Are The Yes Album, CttE and GftO the best 3 of Yes |
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Jacob Schoolcraft
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If I listen to Fragile just for the music and the flow of the entire album I don't think about band members taking solos. Don't think about that. Cans and Brahams..Mood For A Day are interspersed between songs. The instrumentalist aspect to that is part of the overall contents and concentrating on making the pieces fit alongside of the songs. I think they did an excellent job at putting it together.
I happen to like Topographic a lot. Literally it's characteristics whether spiritual or not are intriguing in some strange way. I like the cover and I sort of like the concept though I have to be in a certain mood to actually enjoy anything about it. It certainly doesn't reach everyone. The music certainly isn't commercially viable and it doesn't reach out to kiss everyone. Some people are appalled by it. It wasn't written in a style that would sooth everybody . It's not Supertramp . I guess if you spent the night in a cabin during a massive snow blizzard the album would come to life. The Yes Album, Fragile, and Close To The Edge are outstanding accomplishment! It's not a math test but certainly they were creating a style of writing that would be influential for years to come. Going For The One has certain tracks that are a must to hear..however a few of them I can do without. Relayer was exactly as Jon Anderson described it..a very Grey album. Patrick Moraz was described as playing a very schizoid type of style. At this point the band were taking a darker direction in music. |
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Steve Wyzard
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Supertramp? Soothing? This is kind of like saying that Pink Floyd's "Goodbye Blue Sky" or King Crimson's "Islands" are soothing. Just because something is on the quieter end of the spectrum doesn't make it "soothing". Please listen to (in their entireties) "Asylum", "Ain't Nobody but Me", or the post-indictment cataclysm that closes "Crime of the Century". Yes, the band did do some pop material later in their career, but even that could only very rarely be described as "soothing". I'm sure somebody somewhere would even describe "The Remembering" as soothing.
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Jacob Schoolcraft
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People who are fanatical whores for sing-song melody tend to go for songs like "Sister Moonshine" or "Dreamer" which has probably been used for children's movies . Supertramp are a great band no doubt...but I see people who go for Supertramp's Pop sensibilities finding The Remembering revolting..and perhaps even to the point of outright saying..."WTF is that?? " |
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Zappastolethetowels
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CttE, Fragile & Relayer for me
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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Same here although the Yes album would be right behind them for me.
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Zappastolethetowels
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^same exact thought
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15132 |
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And yet, further listening to Fragile is a bit of a struggle and a new challenge to me, and interesting concerning the future. Also, a new discovery: Yes was the most Pop-influenced of the classical Big Six.
Edited by David_D - October 08 2024 at 08:15 |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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David_D
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Another perspective to this can be being something like joyful and uplifting, according to Jon Anderson / Yes' wish of giving the music the effect of spiritual awareness - that makes me more happy.
Edited by David_D - October 08 2024 at 16:29 |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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dr wu23
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Edited by dr wu23 - October 08 2024 at 15:06 |
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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin |
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Psychedelic Paul
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1. Mirror to the Sky
2. The Ladder 3. Going for the One
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David_D
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Now, I've began serious listening to Relayer, and there's definitely some interesting, exiting and great stuff, not least "The Gates of Delirium".
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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Hector Enrique
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 26 2019 Location: Lima, Peru Status: Offline Points: 727 |
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A. Close to the Edge / Going for the One / Yes Album B. Fragile / TfTO/ Relayer / Drama |
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Héctor Enrique
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David_D
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No wonder, as "The Gates of Delirium" is about the absurdity of The Vietnam War.
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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Hugh Manatee
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Not quite. You might be getting it confused with "Yours is no Disgrace". "The Gates of Delirium" is loosely based on Tolstoy's "War and Peace". |
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I should have been a pair of ragged claws
Scuttling across the floors of uncertain seas |
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15132 |
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I've seen that point of view as well, but this is what Jon Anderson has stated in an interview with Songfacts (February 2021):
( https://www.songfacts.com/facts/yes/the-gates-of-delirium )
Edited by David_D - October 14 2024 at 10:23 |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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David_D
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Btw, Relayer may look to me influenced by Brain Salad Surgery and Tarkus.
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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David_D
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But the more I listen to Fragile, the more am I happy about its joyfulness and prefer it to Relayer's dark moments, and at the same time, some of Relayer can seem rather poppy to me.
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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richardh
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Yes and ELP were bands that looked at each other quite a bit. Would Yes have been so keen to bring a keys man like Rick Wakeman into the fold but for the challenge laid down by Keith Emerson on early ELP albums? Stylistically though it's well known that Anderson and Howe were very interested in Mahavishnu Orchestra and that was more an influence on them at the time than ELP. I've heard it described as 'hard edged technicality' but there is none of the showboating of ELP to be honest.
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David_D
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And yet, it can look like the more I listen to Relayer, the more do I like it too. |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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Starshiper
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Am I alone in thinking that the GftO album sounds like a perfect blend of previous 70s Yes albums, excluded jazz-rocky Relayer?
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