tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357001616333664522.post6463463691625013217..comments2024-03-27T21:28:51.242-07:00Comments on Burning Wood: Chris Squire, R.I.P.Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger9125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357001616333664522.post-10583426827041155612015-06-30T07:14:47.268-07:002015-06-30T07:14:47.268-07:00Most of Yes is burned into my DNA too. Binge liste...Most of Yes is burned into my DNA too. Binge listening to Fragile. So EVERYONE knows Steve Howe's famous harmonics on the intro. But seriously, the bass riff by Squire at 0:44 hits like a sledge hammer. Wow. And not that it really matters, but is probably harder to play than the intro by Steve Howe. Chris Squire added aggressiveness to the band. And he was a pretty good singer too. I have no idea what kind of a human being he was, but he was a monster bassist.Ken J Xenozarhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16024446764828171613noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357001616333664522.post-29434209084835359472015-06-30T04:52:47.233-07:002015-06-30T04:52:47.233-07:00a great long read about the early days of Yes - ht...a great long read about the early days of Yes - http://themarqueeclub.net/interview-peter-banks-yes Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357001616333664522.post-29682668406607498772015-06-29T15:51:29.049-07:002015-06-29T15:51:29.049-07:00Same here. "Close", then "Fragile&q...Same here. "Close", then "Fragile", then finding one day an import Atlantic various artists album with S & G's "America" at it's full length. The Alan White era began for me with "Yessongs", then "Tormato" & "Going for the One" (yeah, got "Fish Out of Water" too). Bruford and Squire were an incredible duo. Rest in Peace to a Musician's Musician.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15270026765498412557noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357001616333664522.post-34277212262544763992015-06-29T08:38:19.297-07:002015-06-29T08:38:19.297-07:00Sad News. Chris and Bill were the first rhythm sec...Sad News. Chris and Bill were the first rhythm section I noticed after Paul and Ringo.<br />"Roundabout" caught my ear because it sounded like the Beatles. The complexity and sound compared well with Side 2 of "Abbey Road". I noticed Bill's snare drum pop, and it might be no coincidence Chris and Paul both favored Richenbachers. Then there was "Long Distance Runaround" getting some airplay with some absolutely ripping bass. I didn't buy the album.<br />Like Sal, "Close To The Edge" was my first non Beatles (etc) album, and just thinking about it makes my hair stand on end. That is the pinnacle. Nice that Bill singled it out.<br />I bought "Fragile" and about half of it is great. The solo bits are embarrassing filler, but when I do a mental inventory, Chris gets a pass. <br />I bought "Fish Out Of Water", and I don't remember a thing about it except the cover wasn't too good.<br />I followed Bill into King Crimson, and that's another story.<br />Alan White plays drums on a couple records I really like "Instant Karma", and he plays with Eric and Klaus on "Live Peace In Torronto", another half record, but that didn't lessen my disappointment in "Tales From Topographic Oceans", one of my least favorite ever followups to a favorite.<br />"Yessongs didn't do it for me either. I missed Bill.<br />"The Yes Album" is my second favorite. There is a kick drum beat at the end of "The Clap" that we used for testing car stereos. <br />The first two have moments, but are pretty inessential except for that Richie Havens cover.<br />Then there's "Relayer" which is the last one I bought. All I remember about it was a ballad that sounded too much like "The Way We Were" for my tastes. Goodbye Yes! Hello Genesis, King Crimson, Roxy Music, David Bowie, and a cast of thousands. <br />buzzbabyjesushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09375127662096374324noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357001616333664522.post-53700992221721961202015-06-29T08:32:39.796-07:002015-06-29T08:32:39.796-07:00I'm probably the opposite to your other reader...I'm probably the opposite to your other readers - not for the first or last time, I suspect - in that, as a younger version of me now, I never owned any Yes to listen to or went out of my way to hear. Until the remasters of the early albums came along in the 90's, that is, when I discovered what I'd been missing. My ignorance (or blinkered viewpoint, depending on where you sit) probably stems from the fact that my high school pals were crazy for the band & always banging on about that drum fill or this riff or that lyric. One of them was a virtuoso at humming the intricate basslines while playing air bass guitar(thank you, Mr Squire) & the fact this lad was Scottish to boot probably fuelled my animosity towards all things Yes. Anyway, my conversion to prog was complete after hearing the Yes early stuff in its pristine loveliness (the later works don't move me the same way). And let's face it, Chris Squire was a pretty good bass player. Thanks for writing the nice article. dogbreathnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357001616333664522.post-51060266469344061012015-06-29T08:13:17.805-07:002015-06-29T08:13:17.805-07:00Totally agree. One of the best rythm sections ever...Totally agree. One of the best rythm sections ever. What Bruford and Squire did together still amazes me. You're right as far as "Tales...." totally destroying all the good they did with the first 5 magical albums. I don't think I ever go all the way through any of the sides. One of my favorite bass players. He was so technically proficient but so many times technique leaves artistry by the wayside. Not in his case. He played beautifully and was always a pleasure to listen to his inventive lines. He and the band have been given short shrift because let's admit it they did get a bit pompous and rediculous but it doesn't negate their accomplishments.cmealhahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03201121023050701074noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357001616333664522.post-65605101764542283632015-06-29T07:27:41.394-07:002015-06-29T07:27:41.394-07:00I'd heard Roundabout a zillion times by the ti...I'd heard Roundabout a zillion times by the time I went to a midnight movie in 10th grade and saw "Yessongs." Soon I had the triple-vinyl album - still my favorite Yes record, those songs I think benefit from their lack of studio lacquer - and played it constantly. They'd come around every summer, usually it was the Hartford (CT) Civic Center, a long drive from my upstate NY home, but that gave me plenty of time to modify my reality in preparation.<br /><br />"Going For The One" came out when i was a high school senior, and while some of it doesn't really hold up, the title tune and "Parallels" are tops in my book. I remember being desperately disappointed that they didn't play "Going" on that summer's tour.<br /><br />Squire played a lot of lines that, as mentioned in the piece, stand alone as great melodic parts. One of the true giants of that instrument. I've been waiting to see if that original line-up might someday manage to tour again, I would not have missede it. Sadly, not to be. Sal, you write a nice eulogy.Noam Sanenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357001616333664522.post-26950528250468011362015-06-29T07:22:13.506-07:002015-06-29T07:22:13.506-07:00I have a similar history as William. I grew up lo...I have a similar history as William. I grew up loving YES but upon entering college in the early 80's I thumbed my nose at them as they weren't cool. Instead I turned my focus on REM, Replacements, etc. It wasn't until YES released The Ladders in the late 90s did I come back to them.<br /><br />The YES album remains one my top 20 records of all time and would certainly make any desert island list I had to come up with.<br /><br />I saw them last year at Radio City. I was really disappointed in the show and frankly Chris looked awful. <br /><br />I see that they have another tour (with Toto??) later this summer. I can't imagine that they will continue to perform and record.<br /><br /><br /><br />kevin mnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4357001616333664522.post-3470746991311828782015-06-29T06:20:21.397-07:002015-06-29T06:20:21.397-07:00The first Yes album I bought in real time was Goin...The first Yes album I bought in real time was Going for the One ... I think my parents assumed I was going to be gay as I recall buying Rush's Hemispheres around the same time, both featuring bare-assed guys on the cover. The title track holds a special place for me as a result.<br /><br />Like many people who got into the "alternative" scene in the 80's, I had to disown prog rock, along with a lot of other 70's music hat was deemed "uncool" at the time. I came back to Yes some time in the 90's, and glad I did. I think by the time it became hip to disown prog, in all fairness, the prominent album tracks of all those bands had been played to death on AOR radio (Jethro Tull and Yes, in particular). Some music is so tied in to certain emotional stages of your life that it becomes necessary to abandon them at some point, and then to come back and recognize their greatness later.<br /><br />With Yes, it was their versatility, Steve Howe in particular, could play anything, any type of music. I could hear strains of straight rock, country, jazz, classical, etc. in their songs, despite whatever lyrical goofiness was going on. So much of their early 70's material is elemental to me now, so ingrained that I can play the songs completely in my head and remember everything ... which is something with a nine minute track! With Squire, the loping bass line that pushed "Yours is No Disgrace" along and the dark, brooding mood followed by an explosion on "Heart of the Sunrise" ... just brilliant.<br /><br />It's hard to explain prog to people who don't get it, or people like me who abandoned it for punk/new wave, but never came back. Part of the problem comes with the pretentiousness of trying to explain it. It's just good music, often times great. "Roundabout" might have drilled holes in my brian by the 5,000th time I heard it on the radio by 1979, but funny things happen when you don't listen to certain types of music for years, decades in cases, then come to realize there was a reason it got played on the radio all the times for years.William Repsherhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16690181505790748431noreply@blogger.com