Genesis

Selling England By The Pound

  • MOG Editorial Review

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    Before truly hitting it big with radio-friendly rock hits in the '80s, Genesis were creating some of the best prog-rock around, and 1973's Selling England by the Pound was the best showcase of the band's range. Using the imagery of medieval England to tell seriously out-there stories, Genesis managed to shift between accessibly experimental rock jams like the organ-heavy "I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)" and sprawling songs that often clocked in at over eight minutes like "Firth of Fifth" and "The Battle of Epping Forest." It's a testament that rather than feeling repetitive, these massive tunes and short gems felt fresh no matter what the length time was, and it was somehow only a hint of just how talent Peter Gabriel, Phil Collins and the gang were.
  • AMG Review of Selling England by the Pound

    Amg
    Stephen Thomas Erlewine
    All Music Guide

    Genesis proved that they could rock on Foxtrot but on its follow-up Selling England by the Pound they didn't follow this route, they returned to the English eccentricity of their first records, which wasn't so much a retreat as a consolidation of powers. For even if this eight-track album has no one song that hits as hard as "Watcher of the Skies," Genesis hasn't sacrificed the newfound immediacy of Foxtrot: they've married it to their eccentricity, finding ways to infuse it into the delicate whimsy that's been their calling card since the beginning. This, combined with many overt literary allusions -- the Tolkeinisms of the title of "The Battle of Epping Forest" only being the most apparent -- gives this album a storybook quality. It plays as a collection of short stories, fables, and fairy tales, and it is also a rock record, which naturally makes it quite extraordinary as a collection, but also as a set of individual songs. Genesis has never been as direct as they've been on the fanciful yet hook-driven "I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)" -- apart from the fluttering flutes in the fade-out, it could easily be mistaken for a glam single -- or as achingly fragile as on "More Fool Me," sung by Phil Collins. It's this delicate balance and how the album showcases the band's narrative force on a small scale as well as large that makes this their arguable high-water mark.

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