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Their roots go way back
to the late sixties when they were
formed in the UK by vocalist Jon
Anderson, a man with the most
unique voice and who'd previously
been in a beat group called The
Warriors, and bassist Chris
Squire, previously of The Syn.
Guitarist Peter Banks, who'd been
with Squire in The Syn, Bitter
Sweet keyboard player Tony Kaye
and drummer Bill Bruford,
completed the quintet. Soon after
they began gigging, they secured a
residency at London's Marquee
Club, and they signed a recording
deal with Atlantic Records. They
released their debut self-titled
album in 1969. It had a lot of
fine moments and showed great
promise and was well received by
the critics. Subsequent releases
and tours saw the band build up a
very large and loyal fan base, in
spite of the fact that they
underwent a number of major
line-up changes: guitarist Steve
Howe, ex-Bodast, Tomorrow, The
Syndicats and In Crowd replaced
Banks, who went on to form Flash,
in 1971. Ex-Strawbs keyboard
player Rick Wakeman joined in
1971, and this line-up was fairly
stable for a while, recording what
is arguable one of the best albums
of the early seventies and is also
widely believed to be one of the
bands' best ever albums, Fragile,
in 1971. Another stand out feature
of Yes' albums was the stunning
sleeve artwork by the incredible
Roger Dean. Bruford was replaced
by Alan White, Wakeman by Patrick
Moraz, ex-Refugee, but it was
widely felt that the band was
losing direction. They carried on
recording and touring up to 1981,
when they effectively broke up. At
this stage, ex-Buggles members
Geoff Downes and Trevor Horn were
in the band, and they featured on
1980's "Drama", which was actually
a very good album. All members
enjoyed successful solo careers
and it came as a surprise to find
that the band had reformed in
1983, with guitarist Trevor Rabin,
ex-Rabbit! The reformed Yes
released "90125" in 1983 and it
was a great success all over the
world, with a number of charting
singles. The line-up at this stage
was Rabin, Anderson, White, Kaye
and Squire and this line-up also
featured on "Big Generator".
Further albums, such as 1991's
"Union" had almost the entire Yes
family on one album, but there
seemed to be big trouble in
paradise: Rabin was ousted in the
mid nineties ( he's now heavily
involved in music scores), Howe
was back and two double albums,
"Keys to Ascension" parts one and
two were released in 1996 and
1997. "Open your Eyes", released
in 1997, featured Billy Sherwood
on guitars and keyboards, Wakeman
once again having gone AWOL, which
brings you up to date with their
latest offering, 1999's "The
Ladder", a fairly good album
featuring new keyboard player Igor
Khoroshev.
Yes
Yes - Roundabout, from "Fragile"
in 1971, their 4th album. Next to
"90125", "Fragile" is probably
Yes' best known and most popular
album, having reached number seven
on the UK charts and number four
in the US. Yes, you may or may not
recall, were formed in the UK by
vocalist Jon Anderson and b assist
Chris Squire in the late sixties.
Joining Anderson and Squire were g
uitarist Peter Banks, drummer Bill
Bruford and keyboard player Tony
Kaye, and this line-up appeared on
the band's debut, self-titled
album, which was released on
Atlantic Records in 1969. The
second album, "Time and a Word",
released the following year, was
the last album to feature Banks,
who left to join Blodwyn Pig,
later forming Flash in 1972. His
replacement was ex-Syndicats/The
in Crowd/Tomorrow and Bodast
guitarist, Steve Howe. "The Yes
Album", in turn, was the last
album to feature Tony Kaye, who
joined Banks in Flash. He also
formed the unfortunately
short-lived Badger in 1973. Our
featured album saw the arrival of
ex-Strawbs keyboard player Rick
Wakeman, who was able to give the
band a much fuller keyboard sound,
making use of a much wider range
of keyboard instruments, such as
the Moog and mellotron. "Fragile"
was a brilliant album, and it
cemented Yes' reputation as one of
the world's top progressive bands
at the time. The band went on to
release a number of albums of
varying degrees of popularity
during the remainder of the
seventies and well into the
eighties, with a host of different
musicians, with many of the
original members also releasing
solo albums. Wakeman, although not
exactly an original member, was by
far the most prolific in terms of
solo albums released. Yes are
still around today.
(If you have more info on this
band, please
e-mail us)

Biography by Bruce Eder
Far and away the longest lasting
and the most successful of the
'70s progressive rock groups,
Yes proved to be one of the
lingering success stories from
that musical genre. The band,
founded in 1968, overcame a
generational shift in its
audience and the departure of
its most visible members at key
points in its history to reach
the end of the century as the
definitive progressive rock
band. Where rivals such as
Emerson, Lake & Palmer withered
away commercially after the
mid-'70s, and Genesis and King
Crimson altered their sounds so
radically as to become
unrecognizable to their original
fans, Yes retained the same
sound, and performed much of the
same repertory that they were
doing in 1971; and for their
trouble, they found themselves
being taken seriously a quarter
of a century later. Their
audience remains huge because
they've always attracted younger
listeners drawn to their mix of
daunting virtuosity, cosmic
(often mystical) lyrics, complex
musical textures, and powerful
yet delicate lead vocals.
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; he was later 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 in the spring
of 1971; later, it got to number
40 in America. 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 in the number of
instruments that he used. 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 13 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' 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
45s 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 reached
number six on the American
charts.
No album has more divided both
fans and critics of Yes alike.
At the time of its release,
critics called Tales From
Topographic Oceans excessive,
representing the height of
progressive rock's
self-indulgent nature.
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.
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 Centre 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, possibly 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-number-60-spots 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, in the U.K. 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. 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 Geoffrey Downes
(keyboards), formerly of the
British band the 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 Records
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
virtually re-formed 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 U.S.
Top 40 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 sold-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 a 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 of the
show, 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. 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,
Anderson, and Howe), are taken
very seriously by fans and
critics. Today, their music from
almost every era is regarded by
fans with undiminished
enthusiasm, and by their critics
as respectable attempts at doing
something serious with rock
music.

Rick
Wakeman
Jon Anderson
Peter Banks
Bill Bruford
Steve Howe
Trevor Rabin
Chris Squire
Alan White
Tony Kaye

Pink
Floyd
The Moody Blues
Jethro Tull
Genesis
Emerson, Lake & Powell
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Renaissance
PFM
Patrick Moraz
Starcastle
Chris Squire
Flash
Peter Banks
Alan Parsons
Electric Light Orchestra
Billy Sherwood
Peter Gabriel
Queen
Marillion
King Crimson
Giles, Giles & Fripp

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have any contribution to make to
this band or something to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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