Recently submissions were being welcomed by the publishers of this excellent collection of books about music sub-titled 33 1/3  (Continuum Press). The series was simple: take an entire album from the  pop genre and write about it in any style you like. One of the best was  by our own Kevin Courrier called Captain Beefheart's Trout Mask Replica (2007).  I was enamored by the series and its love of music and good story  telling. As I read more of them, I knew that I could write one too; and  so, when the opportunity presented itself, I submitted a proposal for  Genesis's The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway in April, only to be turned down in May. The next logical place for publication was here in Critics at Large. Below is the draft introduction to my book proposal. 
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| Genesis, circa 1971 | 
To  the listeners watching this conference online and around the world, the  very idea that Gabriel would re-join Genesis and remount one of the  most notorious shows in the band’s history had eyebrows raising. Gabriel  had left the band in 1974 under mysterious circumstances just at the  time the band was to breakthrough in North America. He even released a  full-page “letter to fans” in the leading British music publication, Melody Maker explaining  his departure. By 1977, with the release of his first solo album, it  could be said that Gabriel went out of his way to distance himself from  the group and the colourful characters he played in concert. On the  other hand, the covers of his first four eponymous solo records are also  altered images of Gabriel’s face: hidden from full view either in the  front seat of a car, or distorted as seen on his fourth album. Was he  still hiding behind a mask?
The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway is  no ordinary work. It’s more a culmination of Genesis’s own mystical and  redemptive journey through music and performance. Historically it came  out at a time when the “rock opera” was the mainstay of progressive  rock, a term used to describe music of grandeur with a large dose of  theatricality. Led by Peter Gabriel, this British “progressive rock”  band had made its mark with eclectic compositions and elaborate  theatrical stage presentations. The Who's Tommy, released in  1969, was the recording most often cited as the definitive rock opera  (Andrew Lloyd Webber notwithstanding). But in 1974, when Genesis  released The Lamb, the rock opera was a generally accepted musical format. But that’s where the similarities end, for The Lamb is  more than just a “rock opera”: it’s a contemporary study about the loss  of identity and the journey made by its lead character Rael to recover  it. For Genesis, The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway drew to a  conclusion the group’s work with Peter Gabriel, the lead singer  and front-man for the band since 1969. His controversial departure, just  when the band was enjoying incredible success in America, is the stuff  of legend. The group had six very successful and musically interesting  albums under its collective belt by that time. Some people said Gabriel had  been suffering exhaustion; others said it was musical differences with  the band. This book seeks to understand how The Lamb both mirrored and traced Gabriel’s paradoxical journey.
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| Peter Gabriel as Rael | 
Musically speaking, The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway is  the consummate Genesis album. Every record that preceded it pointed the  way to this highly conceptual idea about Rael, a half Puerto Rican  juvenile delinquent from New York driven underground to face eminent  danger. He sets out to rescue his brother only the brother turns out to be actually the other part of his split personality. It was the first two-record set  in the band's history and it came out when record companies weren't  afraid to indulge their clients. What makes this album stand out is the  use of New York City as the backdrop to Rael's story, who in the words  of Gabriel, “crawls out of the subways of New York and is sucked into  the wool [lamb] to regain consciousness underground.” During the tour,  to no one's surprise, Gabriel played the part of Rael. (Rael is even a  play on Gabriel's surname.) The performance and presentation of the The Lamb  on stage was a critical success. Many fans of Genesis consider it the  peak of the band's musical theatrical powers and a concept album beyond  all concept albums.
But  the record goes further and even deeper than the usual Lewis Carroll  fairytale. In no small way, it ambitiously employs popular forms of  music: Music Hall and Theatre of the Absurd; Performance Art and  Mythology with a dash of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress; and  a nod to Vaudeville and Tin Pan Alley. The music is full of Biblical  and pop cultural references, but wrapped with a slightly cryptic story  by Gabriel in the liner notes. To fans of prog rock, it was the complete  package. The Lamb featured a complex story, which invoked  through a lucrative concert presentation, illustrious costumes, slide  images and big lights presented to fascinate, titillate and entertain in  the biggest way possible. It was also Peter Gabriel’s most personal  foray into the ideas of psychologist Carl Jung, where “a lot of my focus  in Genesis had been on journeys into the psyche.”(Most of the song's  ideas came directly out of Peter Gabriel's dreams.) The nature of  duality is imaginatively explored on The Lamb, making the story  dense, yet riveting upon first listen. But by unveiling the layers of  the album, its lyrics and musical roots, we come to understand what the  band was trying most to achieve as a theatrical and conceptual group;  and why The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway remains one of the most beloved in the genre of progressive rock.
As guitarist Steve Hackett has often said about Genesis, “It’s music to dream to.”
 – John Corcelli is a musician and broadcaster. He's currently working on a radio documentary, with Kevin Courrier, for CBC Radio's Inside the Music called The Other Me: The Avant-Garde Music of Paul McCartney.
 – John Corcelli is a musician and broadcaster. He's currently working on a radio documentary, with Kevin Courrier, for CBC Radio's Inside the Music called The Other Me: The Avant-Garde Music of Paul McCartney.  
I think that Gabriel may have used Rael as a nod to Pete Townshend's earlier concept.
ReplyDelete"I submitted a proposal for Genesis's The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway in April, only to be turned down in May."
ReplyDeleteAll-too-predictable anti-prog snobbery, while overrated manure such as Beefheart, always a darling of hipster rock critics, of course makes the cut. Sickening.
The Pilgrim's Progress and not "process"
ReplyDelete