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Topic ClosedRelayer: The Yes Masterpiece?

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esky View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 27 2010 at 09:06
Tongue  Yeah, I saw that same tour but at Balboa Stadium in San Diego (whose massive columns were leveled some years back because of earthquake safety - do you care?). Sure, there was Gentle Giant (who I was too ill-informed about to savor), Gary Wright (enjoyable), and Frampton, who got a large Dixie cup of soda thrown up onto him by a ditzy fan. Yes did close the show (headliner?) but for some reason I don't remember "Gates" being part of the set. You lucked out if you saw 'em do it. I do remember the grace and beauty of Moraz's playing though, and the guys pulled out "Money" as one of their encores. My point here: Yes' Moraz era was golden!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 27 2010 at 21:30
Yes played "Money"? You mean the one from Dark Side of the Moon? That would have been interesting to hear...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 28 2010 at 06:22
When Yes came to Brazil in 1998, I went to the show! They played a small part of "Sound Chaser", in a little medley, at the final of "The Fish"!
Great Squire performance!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 28 2010 at 07:19
Originally posted by Dellinger Dellinger wrote:

Yes played "Money"? You mean the one from Dark Side of the Moon? That would have been interesting to hear...
 
Not the PF one. It's on the YesYears box set. I haven't played it for a while but if I remember correctly it features a Rick Wakeman impression of Denis Healy.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 28 2010 at 07:24
Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:

Relayer is a fantastic album. A very easy to get war theme fits the music power and dynamics with a directness not reaily apparent on Tales. Tales is probably my favourite of the lot but it's not an obvious album in terms of it's lyrical focus.

But this is the whole idea. It' s not pop music (though the broad category is Poular Music - I mean pop as in disposable.) This stuff (Prog and Yes especially requires study and analysis much the same as (non comic) opera, symphonies, concerto and orchestral suites, jazz masterworks from Ellington, Miles, Coltrane. and Tales, Relayer and the other Yes suspects fall into this In Depth category.

Yes went on with Going For The One and the Keys material but Gates of Delerium has a unique ness that places it so evidently that this thread needed to be started.

The greatest? The last greatest (arguably the last could be GFTO). But Gates is so epic. It's probably on it's own, a superior condensed idea than any one of the individual tracks from Tales which is a better sum considering that the album (if you folow the lyrics is a cyclic narrative.)

Sound Chaser I've noticed gets a bit of a rough ride and To Be Over almost ignored. IMHO Sound Chaser absolutely electrifies. Wild Yes on fire like never before or since. To Be Over is an understated piece of charming lyricism with all the timeles beauty of a Turner.

Wonderful album.

Clap 
To Be Over is one of my favourite Yessongs and contains one of Howe's best solos.  As for Relayer, I can't really separate it from CTTE and TFTO as their best.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 28 2010 at 10:14
I love Relayer, and prefer it personally to Close To The Edge. Relayer is a much more spontaneous and energetic album than that CTTE.

For me it's hard to choose a favourite Yes album, though. All '70's Yes albums are great, as well as 90125 and the live tracks on Keys To Ascension 1.

Relayer is a masterpiece, yes, but Yes made so many masterpieces.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2010 at 10:44
The Yes Album and Close to the Edge.
Fragile doesn't quite make it for me as a complete album, although it does have some of my favorite songs on it.

Relayer for me is 2nd tier, probably on a level with Going for the One.  Relayer just sounds "sterile" to me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 01 2010 at 12:35
Almost all of you prefer Relayer. Very impressiv album, really. But, my feelings were attracted to "Close to the Edge". The theme, the virtuosity, the feeling, a real voyage in a dense atmosphere, evolving and leading us to the climax and a relax with I get Up I get down - so fantastic! I love it! And we have the real masters all together, Wakeman and Bruford  all in sincronicity.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 01 2010 at 13:22

The original question that started this thread was essentially “... Which album is it that drives there point home?” Not, What’s your favorite Yes album.””

While it’s arguable that Yes actually has a specific “point” to drive home, it seems to me that their own preference for the make-up (or line-up) has to have something to do with it. To me that says that they were happiest with the Anderson, Howe, Squire, White, Wakeman line up. 

It would be interesting to know what they themselves consider their best works. I can’t help but wonder why they wouldn’t have continued with Moraz if they were happy with Relayer. Anyone know if they’ve ever talked about this? 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 01 2010 at 14:03
"Close To The Edge" remains, unquestionably, the group's masterpiece.

assume the power 1586/14.3
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 01 2010 at 16:22
Howard HUghes wrote - <I can’t help but wonder why they wouldn’t have continued with Moraz if they were happy with Relayer. Anyone know if they’ve ever talked about this? >

Yes, I remeber an interview- can't recall the spoecific medium but those replying said he (Patrick Morazx) was too Swiss, too foreign. A slight parodying of Moraz' accented voice setrved to underline this. I think they just felt happier with Wakeman.

Incidentally, Wakeman left Yes after Tales as he thought it wasn't (pop? eeerk) enough (should've waited ' til 90125...) Anyway....he later went on to say it hardly mattered if a song was 3 or 8 or 20 minutes, however long it took to say what they had to say. True he was enamoured of the GFTO sessions (they're writing soings again.)

Intderestingly along came Tormato which did little for Yes other than prompting Wakeman and Anderson to depart. This was an album of songs. No coneptual themes.

I do think with Relayer being the last of their acknowledged epics before Endless Dream, Be The One, That,. That Is and Mind Drive (all appearing within 2 -3 years and none since - and 20 years after Relayer then Relayer was certainly the last Yes classic to hammer theri themed epic tone poem ideas home. There is Awaken but Yes hit the rocks after '77 and spent too much time boxing the compass.

After Drama they chased an audience rather than vice versa and this leaves Relayer as the last great evidence of epics. Mind You I think GFTO is equally fine. But having that themed consistency - that story feel to their recordings was essentially Yes' area of expertise. And they let it go...

They're good at pretty much everything and making mainstream rock (their's is more distinguished than most others) but ... Relayer / Awaken are the last epics before the drama of the 80s.

Interesting how the title track  of Relayer (such as it is) turns up on Tales...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2010 at 10:15
Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:

Interesting how the title track  of Relayer (such as it is) turns up on Tales...


Yes, I remember I went to London in 1976 or so and I told my friend back in Belgium (who'd actually introduced me to Yes) that the band's latest album was entitled SILENCE OF THE VALLEY!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2010 at 12:35
Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:

Howard HUghes wrote - <I can’t help but wonder why they wouldn’t have continued with Moraz if they were happy with Relayer. Anyone know if they’ve ever talked about this? >

Yes, I remeber an interview- can't recall the spoecific medium but those replying said he (Patrick Morazx) was too Swiss, too foreign. A slight parodying of Moraz' accented voice setrved to underline this. I think they just felt happier with Wakeman.

Incidentally, Wakeman left Yes after Tales as he thought it wasn't (pop? eeerk) enough (should've waited ' til 90125...) Anyway....he later went on to say it hardly mattered if a song was 3 or 8 or 20 minutes, however long it took to say what they had to say. True he was enamoured of the GFTO sessions (they're writing soings again.)

Intderestingly along came Tormato which did little for Yes other than prompting Wakeman and Anderson to depart. This was an album of songs. No coneptual themes.

I do think with Relayer being the last of their acknowledged epics before Endless Dream, Be The One, That,. That Is and Mind Drive (all appearing within 2 -3 years and none since - and 20 years after Relayer then Relayer was certainly the last Yes classic to hammer theri themed epic tone poem ideas home. There is Awaken but Yes hit the rocks after '77 and spent too much time boxing the compass.

After Drama they chased an audience rather than vice versa and this leaves Relayer as the last great evidence of epics. Mind You I think GFTO is equally fine. But having that themed consistency - that story feel to their recordings was essentially Yes' area of expertise. And they let it go...

They're good at pretty much everything and making mainstream rock (their's is more distinguished than most others) but ... Relayer / Awaken are the last epics before the drama of the 80s.

Interesting how the title track  of Relayer (such as it is) turns up on Tales...
The YesYears video has Anderson saying that Moraz was getting "lost in space", so I surmise that means he was not as enamored of the jazz-rock direction, at least as represented by Moraz, as the latter, and it's common knowledge that Anderson forces the issue in a personnel sense. Perhaps it just means that Anderson thought that Relayer couldn't be improved upon in that category, and it was time to re-direct. Remember, punk and new wave were just coming on, with their disdain for the pomp and grandiosity that many prog acts could be accused of.
 
I was fortunate enough to host Moraz at one of the CHAT I tour stops in 1995, and when someone proffered a Relayer LP for him to sign, he looked at the rearing snake on the back cover and murmured "reminds me of Brian Lane".  Manager Lane was evidently urging the rejoining of Wakeman since it was seen as helping the marketing, especially if a new musical direction were forthcoming.
 
Regarding Tormato, it was certainly a letdown compared to GFTO, but they all stuck around for the next effort, which took place in Paris with Roy Thomas Baker chosen to produce, and if you've heard any of that material, it's really a low point. Much of it is just unlistenable. Wakeman has even called it unproduceable (also in YesYears).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2010 at 13:15
Ouch  No, you don't seem to get it. Relayer was a tour-de-force after the failed experiment of TFTO. It was Wakeman out, Moraz in, and his work shined as part of a trilogy of work that included his own solo album of the time ("The Story of " and Squire's Fish Out of Water. 1975 was indeed a magical time because of it.
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