The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
{{For|the title track|The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (song)}}
{{EngvarB|date=June 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2014}}
{{Infobox album
| name = The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
| type = studio
| artist = Genesis
| cover = The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway.jpg
| border = yes
| alt =
| released = 22 November 1974{{Cite web|url=https://www.genesis-movement.org/Genesis%20Official%20Release%20Dates%20Online%20Version%20Rev%20E3%20(Oct%202022).pdf|title=Get 'Em Out By Friday. Genesis: The Official Release Dates 1968-78|author=Mic Smith|pages=57–61|date=May 2017|accessdate=28 September 2023}}{{Cite web|url=https://petergabriel.com/news/the-lamb-lies-down-on-broadway/|title=The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway|website=petergabriel.com|date=20 November 2024|accessdate=20 November 2024}}
| recorded = August–October 1974{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=349}}
| venue =
| studio = Island Studios Mobile at {{lang|cy|italic=no|Glaspant}} Manor, {{lang|cy|italic=no|Capel Iwan}}, Carmarthenshire, Wales
| genre = {{flatlist|
- Progressive rock
- art rock{{cite web |url=http://ultimateclassicrock.com/genesis-albums-ranked/ |title=Genesis Albums Ranked Worst to Best |last=Allen |first=Jim |date=January 4, 2017 |website=Ultimate Classic Rock |access-date=March 2, 2019}}
- rock opera{{cite web | url=https://ultimateclassicrock.com/rock-opera-albums/ | title=40 of Rock's Most Important Rock Opera Albums | date=17 October 2023 }}{{cite web | url=http://music.ign.com/articles/706/706219p4.html | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110309184426/http://music.ign.com/articles/706/706219p4.html | archive-date=9 March 2011 | title=Top 14 Greatest Rock Operas/Concept Albums of All Time - Music Feature at IGN }}
}}
| length = 94:17
| label =
| producer = {{flatlist|
- John Burns
- Genesis}}
| prev_title = Selling England by the Pound
| prev_year = 1973
| next_title = A Trick of the Tail
| next_year = 1976
| misc = {{Singles
| name = The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
| type = Studio album
| single1 = Counting Out Time
| single1date = 15 November 1974{{Cite web|url=https://www.genesis-movement.org/Genesis%20Official%20Release%20Dates%20Online%20Version%20Rev%20E3%20(Oct%202022).pdf|title=Get 'Em Out By Friday. Genesis: The Official Release Dates 1968-78|author=Mic Smith|pages=57–61|date=May 2017|accessdate=28 September 2023}}
| single2 = The Carpet Crawlers
| single2date = 18 April 1975
}}
}}
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway is a studio double album and sixth overall by the English progressive rock band Genesis. It was released on 22 November 1974 by Charisma Records, and is their last to feature original lead vocalist Peter Gabriel. It reached No. 10 on the UK Albums Chart and No. 41 on the US Billboard 200. A rock opera, the album tells the story of Rael (portrayed by Gabriel), a troubled and rebellious youth from New York City who is unexpectedly taken on a surreal and introspective journey of self-discovery. He faces a series of bizarre and symbolic experiences that lead to his transformation and spiritual awakening.
Genesis worked on new material at Headley Grange for three months in 1974 after touring their previous album, Selling England by the Pound. The album was marked by increased tensions within the band as Gabriel, who devised the story, insisted on writing all of the lyrics, temporarily left to work with filmmaker William Friedkin, and needed time to be with his wife and newborn child. Most of the songs were developed by the rest of the band through jam sessions and were put down at {{lang|cy|italic=no|Glaspant}} Manor in Wales using a mobile studio. The story is rich with allegorical elements, drawing from religious, literary, and psychological themes, and portrays American imagery which contrasts previous Genesis albums that were based on fantasy and mythological ideas. This change is also represented visually in the cover artwork produced by Hipgnosis.
The album received mixed reviews at first, and was the first Genesis album that failed to outsell its predecessors, but gained acclaim in subsequent years and has a cult following. "Counting Out Time" and "The Carpet Crawlers" were released as singles in the UK and "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway" in the US, but neither were successful. Genesis toured the album across North America and Europe in 1974 and 1975, playing the album in its entirety with an elaborate stage show that had Gabriel portray Rael and several characters in the story. The album reached Gold certification in the UK and the US, and was remastered in 1994 and 2007, the latter as part of the Genesis 1970–1975 box set which contains a 5.1 surround sound mix and bonus material. A 50th anniversary edition will be released in 2025.
Background
In May 1974, the Genesis line-up of frontman and singer Peter Gabriel, keyboardist Tony Banks, bassist and guitarist Mike Rutherford, drummer Phil Collins and guitarist Steve Hackett finished touring Selling England by the Pound (1973). That album was a critical and commercial success for the group, earning them their highest-charting release in the UK and the US. They booked three months at Headley Grange, a large former workhouse in Headley, East Hampshire, to write and rehearse new material for their next studio album from June.{{sfn|Rutherford|2015|p=120}}{{cite magazine |url=http://www.thegenesisarchive.co.uk/the-charterhouse-boys-interview-by-steve-clarke-nme-1st-june/|title=The Charterhouse Boys|first=Steve|last=Clarke|magazine=New Musical Express|date=1 June 1974|access-date=23 April 2016}} The building had been left in a very poor state by Pretty Things, the previous band who had used it, with human excrement on the floor and rat infestations, which took Genesis considerable effort to tidy up.{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=151}}{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=214}} By this time the personal lives of some members had begun to affect the mood in the band, causing complications for their work. Hackett explained: "Everybody had their own agenda. Some of us were married, some of us had children, some of us were getting divorced, and we were still trying to get it together in the country".{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=151}}
== Writing ==
The band decided to produce a double album before they had agreed on its contents or direction, for the extended format presented the opportunity to put down more of their musical ideas.Rutherford, Mike. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 4:22–4:45. Banks thought they had gained a strong enough following by this point to put out two albums' worth of material that their fans would be willing to listen to,Banks, Tony. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 4:45–5:05. and Gabriel considered a double album as a logical extension to the group's output. They had wanted to produce a concept album that told a story for some time, and Rutherford pitched a musical adaptation of the fantasy novel The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, but Gabriel thought it was "too twee" and believed "prancing around in fairyland was rapidly becoming obsolete".{{sfn|Platts|2001|p=74, 75}}{{cite magazine |url=http://www.thegenesisarchive.co.uk/sounds-26th-october-1974-barbara-charone-mickey-mouse-lies-down-on-broadway/ |title=Mickey Mouse Lies Down on Broadway |first=Barbara |last=Charone |date=26 October 1974 |magazine=Sounds |pages=22, 27 |access-date=22 April 2016}} In an interview published early into their stay at Headley Grange, Gabriel spoke of the band's desire to present an entirely new stage act and make a "radical change" for the new album.{{cite magazine|url=https://thegenesisarchive.co.uk/interview-genesis-looking-for-a-backseat-role-8th-june/|title=Looking for a back seat role|first=Jerry|last=Gilbert|date=8 June 1974|magazine=Sounds|page=14|access-date=19 May 2025}}
{{multiple image
| footer = Gabriel's inspirations for the story included The Pilgrim's Progress by John Bunyan (illustration by William Blake pictured left) and the works of Carl Jung (pictured right).
| image1 = William Blake - John Bunyan - Cristian Reading in His Book - Frick Collection New York.jpg
| width1 = 136
| alt1 = Cristian Reading in His Book by William Blake
| image2 = ETH-BIB-Jung, Carl Gustav (1875-1961)-Portrait-Portr 14163 (cropped).tif
| width2 = 148
| alt2 = Carl Jung circa 1935.
}}
Gabriel presented a surreal story about Rael, a troubled and rebellious youth who is unexpectedly taken on a journey of self-discovery and identity as he encounters a series of bizarre incidents and characters.Welch, Chris. Genesis: The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway. Melody Maker, 23 November 1974.{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/release/pgn8 |title=Classic Pop/Rock Review – Genesis, The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway |first=Daryl |last=Easlea |access-date=31 December 2008 |publisher=BBC |date=23 April 2007}} He first thought of it during the band's previous American tour, and pitched a synopsis to his bandmates until they all agreed to pursue it. It was more detailed and obscure in its initial form, but Gabriel refined it and made Rael the central character.{{sfn|Bowler|Dray|1992|p=88}} Gabriel was inspired by a variety of sources for the story including West Side Story, "a kind of punk" twist to the Christian allegory The Pilgrim's Progress, the works of Swiss psychologist Carl Jung, the surreal Western film El Topo (1971) by Alejandro Jodorowsky,{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=157}} and settings derived from his own dreams.Platts 2001, p. unknown. In contrast to Selling England by the Pound, which contained strong English themes, Gabriel wanted to avoid repetition and instead portrayed American imagery. He set the story in New York City, and makes references to American culture throughout his lyrics, including Caryl Chessman, Lenny Bruce, Groucho Marx, Marshall McLuhan, Howard Hughes, Evel Knievel and the Ku Klux Klan.{{cite magazine |url=http://www.thegenesisarchive.co.uk/genesis-the-lamb-lies-down-on-broadway-reviewed-in-nme-30th-november/ |title=GENESIS: "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway" (Charisma) |first=Pete |last=Erskine |date=30 November 1974 |magazine=New Musical Express |access-date=23 April 2016}} Gabriel expressed some uncertainty over the meaning of the album's title, but clarified that the lamb itself is purely symbolic and a catalyst for the peculiar events that occur.{{cite magazine |url=http://www.thegenesisarchive.co.uk/genesis-interview-gabriels-cosmic-juice-nme-15th-march/ |title=Gabriel's Cosmic Juice (not to be taken internally) |first=Max |last=Bell |date=15 March 1975 |magazine=New Musical Express |pages=14–15 |access-date=23 April 2016}}
During the writing sessions at Headley Grange, Gabriel insisted that having devised the concept he should write the lyrics, leaving the majority of the music in the charge of his bandmates.{{sfn|Hewitt|2001|p=42}} This was a departure from the band's usual method of songwriting, as lyrical contributions on previous albums had always been divided among the members.Banks, Tony. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 5:15–5:25. Gabriel explained that "I maintained then (and still do) that not many stories are written by committee", while Banks said that the rest of the group "felt it would give the album a bit of a one-dimensional quality and, for me, lyrically speaking, that is what happened."{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=211-212}} This situation left Gabriel often secluded in one room writing the lyrics, and the remaining four rehearsing in another, since Gabriel could not write lyrics as fast as the others could write music, and so had to catch up on writing lyrics for music that had already been composed.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=213-214}}Collins, Phil. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 2:07–2:28. Gabriel ultimately fell so far behind that he allowed Rutherford and Banks to write the words for one song, "The Light Dies Down on Broadway".{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=233}} Banks and Hackett suggested lyrics they thought would fit "The Lamia" and "Here Comes the Supernatural Anaesthetist" respectively, which Gabriel rebuffed.{{sfn|Platts|2001|p=75}}
Further disagreements arose during the writing period when Gabriel left the group for a short period having accepted an invitation from film producer William Friedkin to collaborate on a screenplay, after he took a liking to Gabriel's surreal story printed on the sleeve of Genesis Live (1973). Gabriel believed that he could collaborate with Friedkin as a side project. However, the other members maintained that this was an encroachment on the band's time and that Gabriel had to choose between them and Friedkin; he chose Friedkin.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=216}} In Gabriel's absence Collins suggested having the new studio album be purely instrumental, but the idea was rejected by the rest of the group.Collins, Phil. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 8:36–9:20. Friedkin, however, was not prepared to split the band over a mere idea and Gabriel resumed work on the album. Charisma Records president Tony Stratton Smith encouraged Gabriel to return and finish the album.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=216}}{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=154}}
Recording
After their allocated time at Headley Grange came to an end, Genesis relocated to {{lang|cy|italic=no|Glaspant}} Manor in {{lang|cy|italic=no|Capel Iwan}}, Carmarthenshire, Wales between August and October 1974 to record,{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=349}}{{cite news |last1=Murray |first1=Matthew |title=Genesis studio manor house in Capel Iwan up for £1.1m |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-wales-south-west-wales-38858022 |access-date=13 February 2024 |work=BBC News |publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation |date=3 February 2017 |ref=Murray 2017}} using the Island Studios' mobile facility that was parked outside.{{cite web |url=http://www.glaspant.co.uk/History.html |title=Glaspant Retreats Gallery |website=www.glaspant.co.uk |access-date=4 April 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161020135145/http://www.glaspant.co.uk/History.html |archive-date=20 October 2016 |url-status=dead}} They chose the mobile rather than a professional studio as it allowed them to put down takes quickly, which kept the material fresh. The mobile featured two 3M 24-track recorders,{{efn|In an interview with New Musical Express, Gabriel said the Island Mobile was 16-track.}} a Helios Electronics 30-input mixing console, Altec monitors, and two A62 Studer tape machines for mastering.{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=52}} It was the last Genesis album with John Burns as co-producer. Engineering duties were carried out by David Hutchins.{{cite AV media notes|url=https://www.discogs.com/release/3858055-Genesis-The-Lamb-Lies-Down-On-Broadway|title=The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway|date=1974|publisher=Charisma Records|id=CGS 101}} Burns and Gabriel experimented with different vocal effects by recording takes in a bathroom and in a cowshed located two miles away.{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=52}} Rutherford noticed an improvement in the band's sound on the album, particularly with Collins' drums.Rutherford, Mike. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 14:42–15:15. Collins compared the overall sound to that of Neil Young's recordings made in his barn, "not studio, not soundproof, but a woody quality".Collins, Phil. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 15:15–15:32. One track was recorded directly onto a cassette.
Gabriel spent additional time in London after his wife, Jill, underwent the difficult birth of their first child on 26 July 1974, leaving Gabriel often travelling back and forth.{{sfn|Platts|2001|p=75}}{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=217}} Gabriel recounted, "the band were recording but instead of being somewhere reasonably close to where we were, in St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, they were out in Wales, so I was making these long pilgrimages. I was based in London and whenever things looked better I'd try and zoom back to Wales for the recording. This is something I think that the band would accept now, but back then they weren't very understanding. And I just lost it in a lot of ways because this was a life and death situation and so obviously much more important than an album or anything else."{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=217-218}} Rutherford later admitted that he and Banks were "horribly unsupportive" of Gabriel during this time, and Gabriel saw this as the beginning of his eventual departure from Genesis.{{sfn|Rutherford|2015|p=122}}Gabriel, Peter. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 10:55–12:30.
The backing tracks were put down in roughly two weeks.{{sfn|Platts|2001|p=75}} Gabriel was still working on the lyrics a month later, and asked the band to produce additional music for "The Carpet Crawlers" and "The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging" so he could fit in words that had no designated section for them.{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=52}} Thinking the extra material was to be instrumental, the band later found that Gabriel had sung over their new parts,{{sfn|Platts|2001|p=76}} something that he also had done on Foxtrot and Selling England by the Pound and caused songs to be musically dense. Gabriel recorded his remaining vocals at Island's main studio in Notting Hill, London, where the album was mixed over a series of shifts as they were pressured to finish the album in time for its manufacturing date.{{sfn|Platts|2001|p=76}} Collins recalled: "I'd be mixing and dubbing all night and then Tony and Mike would come in and remix what I'd done because I'd lost all sense of normality by that point".{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=52}} Mixing was finished four days before the band were originally scheduled to go on tour. The band considered releasing the album in two parts and six months apart. Gabriel thought this idea would have been more suitable, for a double contained too much new material and the extra time available to work on the lyrics.{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=52}}
Story
File:SKYSCRAPERS OF MANHATTAN VEILED IN SMOG - NARA - 548360.jpg (pictured in 1973) to emphasize the protagonist's "more real, more extrovert and violent" nature.]]
Gabriel set the story in New York City to make Rael "more real, more extrovert and violent", and portrayed him to be least likely person to be subject to the surreal events. The name Rael was chosen as it was not of any particular ethnic origin, but Gabriel soon realised that The Who had used the same name on The Who Sell Out; this annoyed him at first, but he stuck to the choice.{{cite magazine |url=http://thegenesisarchive.co.uk/the-new-face-of-gabriel-melody-maker-26th-october/ |title=The New Face of Gabriel |first=Chris |last=Welch |magazine=Melody Maker |date=26 October 1974 |pages=28–29 |access-date=22 April 2016}}{{efn|In a Melody Maker interview, Gabriel erroneously refers to a "character" named Rael, but "Rael" in the Who song is actually a place.}} The band also found that "Ra" was common in male names in various nationalities.{{cite magazine |url=https://thegenesisarchive.co.uk/nme-1974-neil-spencer-genesis-interview/ |magazine=New Musical Express |title=Public school boy reprimands critics |first=Neil |last=Spencer |access-date=17 August 2019 |date=2 November 1974}} Rael is portrayed as half Puerto Rican; the other half of his identity is unknown.{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=65}}
Gabriel summarised the concept as "overcoming fear".{{cite news |url=https://newspapers.com/clip/28759159/the_lamb_1974/ |title=Genesis of a rock 'n' roll band |first=Jonathan |last=Takiff |date=4 December 1974 |newspaper=Philadelphia Daily News |page=23 |via=Newspapers.com |access-date=23 February 2019}} He deliberately made the ending ambiguous, but clarified that Rael does not die and compared the ending to the buildup of suspense and drama in a film in which "you never see what's so terrifying because they leave it up in the air without ... labelling it". Collins remarked that the entire concept was about split personality.{{cite AV media |people=Genesis |title=Genesis: A History |medium=VHS |publisher=PolyGram Video |year=1991}} The individual songs also make satirical allusions to mythology, the sexual revolution, advertising, and consumerism. Gabriel felt the songs alone were not enough to detail all of the action in his story, so he wrote the full plot on the album's sleeve.
= Plot summary =
One morning in New York City, Rael is holding a can of spray paint, hating everyone around him. He witnesses a lamb lying down on Broadway which has a profound effect on him ("The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway"). As he walks along the street, he sees a dark cloud take the shape of a movie screen and move towards him, absorbing him ("Fly on a Windshield"). He sees an explosion of images of the current day ("Broadway Melody of 1974") before he wakes up in a cave and falls asleep once again ("Cuckoo Cocoon"). Rael wakes up and finds himself trapped in a cage of stalactites and stalagmites which close in towards him. As he tries to escape, he sees many other people in many other cages, before spotting his brother John outside. Rael calls to him, but John walks away and the cage suddenly disappears ("In the Cage").
Rael now finds himself on the floor of a factory and is given a tour of the area by a woman, where he watches people being processed like packages. He spots old members of his New York City gang, and also John with the number 9 stamped on his forehead. Fearing for his life, Rael escapes into a corridor ("The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging"){{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=72}} and has an extended flashback of returning from a gang raid in New York City,{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=75}} a dream where his hairy heart is removed and shaved with a razor ("Back in N.Y.C."), and his first sexual encounter ("Counting Out Time").{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=76}} Rael's flashback ends, and he finds himself in a long, red-carpeted corridor of people crawling towards a wooden door. Rael runs past them and exits via a spiral staircase ("The Carpet Crawlers"). At the top, he enters a chamber with 32 doors, surrounded by people and unable to concentrate ("The Chamber of 32 Doors").
Rael finds a blind woman who leads him out of the chamber ("Lilywhite Lilith") and into another cave, where he becomes trapped by falling rocks ("Anyway"). Death arrives and gasses Rael with his supernatural anaesthetic ("Here Comes the Supernatural Anaesthetist"). However, Rael believes himself to still be alive and escapes the cave, dismissing Death as a hallucination. Rael ends up in a pool with three Lamia, beautiful snake-like creatures, and has sex with them, but they die after drinking some of his blood. He eats their corpses ("The Lamia"). Leaving by the same door he came in through, he finds himself in a group of Slippermen, distorted, grotesque men who have all had the same experience with the Lamia, and say he has become one of them ("The Arrival"). Rael finds John among the Slippermen, who reveals that the only way to become human again is to visit Doktor Dyper and be castrated ("A Visit to the Doktor"). Both are castrated and keep their removed penises in containers around their necks. Rael's container is taken by a raven and he chases after it, leaving John behind. The raven drops the container in a ravine and into a rushing underground river ("The Raven").
As Rael walks alongside it, he sees a window in the bank above his head which reveals his home amidst the streets. Faced with the option of returning home, he sees John in the river below him, struggling to stay afloat. Rael dives in to save him and the gateway to New York vanishes ("The Light Dies Down on Broadway"). Rael rescues John and drags his body to the bank of the river and turns him over to look at his face, only to see his own face instead ("In the Rapids"). His consciousness then drifts between both bodies, and he sees the surrounding scenery melting away into a haze. Both bodies dissolve, and Rael's spirit becomes one with everything around him ("it.").{{cite web |url=http://www.bloovis.com/music/lamb.html |title=bloovis.com – The Annotated Lamb Lies Down on Broadway |website=www.bloovis.com |access-date=4 April 2018}}
Songs
Much of the music developed through band improvisations and mood-inspired jams, often after one member set a single idea. Examples of this are what Banks described as a "Chinese jam" which ended up sharing a track with "The Colony of Slippermen", one named "Victory at Sea" which was worked into "Silent Sorrow in Empty Boats", and another known as "Evil Jam" which became "The Waiting Room".{{sfn|Hewitt|2001|p=42}}{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=156}} Though the album is written to a story concept, Gabriel described its format as being split into "self-contained song units". He thought the album contained some of the group's best material that he was most proud of during his time in Genesis.Gabriel, Peter. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 16:34–16:52.
=Sides one and two=
Opener "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway" was the last song that schoolfriends Banks and Gabriel wrote together while Gabriel was in the group, although Gabriel maintained that he only wrote the lyrics.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=213}}Banks, Tony. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 17:39–17:51. Banks had to cross his hands over to play the piano introduction which has unusual sequences of notes.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=221}} The song borrows music and lyrics from "On Broadway" by The Drifters at the end.{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=65}} "Fly on a Windshield" came from a group improvisation sparked by Rutherford's idea of Egyptian pharaohs going down the Nile, which Hackett compared to Maurice Ravel's Boléro.{{sfn|Hewitt|2001|p=42}} Banks described the part where the entire band comes in, signifying the moment a fly hits the windshield of a car, as "probably the single best moment in Genesis's history."{{sfn|Fielder|Sutcliffe|1984}}{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=157}}{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=222}} The track segues into "Broadway Melody of 1974", although the two pieces were written independently and only connected later on.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=222}} Hackett and his brother John wrote the two opening chords of "Cuckoo Cocoon" at home several years prior, but John is uncredited.{{cite web |last1=Herlitschka |first1=Paul |title="The trip to Alsace was a major part of Moonspinner" |url=http://freda1site.free.fr/interviews_english.htm |website=Genesis France |publisher=Association Genesis France |access-date=9 October 2021}}{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=223}} Hackett wrote the vocal melody.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=223}} The music for "In the Cage" was almost entirely written by Banks, who presented it to the band only when it was nearly complete.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=223}}
File:Brian Eno - TopPop 1974 07.png (pictured in 1974) contributed vocal effects, credited as "Enossification", to several songs on the album.]]
"The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging" is one of the few songs on the album where the lyrics were written first, and the music was then composed to fit the theme.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=223-224}} According to Banks, "I just started playing these two chords, a dopey kind of riff really ... I just keep one note going through the whole thing and just change the chords underneath it, letting it build. Then what Pete did on top was kind of wild and he didn't really make any use of the melodic content of the piece, but I think it works very well."{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=223}} While mixing at Island Gabriel asked Brian Eno, who was working on his album Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy), to add synthesized effects on his vocals on several tracks, including "The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging".{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=58}} Eno's work is credited on the liner notes for "Enossification". Gabriel was a fan of Eno and believed he could enhance the adventurous aspect of the sound. Genesis had little money to pay Eno,{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=224}} so Eno negotiated for Collins to play drums on his track "Mother Whale Eyeless".{{sfn|Thompson|2004|p=117}}
"Back in N.Y.C." saw Genesis adopt a more aggressive sound than before.{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=75}} with Rutherford playing a 6-string Micro-Frets bass. Rutherford described "Back in N.Y.C." as a group composition which emerged from improvisations, while Banks said it was written entirely by Rutherford and himself, with Rutherford writing "the main parts".{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=224-225}} Banks also credited Rutherford as the sole composer of "In the Rapids".{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=234}} "Hairless Heart" originated from a guitar melody from Hackett, for which Banks composed the other parts as a backing.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=225}} Banks was fond of the piece and was dismayed when it was titled "Hairless Heart" in reference to a lyric from "Back in N.Y.C.", commenting, "shaving hair off the heart, it's a horrible concept!"{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=225}} A rare instance of a Genesis song not written collaboratively, "Counting Out Time" was written entirely by Gabriel before the album was conceived.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=225}} Hackett's guitar solo was filtered through an EMS Synthi Hi-Fli guitar synthesizer.{{sfn|Platts|2001|p=77}} "The Carpet Crawlers" developed at a time when Gabriel had written some lyrics, but no music had been written for them. Banks and Rutherford put together a chord sequence in D, E minor and F-sharp minor with a roll from the drums flowing through it.Banks, Tony. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 19:31–19:59.{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=157}} Gabriel spent "hours and hours" on an out-of-tune piano at home developing the song, and his wife recalled his fondness for the track.Gabriel, Peter. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 19:59–20:25.{{cite book |last=Bright |first=Spencer |title=Peter Gabriel: An Authorized Biography |url=http://amzn.com/0283061871 |publisher=Sidgwick & Jackson |year=1999 |isbn=0-283-06187-1 |access-date=6 August 2013}} The beginning of the song reprises "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway".{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=227}}
=Sides three and four=
"Lilywhite Lilith" was built on two song fragments, both of them written by Collins–a section from the unrecorded early Genesis song "The Light", and a piece that he wrote later on.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=228}} "The Waiting Room" developed as a "basic good to bad soundscaping" jam while it was raining outside Headley Grange. When the band stopped, a rainbow had formed.{{sfn|Bowler|Dray|1992|p=92}} Collins remembered Hackett playing "these dark chords, then Peter blows into his oboe reeds, then there was a loud clap of thunder and we really thought we were entering another world or something. It was moments like that when we were still very much a unified five-piece."{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=157}} Banks regretted not recording the improvisation as it took place, as he felt the band were unable to recreate the tone of the original in their later renditions.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=229}} "Anyway" developed from a song named "Frustration", which Banks wrote before Genesis was formed.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=230}} The music for "The Lamia" was primarily written by Banks. After he brought it to the band, Gabriel wrote the lyrics, and Banks brought it home to write the vocal melody.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=230-231}}
"The Colony of Slippermen" is divided into three parts, but also shares a track with the "Chinese jam" which was never given a proper title.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=231}} The synthesizer solo was developed as a joke, parodying traditional rock forms, but when played back the band found it sounded stronger than they had intended.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=232}} The riffs which precede "The Raven" were another element recycled from "The Light".{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=232}} "Ravine" was another piece improvised by the band, with Hackett using a fuzz box and wah-wah pedal to emulate the sound of wind.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=232-233}} "The Light Dies Down on Broadway" is a reprise of "The Lamia" (the verses) and "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway" (chorus), but the latter arranged at a slower tempo.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=233}} Rutherford and Banks wrote the lyrics, the only one on the album with lyrics by someone other than Gabriel, but were told by Gabriel what action had to take place in them.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=233}} "Riding the Scree" was played entirely by Banks, Collins, and Rutherford (apart from a brief vocal by Gabriel), with Rutherford playing both bass and guitar.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=233-234}} It was a particularly difficult track for Banks to play on stage due to its irregular meter with multiple time signature changes, so he played the solo in 4/4 time and hoped to end up with the rest of the band at the end.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=233}} Genesis were unable to come up with ideas that they liked for a finale, so they settled for a piece Banks and Hackett wrote as an instrumental as the music for the closing track, "it."{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=234-235}} Gabriel said the lyrics deal with forming "substance from negatives". The concluding lyric–"It's only knock and knowall, but I like it"–is a play on the contemporary song "It's Only Rock 'n Roll (But I Like It)" by The Rolling Stones.
Sleeve design
File:Genesis logo (The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway).svg
The group's change in musical and artistic direction is also reflected visually, bringing in Hipgnosis to design the cover artwork. In contrast to previous Genesis album covers, which were colourful and more pastoral in nature, Hipgnosis conceived a monochrome design of a storyboard made of photographs depicting Rael in various settings from the story. The image on the right of the front cover was taken in the vaults below the Roundhouse venue in London. Like the story, the photographs are open to interpretation.{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|pp=56–57}} The bottom left image depicts Rael in the area where "In the Rapids" and "Riding the Scree" are set.{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=52}} Storm Thorgerson said the focal point of the design was having Rael step outside of it and looking back on the events, "a step considered necessary in the process of self-realisation."{{cite web|url=https://hypergallery.com/products/genesis-the-lamb-lies-down-on-broadway|title=Genesis: The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway|publisher=Hypergallery|access-date=23 November 2024}} The photographs were shot on black-and-white negative, of which the prints were cut, adjusted, and touched up with several artistic processes by Richard Manning to produce a final composite.{{cite web|url=https://www.richardmanning.co.uk/hipgnosis-album-cover-art/genesis--lamb-lies-down-on-broadway---1974/12|title=Genesis - Lamb Lies Down on Broadway 1974|publisher=RichardManning.co.uk|access-date=23 November 2024}} The band were adamant that they did not want to be photographed for the cover, and conducted a search for a model to portray Rael.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=235-236}} They went with an unnamed person who is credited as "Omar" on the liner notes. The cover features a new band logo in an Art Deco style produced by George Hardie.
The band members had varying opinions of the album cover. Hackett considered it inferior to many of Hipgnosis's other covers and felt the style reflected an unwillingness by Hipgnosis to take the band's preferences into consideration. By contrast, Banks and Gabriel felt the cover was well-suited to the album, effectively highlighting that the music was in a much more stark and realistic style than their previous albums, though Gabriel said he was not fully satisfied with the model who portrays Rael. Collins called the cover "a little bit confused, just like the story. It's a distinct package and at least it evokes something."{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=235-236}}
Release
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway was released on 22 November 1974, days after the start of its supporting tour. It peaked at No. 10 on the UK Albums Chart{{sfn|Bowler|Dray|1992|p=246}} in December 1974 during its six-week stay on the chart,{{cite web |url=http://www.officialcharts.com/artist/14995/genesis/ |title=Genesis |publisher=Official Charts |access-date=25 April 2016}} and became the band's highest-charting album yet in the US, peaking at No. 41 on the Billboard 200{{cite web |url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/genesis-mn0000199995/awards |title=Genesis: Awards |publisher=AllMusic |access-date=23 September 2015}} in February 1975. Elsewhere, the album reached No. 15 in Canada and No. 34 in New Zealand.{{cite web |url=https://charts.nz/showitem.asp?interpret=Genesis&titel=The+Lamb+Lies+Down+On+Broadway&cat=a |title=GENESIS – THE LAMB LIES DOWN ON BROADWAY (ALBUM) |publisher=Recorded Music NZ |access-date=24 April 2016}} Two singles were released; "Counting Out Time" with "Riding the Scree" as its B-side, was released on 1 November 1974.{{sfn|Holm-Hudson|2008|p=52}} The second, "The Carpet Crawlers" backed with a live performance of "The Waiting Room (Evil Jam)" at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, followed in April 1975. The album continued to sell, and reached Gold certification by the British Phonographic Industry on 1 February 1975,{{cite web |url=http://www.bpi.co.uk/certified-awards.aspx |title=Certified Awards |publisher=British Phonographic Industry |access-date=30 April 2016 |archive-date=10 July 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170710164143/http://www.bpi.co.uk/certified-awards.aspx |url-status=dead }} and Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America for sales in excess of 500,000 copies on 20 April 1990.{{cite web |url=https://www.riaa.com/gold-platinum/?tab_active=default-award&se=the+lamb+lies+down+on+broadway#search_section |title=GOLD & PLATINUM: The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway |publisher=Recording Industry Association of America |access-date=30 April 2016}}
Critical reception
{{Album ratings
| rev1 = AllMusic
| rev1Score = {{Rating|5|5}}{{cite web |url={{AllMusic|class=album|id=the-lamb-lies-down-on-broadway-r8170|tab=review|pure_url=yes}} |title=The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway|first=Stephen Thomas |last=Erlewine |publisher=AllMusic |year=2011 |access-date=25 July 2011}}
|rev2 = Christgau's Record Guide
|rev2Score = B−{{cite book |last=Christgau |first=Robert |author-link=Robert Christgau |year=1981 |title=Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies |publisher=Ticknor & Fields |isbn=089919026X |chapter=Consumer Guide '70s: G |chapter-url=https://www.robertchristgau.com/get_chap.php?k=G&bk=70 |access-date=February 24, 2019 |via=robertchristgau.com |title-link=Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies}}
| rev3 = The Rolling Stone Album Guide
| rev3Score = {{Rating|4|5}}{{cite book |author1=Nathan Brackett |author2=Christian David Hoard |title=The new Rolling Stone album guide |publisher=Simon & Schuster |page=[https://archive.org/details/newrollingstonea00brac/page/327 327] |location=New York |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-7432-0169-8 |url=https://archive.org/details/newrollingstonea00brac |url-access=registration}}
}}
Members of the group expressed some concern about the album's critical reception, and expected to receive some negative responses over its concept and extended format. Banks hoped the album would end people's comparisons of Genesis to Yes and Emerson, Lake & Palmer, two other popular progressive rock bands of the time. Gabriel knew the album's concept was ideal for critics "to get their teeth into".{{sfn|Bowler|Dray|1992|p=94}}
In giving an interview to Melody Maker in October 1974, shortly before the album's release, Gabriel played several tracks from The Lamb to reporter Chris Welch, including "In the Cage", "Hairless Heart", "Carpet Crawlers", and "Counting Out Time". Welch wrote, "It sounded superb. Beautiful songs, fascinating lyrics, and sensitive, subtle playing, mixed with humour and harmonies. What more could a Genesis fan desire?" He singled out Collins' playing as "outstanding". Welch's review for Melody Maker published a month later included his thoughts on such long concept albums—"A few golden miraculous notes and some choice pithy words are worth all the clutter and verbiage"—and he called the album a "white elephant".{{sfn|Bowler|Dray|1992|p=94}} For New Musical Express, Barbara Charone wrote highly of the collection. She summarised The Lamb as a combination of the "musical proficiency" on Selling England by the Pound (1973) with the "grandiose illusions" on Foxtrot (1972) and "a culmination of past elements injected with present abilities and future directions". Charone thought it had more high points than any previous Genesis album, apart from some "few awkward instrumental moments on side three". All members received praise for their performances, including Hackett coming across as a more dominant member of the group with his "frenetic, choppy style", Collins' backup harmony vocals and Rutherford's "thick, foreboding bass chords and gentle acoustics".{{cite magazine |url=http://www.thegenesisarchive.co.uk/album-review-genesis-the-lamb-sounds-25th-november/ |title=Genesis: lamb like a polished diamond |first=Barbara |last=Charone |date=25 November 1974 |magazine=Sounds |access-date=23 April 2016}} Colin Irwin wrote a negative review of the "Counting Out Time" single, with its "weary, tepid approach" and a "woeful, dreary three and a half minutes".{{cite magazine |url=http://www.thegenesisarchive.co.uk/review-counting-out-time-single-mm-16th-november/ |title=Genesis: What a dreary time |first=Colin |last=Irwin |date=16 November 1974 |magazine=Melody Maker |access-date=23 April 2016}}
Legacy
In later years, the album received acclaim. In 1978, Nick Kent wrote for New Musical Express that it "had a compelling appeal that often transcended the hoary weightiness of the mammoth concept that held the equally mammoth four sides of vinyl together".Nick Kent: "Gabriel: The Image Gets a Tweak". New Musical Express. 10 June 1978 In a special edition of Q and Mojo magazines titled Pink Floyd & The Story of Prog Rock, The Lamb ranked at No. 14 in its 40 Cosmic Rock Albums list.Q Classic: Pink Floyd & The Story of Prog Rock, 2005. The album came third in a list of the ten best concept albums by Uncut magazine, where it was described as an "impressionistic, intense album" and "pure theatre (in a good way) and still Gabriel's best work".Uncut magazine. May 2007. Issue 120. AllMusic reviewer Stephen Thomas Erlewine gave a retrospective rating of five stars out of five. He says that despite Gabriel's "lengthy libretto" on the sleeve "the story never makes sense", though its music is "forceful, imaginative piece of work that showcases the original Genesis lineup at a peak ... it's a considerable, lasting achievement and it's little wonder that Peter Gabriel had to leave ... they had gone as far as they could go together".
A Rolling Stone poll to rank readers' favourite progressive rock albums of all time placed The Lamb fifth in the list.{{cite magazine |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/readers-poll-your-favorite-prog-rock-albums-of-all-time-21430/5-genesis-the-lamb-lies-down-on-broadway-239691/ |title=Readers' Poll: Your Favorite Prog Rock Albums of All Time |author=Greene, Andy |magazine=Rolling Stone |access-date=30 July 2012}} In 2014, readers of Rhythm voted it the album with the fourth-greatest drumming in the history of progressive rock.{{cite web |url=https://www.teamrock.com/news/2014-10-03/rush-neil-peart-influential-prog-drummer |title=Peart named most influential prog drummer |publisher=TeamRock |date=3 October 2014 |access-date=21 August 2015}} In 2015, NME included the album in its "23 Maddest and Most Memorable Concept Albums" list for "taking in themes of split personalities, heaven and hell and truth and fantasy".{{cite web |url=https://www.nme.com/photos/23-of-the-maddest-and-most-memorable-concept-albums/382723#/photo/1 |title=23 Of The Maddest And Most Memorable Concept Albums |work=NME |date=8 July 2015 |access-date=25 October 2015}} It was one of two albums by Genesis included in the top ten of the Rolling Stone list of the 50 Greatest Prog Rock Albums of All Time. The magazine described it as "one of rock's more elaborate, beguiling and strangely rewarding concept albums".{{cite magazine |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists/50-greatest-prog-rock-albums-of-all-time-20150617/yes-fragile-1971-20150616 |title=50 Greatest Prog Rock Albums of All Time |magazine=Rolling Stone |access-date=25 October 2015}} The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.{{cite book|first=Daryl|last=Easlea|editor-first=Robert|editor-last=Dimery|chapter=Genesis: The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway|title=1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die|title-link=1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die|publisher=Universe Publishing|year=2006|isbn=978-0-7893-1371-3|page=[https://archive.org/details/1001AlbumsYouMustHearBeforeYouDie/page/n157/mode/1up 316]}}
Banks later thought the album's concept the weakest thing about it, though the lyrics to some of the individual songs are "wonderful".Banks, Tony. Reissues Interview 2007 bonus feature at 2:33–2:45. Rutherford said that, while The Lamb is a fan favorite, it was a gruelling album to work on and had a lot of highs, but also a lot of lows. Hackett remarked how his guitar was underutilized in comparison to past albums, but thought the album had a lot of beautiful moments and has grown on him over time. In Genesis: Together and Apart, Gabriel said The Lamb and the song "Supper's Ready" were his high points with Genesis. Collins said it was Genesis's best music and his favourite Genesis album.{{cite web |url=https://m.imdb.com/name/nm0002015/trivia |title=Phil Collins |website=IMDb |access-date=4 April 2018}}
In 1974, Gabriel expressed a wish to adapt the album into a film. Despite initial enthusiasm in the early 1980s, development never progressed beyond the initial stages. In 2020, American artist Nathaniel Barlam released a fan-made video of illustrating the entire album onto YouTube.{{cite web|url=https://www.loudersound.com/news/watch-the-lamb-lies-down-on-broadway-beautifully-illustrated-throughout|title=Watch a beautifully illustrated film of Genesis's The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway|first=Jerry|last=Ewing|date=24 January 2020|publisher=Loudersound|access-date=19 May 2025}}
Genesis tribute band The Musical Box have performed the album in its entirety on several tours since 2004. They secured a license to perform the music and recreated the show as much as possible, from the music, instruments, costumes, and stage effects, including the same projector slides used on the original tour. Banks granted them access to the original masters so they could learn all the different musical parts.{{cite journal|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-1550819.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171029012517/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-1550819.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=29 October 2017|title=Musical Box pays stunning tribute to Genesis Canadian group resurrects spirit of '70s at Vic Theatre|date=24 October 2004|newspaper=Chicago Sun-Times|first=Jim|last=DeRogatis|access-date=28 October 2017|url-access= }} The tour was registered as a play.{{cite web|url=http://www.dabelly.com/features/feature160.htm|title=Denis Gagne of The Musical Box|work=DaBelly|access-date=28 October 2017}}
= Reissues =
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway was first remastered for CD in 1994, and released on Virgin Records in Europe and Atlantic Records in North America. The included booklet features the lyrics and story printed on the original LP, though some of the inner sleeve artwork was not reproduced. A remastered edition for Super Audio CD and DVD with new stereo and 5.1 surround sound mixes by Nick Davis was released in 2008 as part of the Genesis 1970–1975 box set.
In 2024, Genesis announced the 50th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition. This edition will include a new remaster of the album, a full live concert from the Shrine Auditorium (previously released on Genesis Archive 1967–75), a Blu-ray version of the album in Dolby Atmos and "three previously unreleased demos" from the Headley Grange sessions included on a digital download card. Also included is a 60-page book, featuring notes by Alexis Petridis, a band member commentary and "rare images", and a 1975 tour programme, poster and replica ticket. This reissue is set to be released on 13 June 2025. [https://superdeluxeedition.com/news/genesis-the-lamb-lies-down-on-broadway-super-deluxe-edition/]
Tour
{{Main|The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway Tour}}
Genesis supported the album with a 102-date concert tour across North America and Europe,{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=349}} playing the album in its entirety with one or two older songs ("The Musical Box", sometimes followed by "Watcher of the Skies" and later "The Knife") as encores.{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=158}}{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=242}} Rutherford said he was weary of this format by the end of the tour, preferring to play songs from a variety of eras and have the freedom to change up the setlist mid-tour.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=241-242}} Gabriel echoed this view towards the end, and said the group considered playing new material for just half of the set. Most of the audience were not yet familiar with the large amount of new material; in particular, the opening North American leg was conducted before the album had been released there.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=241}} The tour was originally set to begin on 29 October 1974 with an 11-date tour of the UK that sold out within four hours, but Hackett crushed a wine glass in his left hand which severed a tendon and needed time to recover. The UK dates were rescheduled for 1975 and the band lost money, for they were unable to recoup deposits they had paid to the venues.{{cite magazine |url=http://thegenesisarchive.co.uk/nme-26th-october-1974-genesis-tour-is-off/ |title=Genesis tour is called off! |date=26 October 1974 |magazine=New Musical Express |access-date=22 April 2016}} The tour began on 20 November in Chicago, and ended on 22 May 1975 in Besançon, France.{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=349}} The last scheduled concert, on 24 May in Toulouse, was cancelled due to low ticket sales.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=247}} All but one date of an extensive tour of Italy was also cancelled, due to political turmoil.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=246}} Hackett estimated the band's debts at £220,000 at the tour's end.{{sfn|Platts|2001|p=82}}
The tour featured at the time some of the biggest instruments used by the band, including Rutherford's double-neck Rickenbacker and the largest drum kit ever used by Collins. The stage show involved a laser lighting display{{sfn|Platts|2001|p=95}} and three backdrop screens that displayed 1,450 slides designed by Geoffrey Shaw and Theo Botschuyver that were stored on 18 different cassettes and displayed using eight carousel projectors.{{cite web|url=https://thegenesisarchive.co.uk/interview-c-welch-mm-gabriels-ladder-15th-march/|title=Gabriel's ladder|first=Chris|last=Welch|date=15 March 1975|work=Melody Maker|page=13|access-date=19 May 2025}}{{sfn|Bowler|Dray|1992|p=100}} Banks and Collins recalled the slides only came close to working perfectly on only four or five occasions.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=241}} Roadies made the stage and venue as dark as possible to maximise the effect of the various stunts and lighting tricks.{{cite web|url=https://thegenesisarchive.co.uk/how-genesis-brought-their-lamb-to-market-mm-19th-april/|title=How Genesis brought their lamb to market|first=Brian|last=Harrigan|date=19 April 1975|work=Melody Maker|access-date=19 May 2025}} Gabriel changed his appearance with a short haircut and styled facial hair and dressed as Rael in a leather jacket, T-shirt and jeans. During "The Lamia", he surrounded himself with a spinning cone-like structure decorated with images of snakes.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=244}} In the last verse, the cone would collapse to reveal Gabriel wearing a body suit that glowed from lights placed under the stage. "The Colony of Slippermen" featured Gabriel as one of the Slippermen, covered in lumps with inflatable genitalia that emerged onto the stage by crawling out of a penis-shaped tube. Gabriel had difficulty placing his microphone near his mouth whilst he was in the costume. Even on those occasions when Gabriel's mouth reached the microphone, and he did not get stuck coming out of the tube or trip and fall due to the poor visibility, he was too out of breath from his struggles with the costume to sing properly.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=242}} Between the end of "In the Rapids" and the start of "it.", an explosion set off twin strobe lights that revealed Gabriel and a dummy figure dressed identically on each side of the stage, leaving the audience clueless as to which was real. Gabriel had a life mask of his face made of plaster, and took it to a barber several times so its hair matched with his own.{{cite web|url=https://thegenesisarchive.co.uk/interview-c-welch-mm-gabriels-ladder-15th-march/|title=Gabriel's ladder|first=Chris|last=Welch|date=15 March 1975|work=Melody Maker|page=13|access-date=19 May 2025}} The performance ended with Gabriel vanishing from the stage in a flash of light and a puff of smoke. At the final concert roadie Geoff Banks acted as the dummy on stage, wearing nothing but a leather jacket. Banks felt this prank was in poor taste.{{sfn|Giammetti|2020|p=247}}
In one concert review, the theatrics for "The Musical Box", the show's encore and once the band's stage highlight, was seen as "crude and elementary" compared to the "sublime grandeur" of The Lamb... set.{{cite magazine |url=http://thegenesisarchive.co.uk/melody-maker-genesis-reviewed-live-in-chicago-7th-december/ |title=Impressive Genesis hit new heights |first=Al |last=Rudis |magazine=Melody Maker |date=7 December 1974 |page=28 |access-date=23 April 2016}} Music critics often focused their reviews on Gabriel's theatrics and took the band's musical performance as secondary, which irritated the rest of the band.{{sfn|Bowler|Dray|1992|p=93}} Collins later said, "People would steam straight past Tony, Mike, Steve and I, go straight up to Peter and say, "You're fantastic, we really enjoyed the show." It was becoming a one-man show to the audience."Genesis 2007, p. unknown. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame called the tour "a spectacle on par with anything attempted in the world of rock to that point".{{cite web |url=http://rockhall.com/inductees/genesis/bio/ |title=Genesis Biography |publisher=Rock and Roll Hall of Fame |access-date=25 October 2015}}
= Gabriel's departure =
During their stop in Cleveland in November 1974, Gabriel told the band he would leave at the conclusion of the tour.{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=158}} The decision was kept a secret from outsiders and media all through the tour, and Gabriel promised the band to stay silent about it for a while after its end in June 1975, to give them some time to prepare for a future without him. By August, the news had leaked to the media anyway, and Gabriel wrote a personal statement to the English music press to explain his reasons and his view of his career up to this point; the piece, titled "Out, Angels Out", was printed in several of the major rock music magazines.{{cite web |url=http://www.thatericalper.com/2012/02/13/peter-gabriels-letter-to-media-on-why-he-left-genesis/ |title=Peter Gabriel's letter to media on why he left Genesis |last=Eric |date=2012-02-13 |website=That Eric Alper |access-date=2017-07-25 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140426232305/http://www.thatericalper.com/2012/02/13/peter-gabriels-letter-to-media-on-why-he-left-genesis/ |archive-date=26 April 2014 |df=dmy-all}} In his open letter, he explained his disillusion with the music industry and his wish to spend extended time with his family.{{sfn|Bowler|Dray|1992|p=107}} Banks later stated, "Pete was also getting too big for the group. He was being portrayed as if he was 'the man' and it really wasn't like that. It was a very difficult thing to accommodate. So it was actually a bit of a relief."{{sfn|Genesis|2007|p=158}}
= Recordings =
No complete live performance of the album has been officially released, though the majority of the band's live performance from 24 January 1975 at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles appears on the Genesis Archive 1967–75 box set.{{sfn|Platts|2001|p=81}} Some tracks feature re-recorded vocals from Gabriel and guitar parts from Hackett, while the rendition of "It" was replaced with a remixed studio version with re-recorded vocals.
The upcoming 50th anniversary box set of the album, to be released on 26 September 2025, will include a complete recording of the Shrine Auditorium show, including the previously-unreleased encore performances of "Watcher of the Skies" and "The Musical Box". The box set will also include a new remaster of the album from the original 1974 mix, a Dolby ATMOS mix which was supervised by Peter Gabriel and Tony Banks, and several demos from the recording sessions.{{cite magazine | url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/genesis-50th-anniversary-edition-the-lamb-lies-down-on-broadway-1235172395/ | title=Genesis to Release 'Lamb Lies Down on Broadway' Anniversary Edition | magazine=Rolling Stone | date=20 November 2024 }}
Track listing
All tracks written by Tony Banks, Phil Collins, Peter Gabriel, Steve Hackett and Mike Rutherford.
{{Tracklist
| headline = Side one
| total_length = 22:56
| title1 = The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway
| length1 = 4:48
| title2 = Fly on a Windshield
| note2 = {{efn|Several later pressings of the album lists "Fly on a Windshield" at 4:23 and "Broadway Melody of 1974" at 0:33, an error by the manufacturer as "Broadway Melody of 1974" begins at 2:47 of "Fly on a Windshield". The lyrics printed on the sleeve give the correct division between the two tracks.}}
| length2 = 2:45
| title3 = Broadway Melody of 1974
| length3 = 2:11
| title4 = Cuckoo Cocoon
| length4 = 2:11
| title5 = In the Cage
| length5 = 8:14
| title6 = The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging
| length6 = 2:47
}}
{{Tracklist
| headline = Side two
| total_length = 22:31
| title1 = Back in N.Y.C.
| length1 = 5:44
| title2 = Hairless Heart
| length2 = 2:10
| title3 = Counting Out Time
| length3 = 3:42
| title4 = Carpet Crawl
| note4 = {{efn|The original UK pressing lists the track as "Carpet Crawl". The single worldwide and the original US pressing lists the track as "The Carpet Crawlers".{{cite AV media notes|url=https://www.discogs.com/release/6800750-Genesis-The-Lamb-Lies-Down-On-Broadway|title=The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway|date=1974|publisher=Atco Records|id=SD 2-401}} Was changed to "Carpet Crawlers" worldwide on the 1994 remaster.{{cite AV media notes|url=https://www.discogs.com/release/7020658-Genesis-The-Lamb-Lies-Down-On-Broadway|title=The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway [1994 Remaster]|date=1974|publisher=Virgin Records|id=CGSCDX 1}}}}
| length4 = 5:15
| title5 = The Chamber of 32 Doors
| length5 = 5:40
}}
{{Tracklist
| headline = Side three
| total_length = 24:16
| title1 = Lilywhite Lilith
| length1 = 2:45
| title2 = The Waiting Room
| length2 = 5:22
| title3 = Anyway
| length3 = 3:08
| title4 = Here Comes the Supernatural Anaesthetist
| note4 = {{efn|The US pressing lists the track as "The Supernatural Anaesthetist".}}
| length4 = 3:00
| title5 = The Lamia
| length5 = 6:57
| title6 = Silent Sorrow in Empty Boats
| length6 = 3:07
}}
{{Tracklist
| headline = Side four
| total_length = 24:31
| title1 = The Colony of Slippermen"
:a. "The Arrival"
:b. "A Visit to the Doktor"
:c. "The Raven
| length1 = 8:13
| title2 = Ravine
| length2 = 2:04
| title3 = The Light Dies Down on Broadway
| length3 = 3:33
| title4 = Riding the Scree
| length4 = 3:57
| title5 = In the Rapids
| length5 = 2:30
| title6 = it.
| note6 = {{efn|The song's title is typeset in lowercase in the album's booklet, which presents the titles of every other song in title case. On the back cover it is presented in all caps, the same as all other songs, but is the only one in italics.}}
| length6 = 4:14
}}
Personnel
Credits are adapted from the original 1974 liner notes.
Genesis
- Peter Gabriel – lead vocals, flute
- Steve Hackett – guitars
- Mike Rutherford – bass guitar, 12-string guitar
- Tony Banks – keyboards, guitar
- Phil Collins – drums, percussion, vibraphone, backing vocals
Additional musician
- Brian Eno – "Enossification" (electronic effects) on "In the Cage" and "The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging"{{cite web |last=Stone |first=Greg |title=Tony Banks Interview April 1978 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xix9dMO5V6s |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211212/xix9dMO5V6s| archive-date=2021-12-12 |url-status=live|website=YouTube|date=11 November 2012 }}{{cbignore}}
Production
- John Burns – production
- Genesis – production
- David Hutchins – engineer
- Hipgnosis – sleeve design, photography
- Graham Bell – choral contribution
- "Omar" – Rael on the album's artwork
- Richard Manning – cover retouching
- George Hardie – graphics (George Hardie N.T.A.)
- George Peckham (as "Pecko" and "Porky") – lacquer cutting
Charts
class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" |
Chart (2014)
! Peak |
---|
{{Album chart|UKRock|17|date=20141012|rowheader=true|accessdate=March 10, 2024}} |
Certifications
{{Certification Table Top}}
{{Certification Table Entry | type = album | region = Canada | artist = Genesis | title = The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway | award = Gold | relyear = 1974 | access-date = 5 December 2016 | refname = "Canada certification"}}
{{Certification Table Entry | type = album | region = France | artist = Genesis | title = The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway | award = Gold | relyear = 1974 | certyear = 1977 | source = infodisc | access-date = 5 December 2016 | refname = "France certification"}}
{{Certification Table Entry | type = album | region = United Kingdom | artist = Genesis | title = The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway | award = Gold | relyear = 1974 | access-date = 22 August 2022 | id=7064-1206-2 | refname = UK certification}}
{{Certification Table Entry | type = album | region = United States | artist = Genesis | title = The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway | award = Gold | relyear = 1974 | access-date = 5 December 2016 | refname = "US certification"}}
{{Certification Table Bottom}}
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{reflist|30em}}
Sources
- {{cite book |last1=Banks |first1=Tony |last2=Collins |first2=Phil |last3=Gabriel |first3=Peter |last4=Hackett |first4=Steve |last5=Rutherford |first5=Mike |editor1-last=Dodd |editor1-first=Philipp |title=Genesis. Chapter and Verse |publisher=Weidenfeld & Nicolson |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-297-84434-1 |ref={{harvid|Genesis|2007}}}}
- {{cite book |last1=Bowler |first1=Dave |last2=Dray |first2=Bryan |title=Genesis – A Biography |url=https://archive.org/details/genesisbiography0000bowl_h5d4 |url-access=registration |publisher=Sidgwick & Jackson |year=1992 |isbn=978-0-283-06132-5 }}
- {{cite book |last1=Fielder |first1=Hugh |last2=Sutcliffe |first2=Phil |title=The Book of Genesis |publisher=St. Martin's Press |year=1984 |isbn=978-0-312-08880-4 }}
- {{cite book|title=Genesis 1967 to 1975 - The Peter Gabriel Years|first=Mario|last=Giammetti|publisher=Kingmaker|year=2020|isbn=978-1-913218-62-1}}
- {{cite book |last=Hewitt |first=Alan |title=Opening the Musical Box – A Genesis Chronicle |url=https://archive.org/details/openingmusicalbo00hewi |url-access=registration |publisher=Firefly Publishing |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-946-71930-3 }}
- {{cite book |last=Holm-Hudson |first=Kevin |title=Genesis and The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway |publisher=Ashgate Publishing |year=2008 |isbn=978-0-754-66139-9 }}
- {{cite book |last=Platts |first=Robin |title=Genesis: Inside & Out (1967–2000) |publisher=Collector's Guide Publishing |year=2001 |isbn=978-1-896-52271-5 }}
- {{cite book |last=Rutherford |first=Mike |title=The Living Years: The First Genesis Memoir |publisher=Thomas Dunne Books |year=2015 |isbn=978-1-250-06068-6 }}
- {{cite book |last=Thompson |first=Dave |author-link=Dave Thompson (author) |title=Turn It On Again: Peter Gabriel, Phil Collins, and Genesis |publisher=Backbeat Books |year=2004 |isbn=0-87930-810-9 }}
DVD media
- {{cite video |people=Banks, Tony; Collins, Phil; Gabriel, Peter; Hackett, Steve; Rutherford, Mike |title=Genesis 1970–1975: The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway |medium=DVD |publisher=Virgin Records |date=10 November 2008 |id={{UPC|5099951968328}}|ref=2007InterviewDVD}}
External links
- [https://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dcgnn7b_31g72vwrf7 The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway – Complete Story by Peter Gabriel and Album Links] [https://web.archive.org/web/20121112022316/https://docs.google.com/document/edit?id=1ITGpu-3WK7bTSTLxefdQGC0O6renCkka7LH4cKkxHwU archived]
- [https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/the-ulysses-of-concept-albums The "Ulysses" of Concept Albums] by Jon Michaud The New Yorker 28 Feb 2014
- [https://www.discogs.com/master/29256-Genesis-The-Lamb-Lies-Down-On-Broadway The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway] at Discogs
- [https://musicbrainz.org/release-group/f2e5d462-6ec1-3cf8-8ea8-06eab8fe51f5 The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway] at MusicBrainz
{{Genesis|state=collapsed}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, The}}
Category:Albums with cover art by Hipgnosis
Category:Genesis (band) albums
Category:Charisma Records albums
Category:Albums produced by Peter Gabriel
Category:Albums produced by Phil Collins