Foxtrot
Produced by David Hitchcock and Genesis
 
Released in October 1972
UK CHART POSITION #12
- Tracks
 - Watcher Of The Skies (7.19)
- Time Table (4.42)
- Get 'Em Out By Friday (8.33)
- Can-Utility And The Coastliners (5.43)
- Horizons (1.39)
- Supper's Ready (22.53)
- Lovers' Leap
 - The Guaranteed Eternal Sanctuary Man
 - Ikhnaton And Itsacon And Their Band of Merry Men
 - How Dare I Be So Beautiful?
 - Willow Farm
 - Apocalypse in 9/8 (Co-starring The Delicious Talents of Gabble Ratchett)
 - As Sure As Eggs Is Eggs (Aching Mens' Feet)
 
      
CREDITS
TONY BANKS - Organ, Mellotron, Piano, Electric Piano, 12 String, Voices.
 
STEVE HACKETT - Electric Guitar, 12 String and 6 String Solos.
PHIL COLLINS - Drums, Voices, Assorted Percussion. 
PETER GABRIEL - Lead Voice, Flute, Bass Drum, Tambourine, Oboe 
MICHAEL RUTHERFORD - Bass, Bass Pedals, 12 String Guitar, Voices, Cello. 
Also starring Guy and Paul.
Published by Stratsong Ltd
Recorded at Island Studios, Basing Street, London, August/September 1972
Released October 1972
Produced by DAVID HITCHCOCK 
Engineered by JOHN BURNS 
Sleeve design: PAUL WHITEHEAD
 
Remastered at The Farm and Abbey Road by Nick Davis, Geoff Callingham and Chris Blair
COMMENT
There are rare occasions where words fail; to call Foxtrot “sublime” 
or attach any series of suitably descriptive words to it merely traps in 
an ordinary jelly jar what was meant to exist outside of it.
Hearing Foxtrot, really hearing it, will change the way you look at music altogether. 
Nursery Cryme was an inspired record, but not a perfect one, as this is. 
It’s one thing to aspire to art through music, but quite another to turn each instrument 
into an individual paintbrush, as happens here. 
Perhaps “camera” is the better word, since it’s from five separate vantage
 points that the scenery takes three-dimensional shape.
 From the first moments that Tony Banks heralds “Watcher of the Skies,” it’s clear 
 that this is a different Genesis. 
 
Peter Gabriel inhabits the songs like a foot in a well-worn shoe, 
 wiggling into different characters with ease and aplomb. 
 With Mike Rutherford’s bass providing the foundation, Phil Collins’ drums are 
 free to add delicious commentary throughout the record, underscoring 
 gentle passages with a well-placed tap on the bell, ushering in stormclouds of 
 sound with dexterous rolls on the drums. 
 And of course there’s Steve Hackett, his electric guitar sliding in and out 
 of the music like sunrays through clouds. 
 
Although the nearly side-long “Supper’s Ready” is the album’s focal point 
 (and perhaps their magnum opus), every song on Foxtrot is stellar. 
 
Conjuring the past in “Time Table,” scrying a bleak, not-too-distant 
 future in “Get ‘Em Out By Friday,” inventing new gods on “Watcher of the Skies” 
 and “Can-Utility And The Coastliners,” these songs are at the heart of 
 what progressive rock can accomplish. 
 
There are precious few albums that transcend music to become epics in 
 their own right (Close to the Edge and Minstrel in the Gallery come to mind).
 
Genesis duplicated the magical feat on Selling England By The Pound, but it 
 detracts not one iota from Foxtrot’s achievement. 
 This record, to my tastes, represents one of the great musical works of the 20th century.