Aktuelle Presseberichte über Genesis

  • Ich mach mir die CD einfach selber, da gebe ich doch kein Geld für aus!

    Eric Clapton: Hamburg Phil Collins: Köln (5x) , Hannover (2x) , Köln (2x) Genesis:15.06.2007 - Hamburg (AOL Arena) Peter Gabriel:18.10.2013 - Hamburg; 03.05.2014 - Hannover Steve Hackett:11.09.2015 - Hamburg, 23.04.2019 - Hamburg The Musical Box: 31.10.2014 - Bremen, 23.11.2018 Bremen Australian Pink Floyd Show: 5x (seit 2015) Roger Waters:14.05.2018 - Hamburg Nick Mason's A Saucerful of Secrets:13.09.2018 - Hamburg Queen+ Adam Lambert: 20.06.2018 - Hamburg Robbie Williams:11.07.2017 - Hannover

  • Das habe ich heute bei MySpace gefunden.

    29 Mai 2008, 09:00


    Free Genesis Greatest Hits available this Sunday in the UK!
    This Sunday - 1st of June
    12 fantastic tracks exclusively chosen by one of the world's greatest rock bands.
    Click here to read the complete interview with Phil Collins, Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks and hear a sample of the album.
    http://www.mailonsunday.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1021727/Genesis-The-special-chemistry-awesome-supergroup.html
    Offer only available in the UK & Eire
    Don't miss out - order The Mail on Sunday today

    Roy Wilson :rollen:


    27 Apr 2019 Lübeck 170. Konzert
    25 Mai 2019 Hohen Neuendorf

    14 Jun 2019 THALE / HARZ

    24 Aug 2019 Brandenburg an der Havel

    31 Aug 2019 Wunstorf

    01 Nov 2019 HAMBURG 175. Konzert

    15 Nov 2019 Isernhagen Genesis Show

    16 Nov 2019 Isernhagen Stiltskin Show

  • Phil Collins, Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks talk to Marc Lee about reuniting for the Turn It On Tour and what the future might hold for Genesis


    When Genesis were finally reunited with frontman/drummer Phil Collins for last year's Turn It On Again tour, it was hardly because anyone needed the money.


    The band have sold more than 150 million records since the early Seventies, and Collins pays himself an annual salary that, in recent years, has exceeded £20 million. Nor was there any new material to promote.


    Keyboard-player Tony Banks's overriding memory of the concerts is of a happy mood of nostalgia, while guitarist Mike Rutherford fondly recalls the camaraderie: "It's always a great vibe."


    "We toured for the right reasons," says Collins, who had been out of the band for 15 years.


    The idea of the £10 million jaunt was to present the best of Genesis's 15-album repertoire employing the latest technology, which led to the construction of a 64-metre-wide video screen, the largest ever seen on a concert stage. And, if there had been any doubts about the enduring popularity of the ageing prog-rockers, they were soon dispelled: 1.4 million wildly enthusiastic fans – many of them born after the band's heyday – attended the 22 European concerts, which were followed by a further 25 dates across North America. So the tour can only be judged a huge success: even the torrential rain that lashed gigs on both sides of the Atlantic failed to spoil the fun.


    All of which might have led you to think that this marked the beginning of a new chapter in Genesis's career. Well, apparently not. Speaking to Banks, Rutherford and Collins last week, it soon becomes clear that they have Turned It Off Again.


    The biggest obstacle to them working together in the future is Collins's announcement last month that he has decided to retire – "Something I'd always associated with old people," he says ruefully. "But I suppose I'm old now." (He's 57.)


    "After the final show in Los Angeles," says the singer, "I just wanted to tell these guys, 'Thank you, and I love you.' It felt like an emotional closure. I don't think we'll do any more."


    Collins is stepping out of the spotlight mainly for the sake of his youngest children, aged three and seven. "I do feel this tug [to play], but touring takes me away from my kids, and I have to do the right thing."


    Lolling on either side of him on a vast sofa in a private members' club, Banks and Rutherford seem unperturbed by their bandmate's resolve to call it a day on Genesis. They enjoyed last year's outing, but taking their music to the world's biggest stadiums is no longer a priority in their lives.


    In fact, as our conversation progresses, the only two Genesis members to have been in every one of the band's many line-ups start to seem like rock and roll's most reluctant stars – Banks in particular.


    Watching him on stage, it's striking how intense his concentration is. He sits contemplating his array of keyboards, seemingly unaware of the tens or hundreds of thousands of eyes on him. He barely moves and utters not a single word throughout the show.


    "It's not a natural thing for me," he says. "I'm not a natural performer. When I'm on stage, I'm not sure sometimes why I'm up there."


    Which reminds Collins of an occasion during last year's tour when he produced a camera in the middle of one show and – riskily – took a picture of Banks. "I hadn't warned him, and I didn't know how he was going to react. He could have been absolutely livid." Happily, Banks flashed a rare smile.


    Rutherford, who also leaves the onstage chat to the ebullient Collins, says: "I'm more comfortable on stage than Tony, but I'm not a natural performer either. For the first 10 years of the band, I sat on a stool half the time. I don't live to be on stage."


    So, if touring is now behind them, what does the future hold? All three say they want to continue writing, but each also has a particular passion outside music – all of them very un-rock-and-roll.


    "I'm a keen gardener," says Banks. "If it's a sunny day, I'm out there." And we're not talking about a handkerchief-sized suburban garden here – he's got eight acres to look after. "It could take up all your time or more."


    Rutherford, once a proficient polo player, says: "We have a big equestrian centre at home. I'm also a keen golfer."


    As for Collins, apart from the parenting duties, he has become fanatical about the extensive model railway he has set up in the basement of his home in Switzerland. He's down there every day, he says, and can't wait to get back to it.


    It all sounds as if quiet lives lie ahead, then. And yet, and yet...


    There has been much talk recently about the band going on the road to perform The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway, their landmark concept album of 1974. It was the last Genesis record to feature original vocalist Peter Gabriel, who left shortly afterwards to pursue a hugely successful solo career.


    Talking to my colleague Neil McCormick at about the same time as I met Banks, Rutherford and Collins, Gabriel said he hadn't ruled out rejoining the band. When pressed – and despite Collins's apparent determination to quit performing – the current band members agree that The Lamb remains "on the back burner".


    "It's still out there as an idea," says Rutherford. "Visually, you could do so much with it."


    Not that there wouldn't be problems to overcome. The band's music has changed enormously since their original singer's departure: Collins muses on whether Gabriel would want to sing on the later, poppier songs, such as I Can't Dance.


    Banks is also concerned about what the dynamics would be like in a re-formed Genesis. "Peter has got used to being the boss," he says. "And, if he came back, it wouldn't be like that. It would be back to the old days of fighting and compromising."


    Nothing is certain, then. But perhaps we have yet to reach the final chapter in the book of Genesis.

    Tony Banks - der virtuoseste und beste Komponist und Keyboarder!


    Tour 1987: Mannheim / Tour 1992: Hockenheim / Tour 1998: Mannheim / Tour 2007: Frankfurt - Düsseldorf

  • Die FAZ am Sonntag hat gestern ein Interview mit Genesis veröffentlicht, in dem TB, MR und PC über ihre Einstellung zur Musik (u. a. Klassik) befragt werden. Eine ganze Seite lang. Naja, ein gutes Drittel der Seite hat ein großes Bild der Drei beim Interview ausgefüllt. Nette Sache.

    I'll never find a better time to be alive than now.

    Peter Hammill (on "X my Heart")

  • Die FAZ am Sonntag hat gestern ein Interview mit Genesis veröffentlicht, in dem TB, MR und PC über ihre Einstellung zur Musik (u. a. Klassik) befragt werden. Eine ganze Seite lang. Naja, ein gutes Drittel der Seite hat ein großes Bild der Drei beim Interview ausgefüllt. Nette Sache.


    FAZ Interview (online 3.06.08):
    „Genesis“ über die Frage, ob sie „klassisch“ sind: „Da geht es doch auch um die Ewigkeit“ - Menschen - Gesellschaft - FAZ.NET