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JANUARY 15, 2004
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Source: The Daily Vault
http://www.dailyvault.com/2004_01_15-jw.html
TORMATO
Yes
Atlantic Records, 1978
By Jason Warburg
The amazing thing about Yes -- besides the sheer fact they're all still
alive and still capable of playing great live shows 35 years later -- is
that as often as they've been brilliant over the years, they've also been
terribly, terribly ordinary… or worse. It's as though the musical
intelligence batteries take an increasing amount of time to recharge after
each eruption, and in the meantime, what you get is occasionally-promising goo.
And there it is, your summary of Tormato -- occasionally-promising goo.
Interestingly, it's the two Yes-men who would depart after the failed
sessions that followed this album and tour -- singer Jon Anderson and
keyboardist Rick Wakeman -- who fare the worst here. Wakeman, after
concentrating on rich, grand organ and keyboard sounds on Going For The
One, inexplicably delves into some of the cheesiest, tinniest proto-'80s
synth tones you'd ever want to shield your dog's ears from on this album.
Anderson, for his part, seems here to have lost his way completely as a
lyricist, jumping all over the place like an ADD-ridden flower child. I
mean, "Arriving UFO" -- what more need be said? How about this: the only
thing more horrifying than Anderson wanting to put a song as
teeth-grindingly twee as the wretched "Circus Of Heaven" on a Yes album, is
the rest of the band letting him. Were they all drunk?? (Survey says: possibly.)
There are two high points… well, alright, one and a half. "On The Silent
Wings Of Freedom" is an eight-minute Chris Squire piece in which he uses a
harmonized Rickenbacker bass and pedals to produce some of the most
amazing, buoyant bass tones and melodies you'll ever hear. The lyric is
evocative and sung to good effect by Anderson; even a dose of too-chirpy
synths from Wakeman can't spoil this party. The other half a highlight on
Tormato is "Release, Release," a tight rock number whose punch is undercut
by a silly chorus ("Rock is the medium of our generation"…eek) adorned with embarrassing faux-crowd noise.
The rest is no better than tolerable. Squire's somber "Onward" receives a
better treatment live on 1996's Keys To Ascension than it does here.
Wakeman's "Madrigal" seems derived from but hardly inspired by the
Renaissance flavor of Going For The One's much more interesting "Turn Of
The Century." The famously obscure Anderson suddenly springs a political
message on Yes' audience with "Don't Kill The Whale," laying a stilted
lyric over an undeniably cool beat. (But, those whiny synths! Ahhh!) As for
"Future Times/Rejoice," well, if you don't have anything nice to say… uh-huh.
It would be heartening to think that Tormato was just a momentary stumble,
that a better Yes album lay just around the corner if these guys had just
stuck it out. But the results of the infamous "Paris sessions" -- the
aborted effort to craft a follow-up to Tormato -- were so dismal that you
wonder at guitarist Steve Howe's motives in unearthing them for inclusion
on last year's In A Word box set. It's as if he was trying to finally win
the argument with the fans: "Look, we gave it another go and we all saw it
was bloody awful. It was time to change things around again." And indeed,
in uniquely Yes fashion, they would.
RATING: C-
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