Anthony was a founder member of the British Rock band Genesis.
Ant was born in December 1951 in
at
Gabriel, Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks. It was also at Charterhouse
that the pre Genesis band Anon got together and performed at a
concert playing three Rolling Stones songs. At this time there were two
bands at Charterhouse The Anon and The Garden Wall. In 1967 various
factions of both bands joined forces and became one band.
This band was to go on to become Genesis.
Anthony recorded the albums From Genesis To Revelation and Trespass
and also performed a great many gigs with the band before deciding to
leave the band following a particularly bad bout of stage fright and also
suffering a debilitating bout of bronchial pneumonia.
It was between the years 1970 and the release of his debut album
The Geese And The Ghost in 1977 that many fans lost sight of Anthony Phillips.
In actual fact much of the material that would make up the Geese And
The Ghost and also the later Tarka album would be written during this time.
Anthony also felt he needed to improve his arranging skills and musical
education and learnt to sight-read music. It was also during this time that
Ant continued writing with Mike Rutherford and recordings were made of
songs like Silver Song, which included Mike Rutherford and also Phil Collins.
Some of these early recordings and demos from this period can be found
on the album The Archive Collection Volume One. Much of the first two
albums and even material that would go on to be released on The Private
Parts And Pieces series were originally written during this period which
took on a stop start feel as the profile of Genesis became higher.
Private Parts and Pieces was originally released in the
album as part of the Sides release. It was released as a stand alone album
shortly afterwards in late 1978. The album is almost all acoustic based
material that had been written between Ant leaving Genesis and the
release of The Geese and The Ghost and includes the tracks Fields Of
Eternity and Reaper.
Private Parts and Pieces Volume 2: Back To The Pavillion was released in
early 1980 due to the incredible success of the original Private Parts and
Pieces album. The album includes The Scottish Suite, Nocturne and
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Anthony Edwin "Ant" Phillips (b. 23 December 1951, Chiswick, west London) is an English multi instrumentalist, best known as a founding member of the band Genesis.[1] He played guitar and sang backing vocals until leaving in 1970, following the recording of their second album, Trespass. He left due to suffering from stage fright, after being told by his doctor that the best thing would be to leave the band. He is known for his twelve string guitar work, and his influence can be heard throughout Genesis's early output.
Genesis's first album after Phillips's departure, Nursery Cryme, featured two songs which were holdovers from the days when Phillips was in the band: "The Musical Box" (originally called F#) and "The Fountain Of Salmacis." "The Musical Box" especially remains a favourite of fans.
After leaving Genesis, Phillips studied classical music (especially classical guitar) and made recordings in collaboration with Harry Williamson, Mike Rutherford and Phil Collins, among others.He played the keyboards on the demos for Peter Gabriel in 1976. His first solo album, The Geese and the Ghost, was issued in 1977.
Phillips released his second album in 1978, entitled Wise After the Event. This was followed the next year by Sides. Both of these albums were produced by Rupert Hine and were intended to reach a mainstream audience, though neither album was successful in that regard.
In its initial release in the UK, Sides was accompanied by a more experimental album entitled Private Parts and Pieces; in the U.S. and Canada the two albums were issued separately. Private Parts and Pieces II: Back to the Pavilion followed the next year, and several further sequels were issued in the 1980s and 1990s.
Phillips began writing material with Andrew Latimer of Camel in 1981, and was a featured performer on that band's album, The Single Factor (released in 1982).
Phillips released a mainstream pop album entitled Invisible Men in 1983. He later claimed that this project went "horribly wrong" as a result of commercial pressures, and would subsequently eschew mainstream success in favour of more specialised material.
Phillips remains involved in a variety of musical projects, including extensive soundtrack work in England often for the label Atmosphere part the Universal Music Group. In the mid-1990s, he released an album entitled The Living Room Concert, which featured solo acoustic versions of his earlier material. He also provided archival material for the first Genesis box set, Genesis Archive 1967-75, released in 1998.
Several of his albums feature artwork by Peter Cross.
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