Phil Collins plays at a possible return by offering a new listen to his past

The singer and drummer is taking a step out of musical retirement by offering up huge chunks of his past.

Singer-songwriter Phil Collins is re-releasing all eight of his solo albums, remastered. Drew Gurian / Invision / AP Photo
Powered by automated translation

Singer and drummer Phil Collins is taking one tentative step out of musical retirement by offering up huge chunks of his past.

The multiple Grammy Award-winner is re-releasing all eight of his solo albums, each remastered and accompanied by a second CD of demos and live recordings, many previously unreleased.

His hope is that fans will explore more than just the hits, such as the radio mainstays In the Air Tonight, A Groovy Kind of Love, One More Night, Sussudio, You Can't Hurry Love, Against All Odds and Separate Lives.

“People that don’t like me – and there are some, I know it’s hard to believe – most of the time have based their opinion on what they hear on the radio. It’s played to death,” he says. “I’m a bit more than that. And the ‘bit more’ is on the albums.”

He's already released 1981's Face Value and 1993's Both Sides. Last week came 1982's Hello, I Must Be Going! and 1996's Dance Into the Light. Each new double-CD has Collins recreating his pose from the original album cover.

A long list of current artists – including Adele, Lorde, Kanye West and Pharrell Williams – have publicly come out as fans. “I’m very flattered by that and I think there’s a lot of people out there that may think, ‘OK. Let’s see what the fuss is about’,” says Collins.

The 65-year-old, from Middlesex, England, was the drummer and then lead singer for the band Genesis in the 1970s, and embarked on a solo career in the 1980s that made him one of the most commercially successful artists of all time.

He is estimated to have sold 100 million albums with Genesis and another 100 million as a solo artist.

He won an Academy Award and a Grammy for his soundtrack to the film Tarzan, while his album No Jacket Required won a Grammy for album of the year in 1985. His Another Day In Paradise also picked up the Grammys' top award for Record of the Year in 1990.

In 2011, Collins formally announced his retirement, three years after his third marriage ended in divorce and as health issues mounted. Nerve problems meant the father of five could no longer grip with his left hand. He was deaf in one ear.

“I felt I owed myself some time off. And also I wanted to bring up my two young boys – now 14 and 11,” he says. “I just wanted to be a dad for the first time. A proper dad.”

Now living in Miami near his children, Collins has built a recording studio and hopes soon to start making music again.

“The longer it goes, the bigger the jump,” he says of the songwriting process. He even hopes he can drum again after injuring nerves in his elbow during a Genesis reunion tour in 2007.

“Living life – cutting bread, cutting a bit of cheese – was just impossible,” he recalls. “But it’s got better. And I think I just have to learn to play in a different way. That’s my intention.”

Collins has been getting encouragement from his elder children, including his sons Simon, 39, and Nicholas, 14, who are both in bands. Nicholas, a drummer and guitarist, likes to rehearse at Collins’s house.

“I give them advice but no one listens to it,” he says, laughing. “I’m kind of the elder statesman. They come in, sit around. Occasionally I’ll say, ‘What about ...?’ They’ll listen but they’ll go their own way.”

artslife@thenational.ae