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Yes Band Biography
Lead singer Jon Anderson (b.
Oct. 25, 1944, Accrington, Lancashire) started
out during the British beat boom as a member of
the Warriors, who recorded a single for Decca
in 1964, and later was in the band Gun, before
going solo in 1967 with two singles on the Parlophone
label. He was making a meager living cleaning
up at a London club called La Chasse during June
of 1968, and was thinking of starting up a new
band. One day at the bar, he chanced to meet bassist/vocalist
Chris Squire, a former member of the band the
Syn, who had recorded for Deram, the progressive
division of Decca.
The two learned that they shared
several musical interests, including an appreciation
for the harmony singing of Paul Simon and Art
Garfunkel, and within a matter of days were trying
to write songs together. They began developing
the beginnings of a sound that incorporated harmonies
with a solid rock backing, rooted in Squire's
very precise approach to the bass. Anderson and
Squire saw the groups around them as having either
strong vocals and weak instrumental backup, or
powerful backup and weak lead vocals, and they
sought to combine the best of both. Their initial
inspiration, at least as far as the precision
of their vocals, according to Squire, was the
pop/soul act the Fifth Dimension.
They recruited Tony Kaye (b.
Jan. 11, 1946), formerly of the Federals, on keyboards;
Peter Banks (b. July 7, 1947), previously a member
of the Syn, on guitar; and drummer Bill Bruford
(b. May 17, 1948), who had only just joined the
blues band Savoy Brown a few weeks earlier. The
name Yes was chosen for the band as something
short, direct, and memorable.
The British music scene at this
time was in a state of flux. The pop/psychedelic
era, with its pretty melodies and delicate sounds,
was drawing to a close, replaced by the heavier
sounds of groups like Cream. Progressive rock,
with a heavy dose of late-19th-century classical
music, was also starting to make a noise that
was being heard, in the guise of acts such as
the Nice, featuring Keith Emerson, and the original
Deep Purple.
The group's break came in October
of 1968 when the band, on the recommendation of
the Nice's manager, Tony Stratton-Smith (later
the founder of Charisma Records), played a gig
at the Speakeasy Club in London, filling in for
an absent Sly & the Family Stone. The group
was later selected to open for Cream's November
26, 1968 farewell concert at Royal Albert Hall.
This concert, in turn, led to a residency at London's
Marquee Club and their first radio appearance,
on John Peel's Top Gear radio show. They subsequently
opened for Janis Joplin at her Royal Albert Hall
concert in April 1969, and were signed to Atlantic
Records soon after.
Their debut single, and Anderson
and Squire's first song, entitled "Sweetness,"
was released soon after. Their first album, Yes,
was released in November of 1969. The record displayed
the basic sound that would characterize the band's
subsequent records, including impeccable high
harmonies, clearly defined, emphatic playing,
and an approach to music that derived from folk
and classical, far more than the R&B from
which most rock music sprung, but it was much
more in a pop-music context, featuring covers
of Beatles and Byrds songs. Also present was a
hint of the "space rock" sound (on "Beyond
and Before") in which they would later come
to specialize.
Anderson's falsetto lead vocals
gave the music an ethereal quality, while Banks'
angular guitar, seemingly all picked and none
strummed, drew from folk and skiffle elements.
Squire's bass had a huge sound, owing to his playing
with a pick, giving him one of the most distinctive
sounds on the instrument this side of the Who's
John Entwistle, while Bruford's drumming was very
complex within the pop-song context, and Kaye's
playing was rich and melodic.
In February of 1970, Yes supported
the Nice at their Royal Albert Hall show, while
they were preparing their second album, Time and
a Word. By the time it was released in June of
1970, Peter Banks had left the lineup, to be replaced
by guitarist Steve Howe (b. Apr. 8, 1947), a former
member of the Syndicats, the In Crowd, Tomorrow
("My White Bicycle"), and Bodast. Howe
is pictured with the group on the jacket of Time
and a Word, which was released in August, and
played his first show with the group at Queen
Elizabeth Hall on March 21, 1970, but Banks actually
played on the album. This record was far more
sophisticated than its predecessor, and even included
an overdubbed orchestra on some songs, the only
time that Yes would rely on outside musicians
to augment their sound. The cosmic and mystical
elements of their songwriting were even more evident
on this album.
The group's fame in England
continued to rise as they became an increasingly
popular concert attraction, especially after they
were seen by millions as the opening act for Iron
Butterfly. It was with the release of The Yes
Album in April of 1971 that the public began to
glimpse the group's full potential.
That record, made up entirely
of original compositions, was filled with complex,
multi-part harmonies, loud, heavily layered guitar
and bass parts, beautiful and melodic drum parts,
and surging organ (with piano embellishments)
passages bridging them all. Everybody was working
on a far more expansive level than on any of their
previous recordings — on "Your Move"
(which became the group's first U.S. chart entry,
at number 40), the harmonies were woven together
in layers and patterns that were dazzling in their
own right, while "Starship Trooper"
(which drew its name from a Robert Heinlein novel,
thus reinforcing the group's "space rock"
image) and "All Good People" gave Howe,
Squire, and Bruford the opportunity to play extended
instrumental passages of tremendous forcefulness.
"Starship Trooper," "I've Seen
All Good People," "Perpetual Change,"
and "Yours Is No Disgrace" also became
parts of the group's concert sets for years to
come.
The Yes Album opened a new phase
in the group's history and its approach to music.
None of it was pop music in the "Top 40"
sense of the term. Rather, it was built on compositions
which resembled sound paintings, rather than songs
— the swelling sound of Kaye's Moog synthesizer
and organ, Howe's fluid yet stinging guitar passages,
Squire's rippling bass, and Anderson's haunting
falsetto leads all evoked sonic landscapes that
were strangely compelling to the imagination of
the listener.
The Yes Album reached number
seven in England and number 40 in America in the
spring of 1971. Early in 1971, Yes made their
first U.S. tour opening for Jethro Tull, and they
were back late in the year sharing billing with
Ten Years After and the J. Geils Band. The band
began work on their next album, but were interrupted
when keyboard player Tony Kaye quit in August
of 1971, to join ex-Yes guitarist Peter Banks
in the group Flash. He was replaced by former
Strawbs keyboard player Rick Wakeman, who played
his first shows with the band in September and
October of 1971.
Wakeman was a far more flamboyant
musician than Kaye, not only in his approach to
playing but the number of instruments that he
used and the way he played them. In place of the
three keyboards that Kaye used, Wakeman used an
entire bank of upwards of a dozen instruments,
including Mellotron, various synthesizers, organ,
two or more pianos, and electric harpsichord.
This lineup, Anderson Squire, Howe, Wakeman, and
Bruford, which actually only lasted for one year,
from August of 1971 until August of 1972, is generally
considered the best of all the Yes configurations,
and the strongest incarnation of the band.
The group completed their next
album, Fragile, in less than two months, partly
out of a need to get a new album out to help pay
for all of Wakeman's equipment. And partly due
to this haste, the new album featured only four
tracks by the group as a whole, "Roundabout,"
"The South Side of the Sky," "Heart
of the Sunrise," and "Long Distance
Runaround" — although, significantly,
all except "Long Distance Runaround"
ran between seven and thirteen minutes —
and was rounded out by five pieces showcasing
each member of the band individually. Anderson's
voice was represented in multiple overdubs on
"We Have Heaven," while Squire's bass
provided the instrumental "The Fish,"
which later became an important part of the group's
concerts; Howe's "Mood for a Day" showed
him off as a classical guitarist; Bruford's drums
were the focus of "Five Percent for Nothing";
and Wakeman turned in "Cans and Brahms,"
an electronic keyboard fantasy built on one movement
from Brahms's Fourth Symphony.
Fragile, released in December
of 1971, reached number seven in England and number
four in America. The album's success was enhanced
by the release of an edited single of "Roundabout,"
the group's first (and, for over a decade, only)
major hit, which reached number 13 on the U.S.
charts. For millions of listeners, "Roundabout,"
with its crisp interwoven acoustic and electric
guitar parts and very vivid bass textures, exquisite
vocals (especially the harmonies), swirling keyboard
passages, and brisk beat, proved an ideal introduction
to the group's sound. Neither Emerson, Lake &
Palmer nor King Crimson, the group's leading rivals
at that time, ever had so successful a pop-chart
entry. The single's impact among teenage and college-age
listeners was far greater than this chart position
would indicate — they simply flocked to
the band, with the result that not only did Fragile
sell in huge numbers, but the group's earlier
records (especially The Yes Album) were suddenly
in demand again.
Even the album's jacket, designed
by artist Roger Dean, featured distinctive, surreal
landscape graphics, which evoked images seemingly
related to the music inside. These paintings would
become part-and-parcel with the audience's impression
of Yes' music, and later tours by the group would
feature stage sets designed by Dean as an integral
part of their shows.
The group's appeal was multi-level.
In some ways, they were the successors to psychedelic
metal bands such as Iron Butterfly — "Roundabout"
may have been space rock, with a driving beat
that carried the listener soaring into the heavens,
but lines like "In and around the lake/Mountains
come out of the sky/they stand there" evoked
a surreal imagery not far removed (in the minds
of some listeners) from "In a Gadda Da Vida,"
and just as effective, amid Wakeman's swirling
synthesizer and Mellotron passages, as a musical
background for any druggy indulgences that fans
might pursue. These would also be among the last
lyrics that fans of the band would have to deal
with, apart from anomalies such as the ethereal
"I get up, I get down" from "Close
to the Edge" or the topical "Don't Kill
the Whale" — on most of the band's
future releases, and for much of this song as
well, Anderson's voice was part of the overall
mix of sounds generated by Yes.
Some of his lyrics in future
years were worth a detailed look, however, often
possessing complex subtexts drawn from religious
and literary sources which made them good for
intellectual analysis, and something that college
students could listen to with no shame or rationalizing.
In that respect, Yes were as much the successors
to the Moody Blues, with a beat and balls in place
of the pioneering art-rock/psychedelic band's
stateliness and overt seriousness, as they were
to Iron Butterfly.
Jon Anderson's falsetto vocals,
moreover, compared very well with those of his
Atlantic Records stablemate Robert Plant, the
lead singer of Led Zeppelin. Their classical music
influences offered a level of intellectual stimulation
that Led Zeppelin seldom bothered with. And Yes
played loud and hard — they were progressive,
but they weren't wimps, and they put on a better
show than Emerson, Lake & Palmer. Their music
seemed to evoke the most appealing elements of
heavy metal rock, psychedelic music, the work
of composers as different as Igor Stravinsky and
film composer Jerome Moross (whose "Main
Theme from the Big Country" provided the
basis for the group's version of "No Experience
Necessary"), and eastern religion, all wrapped
in songs running upwards of 22 minutes, an entire
side of an album.
"Roundabout" would
be the group's biggest single success for the
next 12 years, but it was more than enough. Although
they would continue to release 45's periodically,
including a cover of Paul Simon's "America"
during the summer of 1972, Yes' future clearly
lay with their albums. On Fragile, "Long
Distance Runaround," as a three-minute song,
had been the anomaly — the band was clearly
looking at longer forms in which to write and
play their music.
Close to the Edge, recorded
in the late spring of 1972 and released in September
of that year, showed just where they were headed,
consisting of only three long tracks, essentially
three sound paintings, in which the overall sound
and musical textures mattered more than the lyrics
or any specific melody, harmonization, or solo.
"Siberian Khatru" was almost a rock
adaptation of Stravinsky's Rite of Spring, recalling
the composer's most famous work and sounding as
though Anderson and company had tapped into a
element of ritual and a state of consciousness
going back practically to the dawn of time (or
stretching to the end of time), while "And
You and I" seemed to take "Your Move"
to a newly cosmic level.
The fans and critics alike loved
Close to the Edge, resplendent in its rich harmonies
and keyboard passages of astonishing beauty and
complexity, brittle but powerful guitar, and drumming
that was gorgeous in its own right. The album
reached number four in England and number three
in the United States without help from a hit single
(though an edited version of "And You and
I" did reach number 42 in America).
By the time of the record's
release, however, Bill Bruford had left the band
to join King Crimson, and was replaced by Alan
White (b. June 14, 1949, Pelton, Durham), a session
drummer who was previously best known for having
played with John Lennon and Yoko Ono's Plastic
Ono Band. With White — who was a powerful
player, but lacked the subtle melodic technique
of Bill Bruford — installed at the drum
kit, the group went on tour behind the new album
to massive audience response and critical acclaim.
As an added bonus for fans, Rick Wakeman had completed
his first solo LP, the instrumental concept album
The Six Wives of Henry VIII, which was released
by A&M Records in February of 1973 (Wakeman
had played excerpts from it during his featured
solo spot during the previous Yes tour).
A large part of the Close to
the Edge tour, like the group's prior tour with
Bruford on the drums, was recorded, and a three-LP
(two-CD) set entitled Yessongs, released in May
of 1973, was assembled from the best work on the
tour. Yessongs became a model for progressive
rock live albums — at over 120 minutes,
it included the band's entire stage repertory
(not coincidentally, the best songs from the three
preceding albums), all of it uncut and all of
it well-played. The live album reached number
seven in England and number 12 in the United States.
The group spent the second half
of 1973 trying to come up with a follow-up to
four successive hit albums. The resulting record,
a double LP entitled Tales from Topographic Oceans,
was released in January of 1974 with such high
expectations, that it earned a gold record from
its advanced orders.
Tales from Topographic Oceans
broke all previous artistic boundaries, consisting
of four long tracks each taking up the full side
of an LP, with titles like "The Revealing
Science of God (Dance of the Dawn)." If the
group's prior albums were made up of paintings
in sound, then Topographic Oceans was a series
of sonic murals, painted across vast spaces on
a massive scale that did not make for light listening.
If this all seems ridiculously overblown today,
perhaps it was, but this work was being done in
an era in which groups like Emerson, Lake, &
Palmer were recording album-length suites and
stretching relatively modest works such as "Fanfare
for the Common Man" by Aaron Copland into
ten-minute epics. The group believed it had cultivated
an audience for such music, and they were right
— Topographic Oceans not only topped the
British charts but reach number six on the American
charts.
No album has more divided both
fans and critics of Yes alike. At the time of
its release, Tales from Topographic Oceans was
considered an unqualified success by most critics.
Writing in the Village Voice (a journal notoriously
skeptical of progressive rock) in February of
1974, Frank Rose called it "by far the most
impressive work the group has produced in its
five-year history" and went on to describe
the music in exalted terms. And some listeners
(this writer included) still regard this album
as the group's magnum opus.
This view of the album changed
during the 1980s and 1990s, as many critics and
the group's fans came to consider it excessive,
representing the height of progressive rock's
self-indulgent nature (of course, many of these
same people scoff at the very notion of any double-LP
rock album). Originally inspired by Jon Anderson's
reaction to a set of Shastric scriptures, the
album displayed a sublime beauty in many parts,
and immense, mesmerizing stretches of high-energy
virtuosity for most of its length. In concert,
as Rose remarked, its performance took on "aspects
of the Apocalypse." Its only regrettable
moment was an obligatory percussion solo, the
only time Yes ever fell into this clich?of the
progressive rock genre.
The group toured behind Topographic
Oceans early in 1974, performing most of the album
on stage. Following this tour, plans were announced
for each member of the group to release a solo
album of his own. At this point, the group faced
another major lineup change as Wakeman —
whose second solo album, Journey to the Center
of the Earth, appeared in May of 1974 —
announced that he was leaving Yes' lineup in June
to pursue a solo career. In fact, as he revealed
in interviews many years later, he'd been very
unhappy with the content of Tales from Topographic
Oceans, feeling that its music no longer reflected
the direction he wanted to go in and that it was
time to part company with the band. Wakeman's
decision created a major problem for the band,
for the keyboard player had become a star within
their ranks, and was the group's most well-known
individual member — people definitely paid
to see and hear his keyboards rippling amid the
Yes sound.
In August of 1974, it was announced
that Patrick Moraz (b. June 24, 1948, Morges,
Switzerland), formerly of the progressive rock
trio Refugee, had replaced Wakeman. Three months
later, the group's new album, Relayer, was released,
reaching the British number four spot and the
American number five position. Moraz proved an
adequate replacement for Wakeman, but lacked his
predecessor's gift for showmanship and extravagance.
The group toured in the wake of Relayer's release
in November of 1974, but didn't record together
again for two and a half years.
Indeed, in order to satisfy
the demand for more Yes material in the absence
of a new album while the group was on the road,
Atlantic in March of 1975 released a collection
of their early music entitled Yesterdays, drawn
from the first two albums and various singles,
which rose to number 27 in England and number
17 in America. A film that the group had made
along their 1973 tour, entitled Yessongs, was
released to theaters at around the same time.
The movie received poor reviews, owing to the
fact that most reviewers were unfamiliar with
the group's music, but it was profitable and has
been popular for years on home video.
Meanwhile, in the absence of
new albums by Yes, other bands began trying and
capitalize on their own version of the Yes sound.
The most notable of these were Starcastle, a progressive
rock band signed by Epic Records, who made their
recording debut in 1976 with a self-titled album
that could've been another incarnation of Yes;
and Fireballet, a Passport Records quartet who
seemed to bridge the music of Yes and ELP.
In November of 1975, Chris Squire's
Fish Out of Water and Steve Howe's Beginnings
were both released and climbed into the mid-60s
level of the American charts. Squire's record
was clearly the more accomplished of the two,
virtually a lost Yes album, with the bassist exploring
new instrumental and orchestral textures, and
turning in a credible vocal performance as well.
Howe's record was an interesting, low-key effort
that might've impressed other guitarists, but
was sorely lacking in the songwriting department.
These were followed in March
of 1976 by Alan White's Ramshackled, which placed
at number 41 in England, and Moraz's solo venture
Patrick Moraz, which reached number 28 in England
and number 132 in America. And in July of 1976,
Jon Anderson's Olias of Sunhillow, a dazzling,
Tolkien-esque science-fiction/fantasy epic (with
packaging on the original LP that must've doubled
the basic production cost of the jacket) that
sounded as much like a Yes album as any record
not made by the entire band could, reached number
eight in England and number 47 in America.
Amid all of these solo projects,
the group's lineup changed once again, as Wakeman
announced his return to the fold in late 1976,
while Moraz exited. Wakeman's original plan was
to assist the group in the studio on their new
album, but the sessions proved so productive that
he made the decision, fully supported by the band,
to return to the band's lineup permanently.
The group's next album, Going
for the One, released in August of 1977, represented
a much more austere, basic style of rock music,
built around shorter songs. The long-player topped
the British charts for two weeks and reached number
eight on the American charts, while the singles
"Wonderous Stories" and "Going
for the One" rose to numbers seven and 24,
respectively. The group embarked on a massive
tour shortly after the album's release, including
their most successful American appearances ever,
playing to record audiences on the East Coast.
Tormato, released nearly a year
later (heralded by the single "Don't Kill
the Whale," the group's first song with a
topical message), made the Top Ten in both England
and America in the fall of 1978. Once again, after
finishing the tour behind the album, the group
members began working on solo projects. The year
1979 saw the release of The Steve Howe Album,
while early in 1980 Jon Anderson hooked up with
Greek-born keyboard player Vangelis, and the two
released an album, Short Stories, and an accompanying
single, "I Hear You," early in 1980,
both of which reached the British Top Ten. Jon
& Vangelis, as the team became known, went
on to cut several more records together.
In March of 1980, Yes' lineup
collapsed, as Wakeman and then Anderson walked
out after an unsuccessful attempt to start work
on a new album. Two months later, Trevor Horn
(vocals, guitar) and Geoff Downes (keyboards),
formerly of the British band Buggles, joined the
Yes lineup of Steve Howe, Chris Squire, and Alan
White. This configuration recorded a new album,
Drama, which was released in August of 1980 —
rather ominously, this record did dramatically
better in England, reaching the number-two spot,
than it did in America, where it got no higher
than number 18. This hybrid lineup lasted for
a year, but the old Yes incarnation remained much
closer to the hearts of fans — in January
of 1981 Atlantic Record released Yesshows, a double
live album made up of stage performances dating
from 1976 through 1978 that reached number 22
in England and number 43 in America.
Finally, in April of 1981, the
breakup of Yes was announced. Geoff Downes formed
Asia with Steve Howe, which went on to some considerable
if short-lived success in the early '80s, and
the rest of the band scattered to different projects.
For a year-and-a-half, the group seemed a dead
issue, until Chris Squire and Alan White announced
the formation of a new group called Cinema, with
original Yes keyboard player Tony Kaye and South
African guitarist Trevor Rabin. This band proved
unsatisfactory, and Squire invited Jon Anderson
to join. It was just about then that everyone
realized that they'd reformed virtually the core
of the Yes lineup, and that they should simply
revive the name.
In late 1983, this Yes lineup,
with guitarist/vocalist Trevor Horn serving as
producer, released an unexpected chart-topping
hit (number one in the U.S. in January of 1984)
single in "Owner of a Lonely Heart,"
displaying a stripped-down modern dance-rock sound
unlike anything the group had ever produced before.
The remaining group released a successful dance-rock
style album, 90125, under Horn's guidance, which
sold well but also proved a dead-end, with no
follow-up, when Horn chose not to remain with
the group.
Yes was invisible for nearly
two years after that, until the late 1987 release
of The Big Generator, which performed only moderately
well. Meanwhile, in 1986, Steve Howe reappeared
as a member of the quintet GTR, whose self-titled
album reached number 11 in America. The proliferation
of ex-Yes members gathering together in various
combinations led to an ongoing legal dispute over
who owned the group name, which came to a head
in 1989. Luckily for four of them, the name "Anderson
Bruford Wakeman Howe" was recognizable enough
to reach the fans, which sent the resulting album
into the US Top 30 and the British Top 20, more
or less handing them a victory by acclamation
(later supported by the settlement) in their dispute
over the name. By touring with "An Evening
of Yes Music," they presented their classic
repertory to sell-out houses all over the country,
including a 1990 gig at Madison Square Garden.
The legal squabbles had all
been settled by the spring of 1991, at which time
a composite "mega Yes" group consisting
of Anderson, Howe, Wakeman, Squire, Kaye, White,
Rabin, and Bruford (all of the key past members
except Peter Banks) embarked on a blow-out world
tour (which included the filming of a video historical
documentary of the band, Yesyears: The Video)
called Yesshows 1991. The accompanying album,
Union, which displayed somewhat tougher sound
than they'd been known for, debuted on the British
charts at number seven and reached number 15 in
America. This tour, which allowed the band to
showcase music from all of its previous incarnations
and, in the second half, featured each member
who wished it in a solo spot, broke more records.
These mammoth three-hour shows and the resulting
publicity (even news organizations that normally
didn't cover rock concerts did features on the
reunion) only seemed to heighten interest in the
four-CD boxed set YesYears, which was released
by Atlantic in 1991.
By the mid-'90s, even longtime
detractors of progressive rock, who loathed the
band's early-'70s album-length musical excursions,
conceded that Yes is the best of all the bands
in their particular field of endeavor in what
they do. The group continues to sell CDs in large
quantity — in 1995, Atlantic Records issued
upgraded, remastered versions of the group's classic
1960s and '70s albums — even as the work
of many of their one-time rivals are consigned
to the cut-out bins, and their periodic tours,
as well as numerous solo albums (especially by
Wakeman, and lately by Anderson and Howe), are
taken very seriously by fans and critics. Today,
their music of almost every era is regarded by
fans with undiminished enthusiasm, and by their
critics as respectable attempts at doing something
serious with rock music.
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