Anthony Phillips was one of the founding members of
Genesis, having attended the Charterhouse School in Surrey with
Peter Gabriel,
Tony Banks, and
Michael Rutherford.
Phillips and
Rutherford (who had played together in another band before linking up with
Gabriel and
Banks), were the principal composing members of
Genesis during their formative years, right into their first recording venture on English Decca ("Silent Sun," etc.) under the aegis of
Jonathan King. Much of
Phillips' and
Rutherford's music was too subtle and introspective to work for the fledgling band on-stage, and eventually composition became more of a shared effort. By the time the group cut its second album,
Trespass, however,
Phillips had receded into the background, propelled by a crippling onset of stage fright that forced him out of the lineup following the album's release. His influence, ironically, was felt very strongly on their subsequent breakthrough third album,
Nursery Cryme, the title track was the band's first number to attract a wide audience in progressive rock circles for its introduction and opening minute, which used material that
Phillips had written and recorded (as a demo) as early as 1969.
Little more was heard from
Anthony Phillips until 1977, when he released hi first solo album,
The Geese and the Ghost, followed by
Wise After the Event a year later, and then a collection of early demo recordings,
Private Parts and Pieces, also issued in 1978.
Phillips has re-emerged periodically, working in a style that is much closer to the classically influenced original
Genesis sound than to the work of the current version of the group. He retains a cult of fans, similar in certain respects to
Peter Banks of
Yes (another guitar player who quit an art-rock band at a critical early juncture in their history), but recording more frequently. He also writes a considerable amount of music for television and movies, and remains a guitarist of supreme skill and confidence, steeped in classical, pre-Baroque, and folk influences, able to record entire albums featuring only his acoustic instrument.
Phillips' skills on the keyboard, principally synthesizer and Mellotron, are more limited, and were never exploited within a group context, but his studio recordings reveal a distinctive character to his compositions on those instruments as well.
–
Bruce Eder, Rovi