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DECEMBER 31, 2002
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Source: Yahoo Launch
http://launch.yahoo.com
YES Biography
By Brett Milano
Yes was the quintessential English art-rock band, with all the excess and
all the glory that entails. Loaded with too much virtuosity, too many ideas
and too many personnel changes for one band to deal with, Yes has produced
its share of spotty albums over the past 20 years. Yet during its classic
period (lasting between 1970's The Yes Album and 1977's Going For The One)
Yes was almost consistently inspired. Anyone needing to defend art-rock
only has to pull out the side-long title track of Close To The Edge (1972):
It never got more visceral or more melodically soaring than that.
Initially Yes was simply a pop group that got very, very ambitious. Their
first two albums have some R&B traces, thanks to the more basic styles of
guitarist Peter Banks and keyboardist Tony Kaye, who both got weeded out
early. Yet the delicate, almost feminine tones of singer Jon Anderson
proved an early trademark, along with the jazz leanings of the rhythm
section (bassist Chris Squire and drummer Bill Bruford, replaced in 1972 by
the heavier-hitting Alan White). With the arrival of guitarist Steve Howe
and keyboardist Rick Wakeman, Yes was free to explore the rock-symphony
approach they aspired to. Their ambitions reached a peak on 1973's Tales
From Topographic Oceans--a four-song, lyrically dense double album that
even Wakeman found excessive (he exited for a year, replaced by Patrick
Moraz)--yet there were more than enough lovely and powerful moments to
justify the stretch. Reunited with Wakeman after a year making solo albums,
Yes stripped down to relative basics and made its last great album with
1977's Going For The One. Since then the band's inability to settle on a
permanent lineup, coupled with the inevitable career fatigue, has kept them
from hitting the same peaks. Anderson and Wakeman left in 1979, replaced by
the two members of the Buggles (the resulting album, Drama, was nowhere
near as bad as it could have been). Yes was then laid to rest until 1983,
when Anderson, Kaye, Squire and White formed a new lineup with
guitarist/singer Trevor Rabin. At first Rabin's mainstream instincts were
just what the band needed--the 1983 album 90125 was both creative and
commercial, if not quite the cosmic Yes of old--but wound up taking far too
much control and made Yes sound too ordinary.
Anderson rebelled and pulled in the other ex-members for a competing band,
clumsily billed as Anderson, Wakeman, Bruford, Howe--but that didn't work
either, thanks to overdone production and spotty material. The nadir came
when some unfinished AWBH demos were cobbled together with some Rabin
outtakes as a Yes album, Union; an eight-man lineup cashed in with a
reunion tour. The closest thing to a real comeback happened when the
Topographic Oceans lineup reunited in 1996 for Keys To Ascension, a live
album of great Yes obscurities, plus a surprisingly solid studio section
(two new songs totaling 30 minutes, their first long suites in years). A
finished studio follow-up album was said to be even better; yet it was
shelved in 1997 when Wakeman left the band again. The remaining diehard Yes
fans are undoubtedly used to such ups and downs by now.
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