Abacab in one episode): "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'."

Due to its daring shift in style, Abacab is generally considered one of Genesis' most important releases, and was a springboard for future hit albums Genesis and Invisible Touch. The band had been influenced by the punk/new wave revolution in Britain insofar as what they were now offering fans was a set of minimalist, bare, punchy songs, much more in step with the pop charts than Genesis had ever been before.

Three songs that were omitted from Abacab---"Paperlate," "You Might Recall," and "Me & Virgil"---were soon issued on the 3 X 3 EP, which broke the top ten of the UK singles chart, on the strength of the song "Paperlate." They were also issued on the U.S. release of 1982's Three Sides Live, which hit #10.

Two other songs that were omitted from Abacab--"Naminanu" and "Submarine"--appeared as B-sides on the Abacab singles, but were originally intended to be part of Dodo/Lurker, where the order would have been Naminanu/Dodo/Lurker/Submarine.

Track listing

All songs by Tony Banks/Phil Collins/Mike Rutherford, except where noted.

Side one

  1. "Abacab" – 7:02
  2. "No Reply at All" – 4:40
  3. "Me and Sarah Jane" (Tony Banks) – 6:00
  4. "Keep It Dark" – 4:32

Side two

  1. "Dodo/Lurker" – 7:30
  2. "Who Dunnit?" – 3:23
  3. "Man on the Corner" (Phil Collins) – 4:27
  4. "Like It or Not" (Mike Rutherford) – 4:57
  5. "Another Record" – 4:29

Remastered

  1. Abacab 7.04
  2. No Reply At All 4.40
  3. Me and Sarah Jane 6.02
  4. Keep It Dark 4.32
  5. Dodo/Lurker 7.31
  6. Who Dunnit? 3.24
  7. Man on the Corner 4.27
  8. Like It or Not 4.58
  9. Another Record 4.28

Singles

2007 SACD/CD/DVD Release

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

  1. Band interview about this album (2006).
  2. Promotional videos: "Abacab", "No Reply At All", "Keep It Dark" and "Man On The Corner".
  3. World Tour program, from 1981 tour (15 page gallery).

In popular culture

  • In 1993, when the video game Mortal Kombat was ported to the Sega Genesis, the development team made a secret code in the game that spelled out "Abacabb" (with two "B"s) on the controller pad. When activated, it would enable uncensored blood. This was a deliberate reference to one of Ed Boon's favorite bands which shared the same name as the console the code was exclusive to.
  • In the Kimagure Orange Road manga and anime, the restaurant ABCB was named in homage to the album. (The phonetic pronunciation of the letters in Japanese is similar in pronunciation to "Abacab.")
  • During an on-air discussion about the song, Artie Lange of The Howard Stern Show stated that when he was in high school he would sometimes use "A,B,A,C,A,B" to select answers on multiple choice exams. He claims to have usually got "about half of them right" by using this method.

Working titles for the album

Before Abacab was released, many of the songs had working titles. Below is a list of the original song working titles and finalized song titles (in parentheses):

  • Abacab 07:06
  • Jangley (You Might Recall) 05:36 (Cut from album, but released as part of the 3 X 3 EP, and original American release of "Three Sides Live")
  • Nationwide (No Reply At All) 04:47
  • German I & II (Dodo/Lurker) 07:28
  • Sub (Submarine) 04:21 (Cut from album, released as a B-Side to "Man on the Corner", Instrumental Track)
  • Vocal 3/4 (Naminanu) 03:55 (Cut from album, released as a B-Side to "Keep It Dark", Instrumental Track. The song also was created from improvising in the studio.)
  • Chunkey (Me & Virgil) 06:24 (Cut from album, but released as part of the 3 X 3 EP, and original American release of "Three Sides Live")
  • Odd (Keep It Dark) 04:36
  • Spike (Me & Sarah Jane) 06:02
  • Westside (Another Record) 04:42
  • Wierdsynth (Who Dunnit?) 03:41
  • Lonely Man (Man On The Corner) 04:30
  • Don (Like It Or Not) 05:00
  • Paperlate 3:39 (Cut from album, but released as part of the 3 X 3 EP, and original American release of "Three Sides Live")

Personnel

Additional personnel

(Johnny Graham - Trumpet; Andrew Woolfolk - Saxophone) Stayton Heyward - Bass on No Reply At All

Tour

Genesis toured in support of the Abacab album between September and December 1981. Shows in New York and Birmingham, England comprised the Three Sides Live album released the following year.

Set list

  1. Behind the Lines
  2. Duchess
  3. The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
  4. Dodo/Lurker*
  5. Abacab*
  6. The Carpet Crawlers
  7. Me and Sarah Jane*
  8. Misunderstanding
  9. No Reply At All
  10. Firth of Fifth
  11. Man On The Corner*
  12. Who Dunnit?*
  13. In the Cage
  14. The Cinema Show (closing section)/Riding the Scree (teaser)/Slippermen
  15. Afterglow
  16. Turn It On Again
  17. Dance On a Volcano
  18. Drum Duet
  19. Los Endos

Encore:

  1. "I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)"

"Like It Or Not" was played at a few shows on the Northeast US leg. "Me and Virgil" was played at a few shows in Europe. "The Knife" was performed at the last show in Birmingham on 23 December 1981.

Personnel

Preceded by
Dead Ringer by Meat Loaf
UK Albums Chart number one album
September 26, 1981 – October 9, 1981
Succeeded by
Ghost in the Machine by The Police

Trivia

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.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Formats described at Genesis-news.com
  2. ^ a b Explained in interview with producer and remixer Nick Davis, at Genesis-news.com
  3. ^ The DVD interface has two audio choices: Dolby 5.1 and DTS 5.1. If the Dolby 5.1 option is chosen on a system that does not support surround sound, the Dolby stereo mix is played.
  4. ^ Comparison from Sound and Vision magazine article online at Soundandvisionmag.com

 
 
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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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