Freedom to Music
Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman & Howe – An Evening of Yes Music Plus (1989-90) (@256)
21 Oct 2007
(Review from progarchives.com, wikipedia)
Though Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman & Howe (ABWH) had lost the legal rights to use the name of their parent group Yes, it was agreed that they could refer to their origins in Yes on tour posters and merchandise. Thus their 1989-90 world tour was advertised by the phrase “An Evening of Yes Music Plus”.
Tony Levin, who played bass on the studio album as well as most of the tour, was ill during the concert recorded on this album. He was replaced by bassist Jeff Berlin.
The concert is split in its double-CD emotion, but the stage act of classic Yes immense pieces, new ABWH hits or short different music motives gathers a unique tempo of emotions, dynamics and size-explosive rock. The musicianship offering its full soul and energy is a bit of clique, but works to the intensity of the show. The music quality is high-involving, maybe only random to taste. The sense of Yes music is equally challenging, rumbled inside the typical atmosphere and repeated excessively. The modern air of Yes is undeniable, but the passion comes from the greater good of uniform play and basic artistic astound. There are bits of acoustic craft that don’t sound terrific, nor improve the impression, there are wondrous moments when the “script of play” isn’t respected, it’s only taken, benevolently, into a fresh-illusionary performance. The is rock, glam classic, new-age sparkles, fleeting symphonism and perfect-rounded pop (or accessible) expressions. The album is huge to the usual size of resisting the Yes flavor, but what’s worth taking rarely escapes the typical occasion of excitement, heart sign or gold shine. Less typical is the fact that ABWH don’t evolve to their special sign, in any good, spoiled or unpredictable to taste moment.
A “Yes” concert by the special musicianship of glamorous essential artists Jon Anderson, Bill Bruford, Rick Wakeman and Steve Howe. ABWH remains a project that could have continued in shining tempo.
Line-up:
- Jon Anderson / vocals
- Bill Bruford / drums
- Rick Wakeman / keyboards
- Steve Howe / guitar
with
- Jeff Berlin / bass
- Julian Colbeck / keyboards
- Milton McDonald / guitar (rhythm) and vocals
Track List:
CD1
01. Benjamins Brittens Young persons guide to the orchestra
02. Time and a World-Teakbois-Owner of a lonely Heart
03. The Clap-Mood for a day
04. Gone but not Forgotten-Catherine Parr-Merlin The magician
05. Lond distance roundaround
06. Birthright
07. And you and I
CD2
01. Close to the Edge
02. Theme
03. Brother of Mine
04. Heart of the sunrise
05. Order of the Universe
06. Roundabout
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about 5 years ago
OGG!
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Password -> sakalli
about 4 years ago
Cool
about 4 years ago
great
about 3 years ago
Congrats, sir.
Your blog is great.
This is the same 2CD on Fragile Records that I got many years ago, but I know there’s another version that also includes the encore, Starship Trooper.
Best,
Barleyman
about 2 years ago
Amazing stuff!
Thanx,
Jörg, Sweden
about 7 months ago
Who on earth wrote those Wikipedia notes! Or where they just a bad translation from the writer’s native tongue….? ‘….rarely escapes the typical occasion of excitement, heart sign or gold shine’ eh??
As far as I’m concerned, Anderson and Howe were Yes – no matter who owned the rights. But a live album without ‘Gates’ is always going to be a pale shadow…..
about 6 months ago
Thank you Sakalli.