Just turned 26 and listened to "Close To The Edge" for the first time a couple of months ago. I bought the vinyl immediately after hearing the first song. By far the best decision of my life.
@josephvargas4804 жыл бұрын
Damn near 50 years old and still sounds fresh and crisp as it did years ago. Fell in love with Yes back in 73.
@thomasrichmond24134 жыл бұрын
Six albums in three years: The Yes Album. Fragile. Close to the edge. Larks Tongues in Aspic. Starless and Bible Black. Red. Bill Bruford-just your standard underachiever.'
@PhilUKNet4 жыл бұрын
It's 1972, I'm 11 years old and used to listening to the bland pop music of the day. On a visit to my cousin's house (he's older, has a band, plays guitar and is into prog rock) he gives me a set of headphones and plays me Close To The Edge. Mind blowing and - in terms of musical taste - life changing. The thing is, I can still immerse myself in Close To The Edge almost 50 years later and enjoy it just as much. This is still my favourite Yes album and I still regard it as one of the greatest albums ever made. Classic album.
@crnel4 жыл бұрын
15:31 - Bill Bruford did study jazz and so that was his big orientation, while embracing an eclectic combination of styles. I did get to see Bill play Close to the Edge in 1989 during Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman, and Howe's tour. Very impressive with his partly electric set that he used in King Crimson.
@SciFiArtman4 жыл бұрын
I love Yes' boldness and courage to just lay it out there, no matter how off-the-wall or unusual the sound or technique! Not copying from anybody and taking amazing musical chances at every corner! Chris squire, one of the most bombastic players of all time - POW! right in the face - like or of not! And then providing the most lyrical and playful bass to accent the vocals. And Howe, and Bruford, Wakeman, and Anderson take the same all-stops-out writing and performing approach - seeming to hold nothing back! What wonderful freedom to explore such fantastic new sounds and ideas.
@joseantonioespindola58204 жыл бұрын
The best Yes line up of all times, the best album and the landmark of prog rock ever. Simply a master piece. Greetings from Mexico.
@davidmiles65584 жыл бұрын
@ 32 minutes: 'Steve How is underrated'? Er, no. Was consistently voted best guitarist for several years and the years he didn't win was when they asked him not to be considered because everyone knew he would win it. When they 'let him back in' he won it again. One of the very best. Utterly brilliant and thoughtful.
@martindanburen19944 жыл бұрын
I remember Yes as a warm up band to Grand Funk in Yale Bowl. Jon Anderson saw everyone lighting up and asked everyone when he said go light up. First time ever done. His closing Yes piece was And You And I. Then they had to come back for three encores until Grand Funk got pissed off. So off went all the Yes equipment (Grand funk refused to let them use their amps) and on came Grand Funk as the stadium emptied out. Not all of them, but a whole lot. They were a really amazing band.
@PhilRounds4 жыл бұрын
What struck me about CCTE was that it seemed as if the band were painting with music. A dream landscape appears in the mind's eye and one feels as if "inside" the music. When i first heard it i thought it was the best piece of music i'd ever heard...and i still do.
@shawnminnier61174 жыл бұрын
Best album of all time. Genius.
@dclark44224 жыл бұрын
One of the best parts of Yes is the fact that their music is never boring, not for a single second.
@progfrog56234 жыл бұрын
40+ years later and it still gives me chills!
@MikeGervasi4 жыл бұрын
Truly their best work. I've since also become fond of Relayer.
@philjamieson55724 жыл бұрын
I am lucky enough (and old enough) to see Yes live in Liverpool in the mid 70's (76, I think), and, as well as being bowled over by how amazing they sounded, was struck by how they created an almost dream-like, calm joyous mood.
@stevensavoca76054 жыл бұрын
Been following YES since1974 about 46 years now seen them live probably over 50 times in over 6 states they are the band of my life for sure
@BioStuff4154 жыл бұрын
My favorite rock Album the first i heard it 46 years ago... and still is today.
@epiphanydrums54274 жыл бұрын
Man oh man oh man oh man was this ever a mind blowing album! It was a tour de force
@josephvargas4804 жыл бұрын
Close to the Edge, what can In say, that's when YES became YES, I fell in love with this album, came out of my shell.
@wendellwiggins37764 жыл бұрын
I am surprise there arent any comments. I love hearing people talk about YES. Actually theyre one of few bands I can talk about for hours
@timallbritton73294 жыл бұрын
This record was ground-breaking. Even all these years later, it's incredible And even today, considering the skill sets of all five musicians... amazing.
@Douglas214504 жыл бұрын
I saw theme first in 1970 if my memory is correct. I was twenty years old. And I still love them. What a great show. I saw them two more times after. Just grand!
@IYAMNI4 жыл бұрын
Towards the end Malcolm Dome says that after CTTE Yes became so self-absorbed they forgot about the audience and produced 'pretentious' albums like "Tales...". and "Relayer". Perhaps Dome didn't notice the sold-out crowds going to see them play during those tours. I'll going along with the self-obsession of "Tales..." especially considering their idea to play the album in its entirety to crowds who had not yet heard it. But that album is a Yes classic in its own right and I only wish I had been old enough to go see them during that tour. Fortunately I was old enough to see the first Relayer tour. Yes never forgot about the audience. They always wrote and performed music for THEIR audience. If you thought Relyer was inaccessible or 'pretentious' (I hate that hackneyed criticism) , then maybe you weren't part of their audience. "Gates..." is a fucking masterpiece.
@studi0robb4 жыл бұрын
CttE was "The Evening Closer" for my group of friends back in high school. we would hang, listen to music, get stoned, discuss life and the world, laugh...but all good things end, so, when the evening as over, we would put on CttE and listen silently and reverently as it played, our spirits soaring and then end with tranquility via the closing forest sounds....it was, indeed, a very special time, one that i'll always cherish. to this day, when i need a spiritual boost, i play CttE and feel refreshed as it closes out. (๑´▿`๑)♫•*¨*•.¸¸♪✧
@popguy684 жыл бұрын
The dismissal of subsequent albums/line-ups is wrong. Yes!, Close to the Edge is a high water mark, but Relayer, Going for the One, Tormato (underrated I say), Going for the One, Drama all are strong efforts in my book. Also, a photographer who says this album is "not his bag" is commenting here why? Otherwise an enjoyable dive into an amazing recording.
@davidbranin9694 жыл бұрын
Love this yet somewhat torn. Listen to 70's Yes and I picture 5 wizards hanging out at the Shire, making magic.
@colognedog11584 жыл бұрын
words fail to describe . thankfully.the music is incredible. thats it.
@paulwebb44744 жыл бұрын
I'm not really a prog rock fan, but at its best it could brilliant. Yes were the best of the prog rock crew, and this was their best album. Outstanding musicianship and inventiveness. The sophisticated riot that is Siberian Khatru still blows me away all these years later. Amazing.
@maxhult8304 жыл бұрын
19:30 "...albeit in a lower register." Erh, sometimes perhaps, but actually Chris Squire generally sang the top harmony.
@Jeff-o-Lee4 жыл бұрын
19:26 Chris Squire did a lot of 2 part vocal harmony with Jon. It wasn't always 3 part with Steve Howe. And, if you listen closely, Chris is harmonizing in a higher register than Jon through falsetto on I. The Solid Time Of Change A lot of Yes songs were written with both Jon & Chris doing 2 part harmonies that were sung in counterpoint as opposed to one singing a diatonic 3rd to the melody. Chris would often back off the mic giving Jon more to the front sonically.
@GeorgePiazza4 жыл бұрын
The isolated drums and bass from CTTE can be heard on the internet if you know where to find it. Hearing Bruford (and Squire) clearly really upped my appreciation for Bill's work on the song; he was already a favorite drummer, but the nuance and dexterity of his playing on the title track is nothing short of amazing when heard in isolation. I have to agree that White didn't have quite the depth, uniqueness and musical sensibility that Bill had. That said, though I am not a fan of 'Tales From Topographic Oceans', I do think Relayer is right up there with CTTE (perhaps a half a notch below CTTE), partly due to the fresh jazzy approach and slightly different timbre of Moraz on keyboards. Patrick not only brought new blood and energy to the group when they most needed it, but his style and sounds were perfect for Relayer (he was also on of the nicest musicians I've ever met). It's a shame the band didn't do another record with Moraz. They did start writing with him for 'Going For The One', but when Wakeman decided to rejoin (because they 'were writing songs again'), they rather unceremoniously kicked Moraz out (according to most reliable sources). There is an alternate beginning for Awaken that Moraz released, showing the possibilities of what could have been. Sadly I find 'Going For The One' to be a bit edgy, brittle and overplayed (particularly Howe, who crammed riffs from his Telecaster into every vocal pause). Perhaps the album would have been better had they not been so showy, allowing the songs to breathe a bit more. The production didn't help matters IMO; to me the record comes across as loud, scratchy and noisy - probably an odd take coming from someone who rates Relayer so highly - but Relayer somehow manages to maintain an organic quality despite the frenetic structure, wild riffing and clanging embellishments. The last great album from Yes IMHO. I can't fault Bruford from leaving Yes for King Crimson when he did; an artist needs to grow, and I can't imagine Bruford tolerating the Tales sessions. Sure it's possible that Tales would have been better, but then the trio of killer Crim albums would never have been. A world without Lark's Tongues in Aspic, The Nightwatch, Fracture and Starless would be bleak indeed. RIP Chris Squire and John Wetton: kzbin.info/www/bejne/gHycgoiniqygmJY
@diannal7274 жыл бұрын
Amazing album. I memorized every word. This album is timeless.
@GaryKahn3604 жыл бұрын
Pretty enjoyable listen. I loved them back in the day and still appreciate the music and how talented each member is.
@robertochiang80574 жыл бұрын
This is my favourite album ever. I love every single second of it, from the birds at the beggining to the last "Khatru"'s note . Music is great and each musician is at his best. (Don't know what lyrics is about, but it doesn't matter to me - Bruford said he doesn't know what "total mass retain" means, ha-ha), IMO this is Yes peack and prog rock peack also.
@federov1004 жыл бұрын
It's interesting how people are so challenged by the introduction to CTTE, for whatever reason, when I first heard the piece I totally got it...
@axiom664 жыл бұрын
Great commentary on the greatest album. Fine insight about how Wakeman held the songs together.
@jeffdawson27864 жыл бұрын
That record, a new world was opening before us... 🌏
@vitorjunior20234 жыл бұрын
Simply the Best ALBUM. Ever!
@johngore51274 жыл бұрын
Their CTE tour was my first concert ever. Absolutely amazing.
@MyCvid4 жыл бұрын
Close to the Edge = epic prog rock masterpiece.
@sseltrek1a2b4 жыл бұрын
Steve Howe is absolutely underrated as a player...so versatile and creative...
@Russocass4 жыл бұрын
Excellent documentary! Thanks for the upload.
@coyotecreekband2364 жыл бұрын
The high water mark for this innovative and talented band. Though I think Going For The One has some similar qualities. I was fortunate to see them live 4 or 5 times during the 70's and 80's. I wish my kids could have experienced Yes at that time.
@joefazzio26464 жыл бұрын
Just one of the best records I have ever experienced this is what brought me to prog rock . Close to the edge is just the best work I personally have Heard ever in progressive rock ever. Timeless and beautiful. The fazz .
@VegasAlien14 жыл бұрын
Such a shame you couldn't use the original album's music in the album's review. What Bruford laid onto that album was never equaled live by Alan White. Thanks for this video!
@alanhenderson23494 жыл бұрын
What a great documentary about a fantastic album, truly pivotal in prog rock history. Shame that Malcolm Dome seems to think that progressive rock doesn't mean progression however. Tales from Topographic Oceans and Relayer were also great works of musical complexity and took the bands music further. Lucky that Malcolm wasn't around to suggest that Beethoven stopped after his 4th symphony !
@marty38884 жыл бұрын
Great documentary. I don't think the group went down after this. "Topographic Oceans" was a great album and that was a double album that had only 4 songs on it. I also loved "Going for the one." I also wish you would have included music from the album rather than all live vresions especially since this is a documentary about the album.
@stevenvalenti37224 жыл бұрын
Definitely one of the greatest prog. Rock albums ever released. And one of my most favorite prog. Albums also. It's an amazing piece of music.🙂
@burgesmate4 жыл бұрын
I remember well the first time I heard Close to the Edg, in the front room of my mate's house in Cardiff one Saturday morning, aged 12. I had never heard anything like it then and I have never heard anything like it since. Always been a special album for me. Glad it is recognised as such. By all means pigeon-hole it as 'prog-rock' if you find that helpful - it is just a great piece of music.
@eddy714544 жыл бұрын
The Yes Album and Fragile are just as good. Those three albums are what Yes made their living re-creating for the rest of their lives.
@peterbustin26834 жыл бұрын
16:03 I love the way Jon Anderson prepares us with that 'announcement' !
@alanpartridge46814 жыл бұрын
Good documentary! A couple of corrections: 7:29 Fragile was released in November 1971, not early 1972. 34:22 This statement implies that Close to the Edge was the first time the band worked with Eddie Offord. It wasn't, he co-produced The Yes Album and Fragile, and engineered Time and a Word.
@j.p.77084 жыл бұрын
Mood for a day was one of the first few songs I learned, thanks YES 🎸🇨🇦
@miriamgreen39734 жыл бұрын
I love the allowance for individual tracks on Fragile. That they let each band member shine.
@JohnHancotte4 жыл бұрын
I was thinking that as well. They don't discuss Bill's writing credit on And You And I. They demonstrate the acoustic guitar passage but it's not heard in the context of the album as the Yessongs version was all electric.
@rtreno4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for publishing this video.
@anthonymcilwain44264 жыл бұрын
Mr Malcolm Dome - Never heard you talk nonsense before. Fragile and Roundabout got them a broader audience perhaps, especially in America, But it was the incredible Yes Album that was the blueprint. - Perpetual Change? Starship Trooper? And Yours is no Disgrace on top of the bloody pops? Those were the actualisation of what was coming and there is nothing inferior or unrealised about any of it. And as the awful solo crap that littered Fragile made for a disjointed experience and the first indicator that egos might be flying high - It is definitely the lesser of the two - Even though Roundabout,Heart of the Sunrise and South Side of the sky are literally incredible to this day and are monolithic testaments to, by far The Best Prog rock this country or any other has produced Love ya mostly. Talcy Malcy
@coatesycobra4 жыл бұрын
Close To The Edge, The Who's Quadrophenia and Pink Floyd's Animals are my top 3 records ever made. I never tire of any of them...
@daveroxit4 жыл бұрын
CTTE is a "high point of Western civilization" album for me. Everyone in the band at this point in time was not only a master of their craft, but a highly unique and individualistic player. Alan White is a phenomenally powerful and accomplished drummer, but his style is fundamentally identical to virtually any other rock drummer. You could put in him any other rock band. When they lost Bruford, they no longer had an inimitable voice on every instrument, and eventually Squire's bass style settled into the same groove---the two of them became a nimble, but typical, rock rhythm section. Some of Yes' greatest work was still ahead of them, but the lineup was never again as perfect as it was here.
@fantastico3634 жыл бұрын
Well done. Thanks for being substantive.
@BenA7184 жыл бұрын
Great documentary! Though I don't appreciate all the Topographic Oceans bashing ... I think that album needs to be revisited by many of its critics, it's a fantastic album.
@jarongittinger4 жыл бұрын
Its sad how even the people being interviewed talk bad about Tales and Relayer. I think they were Yes's two best albums personally.
@markgatica124 жыл бұрын
Tremendous video. Thanks for posting.
@jimbyers79574 жыл бұрын
Now go and listen to Relayer; my favorite truly 'progressive' Yes recording. It has it all.....
@salpuma91454 жыл бұрын
The slow power piece in You and I is the best THING I've ever heard.
@Tsnore4 жыл бұрын
Alan White had to step into some difficult shoes to fill - he wasn't a jazz drummer but rather a rock/pop drummer who had had impressive accolades with Harrison and Lennon and many others, and yet he pulled it off, giving Yes a different but interesting sound live. His best work I think was on Going for the One and the San Luis Obispo phase.
@coachtd21634 жыл бұрын
Great expose! As a struggling self taught (by ear) near deaf guitarist of many, many decades I found the explanations and demonstrations of Les Davidson to be especially enlightening. His explanation of Yes's use of keys, scales and modes on Close to the Edge et al, certainly opened up some new vista's for me. I suspect we're talking some heavy Rick Wakeman influences here because he was the most musically trained and knowledgable member of the group at that time. It would be fascinating to find out ho suggested A Dorian mode or D harmonic minor scale as underlying foundations. Chris Welch said "Jon Anderson knew so little (in spite of so many ideas) while Rick Wakeman knew so much." I just wish Les had demo'd the licks a bit slower and that his guitar had inlays on the fretboard so I wouldn't have to constantly try and count frets to figure out where he is on the fingerboard. 50 years ago I was picking up the phonograph needle and resetting it to repeat a sequence I was trying to learn(and scratching up the vinyl!). Fast forward to You Tube and its pressing and repressing the pause, sliding counter bar and run button Still tedious but in a different way..... LoL
@andrestipanovic74074 жыл бұрын
the explanations of the chord structure and scales are very interesting
@kvlteacher59114 жыл бұрын
Fantastic! Thank you!
@nickmonks95634 жыл бұрын
It WAS a high point. And yes, by comparison, there WERE problems with many of their future releases. But I don't think it's fair to discount the magic moments that do come from Tales, Relayer, GFTO...or for that matter more maligned records such as Union and Talk. They continued to make extraordinary music. In some cases, it wasn't that what they were doing had changed...they were still making music they wanted to make. It was that the times had changed...the audiences had changed. And that's okay. Tracks like "Awaken", "Holding On" and "In The Presence Of" are superb pieces of music in their own right, and I would challenge any musician to compose pieces of such care and complexity as those. Most could not.
@davep82214 жыл бұрын
Steve Howe 1st member in Guitar Player's Gallery of Greats. Best overall guitarist 5 years in a row. Only 3 total. Eric Johnson and Steve Morse are the other two. All that and people rarely talk about him these days.
@iaincook58354 жыл бұрын
"...legendary drummer Bill Bruford." You got that right, and that's on a bad day.
@nbt36634 жыл бұрын
This confirms what I always felt, Close To The Edge is the G.O.A.T.
@geoffwales86464 жыл бұрын
"...pseudo intellectual hippy dippy airy fairy lyrics"? What wankers some critics are. Anderson used 'the sound of words' to create poetic imagery, something like fragments of dreams, and his impressionist style perfectly suited the music.
@Hawijack4 жыл бұрын
My favorite yes album!
@mrfunball52044 жыл бұрын
And then came the Ramones I love them both 🎸
@kevindeger85994 жыл бұрын
"Wakeman actually, literally became the glue that held together the music."
@jimrutherford69264 жыл бұрын
This is the best Prog-Rock album ever, I was very fortunate to see this album live after seeing the Yes Album/ Fragile live a year earlier.
@IronmanKMSA4 жыл бұрын
My all-time favorite LPs 1. Who's next 2. Piece of mind 3. Close to the edge 4. Abbey Road 5. Physical graffiti
@weeksey494 жыл бұрын
great review was at the Spectrum 79 show that they use clips from 71 thru 78 where Yes's high water years even the Pat Moraz Relayer was great thencame Tourmato and things were never quite the same
@martintaylor92044 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed this video, but I think it gave a great disservice to many of the later albums. I think that Tales From Topograpic Oceans is a masterpiece, but agree that it would not be the album I would introduce a Yes newbie to. Relayer is a fantastic piece of work, and it demonstrated how the band could adapt and work with a different keyboard player. Then move on to Drama. Hear how Yes could stil create a great album without Jon Anderson as the vocalist. I could carry on, but I think you catch my drift.
@yesfan59664 жыл бұрын
Their first real Masterpiece.Followed later by Ritual,The Gates of Delirium, and Awaken
@brian_jackson4 жыл бұрын
Yes did not lose their way after Close to the Edge. Relayer was their ultimate Masterpiece and then Going for the One was superb. Alright they did lose their way after that.
@oiramsq734 жыл бұрын
The photo @8:52... when was that taken? I’ve heard the stories that Alan was basically hovering around during the recording and mixing of CTTE. Was he actually THERE during the mixing? That certainly looks like him sat next to Eddie (“are you ready Eddie?”) Offord. Or perhaps this was taken during TFTO
@koshersalaami4 жыл бұрын
I hear people say that what really led Yes to Close to the Edge was Fragile but I think a lot of it started one album before that. As good as Wakeman is, and I’m definitely a fan, his introduction didn’t change Yes nearly as much as Steve Howe’s did. Time and a Word is forgettable. The Yes Album is really good and also quite sophisticated. Really, they were at their best for three albums, from the time Steve Howe joined until the time that Bill Bruford left. Alan White is good but Bruford is in a league of his own, as became further evident with his work with King Crimson.
@JJ8KK4 жыл бұрын
I gotta say, that if Chris Squire had not set out to dominate the sound of this entire album--with the other guys happy to follow his lead--this album/creation would never have achieved its well deserved fame. To me, Yes was ultimately "Chris Squire's Band", populated with very talented musicians who recognized his talent and were able to see themselves wrapping their own contributions around his powerful sense of direction. A singular achievement in Progressive Rock history...
@tonydakel89184 жыл бұрын
That bald guy acts like Close to the Edge is the only good album by yes lmao. Topograhpic and Relayer are great albums too
@sixfingr4 жыл бұрын
Fun exploration and analysis. I feel like the assertions in too many cases discounted the achievements of subsequent albums. Tales did, indeed, have too much "padding." But the themes and gestures there were real and singular. Relayer's Gates and To Be Over are every bit as good as anything they ever did, and the entirety of Going For the One is masterful. Even the flawed Tormato has Future Times/Rejoice, which I consider to be the spiritual heir of CTTE.
@stevensavoca76054 жыл бұрын
I disagree that they got lost after close to the edge they just went on their way and took a lot of us with them!
@miriamgreen39734 жыл бұрын
I was assigned to do a painting w/a fantasy theme. I painted mountains coming out of the sky in a prophetic shine from the tip of an Tolkien elf's sword flanked by statues of Rohan horses ...thank you Yes
@miriamgreen39734 жыл бұрын
The vocals are an instrument the same way Claptons guitar is a voice by itself
@jeffk12124 жыл бұрын
Amazing things humans can create....amazing...
@timn50084 жыл бұрын
The studio recording is a different animal. I first heard all the songs from the record on Yessongs at the age of seventeen in the back of a Rambler with the typical shit sound system (an 8-track cartridge) of the day (1974). I then got the "Close To The Edge" record and at first I didn't like it. But I soon realized that it was an awesome work. That the band had Eddie Offord pictured on the back of the record along with the band members speaks to the huge impact the producer had on the sound. It's an amazing record, their best, and timeless. I still listen to it today, the only record from that era by any band that I still listen to.
@kilroy25174 жыл бұрын
Best album ever recorded.
@davidgroll-cook71254 жыл бұрын
And you and I is one of there best songs. “Going for the one” was the last great album
@RossMcL19614 жыл бұрын
Great and comprehensive documentary, with insight and dedication, but like the comment before, the album itself and not various live out takes should have formed the back drop, although there could be copyright issues of course, epic in any event.
@Dan63994 жыл бұрын
Very nice.
@CoolGreenApple4 жыл бұрын
Stellar!
@pandstar4 жыл бұрын
OK. Who is the clown with the shaved head, who keeps giving YES backhanded compliments? "airy fairy, pseudo intellectual lyrics", "splitting 'Close to the Edge' into 4 parts because it was pretentious". Prog had a premature death in the mid 70's in large part because of people like this in the music press. IT wasn't that punk killed prog, as many people claim, it was the music press's response that killed prog. What a great thing that prog had a major revival in the mid to late 90's, and has been going strong ever since. THe fact that major labels and the music press just kind of forgot about prog, and let musicians, and small labels, produce it without the need to have commercial success, was the best thing to happen to music.
@leddygee18964 жыл бұрын
Yes kinda reminds me of the Beach Boys on Hallucinogenics. Obviously the vocal harmonies are the dead giveaway, but the music is so much... More!! Been a fan for longer than i care to admit. Pink Floyd "Animals" is right up there with it...
@davep82214 жыл бұрын
One my favorite pieces of music (besides CttE and Awaken) is Amarok by Mike Oldfield. Amarok is the only "song" I know that I can look at my player and say, "crap! only 23 minutes left." It's a 59 minute song that is made of many, many parts. The Lore is that Mike Oldfield hated Richard Branson and made an album with nothing in it that could be carved out as a single. There is also supposed to be Morse code in it that spells out something like "Fuck you Richard Branson." Personally, I put Awaken slightly ahead of CttE.