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Topic ClosedHow many really listen to Yes?

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fuxi View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 29 2009 at 12:14
Originally posted by NickTFTO NickTFTO wrote:

Oh the joy of Jon Anderson. How does he write this?  And sing it with a straight face! Shocked


"Even Jon Anderson goes thru the motions"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2009 at 19:40
I'm constantly listening, whenever and wherever!Big smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 30 2009 at 21:02
Yes comes and goes, Heart of the Sunrise is permanent.
Can you tell me where we're headin'?
Lincoln County Road or Armageddon.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 01 2009 at 01:14
I like them a lot, i listen to their music frequently

Follow me on twitter @memowakeman
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 01 2009 at 01:57
There is always some Yes spinning in this household, in fact just enjoying Big Generator the other day. Which reminds me TFTO deserves a fully attentative listen againSmile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 01 2009 at 06:48
More crazy Anderson lyrics...(where do you start?)

"... Ive seen all good people turn their heads each day. So satisfied Im on my way"

Is he a Doctor doing his rounds on a ward full of patients paralyzed from the neck down?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 01 2009 at 07:46
I listened to tales from topographic. only when i listened to a yes dvd who played a song from the album. But i won't be able to listen to the complete album. I always find difficult to appreciate this album. The songs seems to be lacking of coherence between the different parts. The melody seems to be lost in the sucession of notes.Confused
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 01 2009 at 13:02
Originally posted by treebeard treebeard wrote:

More crazy Anderson lyrics...(where do you start?)

"... Ive seen all good people turn their heads each day. So satisfied Im on my way"

Is he a Doctor doing his rounds on a ward full of patients paralyzed from the neck down?



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 02 2009 at 01:49
Still listen to em, but not as frekvently as 20 years ago.
But that goes for all the Classics, PG PINK ZEP GENESIS.
The only thing i keep listinig as frekvent as back then, is the 69-75 Crimsons.
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 03 2009 at 05:53
I listen to their first albums, well from The Yes Album (and the first one too) to Drama maybe every weeks.

I'm quite sad that I know their albums quite well now but I still enjoy them hopefully, Close To The Edge or Realyer are always a great way to relax and travel through time and space Tongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2009 at 17:50
I have a 120 gb Zune player,and YES is one of the few bands that I have their whole collection on it. I just listened to Tormato this morning, and Close to the edge just yesterday.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2009 at 17:57
Well, me often too. I like to walk  inside the magic and ligtning YES melodies, and dream I sing as the great Jon Anderson does...simply spectacullar. Now listening THE YES ALBUM, this morning CLOSE TO THE EDGE one...Clap


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2009 at 18:01

Yesterday: Fragile

Today: CTTE
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 04 2009 at 18:02
I'm listening to YES frequently. It depends on the mood though 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 05 2009 at 08:33
I have been listening to YES since 1973. They are the defining band in progressive rock for me. Their lesser material is still listenable, and their best material has no peer. I put the music on to complement or stimulate a wide array of moods and situations. Try making out to CTTE, or doing yardwork to Fragile.
  Yes, I listen, and have been priviledged to be part of two bands that perform their music. CTTE, from Chicago, 1998-2001 and Prog, from Madison, WI, 2001 to the present.
   Best wishes to Jon...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 05 2009 at 17:37
I've not listened to Yes lately, since I have been on an Italian Prog binge, but tonight while I get caught up on homework I think I'll listen to TFTO. i used to listen to CTTE quite alot, though.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 05 2009 at 17:52
I've been rewatching Yes videos . . .
Most recently, Yessongs all the way through--I hadn't seen/heard the And You And I version in years. . .
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 06 2009 at 03:31
Not played anything for over a year. Gonna make me a playlist for the short walk to town and back:
 
Yours is no Disgrace
Every Little Thing
Starship Trooper
Siberian Khatru
Heart of the Sunrise
Roundabout


Edited by el dingo - May 06 2009 at 03:31
It's not that I can't find worth in anything, it's just that I can't find worth in enough.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 07 2009 at 21:04

I know that hundereds of thousands are listening to Yes! In the seventies it was millions.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 08 2009 at 06:43
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Hi,
 
I still think that "Tales of Topographic Oceans" is one of the best rock albums ever made ... maybe it was because I had a sensibility and leaning towards long cuts, had enjoyed classical music since I was a tiny tot ... and always looked forward to seeing musicians my age ... show their art ... instead of overloaded, and grossly over rated, pop music!
 
I thought of things like Thick as a Brick, A Passion Play, Topographic Oceans, Mike Oldfield, Vangelis, Klaus Schulze, Tangerine Dream ... and many other long pieces as the "classical music" of our time ... unffortunately many people decided that it was not rock'n'roll and trashed it silly ... and trahsed it hard ... it didn't help that even Ian Anderson was making fun of the long cuts, albeit in a weird way but still good, as the title was related to stuffed up folks and musicians ... that had a lot more to do with their ego than it did with their musicianship!
 
No one sits here and trashes Beethoven, or Mozart, of whomever ... and says that is is self indulgent and that the lyrics are pooh and paah ... and what not ... and that's almost like saying that the sacred stuff is now considered "good" and any attempt that you or I, or Yes in those days will put together  .. is automatically defined as poop'ery.
 
In my book, all it is showing is the lack of knowledge and ability on many people, and specially those that can only have a 3 minute orgasm ... for them I don't even feel sorry, or care.
 
I respect the talent and the beauty ... and above all ... the desire ... to do something like Topographic Oceans ... it's hard ... and playing it is probably nerve wrecking since it is not chuck berry or some simple stuff that is just repetitions on a theme ... it takes no talent to do that btw ... compared to the other example.
 
You decide ... prog for me is about people trying things ... that were not done before ... Topographic Oceans is massive ... and one of the best that prog will ever create ... if we only give it a chance to let it play out. I wish I was a symphony conductor ... I would orchestrate that in a minute ... and I bet the concert hall would fill up ... the second part of the concert would probably be some Frank Zappa! hehe
 
 

ClapClapClap
Clap
Moshkito, you and I ought to hang out.  I entirely agree.  Great post. 

It's thanks to Yes and a few others that I learned what it takes to listen to long forms, a difficulty with far greater dividends than any passive-listening experience can give.  Thanks to the few and proud bands like this, I came to the music of Beethoven and then, far better and subtler, Mozart.  People, if you don't know the Piano Concerti you ought to!  Allow me to suggest (they're all very good, nearly all great, but...) #9 Eb, #22 Eb, #23 A (that almost killed me, since I could fill the page with other suggestions just as good).  And then of course there's the amazing Brahms.  I feel sometimes like he's practically a progger!  Symphonies 3, 4, brilliant; all late works involving clarinet, totally out of hand and can be understood well by prog listeners; the two Piano Concerti.  (Again, plenty else.)  When I came to César Franck I knew I was hearing the same sorts of ideas of form used by Yes in Tales - speaking only of form now, not content - in that all themes are generated from a very few, or one, simple idea.  Came to learn this was dubbed "cyclic form."  That was an immensely exciting discovery for me!  Ah, and Shostakovich... let me stop.

(Please don't anyone chime in to say that people who post stuff like the above are showing off or are pretentious - that'd be too much here among friends on a site dedicated to the deepness of prog.)

So I count myself in that happy number who heard Yes early and got into the wonders of the classical and romantic eras that moved them.

***
Tales is great front to back.  I try never to listen to just parts of it, any more than I would just slap on the second movement of the 18th concerto, perfect little machine that it is.  If I put Tales on, it's the whole 4 movement piece.  Greatest record of the genre perhaps.

***
Do I listen to Yes still?  You bet.  I've even decided in recent months to never again be ashamed of it.  Sometimes a person will smirk or laugh, but whatever.  Maybe, by being open, I'll occasionaly meet a kindred spirit. 

I had work to do the past two days which put me in need of a rental car to drive to points in New Jersey and Long Island.  I burned some mp3 CD-RWs, since the car had an mp3 cd player.  Of my own free will I listened, loudly, to all of Gates, much of Drama, all of Going For The One, with Awaken real loud.  Almost brought Fragile and Close, but I knew that with the above I had enough to get me by.  I had other stuff with me too (Decemberists, Le Orme, Rovescio della Medaglia, Höyry-Kone, others), things I planned to listen to because I'm getting to know them better.  But what did I end up blasting on the Turnpike, singing with on the Expressway almost to the point of tears?  "Pounding out the Devil's surmon..."   "High vibration go on..."  Never a dull moment.

To borrow from what some others in this thread have already said, I love everything from Time And A Word to Drama.  And I consider everything from Yes Album to Going to be true art; and everything from Close to Relayer is High Art imo.

(As an aside, I bet a whole lot of people listened to them back in the day (perhaps still today) in a quite, well, stoned condition.  But I say their music stands up to an eager listener's total awareness and waking, logic-bound scrutiny.) 



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