I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)

"I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)"
Single by Genesis
from the album Selling England by the Pound
B-side "Twilight Alehouse"
Released February 1974[1]
Format 7"
Recorded August 1973
Genre
Length 4:06
Label Charisma
Atlantic
Writer(s)
Producer(s)
  • John Burns
  • Genesis
Genesis singles chronology
"Watcher of the Skies" / "Willow Farm"
(1972)
"I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)"
(1974)
"Counting Out Time"
(1974)
"I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)"

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"I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)" was the first charting single by the rock band Genesis. It was drawn from the 1973 album Selling England by the Pound. The single was released in the UK in February 1974,[1] and became a "minor hit"[2] in April 1974, when it reached number 21 in the UK Singles Chart.[3]

Production

The song's lyrics concern a young man who is employed as a groundsman and who says that he does not want to grow up and do great things, being perfectly happy where he is, pushing a lawn mower. Betty Swanwick's painting The Dream, which was used for the Selling England album cover, alludes to the song; Swanwick added the mower to the original painting at the band's request.

The song, inspired by the Beatles,[2] has a psychedelic rock sound, using hand percussion rhythms and a riff from Steve Hackett that originated from a jam between Hackett and Phil Collins.[4] Keyboardist Tony Banks used a note played on the low end of the Mellotron during the intro and ending to imitate the sound of a lawn mower.

Release and reception

Released by Charisma in the UK in February 1974, "I Know What I Like" was the band's only pop hit of their early years, at a time when progressive rock bands largely avoided the singles market. The song was played on Top of the Pops. Its success would not be topped until And Then There Were Three album's "Follow You Follow Me", some four years later in 1978.

The B-side was the non-album track "Twilight Alehouse", recorded during the sessions for Foxtrot (1972) but left off the album due to lack of room. Its lyrics portray a lonely man who finds solace in the local tavern. This song had been in Genesis' live set since 1970 but was not recorded in the studio until 1972 during the Foxtrot sessions, and its initial release was held until this point. "Twilight Alehouse" was later released as part of Genesis Archive 1967-75.

Live performance

Later live versions of this song (such as the one on Seconds Out) feature an extended instrumental section which includes snippets of various other Genesis songs – such as "Visions of Angels", "Blood on the Rooftops", "Dancing with the Moonlit Knight" and "Stagnation" – and songs by other artists, such as "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood". Phil Collins performed a dance during these instrumentals, using a tambourine in a tight, rhythmic fashion against his hands, elbows, knees, feet and head; this can seen in the Genesis: In Concert film from 1977, as well as the live DVDs The Way We Walk – Live in Concert (1992) and When in Rome 2007.

For The Way We Walk and Turn It On Again tours, this song was played as part of a medley of old Genesis songs, and starting with the A Trick of the Tail tour in 1976 was often performed with excerpts of "Stagnation", from the album Trespass (1970). During the Turn It On Again tour shows, images from the band's history cycled by in the background.

Cover versions

In 1993, Marillion's ex-frontman Fish did a cover version on his Songs from the Mirror album. Fish said his decision to cover the song was to prove to his critics that he could interpret a song differently from Gabriel, having been previously dismissed in his career as a Gabriel clone.[5]

Personnel

References

  1. 1 2 Dave Bowler, Bryan Dray (1992). Genesis - A Biography. Sidgwick & Jackson. p. 249. ISBN 978-0-283-06132-5.
  2. 1 2 Genesis (2008). Genesis Box Set 3 (1970–1975)/Selling England by the Pound – 2007 reissues interview (Box Set/Original Recording Remastered) (DVD). Rhino Records. ASIN B001EO2UJK. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
  3. Genesis UK chart history, The Official Charts Company. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  4. "Genesis on Selling England By The Pound Complete Interview 1 of 3". Retrieved 17 May 2014.
  5. Anil Prasad. "Fish: Mirroring influences". Innerviews. Retrieved 9 August 2014.
  6. Genesis isolated vocals: I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe) on YouTube
Sources
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