Showing posts with label Yes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yes. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Trevor Rabin - 90124 (1981)

Trevor Charles Rabin was born on 13 January 1954 in Johannesburg, South Africa, into a family of musicians. His mother, Joy, was a painter, ballet dancer, actress, and classical pianist, and his father, Godfrey, was a lawyer, musician, conductor, and the lead violinist in the Johannesburg Philharmonic Orchestra. With this background it's no wonder he took up the piano at the age of 6, and at twelve he started to teach himself the guitar using piano exercise books, never having had a formal lesson in the instrument. A year later he played in The Other, before forming Conglomeration, and later joining Freedom's Children for a one-year stint until 1973. At sixteen, he was discovered by a local record producer and became a session musician, playing a variety of styles including jazz, fusion, country, classical, conga, and kwela. In 1972, Rabin reunited with his bandmates in Conglomeration to form the rock band Rabbitt, with drummer Neil Cloud, bassist Ronnie Robot, and singer, keyboardist, and guitarist Duncan Faure, releasing their debut album 'Boys Will Be Boys' in 1975. This included a re-recording of the band's 1972 single, a cover of Jethro Tull's 'Locomotive Breath', and Rabin won an award for his orchestral arrangements. Rabbitt's second album, 'A Croak And A Grunt In The Night', was released in 1977, while Rabin was still pursuing a career as a session musician, and he released two albums under the pseudonym Trevor Terblanche. 
In 1977, Rabin recorded and released his first solo album, 'Beginnings', for RPM Records, playing all the instruments except the drums, for which he used session player Kevin Kruger. Also in 1977 Rabbitt agreed to a distribution deal with the US label Capricorn Records, but they were unable to tour abroad due to the international disapproval of South Africa's apartheid policies, and restrictions on South Africans obtaining visas. The situation became a catalyst for Rabin to leave the country, and in 1978 he arrived in London to continue his solo career. By July he'd struck a recording deal with Chrysalis Records, and in September 1978 they reissued a remixed and re-ordered version of his debut solo album under the name 'Trevor Rabin'. In 1979, he released his second solo album, 'Face To Face', promoting the album with a UK tour as an opening act for guitarist Steve Hillage. Rabin's third solo album for Chrysalis was 'Wolf', released in 1980 and co-produced with Ray Davies at his Konk Studios in London, with Rabin providing lead vocals, guitars, and keyboards, and using other musicians for the parts he didn't play, including drummer Simon Phillips, bassists Jack Bruce and Mo Foster, keyboardists Manfred Mann and John Bundrick, and Chris Thompson and Noel McCalla on additional vocals. Following its release, Rabin severed ties with Chrysalis as he felt the label did little to promote the album, and he moved to Los Angeles in 1981 to begin to develop material for a fourth solo album for his new label Geffen. 
During this time David Geffen also put him in contact with musicians that went on to form the supergroup Asia, but at an early rehearsal he felt his songs were not suitable for the group, which led to the label dropping him. Rabin then sent a tape of his new songs to various labels, including Clive Davis at Arista Records, who praised his vocals but deemed his songs unsuitable for the Top 40 format. RCA Records executive Ron Fair was impressed enough to offer Rabin a solo deal, which was declined after Rabin decided to work with bassist Chris Squire and drummer Alan White, formerly of the progressive rock band Yes, after his demos were discovered by producer Mutt Lange and Phil Carson of Atlantic Records. In late 1982, Rabin, Squire and White formed Cinema, which included original Yes keyboardist Tony Kaye, and they recorded '90125' with former Yes singer Trevor Horn as producer. Based mostly on Rabin's demos, the album displayed a more commercial and pop-oriented direction, much different than their progressive rock-themed albums in the 1970's, but during the mixing stages in mid-1983, former Yes singer Jon Anderson returned to sing on the album, which led to the group becoming a reformed line-up of Yes. 
Rabin was uncomfortable with the decision, feeling the new music did not represent what the band had become popular for, and wished for the album to be judged on its own merits as by the band Cinema. '90125' was released in 1983, and remains the band's highest selling album, with three million copies sold in the US alone, helped by its Rabin-penned lead single 'Owner Of A Lonely Heart', which reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. Before Anderson returned to the fold and Cinema became a Yes reunion, Rabin was very much in charge of the recording, with half the songs being his own, augmented by other members of the band. In fact, the demos that Lange and Carson heard could easily have been polished into an extremely good rock album under his own name, and as one of his demos has since appeared on a re-issue of '90125', and others on his own 2003 compilation, then we can now hear what a Rabin-helmed version of '90125' could have sounded like. This album includes his demos of four songs that Yes took on, as well as 'Fools' which was a precursor to 'Hearts', while 'I'm With You' was developed by Yes, but along with 'Would You Feel My Love' were both left off the final track-listing. Other tracks were demos for Cinema that remained unreleased, and so I've salvaged them from the vaults to make up Rabin's own version of '90125', which as it's essentially a preview of that album, is titled '90124'. 



Track listing

01 Owner Of A Lonely Heart  
02 Hold On  
03 It Can Happen           
04 Changes  
05 It's Over  
06 Would You Feel My Love   
07 Fools             
08 I'm With You
09 Don't Give In

Tuesday, November 2, 2021

XYZ - Telephone Secrets (1982)

In December 1980 Yes bassist Chris Squire met Jimmy Page by chance at a party, and the idea of forming a group together was mooted, to be called XYZ, which was short for eX-Yes-Zeppelin. Squire brought along drummer Alan White, and they also recruited former Greenslade keyboard player and vocalist Dave Lawson. Squire was the main writer for the group, and Page believed the band needed a strong vocalist, so sought out his old pal Robert Plant, and although he did attend one rehearsal on 28 February 1981, he decided not to join the group, citing his dislike for the complexity of the music, and because he was still deeply hurt by the recent death of his long-time friend and band-mate John Bonham. Without a firm commitment from Plant, and with contractual issues on who should manage the group (Peter Grant or Brian Lane), the project was shelved, but not before four demo recordings had been made with Squire on vocals. With XYZ's future in limbo, Squire and White recorded a Christmas single called 'Run With The Fox' in October 1981, and they then asked guitarist Trevor Rabin to join them and form the band Cinema, along with old Yes keyboardist Tony Kaye. Rabin initially attempted to rework the XYZ material along with his solo songs for the new group, and they recorded a few demos, but they then decided to invite Jon Anderson into the group, and Cinema evolved into a new line-up of Yes. The demos produced from the Cinema sessions included 'Make It Easy' and 'It's Over', with lead vocals by Rabin, and an early version of 'It Can Happen' featuring Squire on vocals, which have since appeared on Yes re-issues, but they also recorded a 20-minute instrumental called 'Time', and another unreleased track entitled 'Carry On'. In 1983 the new Yes line-up released the '90125' album, which included the introduction from 'Time' as an instrumental called 'Cinema', as a tribute to the aborted band. Other XYZ and Cinema songs turned up later, with one instrumental being reworked to become part of 'Mind Drive' on the 1997 Yes album 'Keys To Ascension', while 'Can You See' became 'Can You Imagine' on 2001's 'Magnification'. Part of another XYZ instrumental was used as the intro to The Firm's 'Fortune Hunter', which was fair as Squire has mentioned that Page brought the riff to the band anyway. This album collects together all of the above-mentioned tracks except 'Time', which has never surfaced, and as the whole thing started with that chance meeting by Squire and Page, I'm counting it as a lost XYZ album, as Squire and White are constant members throughout the recordings.  



Track listing

01 Can You See (Page, Squire, White, Lawson)
02 Mind Drive (Page, Squire, White, Lawson)
03 Telephone Secrets (Page, Squire, White, Lawson)
04 Fortune Hunter (Page, Squire, White, Lawson)
05 Run With The Fox (Squire, White)
06 It Can Happen (Squire, White, Rabin, Kaye)
07 Make It Easy (Squire, White, Rabin, Kaye)
08 It's Over (Squire, White, Rabin, Kaye)
09 Carry On (Squire, White, Rabin, Kaye)

Friday, October 15, 2021

Various Artists - Sound Chaser (2020)

A passing comment by Leo has inspired this post, as he mentioned that he likes some of the modern neo-prog bands such as The Flower Kings, Mostly Autumn and Spock's Beard, and they are also some of my own favourites, to which I would add Transatlantic and Dream Theater. A lot of these bands love to cover classic progressive rock songs of the 70's, either live or as bonus tracks on their albums, with Transatlantic in particular loving their prog covers, having played songs by Procol Harum (including the full 17 minutes of 'In Held ('Twas) In I'), Santana, Focus and Genesis as bonuses on their albums. Neal Morse's previous band Spock's Beard were also partial to the odd cover, and one band that they both loved was Yes. Spock's Beard covered 'South Side Of The Sky' on the bonus disc of their 'Snow' box set, and if you haven't heard their 'Snow' album then you really don't know what you're missing. When Morse left Spock's Beard and formed Transatlantic with Swedish guitarist Roine Stolt (ex Flower Kings), bassist Pete Trewavas (ex Marillion), and drummer Mike Portnoy (ex Dream Theater), he took his love of Yes with him, with Transatlantic covering 'And You And I' for the bonus disc of their 'Kaleidoscope' album. Dream Theater are famous for covering whole albums for official bootlegs for their fans, like 'Dark Side Of The Moon'. 'Number Of The Beast', 'Master Of Puppets', and 'Made In Japan', and so a Yes cover was always on the cards, and they delivered a stunning take on 'Heart Of The Sunrise' on their 'Uncovered' official bootleg. Stanley Snail are another fine neo-prog band, featuring drummer Nick D'Virgillo from Spock's Beard/Big Big Train, and they covered 'Siberian Khatru' for a Yes tribute album from 1995, and it's such a good version that it really deserves a bigger audience. Dream Theater keyboardist Jordan Rudess has released a number of solo albums, and on 2007's 'The Road Home' he included an extended cover of 'Sound Chaser', which is well worth hearing, and while The Luck Of Eden Hall might not be as well-known as some of these bands, they are an excellent modern prog band, and gifted an 18-minute version of 'Starship Trooper' for the truly outstanding 'Side Effects' box-set, which was issued by the Fruits De Mer label in 2018. It was a four disc coloured vinyl box-set, with artists like The Bevis Frond, Sendelica, The Soft Bombs and Julie's Haircut each covering a song that takes up one whole side of the vinyl. I pre-ordered my copy to ensure that I didn't miss out, and it sold out on the day of release, so hard luck if you want a copy. I really wanted to include something by The Flower Kings, but they only ever covered 'Soon' from 'Relayer' in concert, and it wasn't that great a recording, but in searching for that I stumbled on a Yes tribute band called Awaken, who have covered one of my favourite Yes songs 'The Gates Of Delirium', and as it takes real guts to tackle that and record the whole 22-minute song live in one take then they deserve to close the album with it. If you are impressed by their recording then you can watch them tape it on their Youtube video, and so what we have here are seven of my favourite Yes songs covered by some of my favourite neo-prog bands, on a 90-minute album of some of the best progressive rock ever made. 



Track listing

01 Heart Of The Sunrise
02 Siberian Khatru
03 South Side Of The Sky
04 And You And I
05 Sound Chaser
06 Starship Trooper
07 The Gates Of Delirium

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Yes - The Psychedelic Years (1969)

In September 1967, Chris Squire joined Mabel Greer's Toyshop, a psychedelic group that included Peter Banks, singer Clive Bayley and drummer Bob Hagger. They played at the Marquee club where Jack Barrie, owner of the La Chasse drinking club a few doors down, saw them perform, and was impressed with their musicianship. One evening at La Chasse, Barrie introduced Squire to Jon Anderson, a worker at the bar who had sung with The Gun and also released a few solo singles, but with little success. The two found they shared common musical interests including Simon & Garfunkel, The Association and vocal harmonies,and in the following days they developed 'Sweetness', a track later recorded for the first Yes album. As the band developed, Anderson and Squire brought in drummer Bill Bruford, keyboardist Tony Kaye and Banks for rehearsals, eventually deciding to drop the name Mabel Greer's Toyshop.

After Tony Kaye joined Winston's Fumbs they recorded their one and only single 'Real Crazy Apartment', and shortly after that came out Kaye was invited to attend rehearsals with members of Mabel Greer's Toyshop, a London-based psychedelic rock band, who were forming a new, full-time group. He was approached by bassist Chris Squire after singer Jon Anderson had met Kaye some time before and suggested him, and after a successful audition, he joined Squire and Anderson in the new band.

When Peter Banks left The Syndicats he formed a new band with ex-The Selfs bassist Chris Squire, calling themselves The Syn. They were joined by keyboardist Andrew Pryce Jackman, Steve Nardelli on vocals and Gunnar Jökull Hákonarson on drums, and they recorded two singles, 'Created by Clive'/'Grounded' and 'Flowerman'/'14 Hour Technicolour Dream', in 1967 before calling it a day a year later. Squire meanwhile joined friends Clive Bayley (rhythm guitar) and Bob Hagger (drums) in Mabel Greer's Toyshop, and Banks came to join them, although he briefly left to play with the band Neat Change on their sole single 'I Lied to Aunty May'. Banks then returned to Mabel Greer's Toyshop, and with the loss of Bayley and the addition of organist/pianist Tony Kaye, they started to write new music together, adding to a repertoire which already included Squire/Bayley's 'Beyond And Before' and Anderson/Squire/Bayley's 'Sweetness'.

Meanwhile, Steve Howe's band The In-Crowd had renamed themselves Tomorrow and adopted a psychedelic rock sound, writing more original songs and changing their stage clothes. In 1967, they released two singles, the classic 'My White Bicycle', and it's follow-up 'Revolution, the latter co-written by Howe. During the recording of a new single with producer Mark Wirtz, Howe was asked by Wirtz to record some guitar as a session musician, which he eagerly accepted, and the session led to him recording a selection of singles for EMI, which included his first song 'Mothballs', also known as 'So Bad'. He played guitar on Keith West's single 'Excerpt From A Teenage Opera', which went to No. 2 in the UK, and Howe and his Tomorrow bandmates also took part in a pie fight scene in 1967's satirical comedy film 'Smashing Time'. After Tomorrow split in 1967, Howe played on several songs by their singer Keith West, and by 1968, with his reputation as a guitarist on the rise, he was invited to join Bodast, a trio who went by the name of Canto for a short period. They signed a record deal with Tetragrammaton Records and put down a selection of songs in 1969 at Trident Studios for an album with West as producer, but the label went out of business shortly before its release. After Bodast split, Howe auditioned for The Nice as a potential new member, but decided it wasn't for him, and left the next day, being offered an audition with Jethro Tull, which he failed to attend when he learned the guitarist they wanted would not contribute to the songwriting. He also had a try out with Atomic Rooster while Carl Palmer was a member, but that didn't gel, and so in 1970 he toured as a member of American soul singer P. P. Arnold's backing band, alongside future members of Ashton, Gardner and Dyke, and in April of that year he was approached by Yes to replace the recently-departed Peter Banks. 

When Jon Anderson returned to London a year after the Warriors split up in Germany in 1967, he met Jack Barrie, owner of the La Chasse drinking club in Soho, who had befriended the rest of the Warriors after they had relocated to the city. With no money or accommodation, Barrie allowed Anderson and ex-Warrior Brian Chatton to stay with him, and Anderson helped out by working at La Chasse. During this time he got talking to Paul Korda, a producer for EMI Records, who took him on to sing several demos, and after that he travelled to the Netherlands to join Les Crunches, a band he had met in London. On hearing that some of his demos were to be released as singles by Parlophone Records under the pseudonym Hans Christian, he promptly returned to England, but despite positive reviews in the press neither was successful. In May 1968, Barrie introduced Anderson to Chris Squire, bassist of the London-based rock band Mabel Greer's Toyshop, which had previously included guitarist Peter Banks, and as the two talked they found they shared common musical interests such as Simon & Garfunkel and the idea of vocal harmonies. After some gigs as lead singer in Mabel Greer's Toyshop the members started talking of forming a new band, and in June 1968 they hired Bill Bruford to replace founding drummer Robert Hagger.

William Scott Bruford was born on 17 May 1949 in Sevenoaks, Kent, and decided to take up drumming at the age of thirteen after watching American jazz drummers on the BBC2 jazz TV series, Jazz 625. He cites Max Roach, Joe Morello, Art Blakey, and Ginger Baker as his favourite and most influential drummers as a youngster, and after his sister bought him a pair of drum brushes as a birthday present he gradually built a full drum kit. During his time at boarding school he befriended several fellow jazz fans, and they performed as a four-piece named The Breed from 1966 to 1967 until he was no longer able to attend all their gigs. In 1968 he auditioned for a place in The Savoy Brown Blues Band, but only lasted three gigs as he messed with the beat, and so he joined psychedelic rock band Paper Blitz Tissue in time to record their only single 'Boy Meets Girl'. After he left that band he settled into a flat in north London and placed an advertisement for drum work in the Melody Maker, which was spotted by Jon Anderson, then a member of Mabel Greer's Toyshop. Following a meeting with the rest of the band, Anderson was so impressed with Bruford that he invited him to play with the band that very evening at the Rachel McMillan College in Deptford. Following the gig, Bruford had several offers to join soul bands but chose to remain with Anderson and Squire, who took charge in forming a new band with Peter Banks and Tony Kaye.

After dropping the name Mabel Greer's Toyshop they settled on Yes as the new name, and everything was now in place for the newly-christened band to rehearse, and to start writing material for their first album, destined to become the starting point for a long and illustrious career for all the current and subsequent members. Rick Wakeman joined in 1971, and so is outside the scope of these collections, even though I stretched it slightly to include Steve Howe, who was not actually a founding member of the band, but did join just after their first album had been released. In 1981 Howe obtained the recordings of the songs taped for the Bodast album, and remixed and released them himself, but for these compilations I've just used tracks where he was involved in the songwriting as well as playing on the song, otherwise half the album would be Bodast tracks. If nothing else, these four albums show that every member of Yes had paid their dues over the years, slogging away in various moderately successful or unappreciated bands, and so fully deserved the success and acclaim then they eventually achieved.  



Track listing

Winston's Fumbs (Tony Kaye)
01 Real Crazy Apartment (single 1967)

The Syn (Chris Squire, Peter Banks)
02 Created By Clive (single 1967)
03 Grounded (b-side of 'Created By Clive')

Tomorrow (Steve Howe)
04 My White Bicycle (single 1967)
05 Claramont Lake (b-side of 'My White Bicycle')

Paper Blitz Tissue (Bill Bruford)
06 Boy Meets Girl (single 1967)

Hans Christian (Jon Anderson)
07 Never My Love (single 1968)
08 All Of The Time (b-side of 'Never My Love')

Mabel Greer's Toyshop (Chris Squire, Peter Banks)
09 Beyond And Before (demo 1968)
10 Get Yourself Together (demo 1968)
11 Jeanetta (demo 1968)

Canto (Steve Howe)
12 The Spanish Song (recorded 1968)

Bodast (Steve Howe)
13 Nether Street (recorded 1969)
14 Beyond Winter (recorded 1969)

Neat Change (Peter Banks)
15 I Lied To Aunty May (single 1968)

Enjoy / Enjoy





Track listing

Winston's Fumbs (Tony Kaye)
01 Snow White (b-side of 'Real Crazy Apartment' 1967)

The Syn (Chris Squire, Peter Banks)
02 Flowerman (single 1967)
03 14 Hour Technicolour Dream (b-side of 'Flowerman')

Tomorrow (Steve Howe)
04 Revolution (single 1967)
05 Three Jolly Little Dwarfs (b-side of 'Revolution')

Paper Blitz Tissue (Bill Bruford)
06 Grey Man (b-side of 'Boy Meets Girl' 1967)

Hans Christian (Jon Anderson)
07 (The Autobiography Of) Mississippi Hobo (single 1968)
08 Sonata Of Love (b-side of '(The Autobiography Of) Mississippi Hobo')

Mabel Greer's Toyshop (Chris Squire, Peter Banks)
09 Images Of You And Me (demo 1968)
10 Electric Funeral (demo 1968)

Canto (Steve Howe)
11 Power Of Music (recorded 1968)

Bodast (Steve Howe)
12 Tired Towers (recorded 1969)
13 Nothing To Cry For (recorded 1969)

Neat Change (Peter Banks)
14 Sandman (b-side of 'I Lied To Auntie May' 1968)


Yes - The Beat Years (1966)

Anthony John Selvidge (Kaye) was born on 11 January 1945 in Leicester, and at a very young age was left his grandmother's grand piano, which he played on when he was little. At age four, Kaye began formal piano lessons, and took part in his first concerts at twelve in solo and duet piano performances. His aim was to study at the Royal College of Music in London and become a concert pianist, but he developed an interest in other music once he heard jazz musicians Count Basie and Duke Ellington. By the early 1960s, Kaye had abandoned his classical background in favour of pop and rock music, and after moving to London, he used to visit The Marquee club to watch bands play, including keyboardist Graham Bond whose style became a strong influence. Kaye landed a position in The Federals through an advertisement in Melody Maker and played on their singles recorded between 1963 and 1967, mainly in a covers and comedy showband style, and after passing through Yellow Passion Loaf and Johnny Taylor's Star Combo, he joined Jimmy Winston in Winston's Fumbs. 

Christopher Russell Edward Squire was born on 4 March 1948 in Kingsbury, north west London, and from the age of six his only musical experience was singing in a church choir. He didn't consider a music career until the age of sixteen, when the emergence of the Beatles and the Beat music boom in the early 1960's inspired him to "be in a group that don't use music stands". A school friend recommended Squire to take up the bass after pointing out his tall frame and large hands, thinking they were ideal for playing the instrument, so Squire purchased his first bass. After being suspended from school for having long hair, he never returned, and landed a job selling guitars at a Boosey & Hawkes shop in Regent Street, where he used the staff discount to purchase a new Rickenbacker bass. Squire's first band was The Selfs, a rock and rhythm and blues band that featured Andrew Pryce Jackman on keyboards and Martin Adelman on drums. In 1965, following several personnel changes, Squire, Jackman and Adelman teamed up with singer Steve Nardelli, guitarist John Painter, and drummer Gunnar Jökull Hákonarson to form a new group, the Syn. 

Peter William Brockbanks (Banks) was born on 15 July 1947, and grew up in Barnet, North London, learning to play the  acoustic guitar and banjo as a teenager. His musical career started with the Nighthawks in 1963, and he played his first concert at the New Barnet Pop Festival before leaving them to join the Devil's Disciples in 1964. That band consisted of Banks on guitar, John Tite on vocals, Ray Alford on bass and Malcolm "Pinnie" Raye on drums, and they recorded two songs on an acetate, Arthur Alexander's 'You Better Move On' and Graham Gouldman's 'For Your Love' (which would later be a hit for the Yardbirds). About a year later, Banks joined The Syndicats, replacing their guitarist Ray Fenwick, who had himself replaced Steve Howe, who would later replace Banks in Yes.

Stephen James Howe was born on 8 April 1947 in Holloway, North London, and was exposed to a wide variety of music during his childhood by way of his parents record collection. After he left primary school, he wanted to become a guitarist, and so his parents bought an F-hole acoustic at age 12 as a Christmas present. Two years later he bought a solid body Guyatone, his first electric guitar, which was followed with a Gibson ES-175D in 1964, one of the guitars that he would became most identified with. Later that year he became a member of his first professional band, the north London-based r'n'b group The Syndicats, who were produced by Joe Meek. The band recorded three singles, and the b-side of one of them, 'True To Me', was Howe's first co-writing credit with the band's singer Tom Ladd. In 1965, he left the band and accepted an invitation to join The In-Crowd, a soul and covers band who released a rendition of Otis Redding's 'That's How Strong My Love Is', which just missed the UK Top 40.

John Roy Anderson was born on 25 October 1944 in Accrington, Lancashire, and as a youngster he became a fan of several musicians, including Elvis Presley, Eddie Cochran, The Everly Brothers, and Jon Hendricks. He attended St. John's School, but was not a strong academic, and while there he made a tentative start in a musical career, playing the washboard in Little John's Skiffle Group. At fifteen he left school, and had no particular desire to become a singer until his brother Tony took up singing and joined the Warriors, a local group also known as the Electric Warriors. After one of the backing vocalists left the group, Anderson filled in the position, and found music more enjoyable and a better choice for money than manual labour. The group performed mainly cover songs, and recorded two singles in 1965, 'You Came Along' and 'Don't Make Me Blue'. After the Warriors split in Germany in late 1967, the band returned to England while Anderson stayed behind, briefly singing in the Party, a band from Bolton who were playing in Germany.



Track listing

The Federals (Tony Kaye)
01 Boot Hill (single 1963)
02 Keep On Dancing With Me (b-side of 'Boot Hill')
03 Brazil (single 1963)
04 In A Persian Market (b-side of 'Brazil')
05 Marlena (single 1964)
06 Please Believe Me (b-side of 'Marlena')

The Selfs (Chris Squire)
07 I Can't Explain (demo 1964)

The Devil's Disciples (Peter Banks)
08 You Better Move On (single 1964)

The Syndicats (Steve Howe, Peter Banks)
09 Maybelline (single 1964)
10 True To Me (b-side of 'Maybelline')
11 On The Horizon (single 1965)

The Warriors (Jon Anderson)
12 You Came Along (single 1965)

The In Crowd (Steve Howe)
13 Stop! Wait A Minute (single 1965)
14 You're On Your Own (b-side of 'Stop! Wait A Minute')
15 Why Must They Criticide (single 1965)
16 I Don't Mind (b-side of 'Why Must They Criticise')

Enjoy / Enjoy





Track listing

The Federals (Tony Kaye)
01 Twlight Time (single 1964)
02 Lost And Alone (b-side of 'Twilight Time')
03 The Climb (single 1964)
04 Dance With A Dolly (b-side of 'The Climb')
05 Bucket Full Of Love (single 1965)
06 Leah (b-side of 'Bucket Full Of Love')

The Selfs (Chris Squire)
07 Love You (demo 1964)

The Devil's Disciples (Peter Banks)
08 For Your Love (b-side of 'You Better Move On' 1964)

The Syndicats (Steve Howe, Peter Banks)
09 Crawdaddy Simone (b-side of 'On The Horizon' 1965)
10 Howlin' For My Baby (single 1965)
11 What To Do (b-side of 'Howlin' For My Baby')

The Warriors (Jon Anderson)
12 Don't Make Me Blue (b-side of 'You Came Along' 1965)

The In Crowd (Steve Howe)
13 That's How Strong My Love Is (single 1965)
14 Things She Says (b-side of 'That's How Strong My Love Is')
15 Am I Glad To See You (previously unreleased 1966)
16 Blow Up (previously unreleased 1966) 


For fans of Genesis and Yes

 As a special treat before I start tonight's posting, here are a couple of videos that I stumbled on last night. The Genesis one is a 1973 concert that been around for a while, but the Genesis Museum have taken the original tapes and run them through some sophisticated equipment to significantly enhance the picture quality. In order for the sound to match the new video they've sourced audio from various bootleg recordings and expertly synched it to the pictures. I've studied 'Watcher Of The Skies' and can honestly say that I can't see the joins.
The Yes video is a number of their 1969 performances on the German Beat Club TV show, and these have also been remastered and cleaned up, and put together into one video.
If you are even the mildest fan of progressive rock or of these two bands in particular then you simply must see these two videos.





Yes - The Golden Age (1979)

Following the completion of their tour to promote 'Tormato', Yes decamped to Paris to record some material with producer Roy Thomas Baker. Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman had decided together that they wanted the band to move in a more New Age or pop direction, in keeping with the musical trends of the time, but the rest of the band were not so keen, and wanted to keep their classic, recognisable progressive rock sound. These tensions were evident in the music that was recorded in Paris, and it seemed like fate was intervening when Alan White broke his foot in a roller-skating accident, forcing the recording sessions to be abandoned. Howe, Squire and White returned to London, leaving Anderson and Wakeman to carry on working on their new ideas in Paris. When White's foot had healed and the band got back together, they set about recording what would become the 'Drama' album, and the Paris sessions were consigned to the vaults. What we have here, then, is an album that could have slotted in between 'Tormato' and 'Drama', if Anderson and Wakeman had got their way with a new direction for the group. Some of the songs were reworked later for member's solo albums, but most of these recordings have only ever been heard on bootlegs, and more recently on remastered re-issues of 'Tormato' and 'Drama'. 



Track listing

01 Golden Age
02 Tango
03 Everybody Loves You
04 In The Tower
05 Friend Of A Friend
06 Richard
07 Dancing Through The Night
08 Some Are Born
09 Picasso
10 You Can Be Saved
11 Countryside


Yes - Works (1975)

This isn't a 'lost' album as such, but a fan of these sites called sydfloyd noticed that by 1976 all of the members of Yes had released solo albums, and so he thought 'what if the members of Yes had brought this music to the band in 1975 for their next album'. He took individual tracks from each solo album and tried to compile them into side-long suites, and you'd be surprised at how well some of them work, particularly the first four tracks (Side One).
It ends up as quite a lengthy album, but fans of Yes who know the solo works might still get something out of this. He envisioned the concept as something along the lines of ELP's 'Works' album, with solo efforts being combined into a band release, and so I've adapted that sleeve for the cover to this one.



Track listing

Side 1:
a) Ocean Song - 3:05
b) Impressions (The Dream) - 2:49
c) Spring Song Of Innocence - 5:02
d) Avakak - 6:55

Side 2:
a) Hold Out Your Hand - 4:13
b) Solid Space - 5:21
c) The Nature Of The Sea - 3:57
d) To The Runner - 4:29

Side 3:
a) Impact > Warmer Hands > The Storm - 7:54
b) Moon Ra / Chords / Song Of Search - 12:48

Side 4:
a) Beginnings - 7:31
b) Silently Falling - 11:27

Side 5:
a) Qoquaq Ën Transic / Naon / Transic Tö - 7:08
b) Marching Into A Bottle - 2:00
c) Break Away From It All - 4:19
d) Symphony In The Space - 2:56

Side 6:
a) Doors Of Sleep - 4:08
b) Safe (Canon Song) - 14:56
c) Ram - 1:54