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DECEMBER 2002
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Source: Cameron Crowe Online
http://www.cameroncroweonline.com/writtenby/linernotes/yes.htm
Yes: In a Word: Introduction
By Cameron Crowe
When I first got the opportunity to write about rock for a San Diego
underground paper, I couldn't help it. I wanted to write about the music
that mattered to me. I wanted to write about Yes.
An interview was arranged while the band was in town for a concert. I was
told to go to the backstage door of the San Diego Sports Arena and ask for
tour manager Alec Scott. I did so. The list was not there. I still remember
the guard. He looked like a battered nightclub comic. He wore a yellow
checkered jacket. And he hated me.
Ultimately, the message did get to Scott, who pulled me into the band's
dressing room for an interview with the celebrated keyboardsman Rick
Wakeman. The interview ended when the band exited for the stage. After the
concert, Scott slipped me backstage again. Changing into street clothes,
still adrenalized from the show, the rest of the band now weighed in. Jon
Anderson, Bill Bruford, Chris Squire, and Steve Howe all took passionate
turns explaining their quest to be around a long time, playing music their
way. All for a local underground giveaway paper.
Later given a chance to freelance some pieces for Rolling Stone, I chose
Yes. We toured Southern California together. It was the first time I'd
truly seen how a band operated, the delicate chemistry of a group. There
was an utter seriousness about their quest to be truly great, always
combined with a humor that flashed just below the surface.
Years later, putting together Almost Famous, I dug out all those interviews
and my own time-honored collection of their vinyl. I wrote a scene almost
exactly replicating that first night backstage with Yes. And when we added
music to the movie, it was Yes' "I've Seen All Good People (Your Move)"
that gave my editor and I our first real shiver of joy at what the movie
could be. It was only fitting. Their music still matters, year in and year
out. Whatever trend was in vogue, you could always still find Yes on any
radio dial.
Here's one more fond memory. Writing about Pearl Jam in the heyday of the
so-called grunge explosion, guitarist Stone Gossard was sitting in the back
of a car moving through San Francisco. "There's so much for this band to
accomplish," he said, leaning forward, "but what I really want is for us to
make our Tales From Topographic Oceans."
Wherever you go, wherever you find a record collection of essentials, go to
the end and work back just a little bit. You'll find them there. Years
later, they're still together, no longer just a band, but the owners of a
genre all their own. Yesmusic.
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