No Reply at All

"No Reply at All"
Single by Genesis
from the album Abacab
B-side "Naminanu / Dodo"
Released 9 September 1981
Format 7" / 12"
Recorded 1981
Genre Pop rock
Length 4:40 (LP version)
4:00 (US promo single edit)
Label Charisma/Virgin (UK)
Atlantic (US)
Writer(s) Tony Banks, Phil Collins, Mike Rutherford
Producer(s) Genesis
Genesis singles chronology
"Abacab"
(1981)
"No Reply at All"
(1981)
"Keep It Dark"
(1981)
Abacab track listing
"Abacab"
(1)
"No Reply at All"
(2)
"Me and Sarah Jane"
(3)

"No Reply at All" is a song by British band Genesis, from their 1981 album Abacab.

Structure

This song, like Phil Collins' solo track "I Missed Again" (recorded at around the same time), makes prominent use of a horn section, arranged by Tom Tom 84 (i.e. Thomas Washington, horn arranger for Earth, Wind & Fire) and played by that band's wind players, credited on the song as "EWF Horns". The song marks a step toward the mainstream pop direction Genesis was taking at the time, yet it still contains elements of their past: complex, melodic bass riffs, and a cross-hand technique on a Prophet-5, similar to the style used for the intro to "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway." When Genesis performed the song live during a concert in Leiden, the Netherlands, on 3 October 1981 the band was booed at.

The song was released as the first single from Abacab in the U.S., and reached the U.S. Top 30 in the fall of 1981. "No Reply at All" spent 18 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, longer than most of their hits which reached the Top 10, including "Invisible Touch", which spent only 17 weeks on the chart.

The song was performed live by Phish as a tribute to Genesis at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 2010 induction ceremony. Phish also performed "Watcher of the Skies" that night. Tony Banks and Phil Collins would later state during the ceremony that the song was not any good live.

Meaning

When introducing the song on the 1981 Abacab tour, Collins said it is about miscommunication between two people in a relationship.

Music video

The music video features only the band. Cameras revolve around the band playing their parts in a rehearsal setting. When the horn part is prominent, it cuts to a different shot of the band – wearing hats, sunglasses, and jackets to conceal their identity – playing the trumpet, saxophone and trombone.

Chart performance

Weekly singles charts

Chart (1981–82) Position
U.S. Mainstream Rock [1] 2
Canadian RPM [2] 7
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 29
U.S. Cash Box Top 100 [3] 28
WLS-AM (Chicago) [4] 11

Year-end charts

Chart (1981) Position
Canada [5] 44
WLS (Chicago) [6] 58

External links

References

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