From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philip David Charles Collins (born 30 January
1951)
is best known as the lead singer and drummer of English
progressive
rock group Genesis
and as a Grammy and
Academy
Award-winning solo artist. He has also starred in numerous
films.
Collins sang the lead vocals on eight American
chart-toppers between 1984 and 1989; seven as a solo artist and
one with Genesis. His singles, often dealing with lost love, ranged
from the drum-heavy "In the Air
Tonight", to the dance pop of "Sussudio", to the
political statements of his most successful song, "Another Day
in Paradise". His international popularity transformed Genesis
from a progressive rock group to a regular on the pop
charts and an early MTV mainstay. Collins'
professional career began as a drummer, first with obscure rock
group Flaming
Youth and then more famously with Genesis. In Genesis, Collins
originally supplied backing vocals for front man Peter Gabriel,
singing lead on only two songs, namely "For Absent Friends" from
1971's Nursery Cryme album and "More Fool Me" from
Selling England by the Pound, which was released in 1973. On
Gabriel's departure in 1975, Collins became the group's lead
singer. As the decade closed, Genesis's first international hit,
"Follow You,
Follow Me", demonstrated a drastic change from the band's early
years. His concurrent solo career, heavily influenced by his
personal life, brought both him and Genesis commercial success.
According to Atlantic
Records, Collins' total worldwide sales as a solo artist, as of
2002, were over 100 million.[1]
[
edit] Early life and
career
Collins was given a toy drum kit for Christmas when he was five.
Later, his uncle made him a makeshift one that he used regularly.
As Collins grew older these were followed by more complete sets
bought by his parents.[2]
He practiced by playing alongside the television and radio, and
never learned to read and write conventional musical
notation; instead, he uses a system he devised himself.
His professional training began at fourteen when he entered
Barbara Speake Stage School.[3]
He began a career as a child actor and
model, and
won his first major role as The Artful
Dodger in a London production of Oliver!. He
appeared in The Beatles'
A Hard Day's Night as one of hundreds of screaming
teenagers during the concert sequence. Although only an extra in
this sequence, Collins receives a close-up all to himself: his
mother was hired to cast the extras in this sequence, and she
arranged for her son to receive a brief close-up in the
film.[4]
He also auditioned for the role of Romeo in Romeo
and Juliet (1968).[5]
In 1970, the 19-year old Collins played percussion on the
George
Harrison song "The Art of
Dying"; Harrison credited him in the liner notes to the
remastered CD version of the album released in
2000.[6]
Collins was among the last three finalists for the role of
"I.Q" on the children's American television show The
Bugaloos (he lost out to English actor/musician
John
McIndoe[7]).
Despite the beginnings of an acting career, Collins continued to
gravitate towards music. While attending Chiswick
Community School he formed a band called The Real Thing and
later joined The Freehold. With the latter group, he wrote his
first song titled "Lying Crying Dying".[8]
Collins' first record deal came as drummer for Flaming
Youth, who released a single album, Ark 2 (1969).
A concept album
inspired by the recent media attention surrounding the moon
landing, Ark 2 failed to make much commercial success
despite positive critical reviews. Melody
Maker featured the album as "Pop Album of the Month",
describing it as "adult music beautifully played with nice tight
harmonies".[9]
The album's main single, "From Now On", failed on the radio.
After a year of touring, band tensions and the lack of
commercial success dissolved the group.
[
edit] Genesis era
-
Main article:
Genesis
(band)
In 1970, Collins answered a Melody Maker classified
ad for "...a drummer sensitive to acoustic
music, and acoustic twelve-string
guitarist".[10]
Genesis placed the ad after having already lost three drummers over
two albums.[11]
The audition occurred at the home of Peter
Gabriel's parents. Prospective candidates performed tracks
from the group's second album, Trespass
(1970). Collins arrived early, listened to the other auditions
while swimming in Gabriel's parents' pool, and memorised the
pieces before his turn.[12]
Collins won the audition. Nursery Cryme
was released a year later. Although his role remained primarily
that of drummer and backing vocalist for the next five years, he
twice sang lead vocals: once on "For Absent Friends" (from
Nursery Cryme)
and once on "More Fool Me" (from Selling
England by the Pound).
In 1974, while Genesis were recording the album The
Lamb Lies Down on Broadway, Brian Eno (who is
credited with "Enossification" for electronic vocal effects on the
track "Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging") needed a drummer for
his album Another Green
World. Collins was sent to fill the gap, and played drums
in lieu of payment for Eno's work with the band.
In 1975, following the final tour supporting the concept album
The
Lamb Lies Down on Broadway, Gabriel left the group to
pursue solo projects. Collins became lead vocalist after an
unfruitful search for Gabriel's replacement. In the short term, the
group recruited former Yes and
King Crimson
drummer Bill Bruford to
play drums during live shows, although Collins continued to play
during longer instrumental sections. Bruford's drumming can be
heard on the track The Cinema
Show on the live album Seconds Out.
He was soon replaced by ex-Frank Zappa band
member Chester
Thompson, who became a mainstay of the band's live line-up.
Collins, however, continued to play drums on all of the band's
studio recordings.
The first album with Collins as lead vocalist, 1976's
A Trick of the
Tail, reached the American Top 40, and climbed as high as
#3 on the UK charts. Said Rolling Stone,
"Genesis has managed to turn the possible catastrophe of Gabriel's
departure into their first broad-based American
success."[13]
Collins simultaneously performed in a jazz fusion group called
Brand X. The band
recorded their first album, Unorthodox
Behaviour, with Collins as drummer. Since he put greater
priority on his career with Genesis, there were several Brand X
tours and albums released without Collins. He credits Brand X as
his first use of a drum machine as well as his first use of a
home 8-track tape machine.[14]
As the decade closed, Genesis began a shift from their
progressive
rock roots and toward pop music. The album
…And Then There Were Three… featured their first UK Top 10
and US Top 40 single, "Follow You, Follow Me".
In the 1980s, the group scored a string of successful albums,
including Duke,
Abacab,
Genesis,
and Invisible
Touch. This last album's title track reached number one
on the American Billboard charts, the only Genesis song to do
so. The group received an MTV "Video of the Year"
nomination in 1987 for "Land of
Confusion", another popular single from the album, although
they lost to Gabriel's solo hit, "Sledgehammer".[15]
Reviews were generally positive, with Rolling Stone's
J.D. Considine stating, "every tune is carefully pruned so that
each flourish delivers not an instrumental epiphany but a solid
hook."[16]
Collins left Genesis in 1996 to focus on his solo
career;[17]
the last studio album with him as the lead singer was 1991's
We Can't
Dance. He and Gabriel reunited with other Genesis members
in 1999 to re-record "The Carpet Crawlers" for Genesis's
Turn
It On Again: The Hits. When in the mid-2000s discussions
of a possible Genesis reunion arose, Collins stated that he
would prefer to return as the drummer, with Gabriel handling the
vocals.[18]
Eventually Turn
It On Again: The Tour was announced for 2007, with the
Collins/Rutherford/Banks lineup.
[
edit] Solo career
An early theme in Collins’ music, although never specifically
mentioned in his albums, involved his then-recent divorce. Two
songs he wrote on the Genesis album Duke,
"Please Don't Ask" and the Top 20 hit "Misunderstanding", dealt
with failed relationships. One year earlier he had produced and
played drums on John
Martyn's Grace and
Danger, an album whose main theme is also marriage
breakup. With the recording of his first solo album,
Face
Value, Collins attributed his divorce as his main
influence.[19]
Collins’ marital frustrations formed the bulk of his first solo
album as well as his second album,
Hello, I Must Be Going!. With songs such as "In The Air
Tonight" and "I Don't Care
Anymore", Collins’ early albums had a dark presence, usually
heavy on the drums. Regarding Face Value, he says, "I had a
wife, two children, two dogs, and the next day I didn't have
anything. So a lot of these songs were written because I was going
through these emotional changes."[20]
There were occasional poppier influences – Face Value's
"Behind the Lines", for example, was a jazzy remake of a Genesis
song he co-wrote. Face Value was a critical and
multi-platinum success, and saw Collins’ profile increase further.
Hello, I Must Be Going! gave him a UK #1 for his cover of
The Supremes'
"You Can't
Hurry Love". The album went triple-platinum in the United
States like its predecessor and the Supremes cover was his first
Top 10 US hit (it also hit the Top 10 of Billboard's Adult
Contemporary chart). The album also reached #2 on the UK album
chart, spending well over a year there.
In 1982 he produced Something's
Going On, a solo album by Anni-Frid
Lyngstad (Frida), of ABBA fame. Frida, who had
just parted with bandmate and husband Benny
Andersson, had been impressed by Collins's solo efforts.
Consequently, she approached Collins with her own solo project. The
resulting album, featuring Collins on drums, spawned the 1982–83
international smash hit "I
Know There's Something Going On" (Russ
Ballard) and Collins’ duet with Frida titled "Here We'll
Stay." An edit featuring Frida on all vocals was released as a
single. Two years previously, he had contributed drums to Peter
Gabriel's third self-titled record, which was the first record
to feature Collins’ signature "gated reverb" sound, used on a
song called "Intruder". As the story goes, Gabriel "didn't want
any metal on the record" and asked him to leave his cymbals at
home, to concentrate on the sound of his kit more heavily than
usual. Studio engineer Hugh Padgham
augmented this drum style by using a special microphone (which
was intended for studio communication rather than recording) and
feeding it through a signal compressor. The result was the
"gated reverb" sound which Collins made famous. This was the
same 'big drum sound' used on such songs as "In The Air
Tonight", and "Mama"
by Genesis.
A turning point in Collins’ musical style came when he was asked
to compose the title track for the film Against All
Odds, a song which he re-worked to become "
Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now)" from an original
Face Value session out-take entitled "How Can You Sit
There?". The emotionally charged ballad shot to #1 in the US and #2
in the UK.
In 1984, Collins produced Philip Bailey's
Chinese Wall album. He performed a duet on one of the
album's tracks, "Easy Lover" which
went to #2 on the U.S. pop chart
and spent four weeks at #1 in the UK. Collins worked with the
horn section
of Bailey's band, Earth, Wind
& Fire (later known as the Phenix [sic] Horns) throughout
the 1980s, both on solo and Genesis tracks. By the end of 1984,
Collins participated in Bob Geldof's
Band Aid
charity project, as well as, playing drums on the Band Aid
single "Feed
The World (Do They Know It's Christmas)", a drum part he
laid down in one take (while being filmed).
Collins with drum set and music stand.
Collins was invited to perform at Live Aid in 1985,
Bob Geldof's charity
concert, at both Wembley
Stadium in England, and
JFK
Stadium in Philadelphia
in the U.S. He accomplished this by performing earlier in the
day at Wembley as both a solo artist and alongside Sting (on
hiatus from The Police), then
boarding a Concorde to perform
his solo material, and drum for Led Zeppelin and
Eric Clapton in
Philadelphia.
Howard
Jones re-recorded his song "No One Is To Blame", off his
Dream into
Action album, featuring Phil Collins as drummer, backing
vocalist, and producer. He has also played drums on singles for
Robert Plant and
Tina Turner on their
respective albums. Collins also produced and played drums on the
Eric Clapton albums
Behind the Sun, August, and Journeyman,
and appeared in the videos for Clapton's "Pretending" and
Bad
Love. Collins's solo success, as well as his concurrent
career with Genesis, led to a 1985 cover story in Rolling
Stone, with the tag reading "Phil Collins Beats the
Odds".
Collins released his most successful album, No Jacket
Required, earlier that same year. It contained the hits
"Sussudio",
"One More
Night", "Don't Lose
My Number" and "
Take Me Home". It also featured the less known tracks "Who Said
I Would" and "Only You Know and I Know". The album featured
Sting, Helen
Terry and ex-bandmate Peter Gabriel as
backing vocalists. He also recorded the successful song
"Separate
Lives", a duet with Marilyn
Martin, and an American number one, for the movie
White
Nights. Collins had three American number one songs in
1985, the most by any artist that year.[21]
No Jacket Required went on to win several Grammy awards
including one for Album of the Year.
No Jacket Required received criticism that the album was
too safe despite its upbeat reviews and commercial success. A
positive review by David Fricke of Rolling Stone ended,
"After years on the art-rock fringe, Collins has established
himself firmly in the middle of the road. Perhaps he should
consider testing himself and his new fans' expectations next time
around."[22]
"Sussudio" also drew criticism for sounding too similar to
Prince’s
"1999", a charge that Collins did not deny.[23]
Nevertheless, the album went straight to #1 in the US and
UK.
"Don't Lose My Number"'s B-side, the ballad "We Said Hello
Goodbye" was rediscovered in 1987 by some Midwestern radio
programmers who began playing it, and it soon became a nationwide
radio hit. It was later included on the No Jacket Required
CD. (A different version of the tune had also appeared on the
soundtrack to the
1986 film Playing
for Keeps.)
In 1988, Collins starred in the movie Buster about
the Great
Train Robbery, which took place in England in the 1960s. The
movie generated good reviews and Collins did three songs for the
movie; "Two
Hearts" - which he co-wrote with Motown songwriter,
Lamont Dozier -
"A Groovy
Kind of Love" (originally a 1966 hit for The
Mindbenders; lyrics by Toni Wine, and
music by Carole Bayer
Sager, but with the melody of the Rondo section of Muzio
Clementi's "Sonatina in G major," op. 36 no. 5.), and thirdly he
did the lyrics and music for the song "Loco In
Acapulco", performed by the legendary Four Tops.
In 1989, Collins produced another successful album,
...But
Seriously, featuring the anti-homelessness anthem
"Another
Day in Paradise", with David Crosby on
backing vocals. (Collins later went on to co-write, sing and
play on the song "Hero" on Crosby's 1993 album Thousand
Roads.) Another Day in Paradise went to Number 1
on the Billboard
Charts at the end of 1989 and won Collins a Grammy for
Record of the Year (1990). In the process, it became the last #1
US pop hit of the 1980s. The album "...But Seriously" became the
first #1 US album of the 1990s. Other songs included "Something
Happened on the Way to Heaven", "Do You Remember?" (not released
in the UK), and "I Wish It Would Rain Down" (the latter
featuring Clapton on guitar). Songs about apartheid and
homelessness demonstrated Collins’ turn to politically-driven
material. This theme recurred on his later albums. A live album,
Serious
Hits... Live!, followed.
Collins’ record sales began to drop with the 1993 release of
Both Sides, a
largely experimental album which, according to Collins, included
songs that "were becoming so personal, so private, I didn't want
anyone else's input".[24]
Featuring a less polished sound and fewer up-tempo songs than his
previous albums, Both Sides was a significant departure.
Collins used no backing musicians, performed all the vocal and
instrumental parts at his home studio, and used rough vocal takes
for the final product. The album was not well received by radio.
Its two biggest hits were "Both Sides of the Story" and
"Everyday".
Collins attempted a return to poppier music with Dance into the
Light, which Entertainment
Weekly reviewed by saying that "(e)ven Phil Collins must
know that we all grew weary of Phil Collins."[25]
It included minor hits such as the title track and the Beatles-inspired
"It’s in Your Eyes". Although the album went Gold in the US, it
sold considerably less than his previous albums. Only the title
track made a brief appearance on Collins’ then forthcoming
Hits
collection. Despite this, its subsequent tour regularly sold out
arenas.
In 1996, Collins formed The
Phil Collins Big Band. With Collins as drummer, the band
performed jazz renditions of Collins’
and Genesis's hits. The Phil Collins Big Band did a world tour in
1998 that included a performance at the Montreux Jazz
Festival. In 1999, the group released the CD A Hot Night in
Paris including big band versions of "Invisible Touch",
"Sussudio", and the more obscure "The Los Endos Suite" from
A Trick of the
Tail.
A Hits album released in 1998 was very successful,
returning Collins to multi-platinum status in America. The album’s
sole new track, a cover of the Cyndi Lauper hit
"True
Colors," received considerable play on the Adult Contemporary
charts while peaking at #2.[26]
Some of Collins’ earlier hits (e.g. "I Missed Again", "If Leaving
Me Is Easy", etc.) and other successes were left off of this
compilation.
Collins' next single, "You'll Be in
My Heart", from the Disney movie Tarzan,
spent 19 weeks at #1 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart - the
longest time ever up to that point - and Collins obtained an
Oscar.
It was his third nomination in the songwriters category, having
been previously nominated in 1984.
Metacritic's roundup
of album reviews found his most recent studio album, 2002's
Testify,
to be the worst-reviewed album by the time of its release, though
it has since been "surpassed" by three more recent
releases.
[27] The album's "Can't Stop Loving You" (a Leo
Sayer cover) was yet another #1 Adult Contemporary smash hit
for Collins. Testify sold 140,000 copies in the United
States by year's end, although a successful worldwide tour
followed.[28]
The hip-hop group
Bone
Thugs-N-Harmony recorded a remake of the song "Take Me Home"
titled "Home" on their album Thug World
Order. The song features verses by the group, with the
chorus sung by Collins. Though the BTNH-Collins collaboration
was highly criticized in the United States (for example, VH1
rated it #9 on its "top 20 least hip-hop moments in history), it
received so much positive reception in the UK that Bone Thugs
decided to name Collins an honorary member under the moniker
"Chrome Bone". Collins reported losing
his hearing in one ear, and in 2003 announced his last solo
tour.[30]
He called it the "First Final Farewell Tour", a tongue-in-cheek
reference to the multiple farewell tours of other popular
artists. He continued touring through 2006 while working with
Disney on a Broadway
production of Tarzan, a musical which received generally
poor reviews. In 2007, Collins reunited with his Genesis
bandmates for a tour of Europe and North America. He accepted an
invitation to drum for the "house band" celebrating Queen
Elizabeth II's Golden
Jubilee. He has played drums for Paul
McCartney, Ozzy Osbourne,
Cliff Richard
as well as Eric
Clapton.
[
edit] Films, theatre and
television
The majority of Collins' film work has been through music. Four
of his seven American number one songs came from film soundtracks,
and his work on Disney's Tarzan earned him an Oscar. Collins
even sung German, Italian, Spanish and French versions of the
Tarzan soundtrack for the respective film versions. Collins's
acting career has been brief. As a child, he appeared in three
films, although two of the films were for brief moments as an
extra. Besides the aforementioned A Hard Day's Night (1964),
Collins's first lead role was in Calamity the Cow
(1967).[31]
Collins wrote and performed the title song to Against All
Odds in 1984. The song became the first of his seven
American number one songs and received an Academy Award nomination
for Best Song. Collins was not invited to perform the song at that
year’s presentation, although he was in the audience and had
arranged his tour around the telecast. It was believed that the
Academy, despite nominating him, did not know who he was. A note to
Collins' label from telecast co-producer Larry Gelbart
explaining the lack of invitation stated, "Thank you for your note
regarding Phil Cooper (emphasis added). I'm afraid the spots
have already been filled". Collins instead watched Ann
Reinking perform his song.[32]
For a long time afterward, he would inform audiences at concerts,
"Miss Ann Reinking's not here tonight, so I guess I'll have to sing
my own song," before performing "Against All Odds".
Collins performed (although did not write) "Separate Lives" for
the film White
Nights (1985). A duet with Marilyn
Martin, the single became an additional Number One for
Collins as well as another nominee for an Academy Award (it
being a songwriters award, Collins was not nominated). The song
had parallels to his first two albums. Writer Stephen
Bishop noted that he was inspired by a failed relationship
and called "Separate Lives" "a song about anger".[33]
Collins's first film role since becoming a musician came in 1988
with Buster.
His rendition of "Groovy Kind of
Love", originally a 1966 single by The
Mindbenders, reached Number One. The film also spawned the hit
single "Two Hearts", which he wrote in collaboration with legendary
Motown songwriter
Lamont Dozier.
Movie critic Roger Ebert said the
role of Buster was "played with surprising effectiveness" by
Collins, although the film's soundtrack proved more successful than
the movie.[34]
Collins provided the voices to both Muk and Luk in the 1995
animated feature
Balto.
Collins' had a starring role in 1993's Frauds. He had
cameo appearances in Steven
Spielberg's Hook (1991)
and And
the Band Played On (1993). He also supplied voices to two
animated features, Balto (1995) and
The Jungle Book
2 (2003). A long-discussed but never completed project was
a movie titled The Three
Bears. Originally meant to star him alongside Danny DeVito and
Bob Hoskins, he
often mentioned the film but an appropriate script never
materialized.[35]
Collins performed the soundtrack to the animated film
Tarzan
(1999) for The Walt
Disney Company. He won an Oscar for "You'll Be in
My Heart", which he performed at that year’s telecast as well
as during a Disney-themed Super Bowl halftime
show. The song, which he also recorded in Spanish among
other languages, became his only appearance on Billboard's Hot
Latin Tracks.[26]
Disney hired him along with Tina Turner in 2003
for the soundtracks to
another animated feature film, Brother Bear,
and had some airplay with the song "Look Through My Eyes".
On television, he twice hosted the Billboard Music
Awards. He also appeared in an episode of the series
Miami Vice,
entitled "Phil the Shill", in which he plays a cheating con-man. He
also guest starred in several sketches with The Two
Ronnies. Most recently, he had a cameo appearance on the
television series Whoopi.
In 2001, Collins was sought out by the satirist Chris
Morris and appeared in the Brass Eye
'Paedophile
Special' endorsing a spoof charity called 'Nonce
Sense'. At one point Collins, dressed in a matching baseball cap
and t-shirt emblazoned with the name of this fictitious charity,
stares into the camera and declares: "...I'm talking
Nonce-sense."
In 2005, Collins' work on Brother Bear
was expanded as Disney used the song "Welcome" as the theme for
Walt
Disney's Parade of Dreams, the main parade celebrating the 50th
Anniversary of Disneyland.
In 2006 Disney's Tarzan
was adapted for Broadway.
Collins contributed 11 new songs and instrumental pieces, and was
deeply involved in the production. Unlike the movie, where Collins
sang all the material, the characters sang on stage.
Collins made an appearance as himself in the 2006 PlayStation
Portable and PlayStation 2
video game
Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories, set in 1984. He
appears in three missions in which the main character must save him
from a gang that is trying to kill him, the final mission occurring
during his concert, where the player must defend the scaffolding
against saboteurs whilst Phil is simultaneously performing "In The
Air Tonight." After this, the player is given the opportunity to
watch this performance of 'In the Air Tonight.' "In The Air
Tonight" is also featured in the movie
Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film For Theaters and the
2007 Gorilla
commercial for Cadbury's Dairy Milk
chocolate. All this is a tribute to a character he played in an
episode of the hit show: Miami Vice, "Phil The
Shill."
[
edit] Personal
life
Collins was married to Andrea Bertorelli of Canada, whom he met
at a drama class in London,[36]
in 1975. They had a son, Simon Collins, and
Collins adopted Bertorelli's daughter Joely
Collins, now a Canadian actress.
They divorced in 1980.
Collins and his second wife, Jill Tavelman, were married from
1984 to 1996. They had one daughter, Lily Collins, who now co-hosts
the Nickelodeon
program Slime Across
America and is currently a fashion model signed to Next.
Collins openly admits that some of their divorce-related
correspondence was by fax (one, about access to
their daughter, was reproduced in The
Sun), but denies that this took her by
surprise.[37]
Collins married his third wife, Orianne Cevey, in 1999. The
couple had two sons, Nicholas and Matthew. They lived in
Switzerland
(Begnins), overlooking Lake Geneva,
before announcing their separation on March 16, 2006.
Collins has said he will continue to live in Switzerland to be
near the children. He lives in Féchy and also
maintains a holiday home in the coastal Norfolk village of
Dersingham .
Collins is the boyfriend of CBS news anchor Dana
Tyler. The pair met when Tyler interviewed him about Tarzan
opening on Broadway in May 2006.
Collins is a supporter of animal rights and
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). In 2005, he
donated autographed drumsticks in support of PETA's campaign
against Kentucky
Fried Chicken. Collins is a supporter of Tottenham
Hotspur Football Club and used to support Queens
Park Rangers F.C., before changing his mind when Spurs
reached the 1991 FA Cup Final.
He stated in an interview that he is planning a retirement for
himself again.
[
edit] Further
reading
- Ray Coleman, Phil
Collins: The Definitive Biography, Simon & Schuster.
London. 1997. ISBN
0-684-81784-5
- Dave Thompson, Turn It On Again: Peter Gabriel, Phil
Collins, and Genesis, Back Beat Books, San Francisco. 2004.
ISBN
0-87930-810-9
- Fred Bronson, The Billboard Book of Number One Hits.
Billboard Books, New York. 1998. ISBN
0823076415 (Eight essays about Collins, including one with
Genesis)
- Craig Rosen, The Billboard Book of Number One Albums.
Billboard Books, New York. 1996. ISBN
0-8230-7586-9 (Two essays about Collins)
[
edit] Discography
[
edit] Studio
albums
The following list includes all Phil Collins'
albums with the exception of compilations, live and remix albums.
For a complete album list, see
Phil
Collins discography.
[
edit] Number One
singles
[
edit] See also
[
edit] Notes
- ^
Atlantic Records press release. "Phil Collins Celebrates TESTIFY
with Weekend Today Performance and NYC In-Store" 11/15/02.
- ^
Coleman, R. Phil Collins: The Definitive Biography, Simon
& Schuster. London. 1997. Pgs 29–30. ISBN
0-684-81784-5
- ^
Face Value: From the Official Genesis Biography. [1]
(Accessed January 10,
2006)
- ^
Yahoo! Movies The Beatles - The Making of A Hard Day's Night (1995)
[2] (Accessed January 9,
2006)
- ^
Coleman, Pg 51.
- ^
The Official George Harrison Website [3]
- ^
Phil Collins listing on imdb.com[4] (Accessed October 17,
2007)
- ^
Hewitt, A. Official Biography [5]
(Accessed January 9,
2006)
- ^
Coleman, Pg 55.
- ^
Coleman, Pg 61.
- ^
Billboard Magazine, Online. "Genesis" Biography. Accessed
January 16,
2006. [6]
- ^
Coleman, Pg 63.
- ^
Nicholson, Kris. "A Trick of the Tail" Review. Rolling Stone.
May
20, 1976. [7]. Accessed February 10,
2006.
- ^
Official Brand X biography from the Phil Collins website,
[8], accessed January 14,
2006.
- ^
MTV.com. MTV Video Awards, Past Winners. [9]. Accessed January 16,
2006.
- ^
Considine, J.D. "Invisible Touch" Review. Rolling Stone.
August 14,
1986. [10] Accessed February 8,
2006.
- ^
Hewitt, A. Official Biography. [11]
(Accessed January 9,
2006)
- ^
Heller, C. "Phil Collins Said Open to Genesis Reunion".
November 6,
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[
edit] References
- Atlantic Records Press Release (November 15, 2002).
Phil Collins Celebrates TESTIFY With Weekend
Today Performance and NYC In-Store. Atlantic Records.
Retrieved on January 19, 2006.
- Baker, G.A. (1993). Penthouse Interview. Penthouse. Retrieved on January
13, 2006.
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Retrieved on January 16, 2006.
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Retrieved on January 13, 2006.
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Billboard Books, New York. 1998. Pg. 624. ISBN
0823076415
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Weekly. Retrieved on February 10, 2006.
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Retrieved on January 13, 2006.
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Retrieved on February 8, 2006.
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baby boomers with significant hearing loss and/or tinnitus.
Retrieved on January 13, 2006.
- Heller, Corinne (November 6, 2005). Phil Collins Said Open to Genesis Reunion.
Reuters / ABCNews. Retrieved on January 14, 2006.
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"Opening the Music Box: A Genesis Chronicle". Excerpted on
www.philcollins.co.uk. Retrieved on January 14, 2006.
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ISBN
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| Persondata |
| NAME |
Collins, Phil |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES |
Collins, Philip David Charles |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION |
British musician |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
January 30,
1951 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH |
Chiswick, London,
England |
| DATE OF DEATH |
|
| PLACE OF DEATH |
|