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Topic ClosedYes, an open discussion-how not to do it!

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Winter Wine View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2006 at 07:51
Originally posted by Norbert Norbert wrote:

Musicians of the Buena Vista Social Club are/were in their eigties.

 20 years from now Jon anderson will be only 82, so nothing is impossible.

The man pretty much defies age. At 82 he will probably give us Close to the Edge II

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2006 at 07:58
Originally posted by Winter Wine Winter Wine wrote:

Originally posted by Norbert Norbert wrote:

Musicians of the Buena Vista Social Club are/were in their eigties.

 20 years from now Jon anderson will be only 82, so nothing is impossible.

The man pretty much defies age. At 82 he will probably give us Close to the Edge II

Yes, he really defies age. A wonderful person from every aspect.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2006 at 08:01
Originally posted by Norbert Norbert wrote:

Originally posted by Winter Wine Winter Wine wrote:

Originally posted by Norbert Norbert wrote:

Musicians of the Buena Vista Social Club are/were in their eigties.

 20 years from now Jon anderson will be only 82, so nothing is impossible.

The man pretty much defies age. At 82 he will probably give us Close to the Edge II

Yes, he really defies age. A wonderful person from every aspect.

 I agree, and his voice has remained firmly intact down through the years

I wish I didn't have to go back to school I could talk about Jon all day

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2006 at 08:06
Anderson? What about Howe? That guys sooooooooooooo amazing.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2006 at 11:34

Originally posted by GPFR GPFR wrote:

Anderson? What about Howe? That guys sooooooooooooo amazing.

What about White? or Wakeman? or Squire? they're ALL amazing

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2006 at 12:21

I think CTTE, TALES and RELAYER are the real masterpieces, though any of the 69-79 period is excellent. I liked them live most in the "Ladder" tour. I didn't like that much the symponic tour but maybe because in Antwerp they did not play Gates, for my desperation. I love Steve Howe's guitar playing and not so much Wakeman, and I think Chris Squire is the greatest bass player in rock music (with Tony Levin and Geddy Lee)

ciao,

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2006 at 20:18
I've enjoyed them since they "came on line", and have always favored the
Yes Album, Fragile, CTTE the most. Appreciate Topographic Oceans but
it's not the kind of stuff I can put on and enjoy anytime; gotta be in a
mood for more experimental stuff for that one. Enjoy some of the tracks
from their first two, also (mostly the ones that made the old "Yesterdays"
compilation). From Relayer and on, just haven't related to their stuff - in
the mid-70s I discovered bands like Gentle Giant, Soft Machine, Gong,
"Krautrock" bands, etc, a LOT of good stuff that I'd been missing, and my
tastes went in a different direction - decidedly to more jazz-based stuff.
So I keep the first three cited above, and flush the rest. (Actually my shelf
contains several others, but they collect dust.)
GonG is one and one is YOU
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2006 at 22:26

I love all the albums from 'The Yes Album' to 'Going for the One', except Tales which is ok. It's a bit to noodley and the compositions just go nowhere. Tormato is decent, but no masterpiece. My favorite must be Fragile.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2006 at 15:44
Anybody have the dvd "YesYears" it's very interesting. Especially seeing them play the Topographic Oceans material live, it sounds great!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2006 at 13:34

Can anybody tell me why Rick Wakeman left in 97 just as Keys to Ascension 2 was supposed to be released? He said in interviews that he thought the new material was excellent and everything!

I'd rather not start a new thread for this so I posted here

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2006 at 14:03

I like Yes but I dont hold them with the same level of reverence that many others have on this site, the main reasons, I'd guess, are Jon Anderson (I cant stand his lyrics and his vocals arnt the best) and the sound Chris Squire makes with his bass ( I cant spell the makers name) witch really puts me off as I'm a bassist, even though I can here his great technicall proficiancy.

Mind you, I have only heard CTTE (dull except for SK) and The Yes Album (damn good piece of work).

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2006 at 14:09
Sticky topic...I haven't heard anything from the "classic" era.  What I DO like is 90125 and Big Generator.  I thougt they were written and produced well.  (Well...I know I'm gonna get bitched at for that!)
Some world views are spacious, and some are merely spaced...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2006 at 14:17

Originally posted by sbrushfan sbrushfan wrote:

Sticky topic...I haven't heard anything from the "classic" era.  What I DO like is 90125 and Big Generator.  I thougt they were written and produced well.  (Well...I know I'm gonna get bitched at for that!)

Not by me, I reviewed 90125 lately, have a look

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2006 at 14:19
Originally posted by Winter Wine Winter Wine wrote:

Originally posted by Norbert Norbert wrote:


Musicians of the Buena Vista Social Club are/were in their eigties.


 20 years from now Jon anderson will be only 82, so nothing is impossible.



The man pretty much defies age. At 82 he will probably give us Close to the Edge II



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I know what I like and I like what I know...

Prog is in my heart, in my mind, in my soul...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2006 at 14:21
Originally posted by sleeper sleeper wrote:

I like Yes but I dont hold them with the same level of reverence that many others have on this site, the main reasons, I'd guess, are Jon Anderson (I cant stand his lyrics and his vocals arnt the best) and the sound Chris Squire makes with his bass ( I cant spell the makers name) witch really puts me off as I'm a bassist, even though I can here his great technicall proficiancy.

Mind you, I have only heard CTTE (dull except for SK) and The Yes Album (damn good piece of work).

I don't know why people bother to say such blatantly stupid things sometimes, I know it's down to opinion but I really can't understand when people can't see such obviously silly things, CttE - 'dull', not in a billion years, amazing stuff, a pure adrenaline rush!

But maybe, one sunny day, you'll hear it again and say 'wow'. As for The Yes album, couldn't agree more



Edited by Winter Wine
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2006 at 15:25
Originally posted by Winter Wine Winter Wine wrote:

Originally posted by sbrushfan sbrushfan wrote:

Sticky topic...I haven't heard anything from the "classic" era.  What I DO like is 90125 and Big Generator.  I thougt they were written and produced well.  (Well...I know I'm gonna get bitched at for that!)

Not by me, I reviewed 90125 lately, have a look

 

I had to laugh at your comment about them "not winning any beauty contests".  That was funny.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2006 at 15:27
Originally posted by sbrushfan sbrushfan wrote:

Originally posted by Winter Wine Winter Wine wrote:

Originally posted by sbrushfan sbrushfan wrote:

Sticky topic...I haven't heard anything from the "classic" era.  What I DO like is 90125 and Big Generator.  I thougt they were written and produced well.  (Well...I know I'm gonna get bitched at for that!)

Not by me, I reviewed 90125 lately, have a look

 

I had to laugh at your comment about them "not winning any beauty contests".  That was funny.

Heh, thanks  What did you think about what I said about the music? and my rating?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2006 at 15:55
Originally posted by Winter Wine Winter Wine wrote:

Originally posted by sleeper sleeper wrote:

I like Yes but I dont hold them with the same level of reverence that many others have on this site, the main reasons, I'd guess, are Jon Anderson (I cant stand his lyrics and his vocals arnt the best) and the sound Chris Squire makes with his bass ( I cant spell the makers name) witch really puts me off as I'm a bassist, even though I can here his great technicall proficiancy.

Mind you, I have only heard CTTE (dull except for SK) and The Yes Album (damn good piece of work).

I don't know why people bother to say such blatantly stupid things sometimes, I know it's down to opinion but I really can't understand when people can't see such obviously silly things, CttE - 'dull', not in a billion years, amazing stuff, a pure adrenaline rush!

But maybe, one sunny day, you'll hear it again and say 'wow'. As for The Yes album, couldn't agree more

If you like you can see my review of the album. Basically I found the title track was to drawn out, it would have made a cracking 10-12 minute song but at 18 it was too much. And You And I doesnt even stick in my head so I cant remember exactly what I said about it.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 18 2006 at 19:37

It's late at night, I'm listening to 'Tales From Topographic Oceans' and i'm in the humour to talk about it, So i'll post here because noone will bother looking at it  

Here's my breakdown of the album (In edited form)

  • The Revealing Science of God - One of the best songs to just chill out to. There are very strong melodies here, A spacey spoken word intro which leads to a some great keyboard and guitar work. There is a lot of great ideas in this track, and even though overall Wakeman seems to be less involved on this album than the albums beforehand, He still gives us one of his best, Most aggressive synth solos on any Yes record. Truly amazing. Steve seems to be using a very odd selection of chords throughout the track, but it sounds great, I think some of his best guitar work is on this album, As a lot of it is wildly different than anything that came before.
  • The Remembering - The overlooked one. Lots of very distinct, Interesting sections, Based on a few very great ideas, Great mood again (Especially the meandering guitar at the beginning) One of my favourite moments is the acoustic section before the 'Relayeeeer' section that really gives the track a boost. Great stuff.
  • The Ancient - The difficult one. Even though I have got into this one over the months I bothered to start listening to side 2, I still find it the weakest. It has great ideas too of course but the intro feels too dragged out and if your not prepared for it, Steve's guitar can tear your head apart. When Jon enters on vocals he sounds very odd to me, but the final 8 or so minutes have some excellent vocals, And the acoustic section as a whole is one of the best parts in any Yes song. Also i'd like to add, The percussion experiment reminds of something that Jamie Muir would try, And for that, I find it great, Even if it is madness.
  • Ritual - The easier track to get into. Combining lots of ideas from the last three and adding in some more, The track seems to be brimming with creativity. Wakeman sounds more, For want of a better word, 'Awake' here, There's excellent keyboard and his piano touches in the last few minutes are quite beautiful, There must have been some moments when he thought it wasn't purely crap. The song has a much livelier rhythm and drive to it than most of the other songs, So Chris and Alan play a key role in this one. Jon sounds very emotional here, He sings some lines that can be very touching because they are almost melancholy, The lyrics are quite nice too. Perfect way to end the album.

To me, 'Tales From Topographic Oceans' had the potential to be Yes' finest hour (And 20 minutes) The ideas may not have been as developed as they could have been, there is a certain amount of padding, And sometimes it sounds a little discordant as a result. But I feel this is pure HEAVEN when you finally become accustomed to it. I think it has become something like the 'Die hard Yes fan favourite', So if you pass the Topographic Oceans test you're a true fan of their music. It has a very special atmosphere and mood that Yes fans go crazy for. It is one of my favourite Yes albums, As it offers a LOT to those who like to delve a little further into Yes music, Complicated, Ambitious, Off the wall and even pretentious, it deserves the title 'Flawed Masterpiece'.

I'll end up posting everything I feel about Yes on this thread  Thank God I started it myself.

I should really do my feckin review of Topographic Oceans, If I only I could decide on what to award it! Suggestions would be helpful

Tales from Topographic Oceans

 

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 18 2006 at 20:01

 

  Yes are up there with Floyd and Genesis as the three favorite prog bands of all time and deservedly so.TYA ,Fragile ,CTTE , Relayer and GFTO are masterpieces of the genre. Tormato, Time and a Word and 90125 are reasonable also. The controversial one is TFTO which winterwine calls a flawed masterpiece which is a compromise between those who love it and it's repuation in the public domain.I just listened to it also here are my views

 Side 1 The best of the four with some good melodies and contributions from Wakeman. The most enjoyable of the four and very good for the first ten minutes but petering out.Wakeman never sounds inspired after this side

 Side 2 Nothing I like about this side. Seems to be nothing happening and going nowhere with no hooks even

 Side 3 Seems to be the most coherent of the 4 with some quite good passages but at other times it can feel like an overextended jam. Creativity is high here.

 Side 4 This side starts well but again I think they had run out of ideas and started jamming to fill in the space.

 Potentially a masterpiece because creativity was high but they never had the material to sustain the concept for four sides.

 

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