Yes: on retrouve en effet des passages qui resserviront pour des albums à venir, dont "Nursery Crime".
Merci pour la découverte de ce "frankenalbum"
En consultant pour celui qui est utilisé pour "Anyway", je viens de lire, par cet acte, que Eno avait fait une petite petite participation (surtout selon Banks) à " The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway" pour des traitements sur deux (trois ?) titres. J'avais complètement oublié cette info que j'avais lu il y a des lustres.
Brian Eno is credited with "Enossification" on the Lamb. What we know about this is recorded here:
Phil Collins mentioned it almost by accident during a session work discussion in an interview for a feature article in November 1983 issue of Modern Drummer magazine: "For instance, when Genesis was doing "The Lamb", Eno was upstairs and he met Peter (Gabriel). Peter wanted to feed his vocals through some of Eno's synthesizers. So, he came down. As payment for that, I was sent upstairs to play on Eno's record, which was a track on "Taking Tiger Mountain By Strategy". We hit it off well, so when he [made?] "Another Green World", he rang me and Percy (Jones from Brand X) up and I did all the drums on that."
Greg Stone's radio program Stone Trek on KOME radio had a broadcast on 6/14/92 of an older interview, in which Eno was mentioned.
GS: While we're on "The Lamb Lies Down", how did you come across Brian Eno?
TB: His contribution to the album is minimal actually ; I often wonder why we even credited him, because what he did was very little...
GS: Confused everyone..
TB: Yes it did, it confused a lot of people I think. We came across him because he worked at Island -- he was involved with Island studios while we were doing the album, you know, and he was up in the other studio doing some things, and Peter invited him down just to do a few effects on the vocals, and basically that's what Eno did, he did those effects on "The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging", those sort of funny effects on the vocals, and also on "In The Cage"; that was really all he did.