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DECEMBER 1, 2003
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Source: Rock Ahead
http://www.themusicindex.com/rockahead/interviews/chris_squire.htm
Interview with Chris Squire (19th November 2003 -- webpublished 1 December)
By Jon Kirkman
Yes first came together in 1968 when Jon Anderson and Chris Squire met up
at a London club. Shortly after this historic meeting the band who at the
time also included Tony Kaye, Peter Banks and Bill Bruford signed to
Atlantic Records. Despite various comings and goings of personnel the band
made significant headway in the seventies releasing successful albums like
The Yes Album, Fragile, Close To The Edge and Tales From Topographic
Oceans. In 2003 the classic mid seventies line up of Yes which included
Chris Squire, Jon Anderson, Rick Wakeman, Steve Howe and Alan White
embarked on a tour to celebrate the bands 35th Anniversary with the tour
taking in concerts as far afield as Australia,Asia, Europe and the United
Kingdom and back playing in front of increasingly large audiences. The band
also saw the start of a major re issue campaign with the bands back
catalogue upgraded and re mastered and in many cases complete with new
sleeve notes and bonus tracks and a successful double Best Of CD entitled
'The Ultimate Yes' which even made the British album charts.
To end the year on a high note the band released a double DVD called
Yesspeak, which was filmed throughout 2003 whilst the band toured the
world. The DVD also featured interviews with each of the members of the
classic Yes line up of Chris Squire, Jon Anderson, Rick Wakeman, Steve Howe
and Alan White. Jon Kirkman spoke to Chris Squire who was at his manager's
office in Los Angeles and asked him for his thoughts on the previous twelve
months, The New DVD, and the plans for 2004.
Jon Kirkman: Let's have a chat about the current DVD, which is excellent.
This last year for Yes has been a number of things really, first of all
It's the thirty-fifth anniversary of the band and its been very busy in
terms touring. You have been to the far flung corners of the world; you've
had a lot of your back catalogue re-issued and finally at the end of the
year we have the Yes DVD Yesspeak. Was it planned that this year was going
to be a very busy year in terms of work for Yes.
Chris Squire: Yeah, we got back together at the end of last year and
started off with a north American tour and then we pretty much planned to
do what we did, unfortunately Jon hurt his back last Christmas so we had to
postpone our Asian trip then and did it in autumn but apart from that we
were always planning to come to England at the time we did and the only
regrets we have is that we didn't get the chance to do the Hyde Park show
because of problems with the promoters. Next time we will be able to sort
it out.
JK: It was a shame you didn't get to play in London this time around, I
know you played in Hammersmith but I think the Hyde Park gig would have
been a really nice gig for you guys to play. As regards the DVD, I think
this really caps the year for Yes. It's been a very successful year that
has seen Yes come back right to the forefront of the music business which
is great for real music rather than contrived pop music. You must be very
happy with your resurgence in popularity.
CS: Well yeah, Rick on the tour gave us a little bit of something to hang
the possibility of being able to do a come back and people who wanted to
come and see that particular line up of the band and I suppose together
with that overall there is a re interest in progressive music if you like
and some of the younger bands are doing a sort of new wave version of
progressive music these days so I suppose it is a good time for us and a
good time for the business as well.
JK: In terms of the current or classic line up of Yes, you have been the
only member of Yes that has been in every single line up since day one.
What is it in your opinion that makes this particular line up so special?
CS: I guess it is because we are more empathetic with each other, we're
all around the same age and we grew up in the same time and in England as
well; obviously some of the people we have played with have been Americans
and Trevor Rabin who is South African of course. So I suppose there is a
sort of music empathy that comes naturally to this particular line up
because of our growing up at the same time and in the same country.
Whatever that X factor is that goes into that way of development, scoring
and whatever we went through, being post-war babies I guess. It somehow
becomes regurgitated and affirmed when we play music together.
JK: So, with thirty-five years under the collective belt, how do you choose
which material to play live because there's not been a new album since
Magnification so the last couple of tours have concentrated on some of the
classic material? I think I have asked you this before! It could turn into
a marathon; you have to draw the line somewhere I guess.
CS: Well, there's obviously our most popular songs, which come from around
the Yes album, Fragile, plus the Close to The Edge Era, you know that
people always want to hear. We try to vary other stuff around that and when
we had Magnification we always try to present at least two or three songs
from the latest album or most current thing we're involved with and apart
from that we maybe suggest something that hasn't been played for a while,
that's all it is.
JK: One of my favourite Yes songs has made a re appearance in the set and
it's featured in the Yesspeak DVD and that's South Side Of The Sky. I never
actually thought I'd hear Yes perform that song because it wasn't a song
that was played a great deal when Fragile came out. Is there a particular
song of yours that Yes haven't played for a while that you would maybe like
to see back in the set?
CS: That definitely was one of them and you know for a long time on our
website YesWorld and other websites it had been requested by the fan base
so I guess we found a way of doing it. We had tried it on a few occasions
but it had never quite taken off and I don't quite know why because when we
finally got round to rehearsing it on this particular tour it seemed to be
ok and it got better as we went on.
JK: Something that was mentioned to me by a fan of your later period in
other words the 90125, The Drama, Big Generator Period, they were a little
disappointed that Yes this time round weren't playing too much of that
material. But I guess it must be understandable with the particular line up
that you have.
CS: Well there is that, obviously it makes sense to play more songs that
Rick and Steve were involved with. We sometimes play Owner of a Lonely
Heart, which is something that Steve had resisted for quite a while you
know but now he's kind of ok with it but it's hard for me to answer this
question because I've always played everything we've ever done! It's not
really a good question for me because obviously I will play anything that
we have done from whatever.
JK: I've noticed that for a few years you've played Tempus Fugit, as part
of a solo would there ever be any likelihood of the current line up of Yes
ever touching anything from Drama?
CS: That's one of those circular situations. We've mentioned it to Jon on a
couple of occasions you know, "How about doing that?" and he goes, "Yeah,
that's a great idea." And that's as far as it goes.
JK: Well I asked him that once and he asked me which songs I'd like to see
you do and I said, "Well, I'd like to see you do Into The Lens and Tempus
Fugit and Machine Messiah" and he said, "Maybe we'll do those." But that's
about as far as it went, he was quite diplomatic!
CS: Well, exactly, you got a diplomatic answer but let's face it it's quite
wordy Tempus Fugit and John doesn't like those words so if he ever got
round to doing it he would have to do some studying of someone else's
lyrics. I don't know, it's possible, when we do touring next spring we
might try and do a couple of things we haven't done before and I imagine we
could do that but we'll just have to see how it works out.
JK: As a fan I would like to see a new studio album from this line up and I
would imagine record companies might be interested now they've seen how
popular Yes is again. Would that be the case?
CS: Most likely so yeah. Unfortunately they're going through their own
troubles right now. I'm not ever sure whether Warner Bros. is going to
exist for much longer so we're just keeping an eye on what's going on. We
haven't made any deals yet but obviously we would like a new studio album,
which we will be doing next year. We'd obviously like it to be with one of
the major companies and there's a good chance that that could happen.
JK: On the Yesspeak DVD, each of the band members has their individual
chapter. One of my favourite quotes from the DVD is from your chapter when
you were talking about Fish Out Of Water and although you've worked with
Billy Sherwood in the Conspiracy line up you haven't actually released a
solo album but as you said, "It's only 28 years!" Is there a chance that
there will be a follow up to Fish out of Water?
CS: Yes but I don't know whether it will be the same kind of an album or
not. I was hoping one day to work again with my very good friend Andrew
Jackman, unfortunately he passed away earlier this year, which was very
sad, and you know it was really a bit of a shock to his family and everyone
who knew him because he was a vibrant and healthy type of character. He
suddenly passed away because of a stroke. So that is something that for now
I have had to rule out because Andrew was very much a part of the whole
Fish Out Of Water project in the way that he orchestrated arrangements and
he worked very closely with me doing that. Obviously a second solo album
would be probably different. I definitely had planned to do it and I
probably will be starting work on it quite soon.
JK: In wrapping up the interview, next year looks to be as busy for Yes as
the last twelve months. Looking back over the last thirty-five years, it
must give you an enormous amount of satisfaction looking at the body of
work that Yes has produced and the fact that thirty-five years later you're
still together.
CS: It is surprising that we are still together after thirty-five years and
with basically the mid-seventies line up. I'm very happy that everyone is
alive and well and still enjoying playing music with each other.
JK: Take care and keep doing what you're doing because to my mind and to my
ears, it's wonderful.
CS: OK mate, bye.
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