Mostrando postagens com marcador Steve Howe. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Steve Howe. Mostrar todas as postagens

13.3.20

ANDERSON · BRUFORD · WAKEMAN · HOWE — Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe (1989-2010) 2CD | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

File under "Yes." When this version of the band couldn't obtain rights to the name, they put their album out under their combined names, but it's still Yes by any other name. Jon Anderson's tenor wails through spacy lyrics, Rick Wakeman constructs cathedrals of synthesized sound, Steve Howe rips high-pitched guitar leads, and Bill Bruford makes his drums sound like timpani. For all that, it's a pedestrian effort for these veterans, not as bombastic as some of their stuff, not as inspired as others, but it definitely has the "Yes" sound. "She Gives Me Love" even refers to "Long Distance Runaround." by William Ruhlmann

ANDERSON · BRUFORD · WAKEMAN · HOWE — Brother of Mine (1989) Single | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless


ANDERSON · BRUFORD · WAKEMAN · HOWE — An Evening of Yes Music Plus (1993) 2CD | APE (image+.cue), lossless

Recorded live on the final night of the 1989 Anderson/Bruford/Wakeman/Howe tour, this two-CD set offers both oldies and improvements upon their new material. You'll probably find yourself listening only to the second CD, as the first CD largely consists of shaky solo medleys. Howe fares the best with delicate renditions of "Mood for a Day" and "The Clap." Anderson's guitar and vocal turn comes off like a coffeehouse gig -- not bad, especially when he samples "Teakbois," but not riveting. Wakeman's "Merlin" and "Catherine Parr" solo trades speed for precision, and the crowd is unaccountably thrilled when he wrenches unimpressive blow-bottle sounds out of a keyboard. Bruford blows his solo yet again, just as in Yessongs; infatuated with electronic percussion, he produces a grating assortment of clanks and conks. Once past the solos, though, this set picks up steam. The ABWH album was a soulless-sounding production; songs like "Soul Warrior" and "Brother of Mine" are both warmer in sound and more lively in rhythm when performed on-stage. Fans may also appreciate Bruford's unprecedented live appearance on "Close to the Edge"; though he played on the 1972 studio album, he had left the band before ever getting to play it live. Paul Collins 

12.3.20

RICK WAKEMAN — The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1973-2009) RM | SHM-CD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Not only did this album help pave the way for progressive rock, but it also introduced the unbridled energy and overall effectiveness of the synthesizer as a bona fide instrument. Six Wives gave Wakeman his chance to break away from the other instrumental complexities that made up Yes and allowed him to prove what a driving force the keyboard could truly be, especially in full album form. More than just synthesized wandering, Wakeman astoundingly conjures up a separate musical persona by way of an instrumental ode to each of Henry VIII's wives through his dazzling use of the Mellotron, Moog, and Hammond C-3 organ. For example, Wakeman's fiery runs and fortissimo thwarting of the synthesizer throughout "Anne Boleyn" is a tribute to her feisty temper and valiant courage that she maintained while standing up to her husband. With "Jane Seymour," on the other hand, Wakeman's playing is somewhat subdued and gentle, which coincides with her legendary meekness and frailty, as well as her willingness to cater to Henry VIII. Wakeman's masterful use of his synthesizers is instrumentally stunning, as is his talent of magically shaping the notes to represent behavioral idiosyncrasies of his characters. Yes bassist Chris Squire lends a hand on "Catherine of Aragon," while guitarist Steve Howe and drummer Bill Bruford appear on a few tracks as well, as does former Strawbs member Dave Cousins, playing the electric banjo. The Six Wives of Henry VIII unleashes the unyielding power of the keyboard as a dominant instrument, but also displays Wakeman at the beginning of an extremely resplendent career as a solo musician. Mike DeGagne  
Tracklist :
1.    Catherine Of Aragon 3:41
Bass – Chris Squire, Les Hurdle
Drums – Bill Bruford
Engineer, Mixed By – Ken Scott
Guitar – Mike Egan, Steve Howe
Percussion – Ray Cooper
Vocals – Barry St. John, Judy Powell, Liza Strike

2.    Anne Of Cleves  7:50
Bass – Dave Winter
Drums – Alan White
Guitar – Mike Egan
Percussion – Frank Riccotti

3.    Catherine Howard  6:35
Banjo [Electric] – Dave Cousins
Bass – Chas Cronk
Drums – Barry De Souza
Guitar – Dave Lambert (4)
Percussion – Frank Riccotti

4.     Jane Seymour 4:44
Drums – Alan White
5.     Anne Boleyn 'The Day Thou Gavest Lord Hath Ended' 6:30
Arranged By [End Hymn] – Rick Wakeman
Bass – Les Hurdle
Drums – Bill Bruford
Engineer – Ken Scott
Guitar – Mike Egan
Mixed By – Dave Henshall
Percussion – Ray Cooper
Vocals – Laura Lee, Liza Strike, Sylvia McNeill
Written-By [End Hymn] – E.J. Hopkins

6.     Catherine Parr 7:03
Bass – Dave Winter
Drums – Alan White
Guitar – Mike Egan
Percussion – Frank Riccotti

STEVE HOWE - Beginnings (1975-1994) RM / FLAC (image+.cue), lossless


Steve Howe's first solo album was a failure next to rival solo releases by Jon Anderson and Chris Squire, both of whom yielded work that was more majestic and memorable. The playing is strong throughout, but towards what end is the mystery -- none of the songs are particularly memorable, nor is the production (even a guest appearance by members of the folk-rock group Gryphon doesn't help), and Howe is such a weak singer that he'd have been better off following the lead of his Yes predecessor Peter Banks and sticking to instrumentals. by Bruce Eder
Tracklist:
1 Doors Of Sleep 4:05
Drums – Alan White
2 Australia 4:14
Drums – Alan White
3 The Nature Of The Sea 3:54
Bass – Malcolm Bennett
Drums – David Oberle 
Guitar – Graeme Taylor
4 Lost Symphony 4:38
Baritone Saxophone, Alto Saxophone [Solo] – Bud Beadle
Bass – Colin Gibson
Drums – Alan White
Piano – Patrick Moraz
Tenor Saxophone – Mick Eve
5 Beginnings 7:29
Bass – Chris Laurence
Bassoon – Gwyd Brooke
Cello – Peter Halling
Drums – Alan White
Harpsichord, Piano, Synthesizer [Moog] – Patrick Moraz
Oboe – Sidney Sutcliffe
Piccolo Flute – James Gregory  
Viola – John Meek
Violin – Patrick Halling, William Reid
6 Will O'the Wisp 5:59
Drums – Alan White
Grand Piano, Mellotron – Patrick Moraz
7 Ram 1:52
8 Pleasure Stole The Night 2:53
Drums – Bill Bruford
Flute – Malcolm Bennett
Strings [Double String] – Chris Laurence
9 Break Away From It All 4:20
Drums, Percussion – Bill Bruford

STEVE HOWE - The Steve Howe Album (1979-2011) RM / SHM-CD / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless


Steve Howe's second solo effort is his most essential recording. The Steve Howe Album contains many of Howe's strongest and most original compositions. Whereas some of his albums can be associated with the sound of the bands in which he's played, this release is unique. Howe places himself in a country/bluegrass setting on most of the compositions, and that is what makes this project so appealing -- he's a rock veteran venturing outside of his field. And with Graham Preskett playing violin on "The Continental," Howe turns in what sounds like a real hoedown. The first track, "Pennants," is a gem for the more rock-oriented fan. The cut opens with the sweet, resonant, rocking sounds of Howe's Fender Telecaster; he then adds mandolin and a pervasive twin-neck steel, while drummer Alan White keeps it all rhythmic. Half of the tracks are played by Howe alone, most notably "Surface Tension," his composition for solo Spanish guitar. Other cuts feature former Yes-mates White, Bill Bruford, and Patrick Moraz (all of whom participated on Howe's first solo album), and Claire Hamill, who sings beautifully on "Look Over Your Shoulder." Only one other cut includes vocals: "All's a Chord," on which Howe's singing is awkward but appealing. The song, comprised of several movements and musical styles (including classical), features Howe on eight different stringed instruments, including bass, pedal steel, sitar, banjo, mandolin, and his trademark deep-bodied electric-acoustic Gibson ES 175 D. The final two pieces are set apart from the rest of the recordings. On both compositions, equipped only with his Gibson Les Paul, Howe is accompanied by a string ensemble on his interpretation of Vivaldi's Concerto in D, Second Movement, and by a 59-piece orchestra on "Double Rondo." Andrew Jackman (who served as orchestrator and conductor on Chris Squire's Fish Out of Water several years earlier) conducts. The Steve Howe Album is a culmination of everything Howe represents, every genre of music he loves so dearly, exquisitely played and arranged. The inside cover colorfully depicts all the stringed instruments Howe used on the recordings, and Roger Dean's cover painting makes the package complete. The sound quality of the Japanese import compact disc is unsurpassed, incredibly sharp and vibrant. by David Ross Smith  
Tracklist:
1 Pennants 4:30
Drums – Alan White
Guitar, Bass, Written-By – Steve Howe
Synthesizer – Ronnie Leahy
2 Cactus Boogie 2:02
Guitar, Bass, Synthesizer [Moog], Vocals, Written-By – Steve Howe
Percussion – Clive Bunker
3 All's A Chord 4:56
Drums – Bill Bruford
Guitar, Bass, Synthesizer [Moog], Vocals, Written-By – Steve Howe
Piano – Patrick Moraz
4 Diary Of A Man Who Vanished 2:34
Electric Guitar, Written-By – Steve Howe
5 Look Over Your Shoulder 5:02
Drums – Alan White
Guitar, Bass, Written-By – Steve Howe
Organ [Hammond] – Ronnie Leahy
Vocals – Clair Hammill
6 Meadow Rag 2:41
Guitar, Written-By – Steve Howe
7 The Continental 2:51
Guitar, Bass – Steve Howe
Violin – Graham Presket
Written-By – Con Conrad, Herbert Magidson
8 Surface Tension 3:29
Guitar, Written-By – Steve Howe
9 Double Rondo 8:12
Conductor [59 Piece Orchestra], Orchestrated By – Andrew Jackman
Electric Guitar, Written-By – Steve Howe
10 Concerto In D (2nd Movement) 4:51
Arranged By, Electric Guitar – Steve Howe
Written-By – Vivaldi

STEVE HOWE - Turbulence (1991) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless


Steve Howe's third solo venture, "Turbulence," is packed with strong, flawless playing; however, most of the compositions lack the excitement, eclecticism, and adventurousness that made his earlier solo projects so interesting and appealing. The album's main weaknesses include the facts that many of the pieces (mostly three- and four-minute tracks) are much too similar in sound and structure, and a lot of this material, though completely instrumental, brings to mind the music of Asia ("Novalis"), GTR ("Turbulence"), and 1980s Yes. Howe's earlier solo releases were less affected by his extracurricular band collaborations. Howe plays electric and acoustic guitars and bass on all tracks on Turbulence, with occasional mandolin, dobro, koto, steel, percussion, and keys. Bill Bruford drums on nearly all of the cuts, most of which are rock-based with no forays into country or bluegrass territory. Two of the most solid recordings are classically oriented: "Corkscrew" and "From a Place Where Time Runs Slow." Other strong cuts are "Running the Human Race" (featuring Fender steel), "Fine Line," and "Sensitive Chaos." An alternate version of "Running the Human Race," with lyrics, appears on Howe's 1996 release, Homebrew. Steve Howe is one of the most recognizable guitarists in rock music, his sound and style easily identifiable in any music on which he collaborates. His playing is at its zenith, though, when he plays alone, as on many tracks of The Steve Howe Album and all of Not Necessarily Acoustic. Turbulence is solid and highly recommended but does not contain his most creative material. by David Ross Smith  
Tracklist:
1 Turbulence
Organ – Andrew Lucas
2 Hint Hint
3 Running The Human Race
4 The Inner Battle
5 Novalis
6 Fine Line
7 Sensitive Chaos
8 Corkscrew
9 While Rome's Burning
10 From A Place Where Time Runs Slow
Credits:
Drums – Bill Bruford, Nigel Glockner (tracks: 3, 6)
Guitar, Producer, Arranged By, Written-By – Steve Howe
Keyboards, Viola – Billy Currie
Mixed By – Renny Hill

STEVE HOWE - The Grand Scheme of Things (1993) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This is more like it -- a lithe, lively collection of material, sung in good voice (Howe is joined by his 1960s Tomorrow bandmate Keith West) and played with the kind of robust, cheerful verve that characterized the best moments of Yes's classic sound. There are also guitar breaks that recall the best moments of Yes's work, only they're a little quieter, which gives one the chance to appreciate Howe's virtuoso dexterity. What's more, the melodies range from the beautiful to the memorable, and the songs are clever ("Blinded By Science"), passionate ("Beautiful Ideas"), and generally enjoyable. Howe plays lots of electric and acoustic guitars ("The Valley of Rocks" is a delightful sequel to The Yes Album's "The Clap"), plus mandolin, koto, and numerous other stringed instruments, backed by a violin and keyboards, and drums and bass. One of the better recent offshoots of 1970s progressive rock. by Bruce Eder
Tracklist:
1 The Grand Scheme Of Things 5:09
2 Desire Comes First 3:36
3 Blinded By Science 3:28
4 Beautiful Ideas 3:58
5 The Valley Of Rocks 3:07
6 At The Gates Of The New World 3:57
7 Wayward Course 4:13
8 Reaching The Point 3:52
9 Common Ground 2:15
10 Luck Of The Draw 1:40
11 The Fall Of Civilization 4:06
12 Passing Phase 3:28
13 Georgia's Theme 2:44
14 Too Much Is Taken And Not Enough Given 5:32
15 Maiden Voyage 4:20
16 Road To One's Self 2:38
Credits:
Guitar, Organ, Keyboards, Flute, Mandolin, Bass, Vocals, Arranged By, Producer – Steve Howe
Harmonica, Vocals – Keith West
Percussion, Drums – Dylan Howe
Piano – Virgil Howe
Violin, Vocals – Anna Palm

STEVE HOWE - Not Necessarily Acoustic (1993) Mp3


Recorded in intimate club performances in late 1993, this live and nearly unplugged collection ably spans three decades of Howe's releases. Lead vocals are always a weak spot for him, and so he wisely constrains most of this album to solo instrumentals. The result is a headphone treat, as if you're sitting right in front of his amp and his famed collection of guitars. Of special interest is his one vocal and guitar piece, a seamless medley of each movement from Tales from Topographic Oceans; it's as close to a Tales demo session as fans will ever get. Because Howe's albums are a pastiche of already ripened styles -- a "Meadow Rag" here, a steel guitar twang in "Cactus Boogie" there, and a flamenco-tinged "Mood for a Day" to top it off -- the material on Not Necessarily Acoustic has hardly dated, and it sounds less like a retrospective than a unified new album. The one unfortunate omission is that while the concerts had a nod to his psychedelic days with Tomorrow's "My White Bicycle," there's nothing from that era on this disc. by Paul Collins

25.1.20

YES — The Yes Album (1971-2009) RM | SHM-CD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

On Yes' first two albums, Yes (1969) and Time and a Word (1970), the quintet was mostly searching for a sound on which they could build, losing one of their original members – guitarist Peter Banks – in the process. Their third time out proved the charm – The Yes Album constituted a de facto second debut, introducing the sound that would carry them forward across the next decade or more. Gone are any covers of outside material, the group now working off of its own music from the ground up. A lot of the new material was actually simpler – in linear structure, at least – than some of what had appeared on their previous albums, but the internal dynamics of their playing had also altered radically, and much of the empty space that had been present in their earlier recordings was also filled up here – suddenly, between new member Steve Howe's odd mix of country- and folk-based progressive guitar and the suddenly liberated bass work and drumming of Chris Squire and Bill Bruford, respectively, the group's music became extremely busy. And lead singer Jon Anderson, supported by Squire and Howe, filled whatever was left almost to overflowing. Anderson's soaring falsetto and the accompanying harmonies, attached to haunting melodies drawn from folk tunes as often as rock, applied to words seemingly derived from science fiction, and all delivered with the bravura of an operatic performance – by the band as well as the singer – proved a compelling mix. What's more, despite the busy-ness of their new sound, the group wasn't afraid to prove that less could sometimes be more: three of the high points were the acoustic-driven "Your Move" and "The Clap" (a superb showcase for Howe on solo acoustic guitar), and the relatively low-key "A Venture" (oddly enough, the latter was the one cut here that didn't last in the group's repertory; most of the rest, despite the competition from their subsequent work, remained in their concert set for years to come). The Yes Album did what it had to do, outselling the group's first two long-players and making the group an established presence in America where, for the first time, they began getting regular exposure on FM radio. Sad to say, the only aspect of The Yes Album that didn't last much longer was Tony Kaye on keyboards: his Hammond organ holds its own in the group's newly energized sound, and is augmented by piano and other instruments when needed, but he resisted the idea of adding the Moog synthesizer, that hot instrument of the moment, to his repertory. The band was looking for a bolder sound than the Hammond could generate, and after some initial rehearsals of material that ended up on their next album, he was dropped from the lineup, to be replaced by Rick Wakeman. Bruce Eder  
Tracklist :
1.     Yours Is No Disgrace (Anderson-Squire-Howe-Kaye-Bruford) 9:41
2.     Clap (Howe) 3:17
3.     Starship Trooper (Music: Anderson-Squire-Howe; Lyrics: Anderson-Squire) 9:29
    a) Life Seeker (Anderson)
    b) Disillusion (Squire)
    c) Wurm (Howe)
4.     I've Seen All Good People 6:57
    a) Your Move (Anderson)
    b) All Good People (Squire)
5.     A Venture (Anderson) 3:19
6.     Perpetual Change (Anderson-Squire) 8:58
– BONUS TRACKS –
7.     Your Move (single version) (Anderson) 2:59
8.     Starship Trooper: Life Seeker (single version) (Anderson) 3:28
9.     Clap (studio version) (Howe) 4:02
Musicians :
Jon Anderson - Vocals, Percussion
Chris Squire - Bass Guitars, Vocals
Steve Howe - Electric & Acoustic Guitars, Vachalia, Vocals
Tony Kaye - Piano, Organ, Moog
Bill Bruford - Drums, Percussion

YES — Fragile (1971-2019) UHQCD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Fragile was Yes' breakthrough album, propelling them in a matter of weeks from a cult act to an international phenomenon; not coincidentally, it also marked the point where all of the elements of the music (and more) that would define their success for more than a decade fell into place fully formed. The science-fiction and fantasy elements that had driven the more successful songs on their preceding record, The Yes Album, were pushed much harder here, and not just in the music but in the packaging of the album: the Roger Dean-designed cover was itself a fascinating creation that seemed to relate to the music and drew the purchaser's attention in a manner that few records since the heyday of the psychedelic era could match. Having thrown original keyboard player Tony Kaye overboard early in the sessions -- principally over his refusal to accept the need for the Moog synthesizer in lieu of his preferred Hammond organ -- the band welcomed Rick Wakeman into its ranks. His use of the Moog, among other instruments, coupled with an overall bolder and more aggressive style of playing, opened the way for a harder, hotter sound by the group as a whole; bassist Chris Squire sounds like he's got his amp turned up to "12," and Steve Howe's electric guitars are not far behind, although the group also displayed subtlety where it was needed. The opening minute of "Roundabout," the album opener -- and the basis for the edited single that would reach number 13 on the Billboard charts and get the group onto AM radio in a way that most other prog rock outfits could only look upon with envy -- was dominated by Howe's acoustic guitar and Bill Bruford's drums, and only in the middle section did the band show some of what they could do with serious amperage. Elsewhere on the record, as on "South Side of the Sky," they would sound as though they were ready to leave the ground (and the planet), between the volume and intensity of their playing. "Long Distance Runaround," which also served as the B-side of the single, was probably the most accessible track here apart from "Roundabout," but they were both ambitious enough to carry most listeners on to the heavier sides at the core of this long-player. The solo tracks by the members were actually a necessity: they needed to get Fragile out in a hurry to cover the cost of the keyboards that Wakeman had added to the group's sonic arsenal. But they ended up being more than filler. Each member, in effect, took a "bow" in mostly fairly serious settings, and Squire's "The Fish" and Howe's "Mood for a Day" pointed directly to future, more substantial projects as well as taking on a life of their own on-stage. If not exactly their peak, Fragile was as perfect a rQ2ecord as the group would ever make, and just as flawless in its timing as its content. Bruce Eder  
Tracklist :
1.     Roundabout (Anderson-Howe) 8:36
2.   Cans And Brahms (Extracts From Brahms' 4th Symphony in E minor Third Movement) (Brahms, arr. Wakeman) 1:43
3.     We Have Heaven (Anderson) 1:40
4.     South Side of the Sky (Anderson-Squire) (7:58
5.     Five Per Cent for Nothing (Bruford) 0:38
6.     Long Distance Runaround (Anderson) 3:30
7.     The fish (Schindleria Praematurus) (Squire) 2:42
8.     Mood For A Day (Howe) 3:03
9.     Heart Of The Sunrise (Anderson-Squire-Bruford) 11:27
Musicians :
Jon Anderson - Vocals
Bill Bruford - Drums, Percussion
Steve Howe - Electric and Acoustic Guitars, Vocals
Chris Squire - Bass Guitars, Vocals
Rick Wakeman - Organ, Grand Piano (Electric Piano and Harpsichord), Mellotron, Synthesizer

24.1.20

YES — Close To The Edge (1972-2019) UHQCD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

With 1971's Fragile having left Yes poised quivering on the brink of what friend and foe acknowledged was the peak of the band's achievement, Close to the Edge was never going to be an easy album to make. Drummer Bill Bruford was already shifting restlessly against Jon Anderson's increasingly mystic/mystifying lyricism, while contemporary reports of the recording sessions depicted bandmate Rick Wakeman, too, as little more than an observer to the vast tapestry that Anderson, Steve Howe, and Chris Squire were creating. For it was vast. Close to the Edge comprised just three tracks, the epic "And You and I" and "Siberian Khatru," plus a side-long title track that represented the musical, lyrical, and sonic culmination of all that Yes had worked toward over the past five years. Close to the Edge would make the Top Five on both sides of the Atlantic, dispatch Yes on the longest tour of its career so far and, if hindsight be the guide, launch the band on a downward swing that only disintegration, rebuilding, and a savage change of direction would cure. The latter, however, was still to come. In 1972, Close to the Edge was a flawless masterpiece. Dave Thompson 
Tracklist :
1.     Close To The Edge (Anderson / Howe) (18:43)
     1.I The Solid Time Of Change
     1.II Total Mass Retain
     1.III I Get Up I Get Down
     1.IV Seasons Of Man
2.    And You And I (10:12)
    2.I Cord Of Life
    2.II Eclipse
    2.III The Preacher The Teacher
    2.IV Apocalypse
3.     Siberian Khatru 8:56
    I. The Solid Time Of Change
    II. Total Mass Retain
    III. I Get Up I Get Down
    IV. Seasons Of Man
Musicians :
Jon Anderson - Vocals
Bill Bruford - Drums, Percussion
Steve Howe - Guitars, Vocals
Chris Squire - Bass, Vocals
Rick Wakeman - Keyboards
+ Série: – The Steven Wilson Remixes


YES — Yessongs (1973-2009) RM | 2CD | SHM-CD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

In many ways, the extravagance of this package equates the profligacy of the prog rock combo themselves. After all, how else but on a triple-LP collection could one hope to re-create (and/or contain) an adequate sampling of Yes' live presentation? Especially since their tunes typically clocked in in excess of ten minutes. Although they had turned in five studio long-players, the vast majority of Yessongs (1973) is drawn from their three most recent endeavors The Yes Album (1970), Fragile (1971), and Close to the Edge (1972). There are two exceptions, the first being the "Opening (Excerpt from "Firebird Suite")" – which comes from the 1969 Boston Symphony Orchestra's recording, conducted by Seiji Ozawa. The other is Rick Wakeman's keyboard solo "Excerpts from 'The Six Wives Of Henry VIII'." Yes had just undergone a personnel change shortly after concluding work on Close to the Edge as Bill Bruford (percussion) left to join King Crimson in July of 1972. Bruford can be heard on "Perpetual Change," as well as the medley of "Long Distance Runaround" and "The Fish (Schindleria Praematurus)." Enthusiasts keen on various and arguably irrelevant minutia should note the spelling of "praimaturus" as credited on Yessongs. It is slightly different from Fragile, which is denoted as "praematurus." That bit of trivia aside, the new lineup finds Alan White (drums), quite ably filling Bruford's shoes, alongside Jon Anderson (vocals), Steve Howe (guitars), Chris Squire (bass/vocals), and Rick Wakeman (keyboards).
One of their trademarks has always been an ability to re-create their often densely layered sound in concert. They effortlessly pull off the tricky chord progressions and changes in time signatures of "Siberian Khatru" and a sublime "Heart of the Sunrise," which unquestionably bests the dexterity of its carefully crafted studio counterpart. Both Howe and Squire's respective solos during "The Fish (Schindleria Praematurus)" are highlights as they give the entire unit an opportunity to show off their capacity for dramatic dynamics. The remainder of Yessongs is similarly strong, particularly the note-perfect "Close to the Edge," and the inspired concluding instrumental jam during "Starship Trooper." However, one criticism that can be leveled at the entire Yessongs release is the less than optimal audio quality throughout. The sound is generally muddy with no real fidelity to speak of and an even less precise stereoscape. But until someone goes back to the multi-tracks and remixes them for 21st century ears, this is as good as it gets when documenting Yes during this seminal transition period. Lindsay Planer
Tracklist 1:
1.     Opening (excerpt from 'Firebird Suite') (3:46)
2.     Siberian Khatru (8:53)
3.     Heart Of The Sunrise (11:20)
4.     Perpetual Change (14:14)
5.   And You And I: 5.1. Cord Of Life; 5.2. Eclipse; 5.3. The Preacher The Teacher; 5.4. Apocalypse (9:39)
6.     Mood For A Day (2:52)
7.     Excerpts from 'The Six Wives of Henry VIII' (6:34)
8.     Roundabout (8:39)
Tracklist 2 :
1.     I've Seen All Good People: 1.1. Your Move; 1.2. All Good People (7:06)
2.     Long Distance Runaround / The Fish (Shindleria Praematurus) (13:32)
3.     Close To The Edge: 3.1. The Solid Time Of Change; 3.2. Total Mass Retain; 3.3. I Get Up I Get Down; 3.4. Seasons Of Man (18:10)
4.     Yours Is No Disgrace (14:16)
5.     Starship Trooper (5.1. Life Seeker; 5.2. Disillusion; 5.3. Wurm) (10:13)
Musicians :
Jon Anderson - Vocals
Chris Squire - Bass and Vocals
Steve Howe - Guitars and Vocals
Rick Wakeman - Keyboards
Bill Bruford - Drums (CD 1 track 4, CD 2 track 2)
Alan White - Drums (everything else) 

YES — Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973-2019) 2CD | UHQCD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Four decades after its release, this is still the most controversial record in Yes' output. Tales from Topographic Oceans was the place where Yes either fulfilled all of the promise shown on their previous five albums or slid off the rails in a fit of artistic hubris, especially on the part of lead singer Jon Anderson and guitarist Steve Howe, who dominated the composition credits here. Actually, the group probably did a bit of both here across 80 minutes of music on a fully packed double-LP set; the group's musical ambitions were obvious on its face, as it consisted of four long songs (really suites) each taking up a side of an album, and each longer than the previous album's side-long "Close to the Edge." And Tales had a jumping-off point that was as far advanced in complexity and density as Close to the Edge had been out in front of its predecessor, Fragile, – and all of it made The Yes Album seem like basic rock & roll. Anderson, by virtue of his voice and lyrics, is the dominant personality on Tales, and his fascination with Eastern religion is fully manifest, as never before (or since). Confronted by song titles such as "The Revealing Science of God," and a concept derived from the Buddhist Shastric scriptures, the casual listener might have felt in need of both a running start and a sheet of footnotes: Yes keyboard player Rick Wakeman clearly felt something along those lines, as it was while making this record that he decided to exit the group. And, yet, Tales contains some of the most sublimely beautiful musical passages ever to come from the group, and develops a major chunk of that music in depth and degrees in ways that one can only marvel at, though there's a big leap from marvel to enjoy. If one can grab onto it, Tales is a long, sometimes glorious musical ride across landscapes strange and wonderful, thick with enticing musical textures; it offers the Yes fan the chance to be a true "astral traveler." Apart from one percussion break by Alan White that doesn't come off (if there had to be a Yes album with a percussion solo, why couldn't it have come along when Bill Bruford was in the band?), the music never falls flat, and it's a pity that Wakeman couldn't appreciate the richness and vitality he brought to the album. And Anderson and Howe get to work in an extraordinarily wide range of musical voices. In another reality, perhaps the gorgeous, folk-like passages on Tales would have spawned songs of four or five minutes, but here they are, woven into these long-form pieces, and if one can take the plunge into these particular sonic oceans, and comfortably stay under long enough, it's a journey that will reward. But it's not a trip for everyone – or even every Yes fan – to take, especially not too soon after discovering the album. Bruce Eder
Tracklist 1:
1.     The Revealing Science Of God / Dance Of The Dawn (20:19)
2.     The Remembering / High The Memory (20:31)
Tracklist 2:
1.     The Ancient Giants Under The Sun (18:42)
2.     Ritual (Nous Sommes Du Soleil) (21:42)
Musicians :
Jon Anderson - Vocals
Chris Squire - Bass and Vocals
Rick Wakeman - Keyboards
Alan White - Drums
Steve Howe - Guitars and Vocals
+ Série: – The Steven Wilson Remixes


YES — Relayer (1974-2019) UHQCD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Yes had fallen out of critical favor with Tales from Topographic Oceans, a two-record set of four songs that reviewers found indulgent. But they had not fallen out of the Top Ten, and so they had little incentive to curb their musical ambitiousness. Relayer, released 11 months after Tales, was a single-disc, three-song album, its music organized into suites that alternated abrasive, rhythmically dense instrumental sections featuring solos for the various instruments with delicate vocal and choral sections featuring poetic lyrics devoted to spiritual imagery. Such compositions seemed intended to provide an interesting musical landscape over which the listener might travel, and enough Yes fans did that to make Relayer a Top Ten, gold-selling hit, though critics continued to complain about the lack of concise, coherent song structures. William Ruhlmann
Tracklist :
1.     The Gates Of Delirium (Anderson-Howe-Squire-White-Moraz) 21:57
2.     Sound Chaser (Anderson-Howe-Squire-White-Moraz) 9:27
3.     To Be Over (Anderson-Howe-Squire-White-Moraz) 9:20
Musicians :
Jon Anderson - Vocals
Steve Howe - Guitars, Vocals
Patrick Moraz - Keyboards
Chris Squire - Bass, Vocals
Alan White - Drums, Percussion
+ Série: – The Steven Wilson Remixes

23.1.20

YES — Going for the One (1977-2009) RM | SHM-CD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Going for the One is perhaps the most overlooked item in the Yes catalog. It marked Rick Wakeman's return to the band after a three-year absence, and also a return to shorter song forms after the experimentalism of Close to the Edge, Tales from Topographic Oceans, and Relayer. In many ways, this disc could be seen as the follow-up to Fragile. Its five tracks still retain mystical, abstract lyrical images, and the music is grand and melodic, the vocal harmonies perfectly balanced by the stinging guitar work of Steve Howe, Wakeman's keyboards, and the solid rhythms of Alan White and Chris Squire. The title track features Howe on steel guitar (he's the only prog rocker who bothers with the instrument). "Turn of the Century" and the album's single, "Wonderous Stories," are lovely ballads the way only Yes can do them. "Parallels" is the album's big, pompous song, so well done that in later years the band opened concerts with it. Wakeman's stately church organ, recorded at St. Martin's Church, Vevey, Switzerland, sets the tone for this "Roundabout"-ish track. The concluding "Awaken" is the album's nod to the extended suite. Again, the lyrics are spacy in the extreme, but Jon Anderson and Squire are dead-on vocally, and the addition of Anderson's harp and White's tuned percussion round out this evocative track. Ross Boissoneau  
Tracklist :
1.     Going For The One (Anderson) 5:33
2.     Turn Of The Century (Anderson-Howe-White) 7:56
3.     Parallels (Squire) 5:58
4.     Wonderous Stories (Anderson) 3:50
5.     Awaken (Anderson-Howe) 15:38
– BONUS TRACK –
6.     Montreux's Theme (Howe-Squire-Anderson-White) 2:38
7.     Vevey (Revisted) (Anderson- Wakeman) 4:47
8.     Amazing Grace (Traditional, Arranged by Chris Squire) 2:36
9.     Going For The One (Rehearsal) (Anderson) 5:11
10.     Parallels (Rehearsal) (Squire) 6:21
11.     Turn Of The Century (Rehearsal) (Anderson-Howe-White) 6:59
12.     Eastern Numbers (Early Version of 'Awaken') (Anderson-Howe) 12:17
Musicians :
Jon Anderson - Vocals, Percussion, Harp
Chris Squire - Bass guitar, Vocals
Steve Howe - Electric and Acoustic Guitars, Portuguese 12 String (incorrectly listed as a vachalia at the time), Lap Steel Guitar, Vocal
Rick Wakeman - Piano, Organ, Polymoog and Minimoog Synthesizers, Pipe Organ
Alan White - Drums, Percussion

YES — Tormato (1978-2009) RM | SHM-CD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

The '70s model of Yes runs out of gas. Recorded in a morale slump and an impending haze of drink, Tormato's decent tunes are sabotaged by Rick Wakeman's increasing penchant for cheesy textures and the band's thin overall sound. "Don't Kill the Whale" was their last successful single for years; the soaring "Onward" almost but not quite redeems the twee silliness of "Arriving UFO" and "Circus of Heaven." Of special interest is the pounding "On the Silent Wings of Freedom," which pushes Chris Squire and Alan White to the front of the mix, establishing the kind of aggressive and straightforward rhythms that would propel the band through the '80s. Bass freaks, take note: this tune also marks one of the few appearances of the Dipthong pedal, accounting for Squire's distinctive "bow bow bow" sound. Paul Collins
Tracklist :
1.     Future Times / Rejoice (6:47)
 a) Future Times (Anderson-Howe-Squire-Wakeman-White)
 b) Rejoice (Anderson)
2.     Don't Kill The Whale (Anderson-Squire) 3:58
3.     Madrigal (Anderson-Wakeman) 2:27
4.     Release, Release (Anderson-White-Squire) 5:49
5.     Arriving Ufo (Anderson-Howe-Wakeman) 6:09
6.     Circus Of Heaven (Anderson) 4:32
7.     Onward (Squire) 4:05
8.     On The Silent Wings Of Freedom (Anderson-Squire) 7:52
– BONUS TRACK –
9.     Abilene (Howe) (4:03)
10.     Money (Squire-Anderson-White-Wakeman) 3:15
11.     Picasso (Anderson) 2:12
12.     Some Are Born (Anderson) 5:43
13.     You Can Be Saved (Squire) 4:20
14.     High (Howe) 4:30
15.     Days (demo) (Anderson) 1:00
16.     Countryside (Anderson-Howe-Squire-White) 3:12
17.     Everybody's Song (early demo of "Does It Really Happen?") (Anderson-Howe-Squire-White) 6:48
18.     Onward (orchestral backing track) (3:06)
Musicians :
Jon Anderson - Lead Vocals (all), Alvarez 10-String Guitar (1a, 5, 8)
Steve Howe - Guitars (1-5, 7, 8), Electric & Acoustic Mandolin (6), Vocals (1, 3-6)
Chris Squire - Bass (1, 2, 4-8), Bass Pedals (1a, 3, 5), Piano (2), Vocals (all)
Rick Wakeman - Birotron (1, 2, 4-6, 8), Hammond Organ (1, 4), Polymoog (1, 2, 4-8), RMI (8), Harpsichord (3), Piano (5)
Alan -White - Drums (1, 2, 4-6, 8), Glockenspiel (1a), Crotales (1a, 3, 6, 7), Cymbals (3), Bell tree (3), Gongs (5), Vibraphone (7), Percussion (4), Drum Synthesizer (5), Vocals (4)
Damion Anderson - Vocals (6)

YES — Drama (1980-2009) RM | SHM-CD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

For this one album, ex-Buggles Geoffrey Downes and Trevor Horn were drafted in to replace Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman. It rocks harder than other Yes albums, and for classically inclined fans, it was a jarring departure; but it was a harbinger of Yes and Asia albums to come. A newly emboldened Chris Squire lays down aggressive rhythms with Alan White, and Steve Howe eschews his usual acoustic rags and flamenco licks for a more metallic approach, opting for sheets of electric sound. Prime cuts include the doom-laden "Machine Messiah" and the manic ska inflections of "Tempus Fugit." Despite the promise of this new material, the band soon fell apart; Horn went into production, Howe and Downes joined Asia, and Squire and White toyed and then gave up on a pair-up with Robert Plant and Jimmy Page, which was to be titled XYZ (i.e., Ex-Yes and Zeppelin). Paul Collins
Tracklist :
1.     Machine Messiah (Downes-Horn-Howe-Squire-White) 10:28
     Part I
     Part II
     Part III
2.     White Car (Downes-Horn-Howe-Squire-White) 1:21
3.     Does It Really Happen? (Downes-Horn-Howe-Squire-White) 6:36
4.     Into The Lens (Downes-Horn-Howe-Squire-White) 8:32
5.     Run Through The Light (Downes-Horn-Howe-Squire-White) 4:43
6.     Tempus Fugit (Downes-Horn-Howe-Squire-White) 5:22
– BONUS TRACKS –
7.     Into The Lens (I Am a Camera) Single Version (Downes-Horn-Howe-Squire-White) 3:48
8.     Run Through The Light (Single Version) (Downes-Horn-Howe-Squire-White) 4:31
9.     Have We Really Got To Go Through This (Howe-Squire-White) 3:43
10.     Song No. 4 (Satellite) (Howe-Squire-White) 7:32
11.     Tempus Fugit (Tracking Session) (Downes-Horn-Howe-Squire/White) 5:40
12.     White Car (Tracking Session) (Downes-Horn-Howe-Squire-White) 1:11
13.     Dancing Through The Light (Anderson-Howe-Squire-Wakeman-White) 3:17
14.     Golden Age (Anderson-Howe-Squire-Wakeman-White) 5:58
15.     In The Tower (Anderson-Howe-Squire-Wakeman-White) 2:55
16.     Friend Of A Friend (Anderson-Howe-Squire-Wakeman-White) 3:38
Musicians :
Geoff Downes - Keyboards, Vocoder
Trevor Horn - Vocals, Fretless Bass
Steve Howe - Guitars, Vocals
Chris Squire - Bass, Vocals, Piano
Alan White - Percussion, Vocals 

YES – Yesshows (1979-2009) 2CD | RM | Mini LP | SHM-CD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

The second official concert package from Yes contains tunes recorded over a span of two years (1976-1978) and two different incarnations of the band. Like its live predecessor Yessongs (1973), Yesshows finds the combo during one of their states of perpetual change. Jon Anderson (vocals), Steve Howe (guitar), Chris Squire (bass/vocals), and Alan White (drums) are joined by Rick Wakeman (keyboards) on a majority of the selections. The exceptions being "Gates of Delirium" from Relayer (1974) and the Tales from Topographic Oceans' (1973) epic "Ritual" – which is presented in two parts – and has Patrick Moraz (keyboards) in Wakeman's stead. The original concept contained a few features that would have been akin to Yessongs. They debated as to whether they should make it another triple-LP and feature Tales from Topographic Oceans in its entirety, like Close to the Edge had been done on Yessongs. Undecided, they made a rough mix of a two-album incarnation, but then shelved it in order to focus their attentions on creating new music. Purportedly, that unapproved (by Yes, anyway) version was cleaned up by the record company and released for the holiday shopping frenzy of 1980. As issued, the seven tracks hang well together and provide enthusiasts an opportunity to hear a mixture of older and newer material. Best of all, Yes retain their enviable ability to ably re-create the complex and challenging passages with a soul that is occasionally lacking from the studio counterparts. Reaching back nearly a decade is an excellent update of the optimistic "Aquarian Age" anthem and the title composition of their second platter, "Time and a Word." It is enveloped by a pair of equally well-executed sides from Going for the One (1977). Here, both the opener "Parallels" and the song "Going for the One" exceed the comparatively sterile non-live readings. Particularly endearing and inspired is Anderson's off-key voice crack during the high-octane chorus of the latter. The more involved works – especially the Moraz performances on "The Gates of Delirium" and the nearly half-hour "Ritual" – are fuelled by a continuous energy. They build on the structure established from the respective long-players, yet even the most intricate elements and dynamics are amplified in their decisiveness and command. Anderson's intimacy and passion fuse on the closer "Wondrous Stories," almost as if releasing the audience from one last embrace. Lindsay Planer 
Tracklist 1 :
1.     Parallels (7:08)
2.     Time And A Word (4:07)
3.     Going For The One (5:24)
4.     The Gates Of Delirium (22:43)
Tracklist 2:
1.     Don't Kill The Whale (6:51)
2.     Ritual / Nous Sommes Du Soleil - 1 & 2 (28:55)
3.     Wonderous Stories (3:59)
4.     I've Seen All Good People (7:32)
5.     Roundabout (7:54)
Musicians :
Jon Anderson - Vocals
Chris Squire - Bass Guitar, Vocals, Mixing
Steve Howe - Guitars, Vocals
Patrick Moraz - keyboards
Rick Wakeman - keyboards
Alan White - Drums, Vocals

YES — Union (1991) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

With the exception of Peter Banks and Trevor Horn, virtually all the major contributors to Yes in its various incarnations over the previous 23 years, including both of its drummers, threw their hands into the making of Union, which was supported by a massive tour that filled arenas with at least two generations of fans. So even if Union had been as good as one hoped, this was an album that couldn't possibly have met the expectations inherent in the array of talent involved. The material is reasonably solid, and under ordinary circumstances this album would have been considered just fine, if not exceptional. "I Would Have Waited Forever" shows off the group's vocalizing (by Chris Squire and Jon Anderson) at its most melodic and Steve Howe has one of the most beautiful classical guitar showcases of his Yes career on "Masquerade." But the Trevor Rabin/Chris Squire-composed "Lift Me Up" seems a forced exercise in heaviness, and "Without Hope You Cannot Start" seems more like a composed-by-numbers piece than a truly inspired song. None of the material here would rate alongside the better (forget the best) tracks from any of the group's 1971-1974 albums. Perhaps the defects revealed the real purpose of this album, which wasn't so much to make a definitive statement by any of the participants, but rather to show the flag of the reunited band, which it did. The single "Lift Me Up" topped Billboard's Album Rock Tracks chart for six weeks, with two other cuts also making the list. But the single also only limped to number 86 on the Hot 100, and although the album shot to number 15 and went gold, this was a serious falloff from previous sales. Bruce Eder  
Tracklist :
1.     I Would Have Waited Forever 6:33
Bass – Tony Levin
Engineer [Additional] – Buzz Burrowes, Chris Fosdick
Engineer, Mixed By – Brian Foraker
Vocals – Chris Squire
Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Bill Bruford, Rick Wakeman
Written-By, Producer – Jonathan Elias
Written-By, Producer [Associate], Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Jon Anderson
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Steve Howe
2.     Shock To The System 5:09
Bass – Tony Levin
Engineer [Additional] – Buzz Burrowes, Chris Fosdick
Engineer, Mixed By – Brian Foraker
Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Bill Bruford, Rick Wakeman
Written-By, Producer – Jonathan Elias
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Steve Howe
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments], Producer [Associate] – Jon Anderson
3.     Masquerade 2:17
Producer, Performer, Engineer, Written-By – Steve Howe
Recorded By, Producer [Post Production] – Greg Jackman
4.     Lift Me Up 6:29
Engineer [Assistant] – Steve Harrison
Mixed By – Ed Thacker, Paul Fox
Producer, Engineer, Written-by, Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Trevor Rabin
Programmed By – Mark Mancina
Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Alan White, Jon Anderson, Tony Kaye
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Chris Squire
5.     Without Hope You Cannot Start The Day 5:18
Bass – Tony Levin
Engineer [Additional] – Buzz Burrowes, Chris Fosdick
Engineer, Mixed By – Brian Foraker
Vocals – Chris Squire
Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Bill Bruford, Rick Wakeman, Steve Howe
Written-By, Producer – Jonathan Elias
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instrumens], Producer [Associate] – Jon Anderson
6.     Saving My Heart 4:40
Mixed By – Mike Shipley
Producer, Engineer, Written-By – Trevor Rabin
7.     Miracle Of Life 7:30
Engineer – Stan Katayama
Engineer [Assistant] – Steve Harrison
Producer [With], Engineer – Eddy Offord
Producer [With], Written-by – Mark Mancina
Producer, Engineer, Written-By – Trevor Rabin
8.     Silent Talking 4:00
Bass – Tony Levin
Engineer [Additional] – Buzz Burrowes, Chris Fosdick
Engineer, Mixed By – Brian Foraker
Producer – Jonathan Elias
Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Bill Bruford
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Rick Wakeman, Steve Howe
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments], Producer [Associate] – Jon Anderson
9.     The More We Live - Let Go 4:52
Co-producer, Engineer, Written-By – Billy Sherwood
Producer, Engineer, Mixed By – Eddy Offord
Written-By – Chris Squire
10.     Angkor Wat 5:23
Written-By – Jon Anderson, Jonathan Elias, Rick Wakeman
11.     Dangerous (Look In The Light Of What You're Searching For) 3:37
Bass – Tony Levin
Engineer [Additional] – Buzz Burrowes, Chris Fosdick
Engineer, Mixed By – Brian Foraker
Vocals – Chris Squire
Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Bill Bruford, Rick Wakeman, Steve Howe
Written-By, Producer – Jonathan Elias
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments], Producer [Associate] – Jon Anderson
12.     Holding On 5:25
Bass – Tony Levin
Engineer [Additional] – Buzz Burrowes, Chris Fosdick
Engineer, Mixed By – Brian Foraker
Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Bill Bruford, Rick Wakeman
Written-By, Producer – Jonathan Elias
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Steve Howe
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments], Producer [Associate] – Jon Anderson
13.     Evensong 0:52
Bass, Written-By – Tony Levin
Engineer [Additional] – Buzz Burrowes, Chris Fosdick
Engineer, Mixed By – Brian Foraker
Producer – Jonathan Elias
Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Rick Wakeman, Steve Howe
Vocals, Performer [Instruments], Producer [Associate] – Jon Anderson
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Bill Bruford
14.     Take The Water To The Mountain 3:09
Bass – Tony Levin
Engineer [Additional] – Buzz Burrowes, Chris Fosdick
Engineer, Mixed By – Brian Foraker
Producer – Jonathan Elias
Vocals, Performer [Instruments] – Bill Bruford, Rick Wakeman, Steve Howe
Written-By, Vocals, Performer [Instruments], Producer [Associate] – Jon Anderson
– BONUS TRACK –
15.     Give & Take 4:29
Written-By – Jon Anderson, Jonathan Elias, Steve Howe

JEFF BECK — Wired (1976-2013) RM | Blu-spec CD2 | Serie Legacy Recordings | Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless

Released in 1976, Jeff Beck's Wired contains some of the best jazz-rock fusion of the period. Wired is generally more muscular, albeit l...