A Tower Struck Down - Steve Hackett, Hackett, John [Flut
Hands of the Priestess, Pt. 2
The Hermit
Star of Sirius
The Lovers
Shadow of the Hierophant
After leaving Genesis in 1977 and shortly after completing a tour to promote Wind and Wuthering, Steve Hackett focused on assembling a solo career that ultimately produced several well-received albums, not the least of whi... more »ch was Voyage of the Acolyte, which featured guest appearances by Phil Collins and Mike Rutherford (two thirds of the remaining full-time Genesis members) and contributions from Sally Odlfield and his brother John. Consisting of several highly melodic tracks, only three of which contain vocals drawing on the decidedly idyllic and magical subject matter, the album will treat those who appreciate expert musicianship and artistry. --Paul Clark« less
After leaving Genesis in 1977 and shortly after completing a tour to promote Wind and Wuthering, Steve Hackett focused on assembling a solo career that ultimately produced several well-received albums, not the least of which was Voyage of the Acolyte, which featured guest appearances by Phil Collins and Mike Rutherford (two thirds of the remaining full-time Genesis members) and contributions from Sally Odlfield and his brother John. Consisting of several highly melodic tracks, only three of which contain vocals drawing on the decidedly idyllic and magical subject matter, the album will treat those who appreciate expert musicianship and artistry. --Paul Clark
Mark D Burgh | Fort Smith, AR United States | 11/01/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Many of the best Prog albums after 1973 were not group works but so-called "solo" albums. Steve Hackett, fed up by his work being excluded from Genesis albums, and taking advantage of the hiatus forced by Peter Gabriel's departure, went into the studio and worked out his frustrations, producing a fine album of extended pieces that were better than any Genesis work that followed. The opening of the album, "The Ace of Wands" is a paradigmic prog composition; meters run rampant, thematic material swoops from mood to mood, minor to major, instrument to instrument, with melodrama and muscular playing depicting this figure from the Tarot deck and establishing Hackett's credos as a guitar god. The album follows through with this form; changes in mood, from acoustic reveries to near-heavy metal shriek fests occur throughout. Phil Collins appears to sing the "Star of Sirius" to good effect. All the songs work in their own way, though they lack the absolute focus of Banks/Rutherford, they still are creditable works. Maybe it's wrong to think of them as songs and think of them as compositions, which is truer, I think to the actual work and to Hackett's intentions. Other prog solo albums of this time, Squire's Fish out Water, and Jon Anderson's Olias of Sunhillow exhibit similar scope and determination, somewhat familiar to fans of their home bands, but still outside the expected. Hackett's solo work in point: far more jazzy and frenetic than Genesis' was or would ever be, yet recognizable as part of the Genesis sound world. The joke was on Steve; when he left the band, Banks and Rutherford hired a studio dude to mimic the sound Hackett forged; that's the trouble with a style: unlike mediocre unimaginative playing, a style can be copied. Here is Hackett shaking off the shackles, showing he can out-prog the progiest. Name another 1975 rock album with this much daring. Well worth your time and money."
Steve Hackett's Incredible Voyage
progrock86 | Los Angeles | 04/12/2002
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Steve Hackett's first solo album, a largely instrumental group of songs, remains something incredible, almost 30 years after its release.
The tracks on this disc are predominantly instrumentals, featuring lots of trademark Hackett guitar leads as well as some delicious synth playing and acoustic guitar. "Ace of Wands" is a magnificent mini-epic full of outstanding playing, memorable compostition and perfect instrumentation. "Hand of the Priestess" pats 1 and two as well as "the Lovers" are soft, pastoral pieces featuring delicate acoustic guitar and superb flute leads. "The Hermit" and the "Star of Sirius" feature vocals by Phil Collins and Hackett himself. "Star" has particularily impressive guitar/mellotron textures accompanied by synth and vibes, which border on spacey at times.
"Shadow of the Hierophant," the disc's lengthy closer is a very nice operatic sort of tune featuring vocals of that style by Sally Oldfield. The epic fadeout of the song is not to be missed, but it drags on for far too long, which explains the detraction of a star. "A Tower Struck Down" is the only tense song on this otherwise mellow, often pretty collection of songs.
Fans of Hackett's later work will find this somewhat different from his other material, but most of his followers as well as fans of early Genesis and prog in general will find this incredibly melodic album a real treat."
Voyage of Steve Hackett
Mark D Burgh | 06/25/1998
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Voyage of the Acolyte is actually the first Genesis solo album (one minor error in Paul Clark's nice review). This solo album came out before Peter Gabriel's first solo album. It was recorded in June & July of 1975 just after the Lamb Lies Down on Broadway Tour. Peter Gabriel had just left the band, and Genesis had yet to record Trick of the Tail (November, December 1976). Steve Hackett's first solo voyage shows the depth of creativity which he only continued to expand throughout his post-Genesis solo career which began after his departure following the Wind & Wuthering tour. Steve continues to this day to do things most rock musicians wouldn't, or couldn't, do (like record a CD with the Royal Phil, or play the Vivaldi guitar concerto with the English Chamber Orch). The cover is one of many of the beautiful pieces of art work done by Steve's wife, Brazilian artist Kim Poor (greatly praised by Salvador Dali)."
The Best Post-Gabriel Genesis Album That Genesis NEVER Made
P. McKenna | Atlanta GA | 10/13/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Steve Hackett's first solo disc is a beautiful, complex alternately entrancing and terrifying first effort.
Freed of the constraints of Genesis (who were, according to Gabriel becoming VERY set in their ways, plus Steve's contributions were rather minimalized in the context of the band), Steve wrote a set of very personal music encompassing many moods from beautiful and pastoral ("Hands of The Priestess I & II") to terrifying ("A Tower Struck Down"), frenetic ("Ace of Wands") pensive ("The Hermit") and so much more.
Unlike many guitarists solo discs, Steve doesn't set out ot blow you away with displays of chops but rather lets the songs be the star. He gets plenty of capable help from his bandmates Phil Collins (also singing on the beautiful "Sirius The Star"), Mike Rutherford as well as other notables on the English prog-rock scene at the time (for instance Mike Oldfield's sister Sally does an amazing vocal turn on "Shadow of The Heirophant"). In particular, Collins' drumming here just smokes, especially on "Ace Of Wands" {listening to this however makes me sad to realize that his drumming has since gone completely down the sewer, it hurt even more to hear him in interviews years later totally slamming Genesis' work from this period as that "silly progressive music", but that's another rant).
Back to the subject at hand, this was the start of Steve's rather varied and ecclectic solo career. Some Hackett discs are brilliant, some are rather cheesy but this one is a five-star barnburner! Highly recommended
PS: Great Halloween-type cuts include "Tower Struck Down" and the last part of "Shadow of The Heirophant", play these and watch the spooks come flying out of the speakers."
The Voyage Of Steve Hackett
Alan Caylow | USA | 10/21/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"1975's "Voyage Of The Acolyte" was the debut solo album for Genesis guitarist Steve Hackett, recorded two years before he left the band. In my opinion, "Voyage Of The Acolyte" remains his best solo work to date. "Acolyte" is an absolutely gorgeous album, with Steve magically weaving rock with classical, creating a perfect prog-rock palette of moods, feelings, and sounds. The album also boasts excellent production & phenomenal musicianship, not only from Steve (whose guitar work here is sensational) but also from his Genesis co-horts Mike Rutherford on bass and Phil Collins on drums, and his brother John Hackett on flute. Powerful rockers include "Ace Of Wands," "A Tower Struck Down" and the closing section of "Shadow Of The Hierophant," while "Star Of Sirius" (featuring lead vocals from Phil) is wonderful prog-pop. Exquisitely beautiful pieces include "Hands Of The Priestess Parts I & II," "The Hermit" (with lead vocals by Steve) and the opening section of "Hierophant," with a lovely vocal by Sally Oldfield. "Voyage Of The Acolyte" is Steve Hackett's masterpiece, an album that sounds just as fresh now as it did 30 years ago. No diehard fan of Steve's or Genesis or progressive rock in general should do without it."