Categories

Use your Rocks Off Mag account to vote in our "G.O.A.T. Votes" polls, earn exclusive profile badges and claim your Rocks Off Mag merch!

Or Sign In With

Don't have an account yet? Register here

by continuing you accept our privacy policy

Use your Rocks Off Mag account to vote in our "G.O.A.T. Votes" polls, earn exclusive profile badges and claim your Rocks Off Mag merch!

What Are Some Of Your Favourite Music Moments?
Or Sign In With

by continuing you accept our privacy policy


Forgot Password ?

Don't worry! It happens. Please enter the
adress associated with your account.


Reset Password

Please enter new password.



Thank you for signing up to the Rocks Off.

To complete the sign up process please verify your email address by clicking on the link that has been sent to you previously speficifed email.


Rocks Off Magazine is reader-supported. When you buy via the links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission at no cost to you.

10 Of The Best Genesis Songs For Heavier Rock Fans

genesis

While Genesis are widely considered a progressive rock band, for many rockers โ€“ myself included โ€“ a lot of their tunes fall into more of a pure pop category, but thatโ€™s not to say there arenโ€™t some edgier cuts in their discography that appeal to lovers of heavier, more attitudinal and experimental music.

Yes, the Phil Collins-led ditties are a little polished and were sometimes clearly pushed through the pop cookie-cutter, which is part of the reason why he landed so many gigs with Disney after leaving Genesis in 1996, but he was just one of many songwriters within the band.

When others (primarily Peter Gabriel, Mike Rutherford, & Tony Bank) took the lead, the results were far more engaging, and, more importantly, heavy, giving the hardcore rock fans something to sink their teeth into, and itโ€™s these songs Iโ€™ll be counting down for you today!

The Best Genesis Songs For Fans Of Heavy Rock

10. โ€œโ€ฆ In That Quiet Earthโ€ (Wind And Wuthering, 1976)

While โ€œโ€ฆ In That Quiet Earthโ€ isnโ€™t going get a furious circle pit going, itโ€™s a quintessential prog banger with all the hallmarks of 70s musical experimentation, and my oh my, that beat goes HARD.

Phil Collins goes full-blown Animal for the first 2:47 of this prog phantasmagoria, smashing out mile-a-minute rhythms that wouldnโ€™t sound out of place on a Death Grips record โ€” Not bad for a Disney retainee!

A reverse guitar solo slithers atop Collinโ€™s pummeling until a soaring synth lead rises through the mix.

The guitar turns itself around to harmonize, building into a lively crescendo, after which, guitars punctuated by Colinโ€™s quarter-time shift hit like a ton of bricks โ€” A true headbanger moment!

9. โ€œThe Musical Boxโ€ (Nursery Crymeโ€, 1971)

โ€œThe Musical Boxโ€ starts out soft and silky, with the instrumental trying its hardest to mimic the twinkling of an actual music box using what I assume is some sort of early octave effect, but with the tone taking a dark turn at the 1:25 mark, you know that something heavy this way comes!

Even the flute โ€“ typically a very gentle instrument โ€“ has a sinister quality to it in this section, and eerie guitars shimmer throughout, keeping tensions taught.

After some weaving between soft and ominous sounds for a time, at 3:39, weโ€™re walloped by fuzzy power chords and a discordant keyboard line โ€” The heaviness hath arrived!

Collins launches into a galloping Iron Maiden-esque kick drum pattern, and Hacketโ€™s Les Paul literally screams into action, marking the beginning of a rip-roaring guitar solo.

In true Genesis fashion, we go through a few more phases of gentle prog, but rest assured, these softer sections always resolve in some mosh-friendly mania.

8. โ€œBack In NYCโ€ (The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, 1971)

Gabriel reveals his inner punk on โ€œBack In NYCโ€, spitting every line with venom and grit as tremolo-picked guitars settle into Colinโ€™s angular jazz fusion beat.

Itโ€™s not so much the tone or notes that make this track a heavy hitter, but the way the band play their instruments.

Rutherfordโ€™s bass line locks into Colinโ€™s kick drum, forming a deep, powerful, punchy pocket, perfect for some fist-pumping, foot-stomping action.

Yet, my favorite part of this track has to be the bridge at 4.45 when the guitar breaks from its major noodling into a disconcerting descending pattern that catches you completely off-guard and reminds you just how incendiary Genesis can be.


RELATED: 25 Influential Musicians Of The 80s


7. โ€œThe Return Of The Giant Hogweedโ€ (Nursery Cryme, 1971)

In what is perhaps my favorite Genesis intro of all time, tapped neo-classical guitar triplets light the fuse of โ€œThe Return of the Giant Hogweedโ€, an 8-minute monster of a track telling the story of a huge mutant plant โ€œpreparing for an onslaught, threatening the human race.โ€

In the curiosity shop of prog, Gabrielโ€™s lyrics on this track are undoubtedly window display material, and although โ€œThe Return of the Giant Hogweedโ€ doesnโ€™t stay heavy throughout, when they rear their ugly head, the distorted guitar and keyboard passages prove itโ€™s no pop song!

6. โ€œThe Waiting Room (Evil Jam)โ€ Live (Genesis Archive #1 (1967โ€“1975), 1998)

โ€œThe Waiting Roomโ€ isnโ€™t going to leave you with a case of mosh-neck or anything, but itโ€™s an undeniably heavy trackโ€ฆ just not in the way you might expect.

Utilizing a number of dark ambient tropes, itโ€™d feel more at home in a horror film than it does on a record, but thatโ€™s precisely what the band was going for!

Suffused with eerie, discordant stabs, ghastly howls, and sudden spine-tingling bass swells, this scary track would give even the most hardcore of hardcore rockers the willies, and the live rendition on Genesis Archive #1 is nothing short of spooktacular โ€” Collinsโ€™ abstract drumming adds an extra sense of dread and chaos to an already frightening instrumental improvisation.

5. โ€œSupperโ€™s Readyโ€ (Foxtrot, 1972)

As you might expect, this 23-minute epic is one hell of a musical journey, so rather than a thread of heaviness running throughout, you arrive into heaviness when they reach the โ€œApocalypse in 9/8โ€ section.

But even then, youโ€™re not so much bludgeoned with crushing music, but welcomed to annihilation by the lyrics weaving a terrifying story of end daysโ€ฆ

โ€œ666 is no longer below

Heโ€™s getting out the marrow in your backboneโ€


RELATED: 32 Musicians Share Their Favourite Classic Rock Albums 


4. โ€œSquonkโ€ (A Trick Of The Tail, 1976)

A monstrous being introduced to the world in the 1910 book of folklore, Fearsome Creatures of the Lumberwoods, With a Few Desert and Mountain Beasts, the Squonk hid deep in the hemlock forests of Pennsylvania, ashamed of its hideous form.

โ€œSquonkโ€ reimagines this strange folktale, detailing the capture of the Squonk by a hunterโ€ฆ or what the hunter thinks is a catch, anyway.

As it turns out, being trapped in a sack pushed the Squonk over the emotional edge and the poor thing dissolved into a puddle of tears, leaving the hunter with nothing to show for his efforts.

The obscure lyrical content is nicely offset by Rutherfordโ€™s smooth, driving bass lines, and with Collinโ€™s clearly taking influence from Zeppelinโ€™s infamous skin slapper, John Bonham, the track winds up being quite a rock romp.

3. โ€œDown And Outโ€ (And Then There Were Three, 1978)

The music world was sure that Genesis would lose what edge they had once Hacket decided to go his own way, but the three remaining members threw us a curveball, releasing one of their most overtly rocky tracks to date, โ€œDown and Outโ€.

Predictably, itโ€™s more of a Van Halen-meets-King Crimson kind of heavy than it is a Lamb of God kind of heavy, but Collinโ€™s lightning-fast kick drum triplets certainly give it a hefty backbone, and the articulate guitar riffs are saturated enough to inspire many a rocker to raise their horns to the heavens.

2. โ€œThe Knifeโ€ (Live) (Live, 1973)

The album cut of anti-war song โ€œThe Knifeโ€ isnโ€™t bad, but the real edge of this track was only revealed when Genesis sharpened it live on stage.

With fuzzed-out, buzz saw guitar licks, Kalashnikov drumming, beefy bass, and Peter Gabrielโ€™s manic presence, the song came alive and absolutely crushed during the recording of their Live album.

I personally will always choose to listen to the live version of โ€œThe Knifeโ€ over the studio cut, and once you hear this absolute barn burner of a performance, Iโ€™m sure youโ€™ll feel exactly the same way.

The repeated power chords at the tail end of the track provide a particularly potent headbanging opportunity!


RELATED: 15 Fleetwood Mac Songs That Defined Generation


1. โ€œFly On A Windshieldโ€ (The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, 1974)

With โ€œFly on a Windshieldโ€ Genesis were leaning into cinematic techniques and musical pastiche in order to conjure images of a dauntless Egyptian army marching over a wide open landscape, and in my opinion, they succeeded.

When the vocals drop out at 1:17, and the plodding bass line and persistent drum beat explode in the mix, weโ€™re thrust helplessly into this vast, tumultuous scene.

The strings and synths form the musical backdrop of this landscape, and the rhythm section quakes the ground as the army approaches, but for me, itโ€™s the guitar solo is the truly integral element in this passage.

Itโ€™s interesting, as the lead guitar is usually implemented as embellishment alone, but Steve Hacket manages to contribute to the core theme of the piece, using the suspended pentatonic scale to firmly place the listener in Egypt.

genesis songs for heavy rock fans

Final Thoughts

Genesis were always too adventurous to be pigeonholed into any one style of playing, so while theyโ€™re not a heavy band through and through, as you now know, they have a number of toothy cuts that go pretty dang hard!

That said, there are a plethora of definitions of the word โ€œheavyโ€ as a piece of music terminology, and even though the tracks listed above do have more of an edge to them than the rest of Genesisโ€™ music, they might not quite conform to the heaviest ideals of โ€œheavyโ€โ€ฆ if you catch my drift.

Still, Collinโ€™s insane drumming, as well as his tight rhythmic relationship with Rutherford, does give these songs a hell of a lot of body and attitude, certainly enough to put a smile on any rockerโ€™s face.

To see the classic Genesis in all their glory, check out their iconic live performance at Wembley Stadium in 1985, courtesy of Live Aid.

Erik