Thursday 7 August 2008

Steve Hackett

Steve Hackett   
Artist: Steve Hackett

   Genre(s): 
ROck: Alternative
   Rock
   Rock: Progressive
   Classical
   Rock: Pop-Rock
   Rock: Hard-Rock
   Instrumental
   



Discography:


Wild Orchids   
 Wild Orchids

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 17


Metamorpheus   
 Metamorpheus

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 15


To Watch the Storms   
 To Watch the Storms

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 17


Somewhere in South America: Live in Buenos Aires CD2   
 Somewhere in South America: Live in Buenos Aires CD2

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 12


Somewhere In South America  CD1   
 Somewhere In South America CD1

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 12


Hungarian Horizons (Live in Budapest)   
 Hungarian Horizons (Live in Budapest)

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 2


Genesis Files CD2   
 Genesis Files CD2

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 10


Genesis Files CD1   
 Genesis Files CD1

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 10


Feedback '86   
 Feedback '86

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 8


Sketches of Satie, Feat John Hackett   
 Sketches of Satie, Feat John Hackett

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 20


The Tokyo Tapes (CD 2)   
 The Tokyo Tapes (CD 2)

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 10


The Tokyo Tapes (CD 1)   
 The Tokyo Tapes (CD 1)

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 9


The Tokyo Tapes (Live In Japan)   
 The Tokyo Tapes (Live In Japan)

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 12


The Tokyo Tapes   
 The Tokyo Tapes

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 10


Gtr Live   
 Gtr Live

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 14


A Midsummer Night's Dream   
 A Midsummer Night's Dream

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 18


Genesis Revisited   
 Genesis Revisited

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 11


There Are Many Sides to the Night (Warp Album)   
 There Are Many Sides to the Night (Warp Album)

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 1


Blues With a Feeling (Warp Album)   
 Blues With a Feeling (Warp Album)

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 1


Guitar Noir   
 Guitar Noir

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 18


The Unauthorised Biography   
 The Unauthorised Biography

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 15


Time - Lapse   
 Time - Lapse

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 14


Momentum   
 Momentum

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 14


GTR   
 GTR

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 10


Till We Have Faces   
 Till We Have Faces

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 11


Cured   
 Cured

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 8


Bay Of Kings   
 Bay Of Kings

   Year: 1983   
Tracks: 15


Highly Strung   
 Highly Strung

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 9


Defector   
 Defector

   Year: 1980   
Tracks: 10


Spectral Mornings   
 Spectral Mornings

   Year: 1979   
Tracks: 8


Please Don't Touch!   
 Please Don't Touch!

   Year: 1978   
Tracks: 10


Voyage Of The Acolyte   
 Voyage Of The Acolyte

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 8




Steve Hackett is topper known as the guitarist with Genesis during their topper days as both a progressive and commercial-grade dance banding, across x albums of their history. His reaching in the group's batten order at the begin of 1971, replacement original guitarist Anthony Phillips, provided the radical with the last ingredient that it needed for success. In the long time since, while Phil Collins may experience enjoyed pop/rock stardom and an acting vocation and his other bandmates their periodical successes, Hackett has travel along the furthest as a whizz performing artist and composer in his own right-hand.


Hackett's earlier experience in playacting professionally came with groups named Canterbury Glass and Sarabande, doing mainstream rock-and-roll with a progressive/psychedelic edge. It was as a studio player that he excelled, recording with a band called Quiet World during 1970. They were signed to the Pye Records label and released an LP entitled The Road on that company's progressive rock-oriented Dawn Records label. In late 1970, Hackett crossed paths with the group when he located an advertisement in search of like-minded progressive musicians and Genesis' Peter Gabriel responded -- the group's original guitarist, Anthony Phillips, had departed and they required a switch. He saw them in concert with a impermanent stand-in in the guitarist's smudge and approached them most connexion. Hackett was in the lineup in January of 1971 and was cursorily established as an integral part of their healthy, though his concert work at their earlier gigs suffered from the fact that Hackett had little feel acting onstage, which initially made him neural. He after became not only an indispensable share of the group's sound, just likewise of their image; his monocled figure, sitting and bent o'er his instrument in studied concentration, helped to set the mathematical group aside from flashier progressive rock outfits of the epoch.


His acquisition and immense range opened up the group's wakeless in unexampled ways during their progressive rock phase; conjugate with Phil Collins' drumming in the immix, Genesis was sour into a true wiz unit, as revealed on the albums Fox-trot, Genesis Live, Merchandising England by the Pound, and The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway, all among the finest progressive rock LPs ever conceived. Then, following the going away of lead isaac Bashevis Singer Gabriel and his successor by Collins and their move toward a more commercial sound, Hackett proved every bit wiz; the difference was that their albums were now merchandising in the millions instead of the hundreds of thousands, and he was acquiring far more public exposure than ever before.


Hackett's first solo album, Ocean trip of the Acolyte, dated from 1975 and was, in many slipway, nearly a confused Genesis album, featuring Collins and Michael Rutherford in its lineup of musicians. Coming extinct as it did in the wake of Gabriel's expiration from the group, it was a causa of some tune among the members, scorn their involvement, only Hackett stayed with the band through the term of enlistment behind the release of Wind & Wuthering, making his last coming into court with the mathematical group on the Seconds Out live album, ironically just as the band was ascension into the top ranks of concert attractions and recording acts of the Apostles. Hackett's low gear post-Genesis solo album was Please Don't Touch!, which measuredly hewed very far from his older group's progressive sound and gone completely from Ocean trip of the Acolyte as well. He also put together his low touring band, which included Pete Hicks on vocals and John Shearer on drums, as well as brother John Hackett on flute and keyboards, with whom he afterwards recorded the Ghostlike Mornings album.


Hackett's good advanced rapidly in the eighties, through albums such as Deserter -- a riveting musical/political fantasy -- and the pop-oriented Healed. His concert knead unbroken him busy passim Europe, and the expanding fame of his old band lED a firm current of listeners to check out the work of the former Genesis guitarist, whose playing and personality were so large on those classical early albums. He too reunited with Peter Gabriel and Michael Rutherford and and then with all of his ex-bandmates for a copulate of 1982 charity concerts. The undermentioned year, he enjoyed a very successful European single in the pretense of "Cell 151" off of the Highly Strung LP, which helped impel that album to strike condition. The mid-'80s byword him widen his sound to include versatile elements of "reality music" in his studio work, and he too to start playing littler, more knowledgeable halls where his guitar skills could be better appreciated.


In 1986, Hackett hooked up with Yes guitar player Steve Howe to var. GTR, a progressive stone unit of measurement that became a favourite of MTV and the rock press, and generated a strike individual ("When the Heart Rules the Mind") in America and a platinum-selling record album for Arista Records and followed them up with an international tour of duty. Hackett resumed his solo life history in 1987, simply with the momentum of GTR behind him, he now establish crowds of tens of thousands eagre to get a line him play classical style acoustic guitar and was becoming the arena rock edition of Christopher Parkening or guitar player John Williams. His next major acquittance was Time Lapse, a live retrospective solicitation of his work from several decades of music-making.


In 1994, Hackett surprised almost of his fans by turn back to his roots with Blues with a Feeling, an record album reinforced about the sounds of megrims guitar and harmonica that harked back to his boyhood. This pointed to 1 of the ironies of Hackett's vocation: as a member of Genesis, he was presumed by to the highest degree fans to have been classically trained, just his music was actually derived from a concourse of influences, to which he's e'er extensive himself in purchase order to embrace and plunge; so, although in the first place a rock guitar player with vapors roots, Hackett has performed with the London Symphony Orchestra and composed implemental classic music based on Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream for EMI's Angel Records label.


Tied as his composition career ballooned in the nineties, he too began playing more than concerts and turned back to his progressive rock roots by performing Genesis' definitive repertory. Working with a grouping that includes such luminaries as ex-King Crimson alumni Ian McDonald and John Wetton, non to honorable mention Genesis' Chester Thompson, as advantageously as the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Hackett released a live album entitled Genesis Revisited, which was just that. During the 1990s, he fronted a mathematical group known as Steve Hackett/Friends, including former members of King Crimson, wHO have revived their greco-Roman progressive rock-and-roll repertory in dramatic new concert form, on CD, and concert video. Since and then, Hackett has recorded legion solo albums, including To Watch the Storms, Metamorpheus, and Gaga Orchids.