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JUNE 7, 1973
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Source: Rolling Stone -- Archived at SuperSeventies
http://www.superseventies.com/spyes.html
Yes: Yessongs
By Jon Tiven
YesSongs
Yes
Atlantic 100
Released: March 1973
Chart Peak: #12
Weeks Charted: 32
Certified Gold: 3/17/73
Yes suffers from having too many diverse talents for one group to handle. The differing musical styles of the five musicians cannot easily be
integrated into a unified approach. As a result the group has, more often than not, fallen back on a pattern of extended soloing to duck the issue.
On this six-sided live album, they do it less than on previous releases (in concert you can't very well have people strolling offstage all the time)
although regrettably there is still far too much of it. Nonetheless, this is their best album in quite a while, far superior to
Close to the Edge
and Fragile
.
Yes' lead singer and group spokesman is Jon Anderson, a lad blessed with a
silver throat and a magnificent range. On the negative side, he writes the
group's lyrics which are both contrived and sometimes senseless, and it has
been Jon who has urged the rest of the group (especially Rick Wakeman,
keyboards) to solo more, as an outgrowth of his admiration for such
soloists as Keith Emerson and John McLaughlin. Wakeman and drummer Alan
White have made names for themselves as group members rather than front men
(in the Strawbs and Plastic Ono Band/Balls, respectively), and they are
most effective in their natural roles. Steve Howe, guitar, is a unique
stylist who has helped to define the Yes sound with both his playing and
songwriting, but his musical contributions were much more earthshaking
(although not recognized as such) and indicative of his extraordinary
talents when he led Tomorrow, a psychedelic superband of the late Sixties.
Finally there's Chris Squire, a quiet and musically humble bassist who
knows how to exploit the spacey Rickenbacker bass guitar sound, as well as
having written the majority of Yes' songs.
"Perpetual Change" is perhaps the best single track on the album; the group
uses dynamics to build crescendos full of emotional impact. Unfortunately,
the cut ends with an anti-climactic and monotonous drum solo. "I've Seen
All Good People" would have been better if the bass/drums weren't mixed so
loud during the acoustic segment -- the rumbles around the low edge of the
audio spectrum are more distracting than exciting. But the live version of
"Roundabout" sounds more full and exciting than the original and "And You
and I" is quite invigorating.
In fact, if our interest wasn't so consistently being diverted by the solos
-- which ideally could have been reduced in length and number by editing,
leaving us with a more wieldy two-record set -- I could recommend Yessongs
without reservation. But it is impossible to do so with its stop/start
energy and beautiful songs continually being interrupted by single
instrument rambling that add only length to the album's timing and nothing
to the force of the group's music.
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