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Calling All Stations

Calling All Stations
Genesis - Calling All Stations.jpg
Studio album by Genesis
Released 1 September 1997
Recorded January–June 1997 at The Farm, Surrey
Genre Progressive rock, art rock, alternative rock
Length 67:42
Label Virgin (UK)
Atlantic (US)
Producer Nick Davis, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford
Genesis chronology
The Way We Walk, Volume Two: The Longs
(1993)
Calling All Stations
(1997)
Genesis Archive 1967–75
(1998)
Singles from Calling All Stations
  1. "Congo"
    Released: 15 September 1997
  2. "Shipwrecked"
    Released: 1 December 1997
  3. "Not About Us"
    Released: 23 February 1998
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 1.5/5 stars
Blender 1/5 stars
Chicago Tribune 0.5/4 stars
Entertainment Weekly C−
Rolling Stone 2/5 stars
Calling All Stations Tour
Tour by Genesis
Associated album Calling All Stations
Start date 23 January 1998
End date 31 May 1998
Legs 2 (1 cancelled)
No. of shows 47
Genesis concert chronology

Calling All Stations (stylised as ...Calling All Stations...) is the fifteenth and final studio album to date by English rock band Genesis. Released on 1 September 1997, the album was recorded following the departure of longtime drummer/vocalist Phil Collins from the band in 1996, leaving only keyboardist Tony Banks and guitarist/bassist Mike Rutherford from earlier incarnations of the band. Ray Wilson joined the band as lead vocalist for this album.

Of the three singles excerpted from the album, only "Congo" broke the top 40 in the UK. It achieved a top 40 placing in at least three other European countries.Calling All Stations reached No. 2 in the UK. It reached No. 54 in the United States during five weeks in the chart. The album received negative reviews from critics, who chastised its lack of direction.

Vocalist Ray Wilson, who had fronted a short-lived but popular grunge-influenced outfit called Stiltskin, was brought on board after a lengthy auditioning period. Wilson's darker, theatrical vocals were more reminiscent of former Genesis singer Peter Gabriel than Collins's more pop/rock vocals. Nir Zidkyahu and Nick D'Virgilio (Spock's Beard) were called in to supply the drums.

The music videos for "Congo" and "Shipwrecked" featured Wilson, Rutherford, Banks and Zidkyahu surrounded by extensive use of water imagery. "Not About Us", however featured just Banks, Rutherford and Wilson.

Calling All Stations became the first Genesis' album not to hit number 1 since ...And Then There Were Three... (number 3 in 1978)

Steve Knopper reviewed the album in the Chicago Tribune, calling it "a formless blob of synth sounds" and asserting that new singer Ray Wilson has "no confidence or personality, let alone the vision to stave off his bandmates' meandering ideas". Both AllMusic and Rolling Stone commented that Ray Wilson was a fitting vocal replacement for Collins, but that the album is wholly lacking in good material. Both also commented on the album's odd mix of art rock and pop, saying that it failed to capture any of the likeable elements of either genre; Rolling Stone summarised it as "a Mike and the Mechanics artrock album". In 2014, Stevie Chick of The Guardian dismissed the album as "inexplicable".


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Wikipedia

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