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I've been writing from a parched pen for the past few days, relegated to wandering
over familiar haunts in the search for some lost elixir of inspiration that might have been
missed in earlier travels. "Time And A Word" seemed a fitting destination, since clearly it
couldn't have warranted such misplaced invective as "grandiloquent goo" (my original
assessment). But a benediction from me will have to wait for a better day. I've heard
some of these songs in the context of Yesterdays and suffered no ill mood, but
listening to the 1994 Atlantic remaster once more has rekindled my cranky disposition.
Nowhere in their catalog is their celestial messenger so rudely handled as here,
suffering the ignominy of string arrangements and caricatured in a cacophonous mix
that buries the band under CHRIS SQUIRE's overburdened bass lines. Songs that might
have soared of their own majesty ("Time And A Word", "Then") are here hijacked and
harnessed to the body of a grossly gilded butterfly in the form of TONY COX'
orchestration. The poor thing, as you might imagine, struggles to fly, flapping its wings
noisily in a great commotion. The tragedy here is that "Time And A Word" might have
been a better album than this. "Sweet Dreams" and "Astral Traveller" indicate that the
band's "Survival" skills remain intact, but producer TONY COLTON apparently had some
sort of commercial death wish for them. The red rating should of course be taken in
context. YES fans are a resilient lot, capable of subsisting on the nectar of a cactus
flower where occasion calls for it.
Still, I'd be remiss in not attaching to "Time And A Word" a word of caution. There's little
to be gained in listening to this album, chalking it up to the band's inexperienced
handlers, and slipping the disc back into the forgotten files, but much to be gained from
exploring parallel universes like Flash or the solo work of JON ANDERSON. Look at this
as an open invitation to expand your world. No doubt you can squeeze something
sweet from this lemon, but better to embrace sweet mystery, leave "Time And A Word"
to nameless possibilities, and venture into someplace unexpected, perhaps even into
the gardens of GENTLE GIANT or the harsh universe of VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR.
daveconn |2/5 |
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