Posts Tagged ‘Yes’

Interview: Yes Is The Answer editors Marc Weingarten & Tyson Cornell

August 14, 2013

A Pure Hour of Progressive Rock and More tonight on Echoes.

Marc Weingarten and Tyson Cornell are Progressive Rock fans and they’ve edited a collection of personal essays about the genre called Yes is the Answer and Other Prog Rock Tales. Contributors such as novelist Rick Moody and music critic Jim DeRogatis write about their mixed feelings about Progressive Rock. We’ll talk with Weingarten and Cornell about the mixture of love and embarrassment so many writers feel for the genre.  Hear them talk about it on Echoes tonight in an hour of pure Progressive Rock.

Tyson Cornell's Yes Tattoo.

Tyson Cornell’s Yes Tattoo.

HIGHLIGHTS

Marc Weingarten: It’s sort of like cool people are afraid to admit that they like this highly uncool music.

Tyson Cornell: I listen to Yes every single day.  I have a Yes tattoo on my chest.
Mark Weingarten:  It’s true, folks.

Hear my Prog Playlist on Spotify: Progressive Delites

Read a review of Yestival, featuring Yes, Renaissance, Carl Palmer’s ELP Legacy and Volto!
John Diliberto (((echoes)))
Echoes On Line

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Just Say YESTIVAL to Another Excess.

August 5, 2013
Jon Davison of Yes Calling to the Heavens

Jon Davison of Yes Calling to the Heavens

A Rousing Yes to Yestival with Yes,
Renaissance, Carl Palmer’s ELP Legacy, Volto! and The Musical Box

In 1971 I went to the Orpheum Theater in Boston for a double bill of Yes and King Crimson.  Being too hip for the room, I was there to see the Islands edition of Crimson. Yes of course, were just too pop for me. I mean, they had actual hits with “Roundabout” and “I’ve Seen All Good People.” Krimson gave a good performance, although this was the least interesting edition of the band.  But Yes, this night anyway, wiped them off the stage with a combination of charisma, impeccable musical virtuosity and Jon Anderson’s choirboy yearning.  I walked out a fan, and would have to wait for the Lark’s Tongue edition of Krimson for them to catch up.

Yes bassist Chris Squire Audition for Game of Thrones.

Yes bassist Chris Squire Audition for Game of Thrones.

I found myself in a similar place this past Saturday night at the Yestival, a one day festival of progressive rock headed by the latest iteration of Yes, and the most controversial. This band always had trouble holding its personnel together, but there was always at least one constant, the signature voice and lyrics of Jon Anderson.  But Anderson was effectively booted from the band in 2008, due to a combination of illness and apparent lack of commitment. With the absence of signpost members like drummer Bill Bruford and keyboardist Rick Wakeman, I felt like I was seeing a shadow of this band, no more credible than the Genesis tribute band, The Musical Box, who opened.  This couldn’t be the Yes of Fragile or Close to the edge.  This was just a touring paycheck machine.

Yes guitarist Steve Howe as aged Riff Raff

Yes guitarist Steve Howe as aged Riff Raff

Uh, I was wrong, which was something that about 5500 people at the Yestival in the Susquehanna Bank Center in Camden, NJ already knew.  Anderson’s replacement, (his second actually),  Jon Davison, is frighteningly good. The singer for the American symphonic prog group Glass Hammer, he sounds like a clone of Anderson, except a clone who hits all the notes, sings with passion and ties the band together with his stage presence.  By the time they hit the “Total Mass Retain” section of Close to the Edge, no one was missing Jon Anderson and no one was thinking Davison was a substitute.  He is the lead singer of Yes.

Yes at Yestival

Yes at Yestival

Since this was a festival, Yes was slated to play only two albums straight through instead of the three they’re performing on their solo tour.  But they decided to throw in the third album anyway playing Close to the Edge, Going for the One and The Yes Album.  What magnificent works they are and beautifully performed.  Bassist and co-founder Chris Squire and guitarist Steve Howe,  a member of Yes beginning in their classic years, anchored the band.  Howe switched between electric guitar and lap steel, whipping out the slides of “Going for the One” and nailing the intensity of “Starship Trooper.”

Yes' Steve Howe and Geoff Downe spiraling into space

Yes’ Steve Howe and Geoff Downes spiraling into space

Still an underrated player, Howe matches fleet fingered runs with beautiful tone.  Squire stalked, grimaced and yowled stage left, ripping out those chunky bass-lines that are such a Yes signature.  Neither keyboardist Geoff Downes nor drummer Alan White, both members of later Yes editions, took much of the spotlight, but they provided the orchestral color and rhythmic thrust so essential to this group, who, for all their odd time signatures and multi-movement works, really drives as hard as any rock band.  I don’t care about the excess; nine keyboards stacked up just have a certain gravitas and power that the smaller keyboard set-ups of Volto! and Renaissance couldn’t match.  I can’t say the same for Chris Squire’s triple necked guitar he pulled out at one point.  One Rickenbacker bass is really all he needs.

The staging was tasteful and immersive with a wide screen projection that took the appropriate Yes album covers, animated them, ran them through digital effects and mixed them in to other surreal scenes and digital designs.

Yes is a dinosaur band that has been reborn.  Now all they need is some good new material so they don’t become a nostalgia act.  Hearing Close to the Edge, Going for the One and The Yes Album in sequence made you realize just how glorious this band was and can be.

Denis Gagné as Peter Gabriel in The Musical Box at Yestival

Denis Gagné as Peter Gabriel in The Musical Box at Yestival

Speaking of nostalgia acts, there’s The Musical Box, part of a Festival undercard thought would’ve made for an average Nearfest line-up, the late lamented annual ProgRock Festival that ended last year.  The Musical Box is a French-Canadian Genesis tribute band known for using actual costumes from the Peter Gabriel-era of the band and mimicking everything from instruments to microphones to stage stances, like François Gagnon, playing Steve Hackett, sitting down stage right.  I never saw the band during Genesis’ golden age, but I always took Gabriel’s approach to be very serious.  Although Denis Gagné does a good Peter Gabriel imitation, he turns serious to dour.  Opening with “Watcher of the Skies” they assayed several Genesis classics with Gagné going through something like nine costume changes including the bat wings and flowerhead that Gabriel used to wear.  In replicating the pre-Lamb Lies Down On Broadway-era of Genesis, The Musical Box made the mistake of creating a smaller stage within the large Susquehanna Stage.  Surrounded by white curtains that cut stage depth by two-thirds and halved the width, they made their performance space more like a large club rather than a large arena.  And the effect of their performance seemed to shrink proportionally. I know Genesis fans who love the Box, but I found them unnecessary at best.

Annie Haslam of Renaissance

Annie Haslam of Renaissance

Preceding The Musical Box was Renaissance, true veterans of the Progressive rock era although only singer Annie Haslam remains from the classic line-up of the band.  After some shaky years, Haslam’s voice has been getting consistently stronger and she hit those high, soaring notes on “Carpet of the Sun” and “Mother Russia,” although there was always an edge to it, like she might not make it.  But she did.  On tracks from their new album, Grandine il Vento, she sounded much more comfortable, working in a range more suited to her current voice.      Surprisingly, after nearly 40 years of performing, Haslam lacked any stage presence at all.  She set herself left of center on stage with the center microphone taken by her bassist.  She seemed especially uncomfortable during instrumental passages, rocking and swaying awkwardly in what could best be described as over-sized red print pajamas.  It could worst be described as unflattering. Surrounded by a relatively faceless band, Renaissance lacked the magical sound of the original band.

Carl Palmer at Yestival - Welcome to the Show

Carl Palmer at Yestival – Welcome to the Show

How can you tell when it’s the drummer’s band?  When the drum riser is at the front of the stage.

That was the case with Carl Palmer’s ELP Legacy band.  Think of it as the anti-Keith Emerson and Greg Lake edition of Emerson, Lake & Palmer: No keyboards and no vocals.  A slide montage during “Nutrocker” would have you think that ELP was Carl Palmer and Friends.  CPB is an instrumental power trio turning ELP songs into heavy metal.

The Barbarian at Work - Carl Palmer at Yestival

The Barbarian at Work – Carl Palmer at Yestival

Carl Palmer is aging with a golf pro’s grace, but behind the drums he whipped up a storm.  Guitarist Paul Bielatowicz looked like he snuck in from the School of Rock band that was playing the second stage, but he could play, taking Keith Emerson’s lines and Greg Lake’s vocal melodies and turning them into fret-burning licks.  Bassist Simon Fitzpatrick, who may be a refugee from the Allman Brothers Band, locked down Greg Lake’s bass riffs and then some.  They tore into “Knife Edge” (lifted from Leo Janacek’s “Sinfonietta”) and did a version of Mussorsky’s “Pictures at an Exhibition” that I found more inventive than the original ELP version.  And did I hear a Black Sabbath riff in there somewhere?

Paul Bielatowicz of the Carl Palmer Band

Paul Bielatowicz of the Carl Palmer ELP Legacy

Heavy Metal was also evident in the sound of Volto!, a new quartet consisting of Lance Morrison on bass, Danny Carey (of Tool) on drums, John Ziegler on guitar, and Jeff Babko on keyboards.  The band oscillates between Sabbath-style metal riffs and Mahavishnu Orchestra-style pyrotechnics.  Sitting in a chair and looking like a goateed Buddha with a pork pie hat, Ziegler is a ferocious player who starts in overdrive and accelerates from there. With his double-kick drums, Carey is in familiar polyrhythmic turf here while the bald Lance Morrison eschewed Jaco Pastorius fusion flash for deep, propulsive grooves.

Volta!'s John Ziegler and Danny Carey Shredding

Volto!’s John Ziegler and Danny Carey Shredding

Apparently, a band called Scale the Summit opened, however, they came on before the scheduled start time and were never announced in any material I saw.  With the departure of Nearfest, Yestival was a welcome replacement although I suspect Yes is so far above the rest of the bill that they probably could’ve gotten this audience on their own.  The only sour notes of Yestival were the absence of the advertised quadraphonic sound and the between-act music.  I like James Brown, but this was a Progressive Rock festival.  Save James Brown for the R&B shows and get a DJ who can deliver the Prog next time.

In summary, a cynic of the newborn Yes has been silenced.  That would be me.

John Diliberto (((echoes)))

Further Listening: Yes and Other Prog Rock Tales

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Why Do People Hate Prog Rock? Yes Is the Answer, Maybe.

July 12, 2013

Hear the Podcast of Echoes with Yes Is The Answer Editors Marc Weingarten & Tyson Cornell.

Marc Weingarten and Tyson Cornell are Progressive Rock fans and they’ve edited a collection of personal essays about the genre called Yes is the Answer and Other Prog Rock Tales. Contributors such as novelist Rick Moody and music critic Jim DeRogatis write about their mixed feelings about Progressive Rock. We’ll talk with Weingarten and Cornell about the mixture of love and embarrassment so many writers feel for the genre.  Hear them talk about it on the Echoes Podcast.

Tyson Cornell's Yes Tattoo.

Tyson Cornell’s Yes Tattoo.

HIGHLIGHTS

Marc Weingarten: It’s sort of like cool people are afraid to admit that they like this highly uncool music.

Tyson Cornell: I listen to Yes every single day.  I have a Yes tattoo on my chest.
Mark Weingarten:  It’s true, folks.

Hear my Prog Playlist on Spotify: Progressive Delites

John Diliberto (((echoes)))

UNQOTSASign up for Echoes CD of the Month Club. With the Echoes CD of the Month Club, you get great CDs like Olivier Libaux’s Uncovered Queens of the Stone Age. Follow the link to the Echoes CD of the Month Club and see what you’ve been missing.

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Interview: Yes Is The Answer editors Marc Weingarten & Tyson Cornell

July 8, 2013

A Pure Hour of Progressive Rock and More tonight on Echoes.

Marc Weingarten and Tyson Cornell are Progressive Rock fans and they’ve edited a collection of personal essays about the genre called Yes is the Answer and Other Prog Rock Tales. Contributors such as novelist Rick Moody and music critic Jim DeRogatis write about their mixed feelings about Progressive Rock. We’ll talk with Weingarten and Cornell about the mixture of love and embarrassment so many writers feel for the genre.  Hear them talk about it on Echoes tonight in an hour of pure Progressive Rock.

Tyson Cornell's Yes Tattoo.

Tyson Cornell’s Yes Tattoo.

HIGHLIGHTS

Marc Weingarten: It’s sort of like cool people are afraid to admit that they like this highly uncool music.

Tyson Cornell: I listen to Yes every single day.  I have a Yes tattoo on my chest.
Mark Weingarten:  It’s true, folks.

Hear my Prog Playlist on Spotify: Progressive Delites

John Diliberto (((echoes)))

UNQOTSASign up for Echoes CD of the Month Club. With the Echoes CD of the Month Club, you get great CDs like Olivier Libaux’s Uncovered Queens of the Stone Age. Follow the link to the Echoes CD of the Month Club and see what you’ve been missing.

Echoes On LineNow you can go Mobile with Echoes On-Line. Find out how you can listen to Echoes 24/7 wherever you are on your iPhone, iPad or Droid.

Join us on Facebook where you’ll get all the Echoes news so you won’t be left behind when Dead Can Dance appear on the show, Tangerine Dream tours or Brian Eno drops a new iPad album. Or Follow us on Twitter@echoesradio

Progressive Rock Awards.

September 7, 2012

I didn’t even know they had these and it seems a little late in the game, but Prog Magazine, a journal in the UK with a reported readership of about 25,000, sponsored their first Progressive Music Awards show.  As the first, they understandably acknowledged a lot of the pioneers in the field, granting awards to Genesis, Carl Palmer and Pink Floyd.  Giving Rick Wakeman the “Rock God” award and Peter Hammill the “Visionary” award won’t do much dispel Prog’s reputation for ostentatious grandiosity, although Hammill’s Visionary award is deserved.

More recent acts like Anathema and Steve Wilson (Porcupine Tree) were also acknowledged although Wilson’s “Guiding Light” award isn’t really the kind of tribute that rolls easily off the CV.

Rick Wakeman in Full Prog Regalia

With Progressive Rock being effectively shut out of the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame, somebody had to acknowledge this music.  Only Genesis, Pink Floyd and Traffic have made the cut.   How Yes, ELP, King Crimson have been ignored is one of the mysteries of the Hall of Fame since the beginning.  Goldmine had a fun article on King Crimson’s exclusion a few months ago.

You can read more about the Progressive Music Awards in the BBC News.

~© 2012 John Diliberto ((( echoes )))

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Echo Location: Bill Bruford Redux

March 24, 2009

Bill Bruford brings Plays Taps to Progressive Rock.

((((( You can hear an audio version of this blog, with music )))))

Close to the Edge No one gives the rock drummer much attention, unless he happens to be the signature progressive rock drummer of the last 4 decades. That’s the case with Bill Bruford, who played in three incarnations of King Crimson and had stints in UK, Gong, the Bruford Band and Earthworks. We first heard of Bill when he was a member of Yes, recording on all their albums up through Close to the Edge.

Bill Bruford: The Autobiography As I reported in the Echoes Blog a few weeks ago, Bill Bruford, born in 1949, has retired. He tells his story in a new book, Bill Bruford: The Autobiography. We interviewed Bill a few weeks ago and Echoes listeners got to hear that on the air.  You can hear it on the Echoes Bill Bruford Podcast

Bill Bruford: The Autobiography is a trenchant look at life as a musician that’s light on musical explanations and heavy on trials and tribulations. He has that uniquely British ability to be simultaneously self-deprecating and self-aggrandizing, all while being erudite and charming. He came to renown with Yes, but at the height of their popularity, he left them for the edgier King Crimson

Bill Bruford: I thought they were much hipper. I thought the sound of the group was much filthier, much more grown up, much more X-rated, you know. And I always wanted to be in King Crimson. I also thought Yes was a very light weight group.

There’s not much sex, drugs or rock ‘n’ roll in the Bruford autobiography but there are blistering anecdotes about King Crimson founder Robert Fripp, always tardy Yes-bassist Chris Squire, and getting the boot from his own band, UK. But Bill Bruford spends much of his book talking about the music that always ignited his passion, jazz.

Buhaina\'s Delight BB: Where I got the magic of drumming from was Art Blakey. Just watching guys like that on television who had such command and authority from a drum set. The drummer was in control from the back by some mysterious series of commands that I did not really understand as a 13-year-old. I still do not understand it.  [laughs sardonically] I do now. Now I understand.

Bill Bruford’s cerebral jazz band, Earthworks, has been his true passion for the last 20 years and he has no nostalgia at all for the heyday of progressive rock.

Bill Bruford: Progressive rock was a genuinely interesting phase of popular music. I don’t think it lasted forever. I think it had a great time from about ’68 to 1975. After that I did not think there was much to it and it was time to move on. I am very unsentimental.

Bill Bruford has moved on and out. He’s just released two anthologies of his solo work,Winterfold Collection 1978-1986 and the Summerfold Collection 1987-2008. His book is, Bill Bruford: The Autobiography, published by Jawbone Press. This has been an Echo Location, soundings for new music.

John Diliberto ((( echoes )))

Drummer Bill Bruford Retires

January 26, 2009
Bill Bruford
Bill Bruford

Bill Bruford is an icon of Progressive Rock drumming. He came to renown as an original member of Yes, recording several albums with them before moving on to King Crimson. Over the years he’s spent more and more time with his cerebral jazz band Earthworks. But now he says he’s packing in live performances, concentrating on studio projects.

In the 1980s, Bill Bruford was juggling the rhythms of paradox, playing experimental music with the New Percussionists of Amsterdam and pop music with the Yes reunion law firm,  Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman and Howe. One foot kept the beat of rock, while the other triggered the sounds of electronics. But in the last several years, Bruford has reinvented himself as an acoustic jazz drummer.

Back in 1987, Bruford said: I can see absolutely what kind of man any drummer is, just put him on a drum set for 30 seconds and I can tell you immediately his strength, weaknesses, his bravery, whether he’s a coward, strong-backed, weak-willed, flaccid, limp, pathetic, strong or whatever. You can tell right away because you can tell the choices he’s making.

Close to the Edge Bill Bruford has always had a sardonic side. He was both erudite and sarcastic, tempering his enthusiasm with equal doses of criticism and British self-deprecation. He spoke with mixed emotions about Yes, the group that helped create Progressive Rock.

 Bill Bruford: At the time it was a good opportunity to indicate that pop didn’t have to be about playing instruments simply. You could also play it in other ways too. You didn’t have to be Jan and Dean. There were other ways of using drum sets and things. So I think in that sense it was very good. And I’m must admit that on the big hit, Close to the Edge, I think something happened on that album which was above the music. It was very good. But naive stuff and I can’t say I look back.

Larks Tongues in Aspic - 30th Anniversary Edition Remastered  I first saw Bruford and Yes at the Orpheum Theater in Boston in 1972. At the time, I thought that Krimson was the pinnacle of Progressive Rock innovation and Yes was this pleasant, but innocuous pop group. I walked out blown away by Yes’ epic compositions and tightly controlled virtuosity.

“I remember that gig,” recalled Bruford. “Yes considered King Crimson hipper at the time, and after all King Crimson had a platinum album by this stage. I thought the sound of the group was much filthier, much more grown up, much more X-rated, you know. And I always wanted to be in King Crimson. And it was after that Orpheum gig that Robert [Fripp] suggested I join King Crimson, I think. To which I immediately said. Yes,” because then I could play that mean stuff, you know, that instrumental based stuff which sounded hipper to me.”

He played in three major incarnations of King Crimson, the last with the “double-trio” edition in 1997.

Back in 1989, sitting in the stretch limousine outside of the ABW&H concert in New Jersey, we asked Bruford whether he returned to Yes for the money.

Bill Bruford: It’s funny how you get paid in inverse proportion to the amount of work you do often. Often the amount of fun you have, yeah. You work for months on a project. Your back’s aching. You’ve changed the nature of the instrument. Everything is fabulous, and you get paid nothing. Conversely you sit around on some guy’s album date while he’s busy drinking himself to death or snorting cocaine or something and getting paid a fortune for doing nothing.

At heart, Bill Bruford’s always been a jazz drummer, nurturing himself on the grooves of Max Roach, Elvin Jones and Art Blakey. After King Crimson disbanded in the mid 1980s, he toured in an acoustic duet with former Yes and Moody Blues keyboardist Patrick Moraz. When Bruford decided to tackled Max Roach’s classic solo, “The Drum Also Waltzs,” he was making an important statement for himself.

 BB: Yeah, a psychological leap, certainly. I think really what I’m saying is I want to part of the great tradition of jazz. And I’d met Max around that time and was very impressed by him and his dignity as an older player, and I think some of the older American jazz drummers are a credit. Art Blakey, Elvin and so forth are a credit to how you can be as an older musician. And It’s no doubt I’m in a sort of transitional phase here…and I think I can do more with looser music.

The Autobiography Curiously, an edition of Yes, sans Jon Anderson is touring.  King Crimson still rumbles around in one form or another, UK has just reformed as UKZ sans everybody but Eddie Jobson.   But as Bill Bruford approaches his 60th birthday on May 17, he’s decided to retire from live performances. Somehow, I suspect he’ll be back on stage, and shortly.  Bill Bruford: The Autobiography will be released in March.  Two CD anthologies of his music, The Winterfold Collection 1978-1986 and The Summerfold Collection 1987-2008 have just been released.

John Diliberto ((( echoes )))

Portions of this blog originally appeared in Totally Wired, Electronic Musician and Echoes. Some of the interview materiel was gathered by Kimberly Haas.