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Lyrics Turn It on Again Genesis

1980 single by Genesis

"Turn Information technology On Once again"
Genesis TurnItOnAgain.jpg
Single past Genesis
from the album Duke
B-side
  • "Behind the Lines" (Edit) (UK)
  • "Evidence of Autumn" (US)
Released
  • 8 March 1980 (UK)
  • August 1980 (U.s.a.)
Recorded October–December 1979
Genre Arena rock[1]
Length iii:50 (album version)
iii:44 (UK single remix)
3:27 (The states unmarried remix edit)
Characterization Charisma Records
Atlantic (U.S., Canada)
Songwriter(s) Tony Banks, Phil Collins, Mike Rutherford
Producer(s) Genesis, David Hentschel
Genesis singles chronology
"Deep in the Motherlode"
(1978)
"Turn Information technology On Again"
(1980)
"Duchess"
(1980)
Audio sample

"Plough It On Again"

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"Turn It On Again" is a vocal by the English rock band Genesis featured on their 1980 album Duke. Also released as a single, the song reached number viii in the UK Singles Nautical chart,[2] becoming the band's 2nd superlative 10 hit. The lyrics, by Mike Rutherford,[3] concern a man who does goose egg more than scout television. He becomes obsessed with the people he watches on it, believing them to exist his friends.

The vocal is featured on the Flash FM station playlist in the game K Theft Motorcar: Vice City Stories.

Background [edit]

"Plow It On Once again" was built from leftovers from projects by each member: The second set up of verses was conceived past Tony Banks for A Curious Feeling: "We kind of put [Rutherford'south riff] – the bit he didn't apply on Smallcreep's Twenty-four hour period, curiously plenty – with the bit I didn't use on A Curious Feeling, and put these ii together. We made it much more rocky; both $.25 became much more than rocky. My flake was a bit more than epic, and Mike'due south fleck was a scrap slower and a bit more heavy metallic. And and so Phil gave information technology a much more than straightforward drum role; perhaps neither of u.s.a. would have thought that we would want that on that bit [...] Nosotros put on i or two other bits, too, that ended up from there".[four]

The song is characterised by a rhythmic structure uncharacteristically complex for pop music but mutual in the ring's progressive rock back catalogue. The poetry/chorus sections alternate time signatures, 6
4
to 7
iv
( thirteen
four
), while the intro and bridge sections are in four
four
and five
four
( 9
iv
). The song – written generally by Rutherford, with help from Phil Collins – was originally much slower. Rutherford explains on the Songbook DVD: "I had this riff [plays atomic number 82 riff on guitar], just at the fourth dimension I was playing it similar this: [plays slower]. And Phil said, 'Why don't you endeavor it in a faster speed?' and then he said to me, 'Exercise yous realize it is in xiii
8
?' and I said, 'What exercise you mean, it'southward in 13? It'due south in 4
4
, isn't information technology?' 'No, it'southward thirteen.'"

Collins confirms: "You can't trip the light fantastic toe to it. You see people trying to dance to information technology every now and again. They get on the off crush simply they don't know why".[5] Tony Banks adds: "Yous can't dance or handclapping along to information technology because of that time signature. When we play it live, y'all can ever run into the audience getting defenseless out."[6]

"Turn It On Again" has been a favourite at Genesis's shows. Consequently, the grouping's 1999 compilation Turn It On Once more: The Hits and its 2007 expanded reissue, subtitled The Tour Edition, were named after it, equally was the band's 2007 Plow Information technology On Over again: The Tour reunion bout. In the 1980s, the band would adhere a medley of 1960s pop songs (referred to by the band as the "Dejection Brothers" medley, equally the beginning vocal was "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love"). The song would be returned to its album class for the We Tin't Dance tour and the ring would afterwards regard the medley as a poor decision.[ citation needed ] Peter Gabriel played drums when he reunited with his former bandmates at 1982'south Vi of the Best show and found himself baffled by its time signatures. "It was typical Peter: 'Oh, I can play this'," observed Tony Banks. "Simply once he started playing, he kept looking around going, Oh fuck! 'Turn It On Again' does funny things – information technology'south truly a Genesis song."[half-dozen]

Originally written and recorded in the key of B Major, it was transposed downwardly to A for the 2007 tour and farther downwards to Grand for the 2021 tour to compensate for the lowering of Collins' voice.

The Duke Suite [edit]

"Plow it on Again" was originally a department of a long suite written past the band that was split up into individual songs before information technology was released. At the time, was but an interlude betwixt the preceding and side by side sections of the suite.

Chart performance [edit]

"Turn Information technology on Again" was a moderate hit in North America, but failed to reach the Superlative 40 except in regional markets such equally Chicago (#31 on WLS-AM).[7] All the same, it was a bigger hitting in Europe, peculiarly in the Uk where it reached #8.[8]

Nautical chart (1980) Peak
position
Canadian RPM Top Singles[9] 49
France[10] 32
Republic of ireland (IRMA)[11] 12
Italian republic 8
Netherlands 38
U.k. Singles Chart[8] 8
U.s.a. Billboard Hot 100 58
U.s.a. Cash Box Tiptop 100[12] 55

Personnel [edit]

  • Phil Collins – drums, percussion, pb and backing vocals
  • Tony Banks – keyboards, bankroll vocals
  • Mike Rutherford – guitars, bass pedals

References [edit]

  1. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Knuckles - Genesis | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  2. ^ Genesis Uk nautical chart history, The Official Charts Company. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  3. ^ Prasad, Anil. "Genesis: Turning it on once more". Innerviews . Retrieved 27 May 2012.
  4. ^ Janisch, Helmut; Klinkhardt, Martin. "A Curious Interview". Genesis News Com [it] . Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  5. ^ Genesis (2001). The Genesis Songbook (DVD). Eagle Rock Entertainment.
  6. ^ a b Blake, Mark: "The stories behind the songs"; Classic Rock #216, November 2015, p26
  7. ^ "wls110180". www.oldiesloon.com.
  8. ^ a b "Official Charts Company". officialcharts.com.
  9. ^ "Library and Archives Canada". collectionscanada.gc.ca. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
  10. ^ [1] [ dead link ]
  11. ^ "The Irish gaelic Charts – Search Results – Turn It on Once more". Irish gaelic Singles Chart. Retrieved June 22, 2017.
  12. ^ "Top 100 1980-10-eleven". Cashbox Magazine . Retrieved three January 2015.

External links [edit]

  • Lyrics of this song
  • Genesis - Turn It On Again on YouTube

szabadostheabsitters.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turn_It_On_Again