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  <title>Episode 8: A Foxtrot When Supper's Ready</title>
  <description>If there's a single record that might be said to occupy the heart of prog rock, there's a good case to be made for Genesis's 1972 &amp;quot;Foxtrot,&amp;quot; a record that begins with the cinematic, Mellotron-drenched &amp;quot;Watcher of the Skies,&amp;quot; comments on rapacious landlords in a mixture of Dickens and dystopian sci-fi with &amp;quot;Get 'Em Out by Friday&amp;quot; and then winds up with &amp;quot;Supper's Ready,&amp;quot; clocking in at almost 24 minutes, a journey through mystery, mythology, identity crisis, and the Book of Revelation that will have you humming along in 9/8. This week, Charlie, Henry, and Bill face down the task of explaining just why this thickly-packed, tuneful and ambitious record winds up an all-thriller, no-filler example of prog rock's pleasures.  On Youtube: &amp;quot;Supper's Ready&amp;quot; live in concert (with costume changes!) &amp;quot;Foxtrot&amp;quot; full album &amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>An Embarrassment of Prog</author_name>
  <author_url>https://sites.libsyn.com/445095</author_url>
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