Genesis - Twilight Alehouse (B-Side to " I Know What I Like") video free download


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Duration: 07:53
Uploaded: 2009/01/24

The Song is a non-album b-side to "I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)" from Genesis 1973 released fifth studio album "Selling England by the Pound".

The audio is taken from the "Extra Tracks"-CD of the 1970-1975 box set.

Comments

9 years ago

Vasilis Pandis

This song (the beginning) is a kind of a prequel to the later Phil Collins era.Strange but the rhythm and the drums of the opening give you this impression.Then it gets to classical Genesis

9 years ago

Paul Dove

I normally hate prog but this is really beautiful.

9 years ago

Paul Verhaagen

Great song unbelieveable this is the b side of "I know what I like" total different vibe. Sounds like a 'leftover' of Foxtrot Maybe because it did not fit the album anymore, because the album was full. Concerning the(nonsensical) Gabriel Collins discussion(see comment Tony England) , Collins never took over Genesis it just slowly changed in another band with the same name. No problem, times the are a changing. Cheers, Paul from Holland

9 years ago

jonny lopez

I don't think he intended too...nobody understands schizophrenia anyways but they like what they think hear...

9 years ago

Torkil Skorgen

Why couldn't they put this on Selling England by the Pound, instead of songs like "More Fool Me" and "After the Ordeal"?

9 years ago

moby boy

why this great song has remained only B side ?

9 years ago

Tony England

It's just an opinion so don't shoot me but for me Phil Collins was the perfect drummer for Genesis. And the least perfect songwriter and vocalist. How the band went from Supper's Ready to Misunderstanding is just shocking. I honestly think that when Phil took over the band they should have changed their name, it wasn't even close to Genesis anymore.

9 years ago

extremadrummer

UncleChuckTH: For sure we needed Can-Utility and the Coastliners, are you joking?

9 years ago

extremadrummer

I can't undesrtand how this song was left and I know What I Like included in SEBTPAlthough the song is more in the Trespass musicality line.

9 years ago

Siegfried Kircheis

If they'd put this song on Selling England's second side along with another great song instead of the stuff they did put on the actual second side, the album would be so much better, because I never listen to any of Selling England past "Firth of Fifth". Great stuff!

9 years ago

Zach Haywood

Seriously, why wasn't this song on an album? This is one of their best songs!

10 years ago

LedPeplum

This must have come before Selling England by the Pound, as it is featured on their Belgian TV performance, which was made in 1972 - the year before that album.

10 years ago

Mark Stevenson

May I just add a PS that it seriously pisses me off that Genesis cannot be bothered to put a few outakes / B-sides / odd mixes / etc on their CDs. It's a waste of time (& our money) lads.

10 years ago

Mark Stevenson

First time I've ever heard this. Sounds to me like "Trespass" material, but a bit more agressive in execution. Perhaps it was composed for Tresspass but played by Hackett?? 

10 years ago

Roger Durrant

More Fool Me yuk! A dreadful 1973 harbinger of the awful Collins navel gazing about past relationships which would mar later Genesis albums. Almost as emetic as Please Don't Ask.

10 years ago

Another You Tube Account

This song turns my wife on. And, I introduced her to this music. I got it made!

10 years ago

José Arcanjo

Don't think so, pal. More Fool Me is pretty unique, it gives a good feeling to the album.

10 years ago

José Arcanjo

Wait! What? Stop everything! Are there any other songs from Selling England? I didn't know this one.

10 years ago

TheRunner75

In France, this track hasn't been released on the B side of "I Know What I lIke"; It was "After the Ordeal".

10 years ago

TheRunner75

No! Nearly impossible because "Selling England by the Pound" was already 53:38 long; then adding this track would have led its duration to nearly 1 hour which far too long for a vinyl LP, and a nuisance for quality. I remember bringing back several times the LP in UK in 1973 because it skipped several times on "More Fool Me".

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