or iTunes Price: $9.99 Genre: Rock Released: Jul 22, 2014 Customer Ratings (139 Ratings) |
Heaven & Earth – YesCustomer ReviewsWhat’s Old is New Again (4 stars)Jon Davison’s voice - and lyricism - is shockingly Andersonian, as it’s his presence on this first released track that both frames Yes' latest album and sets it apart from 2011’s Fly From Here. If you’ve missed Davison's work with GlassHammer…well…get caught up and pick up their last four albums… But the greater point here is that Anderson’s gestalt is alive and well with this latest iteration of Yes…and in a way it pro Really? (2 stars) This is just awful, boring arrangement and the production is terrible, it sounds like a demo recorded in a shoebox. Lifelong Yes fan, stunning to me that this is the best they can do. This is Yes!!! (5 stars) I am growing tired of the This Is Not Yes. Or the No Jon Anderson = No Yes comments. Granted, there are certain bands that I would throw my hands in the air and say enough of this. I can't imagine Rush without any of its 3 members. But Yes has always been about change. That's what keeps them interesting to me. I'm not just talking about member changes. Sure, this doesn't sound like Classic Yes or Yes West. This will never rank up there with BiographyFormed: 1968 in Birmingham, EnglandGenre: Rock Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s Far and away the longest lasting and the most successful of the '70s progressive rock groups, Yes proved to be one of the lingering success stories from that musical genre. The band, founded in 1968, overcame a generational shift in its audience and the departure of its most visible members at key points in its history to reach the end of the century as the definitive progressive rock band. Where rivals such as Emerson, Lake & Palmer withered away commercially after the mid-'70s, and Genesis...
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