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| CD Cover |
CD Back |
CD Label |
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| CD Inside Cover |
CD Tray |
Title: | A Trick Of The Outtakes |
Date: | October 1973
Recording Studio: | Trident Studios, England |
Tracklisting |
| 01. | Beloved Summer | 05:40 |
| 02. | Ripples part I | 04:40 |
| 03. | Ripples part II | 04:11 |
| 04. | Robbery, Assault and Battery | 06:25 |
| 05. | Los Endos part I | 03:06 |
| 06. | Los Endos part II | 02:47 |
| 07. | Mad Man Moon | 04:14 |
| 08. | Trick of the Tail | 04:35 |
| 09. | Entangled part I | 04:36 |
| 10. | Entangled part II | 06:33 |
| 11. | Dance On A Volcano | 06:05 |
| 12. | Squonk | 06:54 |
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Personnel |
| Tony Banks | Keyboards, 12 String |
| Phil Collins | Vocals, Drums, Percussion |
| Steve Hackett | Electric Guitar |
| Mike Rutherford | Bass, 12 String |
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Liner Notes:
The Sheffield brothers built Trident studios at No. 17 St.
Anne’s Ct. Soho in 1967. This studio was the recording site for many rock
albums of the 1960’s and 70’s including David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust and many tracks from the Beatle’s White Album. The Genesis sessions
captured on this CD were recorded there in October of 1975 and then remastered
to enhance the listening experience.
The CD begins with Beloved Summer which was the working title for the B-side release called It’s Yourself. It is one of the few songs on the CD that
includes vocals. This is followed by an instrumental version of the song Ripples. Mike Rutherford can be heard counting the tempo at the beginning. A
second version of the song follows. Robbery, Assault and Battery is next and is also in the instrumental mode. Just before the next song, Los Endos, Phil Collin’s can be heard counting the tempo. This song is separated into two tracks detailing different segments of the song. Mad Man Moon is then presented with piano, drums and some bass. It is, again, an instrumental version and suffers from poor recording but is still quite impressive. Trick of the Tail is then offered with vocals in a version very similar to the official release. Two versions of Entangled follow, again devoid of vocals. The accentuation of the guitars is particularly impressive during the first take while the second take is more involved and includes alternatives to the studio mix. Dance on a Volcano is the next track followed by Squonk. Both are presented without vocals and provide an interesting opportunity to really study the instrumentation of these songs.
Remastering Notes (Or “Notes From the Re-Master”)
Most of the recording suffers from a great deal of Hiss. This was removed from each track separately. Bass levels were found to be excessively high on many tracks leading to a muddy sound quality. Bass was cut and both treble and midrange frequency ranges were then raised to bring out the detail within the recording. Many of the peaks within the songs were clipped and required software restoration. The whole recording was then normalized to a consistent volume
level.
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